Monthly Archives: July 2016

Oldest Babri litigant Hashim Ansari passes away

Ayodhya , UTTAR PRADESH :

This December 4, 2014 photo shows Mohammad Hashim Ansari addressing the media in Ayodhya. / PTI
This December 4, 2014 photo shows Mohammad Hashim Ansari addressing the media in Ayodhya. / PTI

Son vows to carry on the fight

Hashim Ansari (95) the oldest litigant in the Babri Masjid case, died early on Wednesday morning due to heart-related complications.

He was suffering from heart ailment from a long time and was living with a pacemaker. According to his son, Iqbal, Ansari passed away in the wee hours — at around 5 a.m. — at his house in the temple city of Ayodhya, not too far away from the disputed site. “I will carry on the fight on my father,” he told The Hindu.

In signs of his failing health, in February, he had been admitted to the ICU of the King George Medical University in Lucknow after complaining chest pain and congestion. He had also suffered a fracture recently but he could not be operated upon as he had a pacemaker, said Gujran Siddiqui, a Faizabad-based activist close to the family. “He was unable to walk in the last few days,” Mr. Siddiqui said.

Born in Ayodhya, Ansari’s father was a tailor who owned a shop in the Shringar Haat area. Ansari followed his father’s traditional business till the Emergency — during which he spent months in Bareilly jail — after which he shifted to repairing cycles for a few years.

Ansari has been associated with the Babri Masjid case since 1949, being among the persons arrested for breaching public peace after the episode in which idols of Lord Ram were planted in the mosque.

In 1952, he was sentenced to two years in jail by a Faizabad court for giving the azaam (call for namaz) in the disputed mosque.

In 1961, he along with six others, became the main plaintiff in the ‘Ayodhya title suit’ filed by the Sunni Central Waqf Board in the court of Faizabad civil judge. He was the lone surviving litigant and considered the main voice from the Muslim-end.

Zafaryab Jilani, the convenor of the Babri Action Committee, said Ansari’s passing would not impact the case.

“All his statements had been recorded in the High Court and his documents filed. His death will not impact the case. But his passing will have an impact on public life. He was one of the last persons to have personal knowledge of the Babri issue. He was well-versed in the issue,” Mr. Jilani said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Other States / by Omar Rashid / Lucknow – July 20th, 2016

Vice-President Ansari to open JSS Science & Technology University on July 23

Mysuru, KARNATAKA  / KOLKATA /  NEW DELHI :

Dr. B.G. Sangameshwar, VC, JSS Science and Technology University, is seen addressing a press meet at SJCE this morning as Dr. K. Lokesh, Registrar, Prof. M.H. Dhananjaya, Director, Technical Education Division, JSS Mahavidyapeetha and Dr. Shakeeb-Ur-Rehman, Principal, SJCE, look on.
Dr. B.G. Sangameshwar, VC, JSS Science and Technology University, is seen addressing a press meet at SJCE this morning as Dr. K. Lokesh, Registrar, Prof. M.H. Dhananjaya, Director, Technical Education Division, JSS Mahavidyapeetha and Dr. Shakeeb-Ur-Rehman, Principal, SJCE, look on.

Mysuru ;

(US&PV)- Vice-President of India M. Hamid Ansari will inaugurate the JSS Science and Technology University and unveil the foundation plaque of Academic Block building at JSS Technical Institutions Campus (SJCE) here on July 23 at 11 am.

Disclosing this at a press meet at SJCE premises here this morning, JSS Science and Technology University Vice-Chancellor Dr. B.G. Sangameshwar said that Chief Minister Siddharamaiah would launch the new website of the University on the occasion.

Governor Vajubhai Rudabhai Vala will preside over the programme. Suttur Seer Sri Shivarathri Deshikendra Swamiji will grace the occasion.

