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The life of a weave

Mubarakpur (Azamgarh District) , UTTAR PRADESH :

One of Abdullah’s designs
One of Abdullah’s designs

Abdullah, a recepient of the Sutrakar Samman Award, on how self help groups are giving weavers a new lease of life

“If you weave good pieces, you will get good returns, this is what I feel,” says Abdullah, whose words belie his 37 years. He is the recepient of the Sutrakar Samman Award 2017, which is presented annually by the Delhi Craft Council to a weaver for his innovation and skill

Abdullah is from Mubarakpur, a small town about 13 km from Azamgarh in Uttar Pradesh. Mubarakpur has been the bastion of Benares sari weaving. Over the years, it seemed to be losing its significance, but timely interventions have led to renewed interest among the weavers and consumers.

Passion for the loom

Abdullah has been weaving for over 25 years. What marks him out is his unceasing love for the loom and the willingness to learn. “Thankfully there have never been any complaints about my work. I have had long stints with master weavers who used to love my creations, I have worked independently and now I work with a SHG. I believe in my work.” His specialty is the khadua or weaving the brocaded borders and motifs for which Benarasis are known. “Khadna or khadai on the loom which is done using small attachments or tillis give that brocaded look. We have to see if the threads are uniformly drawn; they should not criss cross.”

Abdullah started weaving when he was 11; he learnt the technique from his father. His sisters would work on the brocaded pieces and he learnt from them. In a year or so, he was proficient enough to weave a sari on his own. When he was 20, he installed two hand looms in his house. “I used to buy the yarn and do my own designs. My saris had many takers.” However, when market conditions deteriorated it hit the weavers hard. Master weavers make saris for traders from Benares. Their earnings depend on what the buyer fixes. Wages for weavers are not high. “Gradually I learnt what works and what doesn’t in the market. I also mastered the technique with the help of the master weavers with whom I worked. Today I can make any pattern, if you show me the design I can replicate it,” says Abdullah, who takes immense pride in his work.

In a world, where handloom products are on the wane, meeting a weaver like Abdullah fills you with hope. Abdullah adds, “Nearly 80 per cent of the people living in Mubarakpur are dependent on weaving. So there are more weavers than there is work.”

His association with Mubarakpur Weavers, a self help group of young weavers, gave a new lease of life to his work. The group procures orders and gives it to its members. There is a system of fair wages, the group knows at what price the final product is sold. There is no arbitrary profiteering by middle men. They participate in exhibitions and directly supply to stores also. This interaction with buyers also helps them understand design trends and prices. Abdullah’s brother and his other family members also assist him in the weaving.

I ask the inevitable question, will his sons also take up this profession? He smiles, “my experience with the SHG has been good. So if this continues, there will be no regret if my sons also take it up.” As a parting shot he adds, “it is not the money that I make which is important. The buyer who wears my creation should be happy. That is my reward.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Society> History & Culture / by Chitra Balasubramanian / March 08th, 2018

Four doctors to be feted

Mangalore, KARNATAKA :

Indian Medical Association will honour four doctors on Friday on the occasion of Doctors’ Day celebration in recognition of their professional excellence, service to society, and service to the IMA. Doctors’ Day is observed in memory of legendary physician and second Chief Minister of West Bengal B.C. Roy.

I.G. Bhat
I.G. Bhat

The doctors being felicitated are: I.G. Bhat, Parvathi Bhat, Y.M. Hegde, and D.K. Abdul Hameed. Mangalore University Vice-Chancellor T.C. Shivashankara Murthy will be the chief guest, according to an IMA press release.

The IMA said Dr. Abdul Hameed, who did his MBBS in 1968 and post graduation in TB and Chest Diseases in 1979 from the Government Medical College, Mysore, served the Health and Family Welfare Services of the Government of Karnataka from 1970 to 1997. For eight years, he served the Wenlock Hospital here and six years in the Primary Health Centre, Bajpe, and 14 years as a District Tuberculosis Officer. He had received the Best District T.B. Programme Award in 1990 and Meritorious Service Award in 1996 from the State government. He was conferred the Rajiv Gandhi Shiromani Award from the National Integration and Economic Council, New Delhi, for outstanding individual achievements and distinguished services to the nation for 2006-07.

