Monthly Archives: April 2020

Mangaluru MLA helps Italy returnee reach home at Kulai

Mangaluru, KARNATAKA :

MLA U T Khader with the family of Shree Madhu Bhat at her house in Kulai in Mangaluru. (DH Photo)
MLA U T Khader with the family of Shree Madhu Bhat at her house in Kulai in Mangaluru. (DH Photo)

Mangaluru MLA U T Khader has helped a PhD scholar, who had arrived in India from Italy, to reach her home at Kulai in Mangaluru from Bengaluru on Sunday.

Shree Madhu Bhat, a PhD student at the University of Turin in Italy, had arrived in Delhi in a  special flight arranged by the Government of India.

“After completing the quarantine period in Delhi, she was brought to Bengaluru in a special bus arranged by the central government on April 11. However, she could not reach Mangaluru owing to non-availability of any mode of transportation. Her parents had contacted district administration seeking help and also me through a common friend. When I received the information, I was in Bengaluru and brought her in my car,” Khader said.

She is the daughter of Shivaram Bhat and Shailaja Bhat.

After completing the quarantine period, she along with others were sent in a special bus to their respective states on April 8.

The bus had travelled via Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, and reached Bengaluru on April 11.

The MLA had shared a photograph of the family of Shree Madhu Bhat on his Facebook page.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> State> Mangaluru / by Naina J A / DHNS, Mangaluru / April 13th, 2020

Retired soldier shot by militants, succumbs

Buchroo Village (Kulgam District), JAMMU & KASHMIR :

Srinagar :

A retired army soldier shot by militants on Sunday evening in Jammu and Kashmir”s Kulgam district succumbed to injuries in a Srinagar hospital on Monday.

Militants had fired at Abdul Hamid Mandoo, the retired soldier in the Buchroo village of the Kulgam district on Sunday evening.

He was shifted in a critical condition to government medical college hospital in Anantnag district from where doctors referred him to Srinagar for specialised treatment.

Police sources said the retired soldier succumbed to injuries in the Army”s 92 base hospital in Srinagar on Monday.

A manhunt has been launched to trace the assassins.

–IANS

sq/dpb

source: http://www.outlookindia.com / Outlook / Home> The News Scroll / by IANS / April 13th, 2020

Kerala girl sketches Spanish street, wins hearts

Thrikkakara,  KERALA :

The pencil sketch of a Spanish street during the COVID-19 epidemic drawn by Shehana Fathima.
The pencil sketch of a Spanish street during the COVID-19 epidemic drawn by Shehana Fathima.

Work depicted an ‘eerie’ locality during the pandemic

For Shehana Fathima, a 20-year-old engineering student from Thrikkakara, the evening of March 24 will always be memorable.

Just an hour before the Prime Minister announced a 21-day nationwide lockdown, the budding artist posted on Instagram a pencil sketch that portrayed two artistes serenading an eerily empty Spanish street from their balconies even as quarantined neighbours emerged on their balconies to enjoy the music.

The video of noted Spanish pianist Alberto Gestoso and saxophone player Alex Lebron Torrent performing Canadian singer Celine Dion’s My Heart Will Go On in the middle of March had gone viral.

Musicians take notice

The youngster was on cloud nine when hardly a couple of hours later she posted the image, both the musicians praised her work, with Mr. Torrent even promising to repost it from his Instagram account.

Shehana Fathima working on her latest picture.
Shehana Fathima working on her latest picture.

Later, the partner of one of the artistes also personally messaged her.

“The video was going around for a while, and that inspired me. It took me a day to complete the picture. Actually, I don’t know how to draw buildings, and I simply replicated the scene from the video,” said Ms. Shehana, a self-taught painter who is still basking in the glory of completely unexpected adulations.

Hoping to go further in the world of arts, she is now using the lockdown period to master digital drawing tools.

Other mediums

Having started with painting two years ago, the youngster has since then moved on to other mediums and a wider canvass.

