Monthly Archives: May 2018

Life in black and white

Vernawada, Palanpur, GUJARAT :

In a career spanning 70 years, A.L. Syed became one of the important figures of 20th-century Indian photography. Working in black and white, his apparently neutral stance conceals a deeply compassionate vision of human existence,  says  HAVOVI ANKLESARIA.

THIS collection of 93 masterly duotone photographs by Abid Mian Lal Mian Syed is a tribute to the man and a selection of his work. In a career that spanned 70 years, he was perhaps one of the most important figures in the world of 20th-century Indian photography. Born in 1904, Syed spent his childhood in Palanpur where he and his brother became the official photographers of Palanpur State and much of their professional work was done for the royal families of various North Indian States.

In 1923 Syed won first prize in The Illustrated Weekly of India Photo Contest for his photograph of the sunrise at Chowpatty, unfortunately not included in this selection. He began publishing his work in 1925 and towards the end of his life claimed to have been published in every Indian magazine. In 1935, he won the Popular Photography award for his photograph “Traveller of the East, Palanpur” and, with it, instant international recognition.

For generations of viewers overwhelmed by colour, the black and white image is the medium of the master-craftsman and Syed does not disappoint. His eye is impeccable. These are wonderfully evocative photographs sans colour but with varying intensities of light and shadow. O.P. Sharma’s Foreword is slightly overburdened with accolades, but he does a good job of introducing his subject. Syed’s range was vast — from portraits of the rich and powerful to day-to-day village scenes. Much of the attraction of the photographs is the strong emphasis on line and form, particularly the section on his historical buildings and religious monuments. Like many of his generation, he was a keen hunter, but in this collection there are no trophies, only living birds and animals.

The book begins with a series of portraits of the royal families of Northern India in their resplendent gear. Most of the portraits are taken in isolation. The fixed frontal alignment, the expression of supreme assurance from individuals who know their social and political identity, symbolise a way of life and attitudes that are somewhat diminished in contemporary India. The portraits are nonetheless important as a part of the national archive. The first photograph is a long shot of a very young Gayatri Devi of Jaipur seated in a dark room. Her freshness and youth contrasts sharply with the antique grandeur of her surroundings and accentuates the loneliness of her surroundings.

Syed was obsessed with the desert, which penetrated his consciousness almost totally. The desert as star recalls the haunting scenes in the film “Lawrence of Arabia”, though Syed’s photographs predate the film by several decades. Most of his outdoor photographs have a feel of desolation. Even relatively busy scenes evoke a sense of vastness. One of the great classics of this collection and possibly in the history of photography is “Different Climb, Jaisalmer” in which a camel is being drawn up a sand dune. The camel and the man are not in prominent focus. What is emphasised is the sharp angle of the dune’s gradient, evoking the terror and seductiveness of this featureless terrain.

In “Desert Child”, child and lamb pose in front of the camera unselfconsciously. Innocence declares itself without surrendering to the “cutesy bunny” manipulations traditionally associated with photographs of children and animals. Their vulnerability is brought into focus in the context of a remorseless desert existence.

Perhaps one of the most extraordinary photographs in this collection is “Risky Balance” showing a man perched on a rope on one leg with a donkey strapped to his back. The upward tilt of the camera captures the perfect equipoise of the acrobat featured against a dull grey sky. But it is not simply the showmanship that amazes. The image resonates with a sense of perilous uncertainty of living on the edge with no guarantees and of having to depend on skills whose rewards are irregular. Indeed the title is ironic in a way that Syed may not have intended.

In 1971 Syed developed Parkinson’s disease, but continued to work. He died in 1991. Towards the end of his life, he was critical of contemporary Indian photographers and photo-journalists for parading the spectacle of poverty and human misery to satisfy the international market. Syed’s camera was not an instrument of authorship. There is nothing of the vicarious or the gratuitous in these pictures. The frame is a medium of documentation whose artistry is concerned with the simple, direct act of viewing. His apparently neutral stance conceals a deeply compassionate vision of human existence as one of isolation, loneliness and incompatibility.