The release said I.G. Bhat, serving as professor of Neurology, Kasturba Medical College here, has attended various national and international conferences. He has served as president of Dakshina Kannada chapters of IMA and the Association of Physicians of India. He did his MBBS from Mysore Medical College in 1965, MD (Medicine) from KMC Mangalore in 1970, DM from NIMHANS, Bangalore, in 1975.

Dr. Parvathi Bhat, retired professor of Pharmacology, worked in various capacities from tutor to professor and Head of the Department in KMC, Mangalore. She was the Chief Superintendent of Examinations and has edited and published the book, Drug Formulary in 1994. She did her MBBS from Mysore Medical College (MMC) in 1965, MD from KMC here in 1973. She received “Lady Dufferin Silver Medal” for being the best outgoing student of MMC from the President, the IMA release said.

It said Dr. Hegde, an ENT Surgeon, who was awarded D.L.O.R.C.S. from the Royal College of Surgeons, England, in 1976, served in different hospitals in the U.K. till 1979. On his return, he served the Father Muller Hospital as consultant for two years. He worked as Assistant Professor at KMC, Mangalore, till 1988 and served in the Ministry of Health at Muscat from 1988 to 1992. He served the Father Muller Medical College from 1999 to 2008 as Prof. and HoD, ENT. At present, he is serving the institution as Honorary Professor and is on its Trust Committee. He did his MBBS from KMC, Manipal, in 1968, M.S. (ENT) from King George Medical College, Lucknow.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Karnataka / by Special Correspondent / Mangalore – July 01st, 2011

JWT’s Anvar Alikhan passes away at 66

Hyderabad, TELANGANA / Mumbai, MAHARASHTRA  :

He was 66 and on the verge of retiring from his post as senior VP and strategy consultant at JWT Mindset

source: Twitter
source: Twitter

Veteran adman Anvar Alikhan passed away yesterday after a lung infection. He was 66 and on the verge of retiring from his post as senior VP and strategy consultant at JWT Mindset.

In a tragic coincidence, many of his former colleagues and associates had been preparing video messages to bid farewell to Alikhan as he ventured out of advertising, only to hear of his untimely demise.

Alikhan’s career saw him play pivotal roles at agencies like O&M, Contract and JWT, besides ambitiously foraying into what was then considered “new media” as creative director at the fledgling rediff.com. He was an erudite author on a wide range of subjects from advertising to history to the relative merits of Roger Moore and meeting author RK Narayan.

You will find links to some of his writing at the end of this piece.

Brand Equity reached out to a few of his colleagues and former associates for their memories of Alikhan:

Ram Gedela, managing director, JWT Mindset and Santha John, chairman emeritus, JWT Mindset

In 1998, we saw a real vacuum in Hyderabad: big international agencies with shell-like structure and locals with no world experience.

Anvar came up with the name Mindset in 2000, a few years after we started. He’d moved back to Hyderabad when his father had a stroke and needed him. We were fortunate to have Anvar on board and the impact was immediate. We had the contacts, and Anvar the brand value. Clients had a lot more respect for us when he came for meetings and we were invited to many more pitches. By 2004, we were Agency of the Year.

We won Coke’s regional business, a go-karting facility that was branded as Runway 9 by Anvar; Godavari Fertilisers which was looking for divestment, got us to rebrand its identity and create a mass media campaign that eventually helped them sell out to the Murugappa Group. Sagar Cement, a regional brand’s advertising with claymation characters created a lot of buzz regionally. This brand too found a foreign investor Vicat immediately after the campaign.

For a sunglass chain called Shades, which was endorsed by popular celebrities like Sanjay Dutt and Suniel Shetty, the line Anvar wrote was a simple ‘You know who, you know where’.

Towards the latter half of the 17 years with Mindset, his focus shifted to strategy. He did painstaking research with no support whatsoever, but never missed a presentation deadline.

We owe this agency’s success to Anvar. In many ways, he was a mentor to us. He would help us with tips on presentation skills, dress code for different occasions, planning pitch process etc. He conducted workshops internally and a lot of us benefited from them.