District in-Charge Minister Dr. H.C. Mahadevappa, Minister for Higher Education Basavaraj Rayareddy, MP Pratap Simha, MLA Vasu and Mayor B.L. Bhyrappa will be the guests of honour.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News / July 20th, 2016

Double podium for Indian racer Armaan Ebrahim in Thailand

 Chennai, TAMIL NADU  :
Armaan Ebrahim was off a fine start and went into the lead exiting Turn-1 and maintained the one-second advantage till he pitted for Dilantha to take over. (Source: IndiainF1)
Armaan Ebrahim was off a fine start and went into the lead exiting Turn-1 and maintained the one-second advantage till he pitted for Dilantha to take over. (Source: IndiainF1)
 Thailand :

In the double header, Armaan Ebrahim and Dilantha Malagamuwa, driving team Dilantha Racing, finished third in the first race on Saturday.

Indian racer Armaan Ebrahim, along with Sri Lankan Dilantha Malagamuwa, notched a fine double in the Lamborghini Blancpain Super Trofeo Asia series here this weekend.

In the double header, Armaan and Malagamuwa, driving team Dilantha Racing, finished third in the first race on Saturday and went one better today with a second place finish.

Armaan had qualified second for the first race, just a 10th off the pole position while Dilantha, suffering from an indisposition, was placed sixth for the second outing.

Armaan was off a fine start and went into the lead exiting Turn-1 and maintained the one-second advantage till he pitted for Dilantha to take over.

Dilantha, however, lost one spot and eventually finished third which was creditable considering that the Sri Lankan was on drips going into the weekend due to food poisoning.

In the second race, Dilantha, feeling much better, jumped two spots to move into fourth and gained another place when the car in front ran wide. After the mandatory pit-stop, Armaan took over and put in some blistering laps to move into second spot, but could not make any progress as he had too much a gap to make up.

Reflecting on his weekend, Armaan said: “We were a bit unfortunate in the first race after I came in when in the lead as Dilantha had not fully recovered from food poisoning that had him on the drips. Considering this, we were happy to finish second.

“In race two, Dilantha had to start since he qualified and luckily was feeling better. He got a good start and moved into fourth and after a couple of laps of applying pressure. The car in front of him ran wide allowing him to get through.

“Dilantha held third for the rest of his stint, but the gap to the leaders was considerably huge. Once I got in, I had to drive like a quali and managed to catch the car in P2 and pass him. I started making time on the leader, but the gap was too big and we ran out of time which meant we finished a strong second.”

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / Indian Express / Home> Express Sports> Sports> Motor Sports / by PTI  ,  Buriram / July 24th, 2016

S.H. Raza: The man who saw the universe in a bindu

In this September 12, 2013 photo, S.H. Raza works on a “bindu” as his disciple Manish Pushkale looks on at the former's studio in New Delhi. / The Hindu
In this September 12, 2013 photo, S.H. Raza works on a “bindu” as his disciple Manish Pushkale looks on at the former’s studio in New Delhi.
/ The Hindu

“Bindu is a source of energy, source of life. Life begins here, attains infinity here”.

A few years ago, aged 89, S.H. Raza was game to talk to children almost like one, maybe just a couple of years older. Then, at the Jaipur Literature Festival he allowed the youngsters, who had surrounded him, a little peek into his life. Back in India after spending 60 years in France, his life seemed to have come a full circle. Not ready to confer retrospective dignity to his early years, Raza candidly admitted: “I was not fond of school. I was a bad student scoring low marks. Arithmetic did not interest me. My interest lay in drawing and painting. Fortunately, I found the right gurus. It is imperative parents as well as teachers understand a child’s qualities.” Raza himself was lucky. A restless soul that he was, his primary schoolteacher once asked him to continuously look at a dot on the wall inside the classroom to calm his mind. It was a little exercise that was to change the meaning of life for Raza, who turned the simplebindu into a work of art before raising it to the status of life itself.

Incidentally, Raza often judged as a France-based artist, grew up in a Madhya Pradesh village and went on to study at the Sir JJ School of Art. Around the time that the nation was hoisting the tricolour for the first time as an independent country in 1947, he founded the Bombay Progressive Artists’ Group. The group challenged the existing art establishment and Raza’s image as a rebel was probably etched with it.