“I plan to conduct an exhibition and even a workshop once I have enough collection of works,” Shehana Fathima said.

source: http//www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Kerala / by M. P. Praveen / Kochi – April 10th, 2020

Oxford University Press launches ‘Poetry of Belonging’: Muslim Imaginings of India 1850–1950

Mahmudabad (Sitapur District), UTTAR PRADESH :

Oxford University Press launched ‘Poetry of Belonging – Muslim Imaginings of India 1850-1950’ by Ali Khan Mahmudabad. The book engages with the question of Muslim rootedness in India

Oxford University Press launches ‘Poetry of Belonging’: Muslim Imaginings of India 1850–1950

Oxford University Press, the world’s largest university press, launched ‘Poetry of Belonging – Muslim Imaginings of India 1850-1950’ by Ali Khan Mahmudabad on Wednesday. The book engages with the question of Muslim rootedness in India.

The book launch took place in the presence of the author Ali Khan Mahmudabad, Ali Khan Mahmudabad is an academic, columnist, and public speaker. This was followed by a panel discussion and remarks on the books with eminent panellists.

The Poetry of Belonging is an exploration of north-Indian Muslim identity through poetry at a time when the Indian nation-state did not exist. Between 1850 and 1950, when pre-colonial forms of cultural traditions, such as the mushairas, were undergoing massive transformations to remain relevant, certain Muslim ‘voices’ configured, negotiated, and articulated their imaginings of what it meant to be Muslim. Using poetry as an archive, the book traces the history of the mushairas, the site of poetic performance, as a way of understanding public spaces through the changing economic, social, political, and technological contexts of the time.

The book seeks to locate the changing ideas of ‘watan’ (homeland) and hubb-e watanī (patriotism) in order to offer new perspectives on how Muslim intellectuals, poets, political leaders, and journalists conceived of and expressed their relationship to India and to the transnational Muslim community.

The volume aims to spark a renegotiation of identity and belonging, especially at a time when Muslim loyalty to India has yet again emerged as a politically polarizing question.

The Author is currently an assistant professor of history and political science at Ashoka University, Sonipat.

source: http://www.nationalherald.com / National Herald / Home> Reviews & Recommendations / by NH Web Desk / February 27th, 2020

Woman, 50, rides 1,400 km on scooty to bring back son stranded in Andhra

Bodhan Town (Nizamabad District) , TELANGANA :

Razia Begum, a government teacher in Bodhan town of Nizamabad district, started her journey for Nellore, 700 km away in Andhra Pradesh Monday morning and returned home Wednesday evening.

Razia Begum with her son Nizamuddin.

Razia Begum with her son Nizamuddin. (Sourced)

A 50-year old woman from Telangana’s Nizamabad district travelled on a two-wheeler to Nellore 700 km away to pick up her teen son stuck in Andhra Pradesh due to the COvid-19 lockdown.

Razia Begum, a government teacher in Bodhan town of Nizamabad district, started her journey on Monday morning riding her Scooty and reached Nellore town in Andhra Pradesh on Tuesday afternoon. She picked up her 17-year old son Mohammed Nizamuddin, who was stuck at his friend’s place in Nellore, and headed back home. She was back by Wednesday evening, covering a total of 1,400 km in three days.

It helped that Bodhan assistant commissioner of police V Jayapal Reddy had helped her out with a letter that asked authorities to let her travel to Nellore and bring her son back. Razia Begum said she was stopped at several places by the police in the two states on account of the lockdown but was allowed to pass because of the police officer’s letter.

Razia narrated her tale to reporters at Kamareddy on her way to Bodhan on Wednesday. She had lost her husband 12 years ago due to illness and brought up her two children, a son and a daughter.

Nizamuddin, who completed his Class 12 in 2019, has been preparing for medical entrance examination by joining a coaching institute in Hyderabad. On March 12, Nizamuddin went to Nellore along with his friend whose father was hospitalised. The lockdown took them by surprise and he was stuck with his friend due to the lockdown imposed in the state on March 23.

Razia, who did not hear from her son for a long time, came to know that he was at his friend’s house in Nellore. “I approached the ACP and sought his help in bringing my son back to Bodhan. He gave me a letter permitting me to travel despite lockdown and also appealing to the Andhra Pradesh police to allow me to into the state,” she said.