We had several suitors for acquisition. When we didn’t like a particular agency, even the refusal was well rehearsed. The eventual acquisition by JWT had many inputs from Anvar including wooing the CEO on his maiden visit to Hyderabad.

He had a great sense of humour, and also a bit of a mean streak. When he didn’t like a particular clients’ inputs on his strategy or creative he would start packing up with loud noises, making it very obvious.

He brought wisdom, wit and worldly stature to the workplace.

One year, he also bought a whole lot of cheap and fake Mont Blanc pens and these were given out liberally. In the process, his own genuine pen got mixed up with the fakes and was lost forever! He would talk about it with his usual twinkle in his eye

In all the years we worked closely together, not once did he show irritation nor a cross word ever pass his mouth

More recently, he kept in touch with calls, mails, forwards, articles but not his physical presence. None of us even dreamt the end was so near. As recently as last week, we picked his brain regarding a thorny issue and the depth he put into it, marvels us now.

His oft-quoted statement “No other agency has this many brains under one roof” was SO true, because under our roof, was this magnificent brain

From 2000, we had a New Year wishes mailer which was created in such a way, that people often retained it on their noticeboards, giving us great mileage through the year. ‘Life is what happens to you, while you are busy making other plans’ was the first well remembered card

Colvyn Harris, founder, Harris-Mint and former CEO, JWT India

I was going to record a tribute to Anvar and send it for his farewell, but now, he’s given us an entirely different reason to say farewell.

When we merged Mindset into JWT, we acquired the agency not for revenue but to complete the geography of JWT and most importantly for the three people who ran the place, who were gems. He was a phenomenal ad guy, a fabulous professional and the finest of gentlemen. They don’t make them like him any longer.

He had a very versatile writing style, with depth and knowledge. Even recently when he had written a piece on Sir Martin Sorrell he reached out to get the nuances right.

When we went to the office around the time of the merger, he’d framed strips from Dilbert — a personal favourite of mine — all over the place. There are very few quintessential ad guys without brashness and aggression. His death is a big loss to advertising and I was fortunate to have worked with him.

Pratap Bose, founder, Social Street

When I first saw Anvar, the first thing that came to mind was that he was a really distinguished gentleman; the sort you don’t see too often, especially in our business. Ogilvy was my first agency and I had no idea what agency life was like. Over the years, I used to ask him for advice and he shepherded me through. We did not interact too many times, but he was there for me whenever I needed him. I remember meeting him a few years ago; it was his first time at Goafest and we spent an hour talking about books and movies. He was very well spoken and knowledgeable; not just about advertising but life in general. He was one of the last true gentlemen in the business.

A selection of his writing from scroll.in.

source: http://www.brandequity.economictimes.indiatimes.com / ET Brand Equity / Home> Marketing & Advertising News> Latest Marketing & Advertising News> Advertising / by Ravi Balakrishnan / December 27th, 2017

Shaik Masthan Vali, Zahur Haidar Zaidi get Indian Police Medal

New Delhi:

Shaik Masthan Vali, ASI in Railway Protection Force (RPF- Secunderabad) and Zahur Haidar Zaidi, DIG/PS to MOS(R), Railway Board, have been awarded with Indian Police Medal for their meritorious services.

IndianPoliceMedalMPOs21mar2018

President of India Pratibha Patil has awarded 18 Railway Protection Force (RPF)/Railway Protection Special Force (RPSF) personnel for their exemplary services on the occasion of Republic Day 2010.

Vali and Zaidi are among 14 police officers to get Indian Police Medal. The Police Medal for Gallantry, in recognition of their gallant act at Mumbai Central Railway Station during the terrorist attack on 26 November 2008, has been awarded to Sandip Dadaji Khiratkar, Inspector/RPF, Central Railway, Mumbai and Kiran Vasant Bhosale, Sub-Inspector/RPF, Central Railway, Mumbai. The President’s Police Medal for distinguished service has been given to Gopal Gupta, IG-cum-CSC/RPSF, Railway Board and Srikant Kumar Mishra, CSC/RPF, N.E. Railway, Gorakhpur.

source: http://www.twocircles.net / TwoCircles.net / Home> Indian Muslims / by TCN News / January 25th, 2010

40 Muslims among 704 who get Police Medals on R-Day

ALL INDIA :

New Delhi:

This year 40 Muslims were among 704 personnel who have been awarded Police Medals on the occasion of the Republic Day.