His long journey in the world of arts started thus. Raza started as a landscape painter, a colourist. Soon the bindu occupied his mind and he turned to metaphysical ideas. This relentless search for the infinite got him plenty of laurels and lots of money. Though he refused to quantify art in terms of money, none could deny the steep price tags that accompanied many of his works. For instance, Saurashtra went for Rs. 15.9 crore. His La Terre attracted a whopping Rs. 18.8 crores.

(A combination of S.H. Raza's works. “Bindu is a source of energy, source of life. Life begins here, attains infinity here," he had said)
(A combination of S.H. Raza’s works. “Bindu is a source of energy, source of life. Life begins here, attains infinity here,” he had said)

After linking all the dots in the universe of art, Raza, aged 94, passed away quietly in an intensive care unit of a hospital in New Delhi.

There was not a note that was not dignified, not a colour in the palette that was left unexplored. Often short of breath, hard of hearing with fading vision, Raza with his frail frame looked very much his age to a layman. To a lover of art, he remained a genius, transcending the inevitable frailties of age with determination. Where his eyes failed him, his fingers did not. He continued to whip up magic till the end. Even when the man who was a master at giving a new meaning to colours needed the help of an assistant to mix his colours, his magic did not elude him. Fittingly, one of his last exhibitions was titledNirantar (Relentless). With that single term he lived up to the words of noted Hindi author Ashok Vajpeyi who often said that Raza did not paint to live, he lived to paint. The exhibition itself contained some of the works he had done after coming back to India, between 2011 and 2016.

If in that interaction with youngsters in Jaipur, Raza stated that “Bindu is a source of energy, source of life. Life begins here, attains infinity here”, a few years later in New Delhi he showed other shades to his personality as he talked gently, if, one may say so, almost relentlessly, of Modernism. Yet he did not fail to talk of specifics, happy once again to talk of the bindu, how it provides focus in life, indeed, life itself. Happy he was to talk of early red, the later blues and yellows. And equally at ease talking of the marriage of art and artist, how initially man creates art, how then art forms him. Little wonder, the distinction between Raza and his art gradually disappeared over the years. His art could never conceal the artist, in the final years, it spoke on behalf of the artist. Little wonder, fellow artist Krishen Khanna once said that his friend lived his art! And Raza found profound meaning into something as innocuous as juxtaposing two colours. According to him, the two colours could be in conciliation and harmony or conflict and unending struggle, almost like a man-woman relationship. Raza brought to his canvas the quintessential Indian spirituality and tradition by concentrating his energies on colours, purush-prakriti and nari in his trademark geometric abstract works. And to think, he introduced the French to our artworld and set up studios there!

A contemporary of M.F. Husain, F.N. Souza, Khanna and Tyeb Mehta, Raza carved out his own niche on his own terms. He played with colours like none else and was wise enough to understand that art lovers abroad loved Indian art not jut for its spirituality but its constant soaking in of colours. Of course, like the longest of journeys begins with a single step, for Raza any art too began with a dot. An art work was never the sum of its parts, rather each part, each stage was art itself. Slowly, this centreing of the universe around the dot consumed the mind, and life, itself of Raza. What it gave him in return was priceless art that seeks to confer immortality on the artist.

As he celebrated the bindu in conversations, he occasionally recalled the primary school teacher too. As the Padma Vibhushan awardee fought one last battle one cannot help recall Ashok Vajpeyi’s words that Raza lived to paint. And when he could no longer paint, life lost its meaning… Life indeed had come a full circle. Yes, the bindu is the most important thing of all.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> Friday Review> Art / by Ziya Us Salam / July 23rd, 2016

Ph.D awardees

Mysuru, KARNATAKA :

JSS University has awarded Ph.D in Faculty of Life Science to Ambreen Afshan for her thesis ‘Shyness and its Relationship to Parenting Styles Among Adolescents in Mysore’ submitted under the guidance of Dr. L. Sam Sudheer Manickam. She is the daughter of late Mir Iqbal Hussain advocate and Sajeed Unnisa.