“I travelled continuously through deserted roads and dusty villages midway. I was not scared at all,” she said.

The police stopped her at several places, but when they saw the letter from the Bodhan ACP, they allowed her to proceed. “Even at the inter-state borders, I had no issues, as the police cooperated with me. They advised me to take breaks for every two hours of journey so that I did not get tired,” she said.

She did not even stay in Nellore for a day, but immediately began her return journey. “The only wish to see my son gave me so much energy. Nothing more than that,” Razia said and thanked the police for their cooperation.

ACP Jayapal Reddy said he was very impressed by Razia’s determination to bring her son back home. “I was moved by her love for her son. I only requested all the police officers on the way from Bodhan to Nellore to allow her. She thanked me for the help I have rendered,” Reddy said.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Bengaluru / by Srinivasa Rao Apparasu , Hindustan Times,  Hyderabad / April 10th, 2020

Kerala Blasters’ player Zakeer Mundampara lends house for COVID-19 care

KERALA :

Kerala blasters E player Zakeer Mundampara is an inspiration for the people to be part of the initiatives to help the health workers and other people affected by Covid-19.

Zakeer Mundampara with his wife and daughter Mariyom. (File Photo)
Zakeer Mundampara with his wife and daughter Mariyom. (File Photo)

Malappuram :

Kerala Blasters E player Zakeer Mundampara is an inspiration for the people to be part of the initiatives to help the health workers and other people affected by COVID-19.

The young footballer has offered his two-storey residence at Areekode for COVID-19 care and leads an initiative to distribute food kits to the families affected by the infection.

“I’m going to stay with my seven-months pregnant wife at our house in Edavannappara. We will not be using the house at Areekode for at least next couple of months. So, my wife and I have decided to provide the vacant house for COVID-19 quarantine purposes or to accommodate the medical workers in the area. The house has three bedrooms and three bathrooms. Anyone who wants to use these facilities can contact me,” the India Super League (ISL) player said.

Mundampara announced his willingness to lend the house for COVID-19 care for free through his Facebook page recently. The former Santosh Trophy player is also active in helping the people hit by the pandemic.

“Our club, Areekode Chakkamthodu FC, in association with Al Sabah FC Dubai and FC Trikkaripur, has so far distributed 133 food kits to the families affected by the pandemic in the area. We will continue with such efforts to help the people affected by COVID-19 till this crisis ends,” he adds.

Though he will be active with his volunteering activities, Mundampara has decided to spend more time at his house at Edavannappara with wife Fasila and five-year-old daughter Mariyom. “I’m going to spend most of this lockdown time with my family. I will also be finding some time for football practices and small exercises at home. Other than that, not thinking of any busy football practice schedule during this lockdown,” he says.

The 28-year-old had played for Chennaiyin FC and Mumbai City FC in the ISL before becoming a part of Kerala Blasters. Mundampara had also played for Chirag United Club Kerala, Churchill Brothers and Mohun Bagan.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Good News / by Vishnu Prasad K P / Express News Service / April 08th, 2020

Before being angry at Tablighis, remember the coach who put India on global sporting scene

Hyderabad, TELANGANA / NEW DELHI :

Mohammad Ilyas Babar was a staunch supporter of the Tablighi Jamaat. He also spotted, trained and took Padma Shri Olympian Sriram Singh to dizzying heights.

Ilyas Babar | Commons
Ilyas Babar | Commons

Citizens of India may be angry with the Tablighi Jamaat , but let’s not forget at least one member of the Jamaat had put India on the global sporting scene with distinction. 

India’s celebrated athletics coach late Mohammad Ilyas Babar was a staunch supporter of the Tablighi Jamaat. He also spotted, trained and took Padma Shri Olympian Sriram Singh to dizzying heights. Sriram won a gold medal in 800 metres in two successive Asian Games and finished a creditable seventh in the Montreal Olympic Games in 1976.

