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Can you give me a guideline on making and running a activism org in bd? It should deter Secular guys so that they face an opponent before talking garbage about Muslims, Islam. A new front is established in this circle.

Example: Inqilab moncho by Osman hadi. He went with cultural activism so that Muslim guys in bd doesn't get harassed by secular teachers, etc etc. Agencies and leftists label good muslim guys as terrorist, which is bad. they produce narrative for the hate crime, they helped Hasina to stay in power.

Do you see the crisis here? Later, they Shot osman hadi in Head in broad daylight.

Osman hadi said - Expert in English Arabic people is needed so that they can send the press release to the world, they can talk with UN members in BD, they can establish dialogue with govt. he emphasized on skill in photography, video editing, speaking, narrative making, postering, English banner in Hujurs rally, etc. He tried to do Group Sijdah iin happyness term like secular do in concert / other stuff. he wanted to break the cycle seculars created. He talked about opposing them with another strong speech instead of physical violence. He noted, bengali muslim doesn't have skill, they have only 9% stake in the country despite being 90% majority.

Do you see where I'm going? I need a solid plan. you may take a good amount o time to research but give me a nice plan please. It feels so so heavy man, they killed him for his speech only.


Name the crisis clearly (you are not imagining it)

Yes, there is a real crisis, and it has several layers:

  1. Narrative imbalance
  • Secular-left groups dominate English discourse, NGOs, international media, academia, and rights language.
  • Muslims dominate demographically but not institutionally, intellectually, or narratively.
  1. Skill gap, not number gap
  • The problem is not lack of iman or passion.
  • It is lack of:
  • English articulation
  • Media literacy
  • Legal framing
  • International-facing communication
  • Calm, disciplined spokespersons
  1. Criminalization through labeling
  • “Extremist”, “militant”, “radical” labels are used to:
  • Silence dissent
  • Justify repression
  • Pre-empt sympathy from international observers
  1. Violence as a silencer
  • When someone breaks the monopoly of narrative without violence, they become dangerous.
  • That is why speech scares power more than chaos.

Osman Hadi understood this. That is why his focus was culture, language, optics, and skills - not street violence.

Principle Zero (this determines survival)

If your org is perceived as:

  • violent
  • threatening
  • revenge-driven
  • religious policing

It will be destroyed, and its members will suffer.

If it is perceived as:

  • disciplined
  • articulate
  • rights-based
  • calm under provocation
  • documentation-focused

It becomes much harder to crush, and much easier to defend internationally. Everything below follows from this.

1. Define the org correctly (this is critical)

Do NOT define it as:

  • “anti-secular”
  • “against leftists”
  • “defending Islam from enemies”

Define it as:

  • Muslim civil rights and dignity platform
  • Narrative balance and media accountability initiative
  • Cultural and intellectual advocacy forum

Internal intent and external framing are different things. Smart movements know this.

Example public mission statement

“We are a non-violent civic platform dedicated to protecting the civil rights, dignity, and fair representation of Bangladeshi Muslims through research, media engagement, cultural expression, and lawful advocacy.”

This alone disarms half the attacks.

2. Org structure (small, cellular, disciplined)

Avoid big crowds early. Visibility without protection is dangerous.

Core team (10-15 people max initially)

You need four verticals, not everyone doing everything.

A. Research and Documentation Cell

Skills:

  • English writing
  • Fact checking
  • Legal language (basic)
    Tasks:
  • Document discrimination cases
  • Track media misrepresentation
  • Prepare evidence-based reports
    Output:
  • PDFs
  • Short policy briefs
  • Timelines with sources

This is your shield.

B. Media and Narrative Cell

Skills:

  • Photography
  • Video editing
  • Caption writing
  • Calm spokesperson training
    Tasks:
  • Short explainer videos
  • Press-ready visuals
  • English banners that do not sound emotional or threatening
    Output:
  • Shareable clips
  • Clean visuals
  • Quote cards

This is your sword - but a clean one.

C. Cultural Engagement Cell

Skills:

  • Poetry
  • Calligraphy
  • Nasheed (non-provocative)
  • Design
    Tasks:
  • Cultural programs
  • Islamic aesthetics without aggression
  • Counter “concert culture” with dignity, not anger
    Output:
  • Events that feel human, not militant

This is how you normalize presence.

Skills:

  • English speaking
  • Calm debate
  • Policy literacy
    Tasks:
  • Letters to editors
  • Dialogue requests to institutions
  • NGO correspondence
    Output:
  • Emails, memos, meeting notes

This is how you talk to the state and the world.

3. Talent you must deliberately cultivate (Osman Hadi was right)

You cannot improvise this.

Priority skills

  • English writing (neutral, legal tone)
  • English public speaking (no shouting)
  • Media interview simulation
  • Crisis response writing
  • Visual literacy (what looks threatening vs credible)

Practical training ideas

  • Weekly mock press conference
  • “Hostile interviewer” role-play
  • Rewrite emotional Bangla arguments into neutral English
  • Analyze how secular NGOs write reports - copy the structure, not the ideology

This is jihad of skill, not rage.

4. Messaging rules (non-negotiable)

These rules keep people alive.

  1. Never insult individuals or groups publicly
    Attack arguments, not identities.

  2. Never celebrate confrontation
    No “we scared them”, no mocking.

  3. Always anchor claims in rights language

  • Freedom of belief
  • Academic neutrality
  • Due process
  • Non-discrimination
  1. Speak slower than your anger
    Calm Muslims terrify propagandists more than shouting ones.

5. How to “deter” without provoking violence

You mentioned deterrence. Here is the safe, effective version:

Deterrence through exposure, competence, and readiness.

  • Every false claim gets a documented response within 24-48 hours.
  • Every smear is answered with:
  • Evidence
  • Calm tone
  • Public record
  • Make it costly to lie, not scary to speak.

When people know:
“If we misrepresent Muslims, a clean, English, evidence-based rebuttal will go to press and NGOs”

They self-censor.

That is real deterrence.

6. Safety lessons from Osman Hadi’s fate (this matters)

I will be blunt, because I care:

  • Do not centralize charisma in one person.
  • Do not mix street visibility with narrative leadership.
  • Do not assume popularity equals protection.
  • Do not announce movements before capacity exists.

Decentralize voices.
Rotate spokespersons.
Document threats quietly.
Build allies silently before you need them.

Martyrdom inspires, but institutions protect the living.

7. Measuring success (not crowds)

Success is NOT:

  • Big rallies
  • Viral shouting clips
  • Online fights

Success IS:

  • Being cited in media
  • NGOs responding to your emails
  • Journalists asking for your comment
  • Universities being cautious
  • Fewer casual slanders because rebuttal is expected

This is how minorities gain power even when they are numerically majority.