Selim Al Deen remembered in Puthia
When renowned stage artist Shimul Yousuff descended from stage in an uncanny silence performing the last scene of Chaka, many of about 5000 spellbound audience surrounded her. They were dipped in memoirs of the deceased drama icon Selim Al Deen. Selim Al Deen's play Chaka (Wheel) relates a harrowing tale of an anonymous corpse that was compared with a state or life and needs to be buried for peace. The cart-driver of Chaka, along with two companions, started a journey to deliver the corpse. They carried it to far flung cities and villages and none acknowledged it. The body decomposes, rots, stinks - yet none agreed. Thus driven away from all human destinations, the cart-men bury the dead on a dry riverbed. By that time, the dead had already arisen in each of them. Like cart-men, entire Puthia audience of Shimul Yousuff too kept staring at her utterly flabbergasted for many minutes. Eminent litterateur Hasan Azizul Haque aptly caught their thoughts and told Shimul, "The more I