Visions from the Inner Eye: Photographic Art of A.L. Syed, Introduction by O.P. Sharma, Mapin Publishing Pvt. Ltd., p.111, Rs. 1000.

source:  http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu, Online Edition  / Home> Literary Review / January 06th, 2002

A. L. Syed (1904-1991)

Vernawada, Palanpur, GUJARAT :

ALSyed01MPOs26may2018

Abidmian Lalmian Syed (1904-1991), more popularly known as A.L. Syed, is the Doyen of Indian photography. He is regarded as one of the key figures whose works have captured the glory and aura of the Princely States of pre-Independence India.

Born on February 2, 1904, in Vernawada, a village 16 kms from Palanpur, he spent his early childhood in the town where his father was hakim of the Royal family. It was a school tour of Mumbai in 1923 that played an important role in shaping his life. On that trip, a photograph he clicked of sunset at Chowpatty won him the First Prize in Illustrated Weekly of India’s snap shot competition. For the next five decades, his photographs were regularly featured on the pages of the Weekly.

Morning Time In Dyara - 1938 - A. L. Syed
Morning Time In Dyara – 1938
– A. L. Syed

In 1925, his images first began appearing in Kumar, a Gujarati magazine, edited by well- known artist Ravi Shankar Raval, and he was a regular contributor, with photos and feature articles till the publication ceased in 1940. 

At that time he was already working with his elder brother, K.L. Syed, a well known freelance and also official court photographer in Palanpur. But unlike his brother, A.L. went beyond portraits, and his famous photograph ‘Traveller of the East’ taken in 1934, won international recognition and was published as one of the world’s best photographs in Odhan Press Home Library series. Since then it has been a part of over 40 international exhibitions and winner of the annual Popular Photography award in 1935, and later became part of the famous Hutchinson Collection in the USA.

Street Sweeper - 1938 - A. L. Syed
Street Sweeper – 1938
– A. L. Syed

One of his many one-man shows was inaugurated by the then President of India, V.V. Giri, on the occasion of the 6th Convention of the Federation of Indian Photography hosted by the Camera Society, Delhi.

Another of his photographs, ‘Difficult Ascent’ was chosen for an award from among the 2,500 received from 15 Asia Pacific countries in the Asia Pacific Cultural Center for the UNESCO (ACCU) Photo Contest in Tokyo in 1977, and in 1980 he was given the honour of inaugurating a photographic exhibition organized by Illustrated Weekly of India to commemorate its centenary. Later in 1983, he was one of the 10 eminent photographers of the world to receive the India International Photographic Council’s highest honour, the Honorary Fellowship for outstanding contribution and service to various branches of photography. 

Mr. Syed was more than a photographer; he was a master artist, highly respected in Indiaand abroad, both professionally and personally. His skill in bringing alive remarkable images of day to day life around the country and crafting exquisite portraits have made his work live long after he passed away on August 30, 1991.

source: http://www.palanpuronline.com / Palanpur Online / Home> Personalities

Danish Ali’s moment in the sun

Hapur, UTTAR PRADESH / NEW DELHI / KARNATAKA :

Key player: JD(S) leader Danish Ali (left) with party supremo H.D. Deve Gowda.
Key player: JD(S) leader Danish Ali (left) with party supremo H.D. Deve Gowda.

Gowda loyalist and JD(S) stalwart piloted alliance with Congress

The speed with which the Congress-Janata Dal(S) alliance came about on the afternoon of May 15 was a matter of much surprise to those who knew the strained relations between the two parties. That the alliance was stitched up, publicly announced and on the road to Raj Bhavan far ahead of the BJP’s move, was the product of three days of intense backroom talks between the two parties.

While the role of Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha Ghulam Nabi Azad is now well-known, the part played by JD(S)’ secretary general Kunwar Danish Ali remained unknown until he made it to all the photo-ops of Karnataka Chief Minister-designate H.D. Kumaraswamy with Congress president Rahul Gandhi.

According to sources, it was a midnight call between Mr. Azad and Mr. Ali on May 13, two days before the results were out, that set the ball rolling.

“It was clear to the JD(S) that talk of a secret deal with the BJP during the campaign had resulted in a desertion by minorities. The Congress, too, anticipated a less than stellar performance,” said a source. Mr. Ali was instrumental in speaking to both former prime minister Deve Gowda and Mr. Kumaraswamy about Mr. Azad’s call, but only on the night of May 14.

“Mr. Deve Gowda just told him to speak to Mr. Kumaraswamy, while the latter was a bit apprehensive after the bitter campaign by the Congress,” said a source. Mr. Deve Gowda was for a wait and watch approach, sources said, but Mr. Kumaraswamy, once convinced by Mr. Ali, issued a public statement sealing the alliance.

