Review of Bangladesh: Humiliation, Carnage, Liberation, Chaos by Iqbal Chand Malhotra , Subroto Chattopadhyay


Rating: 5/5

This book feels like it was written with one purpose, to force the reader to face what happened in 1971 without softening it. It begins from the pain of Partition in 1947 and keeps showing how East Pakistan and West Pakistan were pulled apart by language, culture, and repeated injustice, until the whole situation finally broke open. It is not written like a distant history note. It reads like a direct statement that the conflict was never random, it was built step by step.

The beginning is where the hurt really starts

What I liked most is that the book does not jump straight to the war. It first spends time on the humiliation, and that matters a lot. It shows how the anger grew from the days when East Pakistan kept being pushed down and ignored. That part gives the whole story its weight, because once you understand the pressure, the explosion in 1971 makes complete sense. The book makes it very clear that this was not just a political disagreement. It was years of silence, insult, and denial piling up.

The violence is told in full force

When the book reaches the carnage, it does not hold back. It describes the Pakistan Army’s crackdown as brutal, with mass killing, sexual violence, and a refugee flood into India. The scale is staggering, and the book wants the reader to sit with that reality instead of escaping from it. I found that honesty one of the strongest parts of the writing. It does not try to make the violence sound clean or distant. It keeps the wound open, because that is what the history deserves.

The book also shows how the world stayed quiet

Another thing that stood out to me is how the book does not stop at the border of East Pakistan. It also looks at the larger international picture and the silence around the killings. The listing itself points to the role of the United States and China tilting toward Pakistan, while the people suffering on the ground were left to face the disaster almost alone. That gives the book a much bigger frame than a simple war story. It is about politics, power, and who gets ignored when history turns ugly.

Liberation comes after sacrifice, not as a miracle

The liberation section works because the book treats freedom as something earned through struggle, not something that just arrived on its own. It brings in the resistance, the Indian role, and the long fight that finally ended in Bangladesh’s birth. The wider 1971 war is also tied to the surrender of Pakistani forces and the creation of Bangladesh, which gives the book a full arc from oppression to independence. That structure makes the reading experience powerful, because you feel the pain first and only then the release.

The ending is not a neat ending

What makes this book stay in the mind is that it does not pretend liberation fixed everything. The chaos after independence is part of the story too, and I liked that the authors did not cut the narrative short at the moment of victory. They let the aftermath remain messy, because history is messy. That choice makes the book feel more real. It is not written to comfort anyone. It is written to tell the story as it was, from humiliation to bloodshed to freedom and then to instability.

My final feeling

For me, this is the kind of book that leaves a strong impression because it is direct, serious, and unapologetic. It takes a painful chapter of South Asian history and tells it in a way that feels heavy, urgent, and impossible to ignore. I finished it feeling that the title is absolutely accurate, because the book really does move through humiliation, carnage, liberation, and chaos exactly the way those words promise. It is a book that wants truth on the page, and it delivers that without hesitation.

Review of Hitler: The Proclaimed Messiah of the Palestinian Cause by Aabhas Maldahiyar


Rating: 5/5

What I liked first about this book is that it does not walk in softly. It enters with a very sharp and heavy claim, and it keeps that same force from start to finish. The title itself tells you that this is not a safe or polite book. It wants to disturb the usual story, and it does exactly that. For me, that boldness is one of the strongest things about it.

The Core Idea Stays Clear

The book keeps its focus on one big argument, and it does not let that go. It builds around the idea that Hitler, Nazi power, and certain Islamist movements were linked in ways that history has not been told honestly enough. The way the author pushes this point is very direct. He does not write like someone asking permission. He writes like someone laying out a case and demanding that the reader face it.

What Makes It Powerful

The strongest part for me is the way the book keeps returning to its central claim with so much confidence. It does not feel scattered. It feels like the author knows exactly what he wants to prove and keeps tightening the net around that argument. That gives the book a very forceful energy. Even when the topic is uncomfortable, the writing keeps moving with purpose, and that makes it hard to put down.

The Tone Is Sharp and Unapologetic

This is not a soft history book that tries to please everyone. Its tone is sharp, fearless, and very direct. That is exactly why it works so well for me. The author does not hide behind weak words. He names people, names movements, and names ideas without hesitation. That kind of writing gives the book a lot of personality and makes it feel alive instead of dry.

The Research Feel Is Strong

One thing that stands out is how much the book tries to lean on sources and archival material. It gives the feeling that the author has gone deep into the material and wants the reader to see that this is not built on empty talk. That matters a lot in a book like this, because the subject is so huge and so sensitive. The book succeeds in making its case feel serious, researched, and deliberate.

The Book Does Not Hold Back

One thing I really notice is that the book does not talk in vague language. It names the Grand Mufti, it names the Muslim Brotherhood, it names Hitler, and it names the Nazi system without trying to soften the edges. That bluntness gives the book its force. It is not written like a polite academic note. It is written like a confrontation. That style may make people uncomfortable, but that is also exactly why it works as a book of argument. The book clearly wants the reader to sit with the claim that fascism and jihad were not always separate worlds in the way people like to imagine.

Final Verdict

By the end, what stayed with me was not just the subject, but the force of the presentation. This book feels like a full-throated argument, one that wants to break the silence around a very uncomfortable part of history. I found that very compelling. It is bold, hard-hitting, and full of conviction. For me, this is exactly the kind of book that leaves a mark because it does not ask to be liked. It asks to be faced.