The Police Medals are given in four categories; President’s Police Medals for Distinguished Service, President’s Police Medals for Gallantry, Police Medals for Gallantry and Police Medals for Meritorious Service.

PoliceMedalsMPOs21mar2018

On this R-Day 77 got President’s Police Medals for Distinguished Service. Of them, four were Muslims. Seven got President’s Police Medals for Gallantry wherein one is Muslim, Police Medals for Gallantry have been given to 98 including 11 Muslims while Police Medals for Meritorious Service have been awarded to 522, of them 24 are Muslims.

List of Muslim winners of police medals

S.N Names Awards Posts States/Organizations
1 Mr. Abdul Rasheed Khan President’s Police Medal for distinguished services Deputy Inspector General of Police, Raipur, Chattisgarh
2 Mr. Abdul Qayoom Manhas = = Deputy Inspector General of Police, North Kashmir Renge, Baramulla Jammu & Kashmir
3 Mr. Shaikh Abdul Khader = = Deputy Superintendent of Police, Finger Print Bureau, W.R, Mangalore Karnatka
4 Mr. Nasir Kamal = = Inspector General/ Joint Director, East Block-7, RK Puram, New Delhi National Crime Record Bureau
5 Mohammad Rafi President’s Police Medal for Gallantry Head Constable Jammu & Kashmir
6 Mohammad Arshad Police Medal for Gallantry Superintendent of Police Jammu & Kashmir
7 Jameel Ahmad Khatana = = Deputy Superintendent of Police Jammu & Kashmir
8 Ishaq Ahmad = = Constable Jammu & Kashmir
9 Ajaz Ahmad Amir = = Constable Jammu & Kashmir
10 Mohammad Imran Lone = = Constable Jammu & Kashmir
11 Abdul Majid Najar = = Constable Jammu & Kashmir
12 Kafil Ahmad = = Head Constable Jammu & Kashmir
13 Peerzada Naveed = = Deputy Superintendent of Police Jammu & Kashmir
14 Shamshad Alam Shamshi = = Sub Inspector Jharkhand
15 Shahab Rashid Khan = = Deputy Superintendent of Police Uttar Pradesh
16 K. Sajjanuddin = = Commandant Central Reserve Police Force
17 Mr. Sayed Athar Quadri Police Medal for Meritorious Service Additional Superintendent of Police,Intelligence Securty Wing Andhra Pradesh
18 Mr. Ismail Khan = = Sub Inspector, Intelligence Department, Hyderabad Andhra Pradesh
19 Mr. Abdul Rasheed = = Head Constable, Greyhounds, Hyderabad Andhra Pradesh
20 Mr. Junaid Ahmad = = Sergeant Major, Patna Rail Bihar
21 Mr. Hilal Ahmad Shah = = Senior Superintendent of Police, Telecom, Jammu Zone, PCR Complex, Jammu Jammu & Kashmir
22 Mr. Mohammad Aslam = = Deputy Superintendent of Police, PHQ, Jammu & Kashmir Jammu & Kashmir
23 Mr. Abdur Rashid Shah = = Inspector, Security HQRS, Jammu and Kashmir Jammu & Kashmir
24 Mr. Aurengzeb Rather = = Sub Inspector, DSB Poonch Jammu & Kashmir
25 Mr. Mohammad Rafiq Bhat = = Sub Inspector, Police Component Srinagar Jammu & Kashmir
26 Mr. Mohammad Shafi = = Sub Inspector, SSG, Jammu & Kashmir Jammu & Kashmir
27 Mr. Parvaiz Ahmad Malik = = Head Constable, JKAP 13th BN. Doda Jammu & Kashmir
28 Mr. Nizam Hasan Mahagonde = = Head Constable, L.A.III, Worli Mumbai City Maharashtra
29 Mr. Zaheed Mohammad = = Deputy Commandment, SOG, Orissa Orissa
30 Mr. Aliyas Khan = = Assistant Sub Inspector, P.S. Salasar, Distt. Church Rajisthan
31 Mr. Rehman Khan = = Head Constable, 11th BN RAC (I.R), Vijay Ghat, Rajisthan
32 Mr. Mohammad Haneef = = Head Constable, 39 BN, PAC, Mirzapur Uttar Pradesh
33 Mr. Ishtiyaq Ahmad = = Head Constable, XI BN, PAC, Sitapur Uttar Pradesh
34 Mr. K.I. Ahmad = = Inspector of Police, Police, HGRS Kavaratti Lakshdweep
35 Mr. Sayed Ruhul Amin = = Sub Inspector, Oil Duliajan, Distt. Dibrugarh, Assam Central Industrial Security Force
36 Mr. Irfan Ahmad = = Head Constable, RGI Airport, Hyderabad Central Industrial Security Force
37 Mr. Shafi Mohammad = = Sub Inspector, RTC, Dharampur, Solan , Himachal Pradesh Central Industrial Security Force
38 Mr. Gulam Hussain Shah = = Head Constable, 2 BN. Sabri Nagar, Sukma, Dantewada, Chattisgarh Central Industrial Security Force
39 Mr. Shaik Mastan Vali = = Assistant, Sub Inspector/Special Intelligence Branch, SCR. Secunderabad, Andhra Pradesh Ministry of Railway
40 Mr. Zahur Haidar Zaidi = = DIG/PS MOS for Railways, Rail Bhawan, Raisina Road, New Delhi Ministry of Railway