“He was convinced that this alliance would have far-reaching consequences for the 2019 polls too,” said a source.

Mr. Ali, 54, had also sewn up the party’s alliance with the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) and the All Indian Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) before the polls, with the BSP contesting in 20 seats and winning one, a historic first for them.

He entered politics as the national president of the Janata Dal student wing in 1994, as a student in Delhi’s Jamia Millia Islamia University, and has stuck with the Gowdas through thick and thin. He came to the attention of the former prime minister especially during the 1994 Assembly polls in Karnataka when he was speaking at a rally in Ramanagara.

In his more than quarter of a century with the Janata Dal(S) and its earlier avatar, Mr. Ali has contested one Assembly poll from Garhmukhteswar in Uttar Pradesh, the State he hails from. Apart from his grand uncle, Kunwar Mahmood Ali, who owed allegiance to the Indian National Lok Dal under late prime minister Chaudhary Charan Singh, and was Governor of Madhya Pradesh between 1992-93, no one else from his family is in politics.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Nistula Hebbar / New Delhi – May 23rd, 2018

First verse of the Koran in 6,000 different styles

Lucknow, UTTAR PRADESH :

New Delhi :

His inclination towards calligraphy was realised way back in school, when he frequently labelled the notebooks of his classmates with their names written in beautiful artistic forms.

However, for 60-year old Hashim Akhtar Naqvi, an architect by profession and calligrapher by interest, the inclination became a life-long devotion when he took upon the task of writing the first verse of the Holy Koran in as many stylised forms as possible.

At last count, the Lucknow based artist had already written the verse in over 6000 styles. His innovative faculties are still as enthusiastic as they were when he started the work, ensuring that he can smoothly go on to add more to his stock.

Recognised by the Limca book of records for his unique venture, the collection of the artist was recently displayed in the capital at the Indira Gandhi national centre for arts, as part of the programme, Aqeedat ke Rang, an exhibition of expressions of devotion in Islam.

When I started blending the verse into artistic designs, I felt I would hardly be able to proceed beyond 8 or 10 forms. But the ideas kept coming and the verse kept repeating itself through my fingers until there was a collection of over 6000 styles, and the venture has not yet ended says Naqvi.

The Arabic verse, Bismillah-ir-Rahman-ir-Rahim, translated as, In the Name of Allah, most beneficient, most merciful, which is recited by Muslims before performing any major or minor task is also represented by the number 786.

Blending his architectural vision to his innate artistic capacity, Naqvi who has been experimenting with the script of the verse for over 20 years, has produced some genuinely original work of calligraphy.

What makes it even more interesting is the fact that his calligraphic pursuits derive very little influence from the existing Arabic calligraphic forms but is largely innovative and in some cases adopts from the scripts of regional Indian languages. I have tried to include the influence of the script of a number of

Indian languages. including Hindi, Bengali, Telugu, Tamil, Punjabi, Gujarati, Malayalam and Kannada, he says.

PTI

source: http://www.financialexpress.com / Financial Express / Home> Archive> Fe300 / New Delhi – April 09th, 2008

Tributes paid to Vakkom Khader

Vakkom Village (Thiruvananthapuram District) , KERALA :

On September 10, 1943, a young man named Abdul Khader was martyred in the fight for India’s independence.

Also known as Vakkom Khader, he was a member of Subash Chandra Bose’s Indian National Army (INA) and was sentenced to death for “conspiring to wage war against the British King.”

Commemorating Khader on the occasion of the 73rd anniversary of his martyrdom, Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said it was important for the younger generations to know about the struggles of Khader and his fellow freedom fighters, so that they appreciate the freedom and rights they enjoy.

This is especially important today, given that questionable interpretations of patriotism and nationalism have arisen of late, he said.

The Chief Minister inaugurated the memorial meeting organised on Saturday by the INA Hero Vakkom Khader National Foundation.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Kerala / by Staff Reporter / Thiruvananthapuram – September 11th, 2016

Free Heart Surgeries for Children at AMU Medical College

Aligarh, UTTAR PRADESH :

The collaboration with the Healing Little Hearts charity was initiated by AMU Vice Chancellor Tariq Mansoor, Tabassum Shahab (Pro Vice-Chancellor) and Shamshul Zoha, an AMU alumnus.