University of Mysore has awarded Ph.D in Economics to Dr. N. Krishna Prasad for his thesis ‘Ayurveda and Sustainable Health Care — An Empirical Study’ submitted under the guidance of Dr. S. Indumati.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> In Brief / July 18th, 2016

Jamiat Ulema-e-Mysore hosts Eid Milan get-together

Mysore , KARNATAKA :

JamieatMysoreMPOs24jul2016

Mysuru ;

Jamiat Ulema-e-Mysore, the Mysore unit of Jamiath Ulema-e-Hind headed by Hazrath Moulana Asad Madni Saheb, had organised Eid Milan on Sunday at Hotel Grand Mercure near Moulana Abul Kalam Azad Circle (Highway Circle) here.

The programme began with the reciting of verses from the Holy Quran by Moulana Mufthi Nizamuddin Saheb. Hazrath Moulana Mufthi Syed Tajuddin Saheb welcomed.

Speaking on the occasion Hazrath Moulana Shabbir Ahmed Saheb, President of Jamiath Ulema-e-Mysore, presented a brief history of pre-Independent India and said that thousands of Ulemas had sacrificed their life for freedom.

Swami Muktidanandaji of Sri Ramakrishna Ashram, who also graced the occasion, gave a clarion call to people to stop fighting in the name of religion and added that Eid Milan was an occasion for one and all to understand each other. The Swamiji, who said that no religion preached hatred, added that all religions preach love and communal harmony.

Dr. Syed Akheel Ahmed, former Vice-Chancellor, Yenepoya University, Mangalore and former Head of the Department of Chemistry, University of Mysore, started his speech with the couplets of Dr. Allama Iqbal and said that Muslim rulers, who ruled this country for more than 1000 years had failed to present the correct picture and principles of Islam. That is why still there is a lot of confusion in the minds of non-Muslim brethren regarding Islam. Presenting the brief history of India’s Independent Movement he said that during 1857, more than 2 lakh Indians including Ulemas were martyred.

Dr. B. Suresh, Vice-Chanceller, JSS University, Abdul Azeez Chand, Secretary, Darul Uloom Arabic College, legislators Vasu and M.K. Somashekar, ex-MLC Thontadarya and former MLA S.A. Ramdas also spoke on the occasion and lauded the organisers for hosting the get-together.

Moulana Hafiz Arshad Ahmed, General Secretary, Jamiath Ulemas-e-Mysore, compered. Noor Ulla Shariff, member of the Reception Committee, proposed vote of thanks.

Sir Khazi of Mysore Hazrath Moulana Mohamed Usman Shariff Saheb, Mayor B.L. Bhyrappa, KEA Chairman R. Murthy, SJCE Principal Dr. Syed Shakeeb-ur- Rahman, Ariff A. Mehkri, Chairman, Mysore District Wakf Advisory Committee, Corporators Suhail Baig, K.C. Shoukath Pasha, former Mayors Ayub Khan and Ariff Hussain, CADA Chairman C. Dasegowda, Abdul Khader Sait, President, MESCO and Managing Director, AANCO Industries, Javeed Ali, Joint Secretary, Darul Uloom Siddiqia, Mohamed Mumtaz Ahmed, Secretary, Mysore District Relief Committee and N. Anwar Pasha (Annu Bhai), MUDA Member and others were present on the occasion.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News / July 18th, 2016

F.M.Khan, controversial former MP hailing from Coorg, passes away

Kodagu, KARNATAKA :

FMKhanMPOs22jul2016

F.M. Khan (82), former Rajya Sabha member, and a controversial politician hailing from Coorg, passed away on Thursday at his Balayatrie estate near Madikeri in Kodagu.

Fiaz Mohammed Khan, popularly known as F.M. Khan, was a close associate of former Karnataka chief minister, Gundu Rao who affectionately referred to his mentor as ‘Father Mother Khan’.

Khan was part of the Sanjay Gandhi brigade during the Emergency and was allegedly involved in several unsavoury incidents. But Gundu Rao always went to his rescue.