source: http://www.twocircles.net / TwoCircles.net / Home> Indian Muslims / by TCN News / January 27th, 2010

52 Muslims among 755 honored with Police Medals

New Delhi:

There are 52 Muslims among 755 police personnel to have been awarded with Police Medals by President of India on this Republic Day. The police medals have been given in four categories: President’s Police Medals for Gallantry; Police Medals for Gallantry; President’s Police Medals for Distinguished Service; Police Medals for Meritorious Service.

Muslim police personnel have made their presence in all categories except the first one — President’s Police Medals for Gallantry. This year President’s Police Medals for Gallantry have been given to 11 police personnel.

Police Medals for Gallantry were given to 129 personnel – 18 are Muslims. President’s Police Medals for Distinguished Service have been awarded to 82 –only 2 of them are Muslims. Police Medals for Meritorious Service have been awarded to 533 personnel – 32 are Muslims. Below is the list of honored Muslim police personnel.

Police Medals for Gallantry 

Imdad A1i——–Sub Divisional Police Officer—-Assam
Rahmat Ali——–Sub Inspector—-Bihar
Parvaiz Ahmad——–Sub Inspector—-Jammu & Kashmir
Imtiyaz Ahmad——–Sub Inspector—-Jammu & Kashmir
Mohd. Shafi——–Sub Inspector—-Jammu & Kashmir
Sajad Assad——–Sub Inspector—-Jammu & Kashmir
Gh. Mohd. Chechi——–Sg. Constable—-Jammu & Kashmir
Gh. Mohammad Malik——–Constable—-Jammu & Kashmir
Sheikh Faisal Qayoom——–Dy. Superintendent Of Police—-Jammu & Kashmir
Md. Majibur Rahaman——–Havildar—-Manipur
Md. Salamad Shah——–Rifleman—-Manipur

Assam Rifles

Mohd. Sayeed——–Rifleman—-Assam Rifles

Central Reserve Police Force
Riyaz Ahmed——–Constable—-CRPF
K. Sajjanuddin——–Commandant—-CRPF
Waseem Ahmed Khan——–Constable—-CRPF
Mohd. Riaz——–Constable—-CRPF
Mohammad Arif Wagay——–Constable—-CRPF
Tanveer Ahmad Mir——–Constable—-CRPF

President’s Police Medals for Distinguished Service

Taj Hassan Mohamed—Joint Commissioner of Police, Security—Delhi
S M Mohamed Iqbal—Deputy Superintendent of Police—Tamil Nadu

