Comparing mythologies from the Middle East to those of Hinduism and pulling commonalities brought communities together astoundingly. As a student of Bangla Literature in Dhaka University, the analysis of "Bidrohi'' was exemplary for her. As a schoolgirl, the meaning of the poem was rather incomprehensible for her, but its stylistic rhythm undulated her even at that tender age.
Noted reciter, educationist, and researcher Rupa Chakraborty reminisces her first encounter with the poem. "Bidrohi" is a symbol for humanity throughout the ages. To her, Nazrul's poem emphasises the convergence of soft and firmness, of the romantic and the violent, and of a vice and a virtue- a series of contraries that bind into an aesthetically and politically strategic unity of opposites against falsehood, repression and sinister powers. He seeks to confront and combat oppression of all forms, with the words, Ami aponare chara korina kahore kurnish. My message is the revelation of truth." In reference to it, Kazi Madina says that Nazrul's intention of provocation is evident in the poem. In "Rajbandir Jabanbandi", Nazrul said, "I am a poet, sent by the Almighty to reveal the undisclosed truth, to give form to the intangible creation.