He was the general secretary of the state Youth Congress and was a member of the Legislative Council from 1974 to 1976.  Khan was elected to the Rajya Sabha twice in 1976 and 1982. He was also associated with various organisations connected with sports. He was vice-president of the Indian Olympic Association.

The former Rajya Sabha member was known for his love for gardens and won accolades for maintaining the best garden in Delhi in his MP bungalow. Back in Kodagu after his controversial political innings, Khan had been nurturing his garden and has been holding annual private flower show since 1998.

Khan was married to a Kodavathi. He leaves behind his wife and three daughters. The funeral will be held at Rasulpur in Guddehosur in Kodagu on Friday.

source: http://www.coorgnews.in / CoorgNews.in / Home> General News / July 21st, 2016

F.M. Khan passes away

Kodagu, KARNATAKA :

Faiz Mohammed Khan, popularly known as F.M. Khan, former Rajya Sabha member and Congress leader, died in his Balayatrie Estate in Somwarpet taluk of Kodagu on Thursday.

A close associate of the former Chief Minister R. Gundu Rao, Mr. Khan (82) leaves behind his wife and three daughters.

Family sources said Mr. Khan passed away around 11.30 a.m. on Thursday.

The funeral will be held on Friday at 10 a.m. at Rasulpur in Guddehosur in Kodagu, according his niece Gazala Khan.

Mr. Khan was involved in the anti-Hindi agitation and later joined the Congress. He became the general secretary of State Youth Congress before becoming a member of the Legislative Council in 1974.

Mr. Khan was elected to the Rajya Sabha first in 1976 and for the second time in 1982. Mr. Khan was also a former vice-president of the Indian Olympic Association. Having been away from politics for more than two decades, Mr. Khan used to hold an annual flower show at his estate.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Mysuru – July 22nd, 2016

F.M. Khan dead

Kodagu, KARNATAKA :

Former Rajya Sabha member and Congress leader Faiz Mohammed Khan, popularly known as F.M. Khan, died in his Balayatrie estate in Kodagu on Thursday. A close associate of former Chief Minister R. Gundu Rao, he leaves behind his wife and three daughters.

Family sources said Mr. Khan (82) died at around 11.30 a.m. on Thursday. The funeral will be held at 10 a.m. at Rasulpur in Guddehosur in Kodagu on Friday, according his niece, Gazala Khan.

Mr. Khan entered politics in the mid-Sixties during the anti-Hindi agitation, and then joined the Congress led by former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. He became the General Secretary of State Youth Congress before becoming a member of the Legislative Council in 1974. Mr. Khan was a two-time Rajya Sabha MP, elected in 1976 and in 1982. He was also a former Vice-President of Indian Olympic Association (IOA).

He had been away from politics for more than two decades. He was holding an annual flower show at his Balayatri estate in Somwarpet taluk.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Karnataka / Special Correspondent / Mysuru – June 21st, 2016

Indra on Wajid Ali Shah’s throne!

The city of etiquette -Bada Imambara complex of Lucknow / Photo: Rajeev Bhatt
The city of etiquette -Bada Imambara complex of Lucknow / Photo: Rajeev Bhatt

“The Other Lucknow” captures the syncretic traditions of the city

Guru Dutt’s immensely popular film Chaudhvin Ka Chand opens with a Shakeel Budayuni song sung by Mohammad Rafi and composed by Ravi. The song  Ye Lakhnau Ki Sarzameen sums up Lucknow and the essence of its famed cultural heritage. Perhaps, no other city in the sprawling Hindi-speaking region evokes such nostalgia, romance, devotion and attachment as Banaras and Lucknow do.

So far, for nearly a century, we used to go back to Abdul Halim Sharar’s classic “Guzishta Lakhnau” that vividly describes the city’s cultural and social life, customs, traditions and history in great detail. This was serialised in the form of articles between 1913 and 1920 in Urdu literary journal “Dilgudaz” that Sharar had launched in 1887. Later, the articles were brought out as a book with a rather longish title “Hindustan mein mashriqi tamaddun ka akhiri namoona: Lakhnau” (Lucknow: The last example of Oriental culture in India). However, the world knows it simply as “Guzishta Lakhnau” (The Lucknow of the Old). National Book Trust published a Hindi translation in 1971 titled “Purana Lakhnau” (The Old Lucknow) with a scholarly introduction written by eminent Urdu critic Mohammad Hasan.