Police Medals for Meritorious Service

Syed Ibrahim—Head Const—Nizamabad, Andhra Pradesh
Fazal Mahmood Guard—Additional Director General of Police—Gujarat
Mohammad Salim Sati—Unarmed Police Sub Inspector—Gujarat
Tajmahmad Abubhai Sandhi—Unarmed Assistant Sub Inspector—Gujarat
Shafqat Ali Watali—Deputy Inspector General of Police—Jammu & Kashmir
Rafi Ahmad Mir—Superintendent of Police—Jammu & Kashmir
Syed Fayaz Ahmad—Inspector—Jammu & Kashmir
Mohammad Ashraf Rather—Inspector—Jammu & Kashmir
Fayaz Ahmad Banday—Inspector—Jammu & Kashmir
Bashir Ahmad Kumar—Assistant Sub-Inspector—Jammu & Kashmir
Showkat Ali—Head Constable—Jammu & Kashmir
Mohamed Budan—Police Inspector—Karnataka
Parvez Anwar Khan—Company Commander,13th Bn SAF—Madhya Pradesh
Ahmedkhan Shahjadekhan Pathan—Armed Assistant Sub-Inspector–Maharashtra
Majhar Safdar Shaikh—Police Head Constable—Maharashtra
Nasirkhan Mirsaheb Pathan—Police Head Constable—Maharashtra
Sharfuddin Khan—Head Constable—Rajasthan
S. Nizamuddin—Superintendent of Police—Tamil Nadu
F M Hussain—Superintendent of Police—Tamil Nadu
S Abdul Kani—Commandant—Tamil Nadu Special Police X Battalion
K. Kadharkhan—Head Constable, Special Task Force—Tamil Nadu
Siraj Ahamad—Constable—Azamgarh, Uttar Pradesh
Sadre Alam—Sub Inspector (Mt), 34 Bn PAC, Varanasi—Uttar Pradesh

Assam Rifles

Safdar Imam, Havildar (Clerk), Assam Rifles Composite Hospital
Shokhuvi, Po-Dimapur (Nagaland), Assam Rifles

Border Security Force

Mohd. Fareed Khan, Deputy Inspector General, Ftr Hqr, Malda,
Villaradhpur, Po- Narayanpur, (WB)
Meer Bux Khan, Inspector, 59 Bn., Po- Painthi, Samba
Faquir Hussain, Head Constable, 161 Bn. Jalipa, Barmer (Rajasthan)

Central Bureau of Investigation

Mohd Mahmood Ali Khan, Head Constable, CBI, Academy, Ghaziabad

Central Reserve Police Force

Abdur Rahman Choudhary, Inspector, Group Centre, Gandhi Nagar, Gujarat
Mohamad Hafiz Khan, Head Constable, 86 Bn, Lamphelpat, Imphal (Manipur)

Ministry of Civil Aviation

Mirza Tahar Baig, Assistant Commissioner Of Security (Ca), Bureau Of
Civil Avation, Security, ‘A’ Wing, Janpath Bhawan, N.Delhi, M/O Civil
Aviation

Ministry of Railways

Mir Fakar Mohideen, Inspector , Chennai Egmore, Chennai Division,
Southern Railway, M/O

source: http://www.twocircles.net / TwoCircles.net / Home> Indian Muslims / by TCN News / January 26th, 2011

Tennis prodigy makes it to Junior Fed Cup

Guntur, ANDHRA PRADESH :

Sk Mubhishara Anjum, who was selected for junior fed cup | Photo Credit: T_VIJAYA_KUMAR
Sk Mubhishara Anjum, who was selected for junior fed cup | Photo Credit: T_VIJAYA_KUMAR

Tourney to be held in Malaysia from April 16

The road to success for this tennis prodigy from Guntur, was not an easy one.

For 16-year-old Sk. Mubhashira Anjum, now ranked 675 in the World’s Junior tennis circuit, the journey from the clay courts in Guntur to the global circuit was filled with grit and hard work. Mubhashira (U-16) will take part in the Junior Fed Cup set to begin at Kuching in Malaysia from April 16.

She had earlier taken part in the Under-14 tennis tourney organised by All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in April 2016.

Born in 2002, Mubhashira began taking lessons in tennis on the clay courts of B.R Stadium and later under the guidance of coaches such as Sk. Ahammad. She began to show her mettle in the tennis tourneys.