File photo of Aligarh Muslim University campus.
File photo of Aligarh Muslim University campus.

Aligarh:

Free heart surgeries will be available for children with congenital defects at the Aligarh Muslim University’s (AMU) Jawahar Lal Nehru Medical College (JNMC) after the varsity signed a deal with a British charity.

The collaboration with the Healing Little Hearts (HLH) charity was initiated by AMU Vice Chancellor Tariq Mansoor, Tabassum Shahab (Pro Vice-Chancellor) and Shamshul Zoha, an AMU alumnus.

Javaid Akhter (Registrar), Mohammad Hanif Beg (Chairperson, Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery) and Azam Haseem signed the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with HLH’s Sanjiv Nichani (Consultant Paediatric Interventionist) and Zoha.

“Since independent researches show yearly births of over 100,000 babies with congenital heart defects in India, it is high time to take necessary steps for helping these children with heart ailments,” said professor Beg.

Many children requiring corrective heart surgeries do not get treated due to financial constraints and even the affordable treatment available is sub-standard with poor expertise.

JNMC provides affordable treatment with state-of-art facilities to patients from underprivileged sections, he added.​

source: http://www.news18.com / News18 / Home> India / by IANS / May 24th, 2018

Man Breaks Ramadan Fast To Save 8-Year-Old Thalassemic Child

Gopalgang District , BIHAR :

The boy was rushed to the emergency of Sadar hospital by his father. The patient complained of uneasiness and weakness, and required immediate blood transfusion.

Patna :

A Muslim man in Bihar chose humanity over religious customs, broke his Ramadan fast to donate blood to an eight-year-old Hindu thalassemic boy and saved his life. Jawed Alam on Tuesday donated blood to Rajesh Kumar in Gopalganj district, a district health official said.

The boy was rushed to the emergency of Sadar hospital by his father. The patient complained of uneasiness and weakness, and required immediate blood transfusion.

There was no blood matching Rajesh’s blood group available in the blood bank. They said it would take at least two-to-three days to arrange it.

The boy’s condition deteriorated quickly. His father had travelled some 200 km from the Kuchaikote area and was fast losing hope as he waited in the corridors of the blood bank.

It was then that a hospital sweeper and cleaner, informed Anwar Hussain, a member of District Blood Donor Team (DBDT) about the child.

Mr Hussain requested his friend Jawed Alam, an active member of DBDT to rush to Sadar hospital.

“When my friend Anwar requested me to donate blood to a seriously ill thalassemia patient, I politely informed him that I was observing Ramzan fast.

“But he convinced me to arrive and consulted doctors. At first even the doctors refused my offer as I was fasting,” Mr Jawed said.

“They agreed only after I took their advise, broke my fast and consumed fruit juice and some solids,” the young Muslim man in his 30s said.

He said: “My religion teaches me to help a fellow human first, so I broke my fast and donated blood to save little Rajesh. Islam preaches that humanity is bigger than everything.”

Thalassemia is a blood disorder and a thalassemic patient needs blood transfusion after every three-to-four weeks.

source: http://www.ndtv.com / NDTV / Home> Sections> All India / by Indo-Asian News Service / May 23rd, 2018

Double Amputee Swimmer Masudur Rahman Baidya Passes Away

Kolkata, WEST BENGAL :

India swimmer Masudur Rahman Baidya, the only man with amputated legs to cross the English Channel in 1997, died on Sunday morning after a heart attack, according to family sources

Masudur Rahman Baidya
Masudur Rahman Baidya

Kolkata:

India swimmer Masudur Rahman Baidya, the only man with amputated legs to cross the English Channel in 1997, died on Sunday morning after a heart attack, according to family sources.

The 46-year-old was not keeping well for a couple of days. His family in Topsia rushed him to a nearby hospital.

“He had a major heart attack and doctors put him in ventilator. Doctors tried their best but he passed away within one hour,” said his sister Monira Rahman.

Masudur is survived by his mother, wife, and two daughters.

source: http://www.mid-day.com / mid-day.com / Home> Sports News> Other Sports News / pTI / April 27th, 2015

The Calligrapher’s Den

Amritsar, PUNJAB :SaraiAmanatKhanMPOs24may2018

His was the hand behind the Arabic inscriptions on the Taj Mahal, which have captivated tourists from across the world.