Born in 1860, Abdul Halim went to Matiaburz when he was nine years old. Matiaburz was the place near Calcutta (now Kolkata) where the deposed Nawab of Lucknow, Wajid Ali Shah, had shifted in 1856. How close his family was with the Nawab can be gauged from the fact that his maternal grandfather had gone to London to present Wajid Ali Shah’s case before Queen Victoria.

When still in his teens, Abdul Halim started writing and adopted the nom de plume ‘Sharar’ (spark). His book is a treasure trove of information about the history and culture of Lucknow which was a truly unique city representing the famed Ganga-Jamuni culture.

Wajid Ali Shah, the last Nawab, was an accomplished poet, musician, dancer, actor and dramatist. Urdu drama owes its beginning to him and dance-dramas like “Inder Sabha”, which he commissioned, where Indra, the king of Hindu gods, would sit on a throne wearing a dress that resembled that of the Nawab himself and fairies would sing thumris in Braj bhasha while conversing in chaste Urdu. What better picture of a syncretic culture can we find elsewhere?

Sharar divided the book into three parts and devoted the first two parts to the history of Awadh and Lucknow and that of the nawabs of Awadh. The third and the last part is the one that introduces us to the way people of Lucknow dressed, talked, ate, sang and danced, set new standards of cultured behaviour and etiquette, gathered to celebrate religious and social festivals at fairs, and offered an example of harmonious communal living. It was also a great centre of the Shias.

TheOtherLucknowMPOs16jul2016

Now, Vani Prakashan, which is essentially a publishing house of Hindi books, has come out with a book on Lucknow in English in collaboration with the Ayodhya Research Institute, an autonomous organisation of the Uttar Pradesh government. Titled “The Other Lucknow: An Ethnographic Portrait of a City of Undying Memories and Nostalgia”, it is the outcome of a research project headed by social anthropologist Professor Nadeem Hasnain, who has put the book together.

NadeemHasnainMPOs17jul2016

The book appropriately opens with a poem that the Jnanpith award winning poet Kunwar Narain, who spent most of his creative life in the city, has written on Lucknow. It has been reproduced in Hindi which lends a special flavour to the book as the rest of it is a collection of articles, reports and analysis written in English. It is a sort of counterfoil to Sharar’s book as it brings the story of Lucknow in its fullness up to the present times.

“The Other Lucknow” is in a class of its own as it can equally serve a tourist as a guide book and an intellectual who wants to know and understand the history, culture, politics, arts and crafts, business and trade, literature, music and dance, architecture and religion – both past and present.

The book opens with a scholarly article “A Short Cultural History” by noted scholar Sandria Freitag followed by an excellent survey of the city’s social fabric underling its diversity. The survey is based on field research and informs us that Kashmiri Pandits, Bengalis, Punjabis, Sindhis, Malayalis, Oriyas, Maharashtrians and Assamese have also become an integral part of Lucknow’s population. It also offers a detailed description of the religious and caste communities residing in the city. In addition to paying close attention to the mohallas, mandis, bastis, landmarks, arts and craft, music and dance, religious places, Ram Leela, qawwalis and danstangoi, the book brings out the city’s Bollywood connection.

It concludes with an article on Dalit imaginations, laying bare the story of the mega monuments and parks created by former Chief Minister Mayawati to commemorate Dalit icons.

One is not surprised to read, as quoted by Nadeem Hasnain to begin his introduction, what William Russel, correspondent of The Times, London wrote in 1858 about Lucknow: “Not Rome, not Athens, nor Constantinople, not any city I have ever seen appears to me so striking and so beautiful as this.”

The writer is a senior literary critic

Corrections & Clarifications:

This article has been edited for a factual error.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Metroplus / by Kuldeep Kumar / July 09th, 2016