
A Bangladeshi American explores his father’s memories of the liberation war in their native country and the cognitive dissonance in learning of the U.S. government’s controversial role in a forgotten genocide that occurred there in 1971.
A Bangladeshi American undertakes a journey to learn about the liberation war in his native country, traveling there for the first time in nearly two decades, and uncovering the controversial role the U.S. played in a forgotten genocide that occurred there over 50 years ago. From 1971 to the present day, this is a story of Bangladesh’s independence, a family’s journey immigrating to America, and the cognitive dissonance of a person belonging to both homelands. Driven by interviews with his father and other family members, along with experts and witnesses, archival videos, declassified recordings, and animations, BENGAL MEMORY is a unique and untold oral history through a personal lens.

Salil Tripathi

Meghna Guhathakurta

Hell Jumper

The RAF: The Red Army Fraction

The Right Stuff

My Brother Is an Only Child

Glory

Heart Mountain: Three Years in a Relocation Center

Tanforan: Race Track to Assembly Center

Sometimes in April

Desert Storm: The Ultimate War

American Swing

Samrat Prithviraj

Narratives of Modern Genocide

Mururoa 1973

Sous nos yeux

Maharajah of the Road

James Bond in India

Reagan: From Movie Star to President

Circus of Books

Muerte al invasor

The Killing Fields