Following the screening of “Jibon Theke Neya”, another iconic Bangladeshi film, “Surja Dighal Bari”, is set to be showcased in Australia. The film, which centres on the resilience of a woman named Joygun amid life’s struggles, will be screened on August 3 at a special venue called Zamindar Bari.
Salahuddin Lavlu came into the spotlight by directing the immensely popular long-running serial “Ronger Manush”. Viewers warmly embraced this rural story-based drama, making it a standout project in his career.
Our experience of designing Brac regional offices across rural Bangladesh.
We need new research methodologies to understand the complex nature of the rural change in Bangladesh in the last two decades.
The streets of rural Bangladesh should value the safety and wellbeing of its users.
The traditional mental image of rural Bangladesh that we have is no longer a reality.
Make sanitary napkins affordable and available to all women and girls
The government is not adequately responding to naturally occurring arsenic in drinking water across large areas of rural Bangladesh, Human Rights Watch (HRW) says in a report.
Following the screening of “Jibon Theke Neya”, another iconic Bangladeshi film, “Surja Dighal Bari”, is set to be showcased in Australia. The film, which centres on the resilience of a woman named Joygun amid life’s struggles, will be screened on August 3 at a special venue called Zamindar Bari.
Salahuddin Lavlu came into the spotlight by directing the immensely popular long-running serial “Ronger Manush”. Viewers warmly embraced this rural story-based drama, making it a standout project in his career.
Our experience of designing Brac regional offices across rural Bangladesh.
We need new research methodologies to understand the complex nature of the rural change in Bangladesh in the last two decades.
The streets of rural Bangladesh should value the safety and wellbeing of its users.
The traditional mental image of rural Bangladesh that we have is no longer a reality.
Make sanitary napkins affordable and available to all women and girls
The government is not adequately responding to naturally occurring arsenic in drinking water across large areas of rural Bangladesh, Human Rights Watch (HRW) says in a report.