netranews
Greg Constantine, Mashruk Ahmad
September 23rd 2025
A visual storyteller built a project which archives shreds of memory and identity of the Rohingya in one common space from across the world and generations; and tells the story about the life of a community rather than the destruction of it.
Taza Mulluk was born in 1941. In 1961, he became a government employee at Burma Communication Service (BCS). He then became a postman. He retired as a postman and would receive a government pension. Included are ID cards from his employment at BCS and Burma Postal Service, his pension book and NRC card, a list of all the postmen in Arakan and a photo of Taza Mulluk retired with two other colleagues from the postal service. © Greg Constantine / Ek Khaale
Every month, Mashruk Ahmed will curate an instalment of a photo-story series that questions established power discourse, featuring photographers who explore gaps, absences, and silences in Bangladesh’s socio-political records.