Not many would know that Babar was a commerce graduate and champion athlete of the Osmania University in Hyderabad. But after he passed out from the National Institute of Sports in Patiala with the first batch of NIS coaches in 1961, he made Delhi his base.

Rajputana Rifles in Delhi hired Babar as the athletics coach, where he spotted Sriram Singh in 1967. And the rest, as they say, is history.

Babar at the Markaz

Whenever Babar was not on the tracks with Sriram and other top Indian athletes, he would be at Delhi’s Nizamuddin. He would teach underprivileged children at the Markaz and spend hours at the teashop then run by a man called Sami.

As a young runner, I was also under Babar’s tutelage. But he never ever discussed his religious views with us. In fact, it was Sami who told us that Babar Sahib used to teach at the Markaz.

Babar was a fakir in the sense that he never sought wealth. On the contrary, he spent whatever he had on Sriram and other athletes, even at the cost of his own three children.

Going to the Olympics

During the Olympic games, we asked him to go to Montreal to be with Sriram for the greatest race of his life. But he made up his mind to go only after Sriram Singh ran a brilliant race in heats on 23 July 1976.

Through the good efforts of then foreign secretary Jagat Mehta, we got a passport for Babar in a few hours and he was on board a flight to Montreal on 24 July. He saw Sriram’s final race on 25 July and was back at Nizamuddin by the evening of 27 July. In Montreal too, he stayed two nights in a masjid.

Babar never missed a namaz. When Sriram was training on the lawns at Rajpath, Babar would spread his janamaz and offer prayers under a jamun tree.

In the current coronavirus context, it feels sad that everyone at Nizamuddin or anywhere else with similar religious leanings is being painted with a brush of hatred. But before we do that, let us think of Babar and thousands of others who served the community with distinction. 

The author is a sports columnist and senior freelance journalist. Views are personal.

source: http://www.theprint.in / The Print / Home> Opinion / by Norris Pritam / April 07th, 2020

The Delhi prof who said tombs & mosques were not just ‘Muslim’, but ‘Indian Muslim’

NEW DELHI :

In the anxiety to label Indian architecture as Hindu, Buddhist, British imperial and Islamic, the buildings lost some of their power to evoke wonder and surprise.

Qutub Minar in New Delhi | Commons
Qutub Minar in New Delhi | Commons

In the 1950s and ’60s, visitors to Delhi’s Qutub Minar often saw a crowd of schoolchildren following an unlikely Pied Piper, a frail man in a white kurta and pyjama, wearing a Gandhi cap, and giving them their first lesson in art history. Mohammad Mujeeb was one of those iconic professors who communicated just as easily with schoolchildren as he did with college students and his colleagues. He instilled in them a love for historic cities, made them see the places as works of art.

In those years, the Delhi skyline and groundline were dominated by monuments. For many families, these landscapes were synonymous with Sunday picnics. For art historians, these spaces became popular hunting grounds, and a number of case studies on architecture took shape in the 1970s.

But the lay reader was more familiar with surveys of Indian architecture. Of these, Percy Brown’s books were the most sought after. His volumes, Indian Architecture (Buddhist and Hindu), and Indian Architecture (The Islamic Period), published in 1942, contain a mine of information. However, because he divided the theme in a binary, he missed out on capturing the special quality of the 14th-17th centuries — the cosmopolitanism in architecture — when rich and powerful rulers, irrespective of religion, engaged skilled artisans and engineers from across south and west Asia to design beautiful public spaces.

Architectural crossover 

In that era of increasing globalisation, artisans met and exchanged recipes for architectural design, and travelled great distances, confident of their patronage. Guilds from the Middle East were employed to design the great pillars of Yorkminster, and Indian stone-masons learned structural engineering from Uzbek architects. Chinese porcelain gave its name to the funerary monument Chini Ka Rauza (China Tomb) in Agra. British tourists to Italy brought back fragments of Roman sculpture to display proudly in their country estates, while Feroz Shah Tughlaq had two Ashoka pillars (only no one knew what they were) ferried to Delhi from Meerut and Topra (Haryana), to embellish his mosque and his estate on the Ridge.

