Pakistan Zindabad (anthem)

Tarana-i-Pakistan (তারানা-ই-পাকিস্তান), or more popularly known as Pakistan Zindabad (পাকিস্তান জিন্দাবাদ), was an alternative national anthem sung by East Pakistan during its existence until liberation of Bangladesh in 1971. The song is in Bengali, the language of East Pakistan, and was adopted from a poem by an East Pakistani poet Golam Mostofa with the name of Tarana-i-Pakistan in 1956. It was composed by Nazir Ahmed. The song was sung during school assemblies in East Pakistan by school children.

English translation
May the Land of the Pure live long, may the Land of the Pure live long, may the Land of the Pure live long In the lush greenery of East Bengal, in the red glow of the banks of the five rivers In the grey deserts of Sindh, the flag awakens a freedom May the Land of the Pure live long, may the Land of the Pure live long, may the Land of the Pure live long At the peak of the Frontier's frigid mountains, it flies the symbol of victory in its skies In the reflections of the Jhelum and the Beas, the taste of freedom has been found May the Land of the Pure live long, may the Land of the Pure live long, may the Land of the Pure live long The binding necklace of equality and alliance, those that have monotheistic teachings in their throats Teesta and Vitasta hitherto wipes its fatigue, sorrow and grief May the Land of the Pure live long, may the Land of the Pure live long, may the Land of the Pure live long Its flagbearers at the Khyber Pass, valiant sepoys at the banks of the Meghna We sing the union of the Orient and the Occident, cultivating the world May the Land of the Pure live long, may the Land of the Pure live long, may the Land of the Pure live long