But today, the mausoleum and the dwelling of Amanat Khan, the calligrapher of the Taj Mahal, lies in decay, neglect and encroachment.

Sarai Amanat Khan, about 29 kilometres south-east of Amritsar on Tarn Taran Attari road, was built by Khan in 1640, where he lived a reclusive life following the death of his elder brother Afzal Khan, the prime minister of Shah Jahan.

But here too, Khan, who came to India from Iran in 1609 and whose real name was Abdul Haq before being conferred the title of “Amanat Khan” by Shah Jahan for his impressive calligraphy, has left the imprint of his craft — the sarai has beautiful Islamic calligraphy inscribed on its fading blue and yellow tiles.

Sarai Amanat Khan was also a guest house, where travellers on the Lahore-Agra route on the Grand Trunk Road would stop for rest in the middle of a long strenuous journey. They would live in the small rooms inside the sarai, and pray in the adjacent mosque and large courtyard.

Today, Sarai Amanat Khan is dilapidated — the Nanakshahi bricks are falling off, and the eastern gate is in disarray; some 800 feet below it is Khan’s ruined tomb.

The sarai is in the middle of a densely populated village, also named after Amanat Khan.

With several shops in its immediate vicinity, the Archaeological Survey of India-protected monument is a site of rampant encroachment. Several families live inside the rooms of the sarai illegally, and claim to have been doing so since Partition. “I was born here,” says 50-year-old Ranjit Singh. “People have been living here since 1947. There had been talks about giving us alternative land and compensation, but those have not materialised,” he adds.

source: http://www.archive.indianexpress.com / The Indian Express / Home> Archive / by Navjeevan Gopal, New Delhi / July 29th, 2012

Subedar Abdul Sattar attains martyrdom in the holy month of Ramzan

Mawa Village, Nagaur District, RAJASTHAN :

Subedar Abdul Sattar
Subedar Abdul Sattar

Srinagar (Jammu and Kashmir) [India]

A Subedar in the Indian Army took his last breath on Sunday, attaining martyrdom during the holy month of Ramzan, after he had sustained burn injuries to around 50 percent of his body while trying to prevent a weapons cache from getting razed by a fire in Jammu and Kashmir’s Gurez.
Subedar Abdul Sattar belonged to 13th Batallion of the Grenadier Regiment.
On May 12 the fire started in the camp of the unit where Sattar, was posted. Within minutes, the whole store of the unit was engulfed in fire, and once he saw it, there was no second choice but to fight.
He plunged into the inferno and managed to pull out the ammunition and weapons, but in the process sustained burn injuries, and was immediately rushed for medical treatment.
Major General Dilawar Singh (Retd), while speaking to ANI said that the training and ethos of the Armed Forces motivates a soldier to accomplish extraordinary feats and to rise above the boundaries of religion and caste.
“A soldier serves the country and the tricolour. Brave hearts like Subedar Sattar is the glowing example of how a soldier can do extraordinary when the testing times come and they can sacrifice even their lives,” he said.
The injured soldier was later taken by a helicopter to Srinagar, where he was admitted to the Army Hospital (Research & Referral). He fought for his life for eight days and passed away on May 20.
The soldier hailed from the village Mawa near Didwana in Nagaur District of Rajasthan. His mortal remains were taken to his village for burial with state honour. A total of 5000 people, including villagers and Army officials congregated to pay their homage to the martyr.
Minister Yunus Khan and MLA Thakur Manwar Singh of Ladnun attended the funeral. The soldiers from the nearby areas were also present to pay their tribute.
More than 300 serving and ex-servicemen of the Grenadiers attended the last rights.
Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje spoke with the father of the soldier.
The commanding officer of the unit, Colonel Ghosh said, “The loss of Subedar Abdul Sattar is irreparable. His memory will always be etched in our hearts. I wish to assure all elders and fellow officers that from here on, his family is the battalion’s responsibility and we shall look after them for the rest of their lives.”
He is survived by his wife Muni Banu, five daughters and one son. Sub Abdul Sattar’s youngest child, son Danish (six-year-old) laid the wreath. It is widely believed in Islam that death during the holy month of Ramzan is doubly blessed, Subedar Sattar will, no doubt, rest in peace. (ANI)

source: http://www.aninews.in / ANI / Home> News> India / May 24th, 2018