James Fergusson, in the mid-19th century, had sought to make sense of the myriad buildings in India. He found it simplest to classify them by ‘style’. Function, it was assumed, shaped the form, and buildings were labelled ‘Buddhist’, ‘Hindu’ or ‘Islamic’. The term ‘Indo-Saracenic’ was coined to describe styles with elements of both, as well as for the British imperial style, which deliberately included decorative Indian elements. In this anxiety over labels, the buildings lost some of their power to evoke wonder and surprise, to speak to the hearts and minds of the people.

Indian-Muslim architecture

Both mosques and tombs adopted from and adapted to the local environment, which is why Mujeeb insists that they be described not as ‘Muslim’ but as ‘Indian Muslim’. They, and other public areas — streets and walled gardens — made for beautiful cities, with a quality of repose and of camaraderie. Soaring arches and minars (towers) connected the earth to the sky, to heaven. (Mujeeb was too much of a rationalist to fall for the belief that djinns lived in historic buildings and could fulfil people’s prayers.)

Communal practices do shape houses of worship — and there is a fundamental difference of form between a congregational masjid (‘beauty without mystery’) and a mandir, where there is mystic communion between deity and worshipper. As for the tomb: “[It] was a symbol of unifying life, death and eternity; primitive beliefs associated with kingship gave the royal tomb a mysterious significance…The tomb of a ruler was the expression of personality, of a force which the community needed to maintain its self-confidence in a world of conflicts,” Mujeeb wrote  in The Indian Muslims (1967). He was not averse to sounding tongue-in-cheek while describing Humayun’s mausoleum: “There is nothing we know of Humayun that would justify our regarding him as an outstanding personality; his tomb is much greater than he.”

The urban architecture of early modern India has some of the features of Persian or Turkish cities, but is most similar to those of Rajput kingdoms, contemporary with those of the Mughals. Both were shaped by the climate, conditioned by topography, the fact that they were built by skilled stone-masons rather than brickworkers, and by the deliberate choice of Indian ornamental motifs.

The Indian-Muslim architect rejoiced in being “free from the beginning, free from fear and hatred, from law and custom, from the conflicts of ideals and interests. There were no limits fixed except those of his own aptitude and means, and the nature and availability of structural material.” They created an architecture that was not just frozen music, but also frozen poetry. It was both the architecture of Urdu poetry and the poetry of our architecture that made cities in India the grandest in the early modern age.

This article is the seventh of an eight-part series on ‘Reading A City’ with Saha Sutra on www.sahapedia.org, an open online resource on the arts, cultures and heritage of India. 

Dr Narayani Gupta writes on urban history, particularly that of Delhi. Views are personal.

Read the series here.

source: http://www.theprint.in / The Print / Home> Opinion> Sahapedia / by Narayani Gupta / January 12th, 2020

Hyderabad’s Doctor Khan Family steps in to fight Coronavirus

Hyderabad, TELANGANA :

Hyderabad’s Doctor Khan Family steps in to fight Coronavirus 

Hyderabad:

Humanity comes first for a family of doctors who volunteered to treat coronavirus patients in Hyderabad.

Unmindful of their own safety, Dr. Mahboob Khan, his wife Dr Shahana Khan and daughter Dr. Rashika Khan have dedicated themselves to serve the poor and needy.

Dr. Mahboob Khan is currently posted as Medical Superintendent of the Chest Hospital, while his wife Dr. Shahana Khan is working as Assistant Professor at the Gandhi Hospital.

Dr. Shahana completed her MBBS from Kakatiya Medical College in Warangal before completing MD in Dermatology from Gandhi Medical College.  Stepping into her mother’s shoes, Dr. Rashika completed her MBBS from Gandhi Medical College. She is currently serving as House Surgeon at the Kornati Hospital.

Being the Superintendent of Chest Hospital, Dr. Mahboob Khan is at the forefront of fighting coronavirus. Dr. Shahana Khan although being a dermatologist has been deputed to treat COVID patients. Similarly, Rashika has also joined in to treat positive cases from March 26.

“These are testing times. We have got the opportunity to serve mankind. I feel we are collectively working towards a common goal of serving poor and needy. We have an 18-year-old son. Had he been a doctor, he too would have joined us in serving the needy,” said, Dr. Mahboob Khan

source: http://www.newsmeter.in / News Meter / Home> Hyderabad> Must Read / by Anurag Mallick / April 03rd, 2020

Meet the Muslim heroes helping Goa’s underprivileged

GOA :

Goa01Mpos05apr2020

Goa:

The increase in Covid19 cases is wreaking havoc in India with about 1251 confirmed cases as on March 31. While Maharashtra grapples with one of the highest number of positive cases in the country, neighboring Goa has also registered five positive cases as some suspects are reportedly quarantined under medical supervision.

There can be no more overlooking the fact that a major share of the nation’s working population are daily wage laborers who have now started suffering more due to the 21 days lockdown than the dangers of contracting the disease. Fear, uncertainty and hunger has led this weaker section to now walk on foot in the absence of transport facilities as they lay stranded miles away from their home states. While there can be no proper planning seen from the government’s sides, it is a ray of hope from civil societies and individuals who are taking the lead in caring for the needs of these weaker sections at such an hour of distress. These heroes, who feel the pain of the workers in unorganized sectors are collaborating sources and coming forward to provide basic meals and necessities to the poor.

“I am doing this for the sake of Allah,” says one such hero, 33-years-old Sarfaraz who is a social activist and member of Valpoi Municipal Council. Sarfaraz Sayed from Goa has set an example before more influential personalities sitting silent at this time by identifying a cluster of about 200 migrant laborers employed across north India where along with his team, are working day and night to provide basic meals. Sarfaraz is on duty voluntarily since day 1 of the lockdown, extending help and support tirelessly to the residents of his town by distributing meals to daily wage workers. In order to keep the infection from spreading for these workers – many of whom are homeless or are away from their home towns – his team has sealed an entire block meanwhile providing all the essential commodities to the residents at their door step.

“We should not forget our poor neighbors and other marginalized as have no sources and money to feed themselves and their family members,” he said, speaking with Twocircles.net. Sarfaraz opines that since this has emerged as a global pandemic, it is a threat to the whole humanity and it is in fact, the responsibility of all the citizens to together fight against the disease. “I am thankful to him for helping my family and making essential commodities available and taking care of working class,” said Mohammad Ibrahim, a beneficiary of Sarfaraz’s free meals programme.

In the same state, another cluster of about 400 families, of whom 40per cent are migrant laborers, are being provided meals, shelter and other essentials by a team of 40 youths who are on their toes since March 15, delivering services 24 hours. “Our schedule is hectic and our distribution work is risky during this time but we are satisfied that Allah has chosen us to serve humans,” expressed a jubilant Saddam Shaikh who is volunteering to serve daily meals to the daily wage laborers.  He added that the Deputy Collector and Municipal Councils, in association with the local police have issued passes to these volunteers for allowing them to fetch groceries for distribution.

Goa02Mpos05apr2020

“Our team personally visits him or her and sends them to quarantine for further medical observations,” said Akib Shaikh, a health care worker from the community health centre. Akib and his team are also frontliners in the country’s Corona battle. Visibly stressed, he refused to talk much about his duties and informed that since past 15 days they are keeping a strict eye on travelers who have come from other states or countries. When asked about government involvement in extending help to the poor, these heroes at the time of Corona distress expressed that as responsible citizens we must all strictly follow guidelines issues by both Central and State governments, adding that the health minister of Goa is doing a fantastic job to control the Covid19 outbreak.

A known social activist from the town Zubair Aga praised Akib and Sarfaraz’s nonstop contribution in this huge countrywide crisis. He added that these are real leaders devoting themselves to humanitarian causes as a real warrior. All praises for the health care workers, delivery service agents, and others, Zubair said, “We salute all of them who are doing commendable jobs even in such unfavorable circumstances.”

source: http://www.twocircles.net / TwoCircles.net / Home> Indian Muslim> Lead Story> Pandemic / by T.I. Inamday, TwoCircles.net / April 04th, 2020