Powerful strokes

Whether hitting ground strokes with ferocious power or dropping the volley at nets, she showed her class early. “She was the pick of the boys and girls and her powerful ground strokes and an ability to cover the court stood out. For a girl of her age, she had an amazing fitness level,” recalled Mr. Ahammad who now coaches boys and girls at Officers Club, Guntur.

Her father Sk. Baji is a small time trader but the family had moved to Hyderabad to enable Mubhashira to take coaching at Sania Mirza Tennis Academy.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Andhra Pradesh / by Staff Reporter / Guntur – March 17th, 2018

Prominent Indian businessman Abdul Hameed dies

Kochannoor (Thrissur District), KERALA /  Doha, QATAR :

K P Abdul Hameed
K P Abdul Hameed

Doha :

Long-time Doha resident and prominent Indian entrepreneur K P Abdul Hameed (76) passed away at a hospital in Bengaluru in southern India on Monday.

He was a managing director of Al Muftah Rent A Car, set up in 1970 as the first vehicle rental firm in Qatar.
Hameed will be buried at his native place, Kochannoor, in Kerala’s Thrissur district on Tuesday. He leaves behind his wife Aminu and two sons, Dr K P Najeeb (Hamad Medical Corporation) and Fazil Hameed (Al Muftah Rent A Car). A K Usman, who is also a managing director of Al Muftah Rent A Car, is his brother-in-law.
Hameed had suffered a stroke more than a month ago in Doha and was taken to India for treatment. Hameed, who arrived in Qatar in 1965, was a regular presence at a number of community events over the last four decades.
The veteran businessman was among the founders of MES Indian School, which was the first Indian expatriate institution of the country. The school was established in 1974.
Hameed was also one of the founding members and chief patrons of the Indian Cultural and Arts Society (Incas Qatar).
Indian Community Benevolent Forum (ICBF) and expatriate forums Incas Qatar and Indian Medical Association (Qatar chapter) and Pravasi Malayali Federation have mourned the death of Hameed.
source: http://www.gulf-times.com / Gulf Times / June 19th, 2017

Bihar: IAS officer Amir Subhani back as Principal Secretary Home

Patna, BIHAR :

Patna :

The new government in Bihar headed by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar today brought back senior IAS officer Amir Subhani to the Home department as Principal Secretary.

Amir Subhani has been brought back as Principal Secretary, Home in place of Sudhir Kumar Rakesh, Chief Secretary Anjani Kumar Singh told PTI.

The Election Commission had on September 12 ordered the removal of Subhani, a 1987-batch IAS officer from the Home department and had appointed 1983-batch IAS officer Sudhir Kumar Rakesh in his place.

But, with the elections ending and Nitish Kumar returning as the CM, Amir Subhani, a trusted officer of Kumar, was brought back to the Home department.

The Chief Secretary said Sudhir Kumar Rakesh has returned to the Panchayati Raj department.

Subhani would also retain his present posting in the General Administration department (GAD).Except for a brief period during the end of Jitan Ram Manjhi’s tenure and recently on order of the Election Commission, Subhani has occupied post of Home department with Nitish Kumar at the helm of affairs in the state.

Both the Home department and the GAD are with Chief Minister Nitish Kumar.

source: http://www.economictimes.indiatimes.com / The Economic Times / ET Home> News> Politics and Nation / PTI / November 23rd, 2015

An evening out at a Mumbra Masjid

Mumbai, MAHARASHTRA :

Mosque launches an outreach programme to fight misconceptions

Imam of Al Furqan masjid, Maulana Saud (in white), looks on as Jamaat member Risal Baig displays the Koran. Photo by Sachin Deshmane
Imam of Al Furqan masjid, Maulana Saud (in white), looks on as Jamaat member Risal Baig displays the Koran. Photo by Sachin Deshmane

A ‘masjid parichay’ is enabling Hindus to visit the Al Furqan mosque and gain a better understanding of Islam.

Spending four hours in a mosque is not most people’s idea of a Sunday evening outing. But for two Sundays in the last few weeks, 10 Hindus have travelled long distances to spend the entire evening at the Al Furqan Masjid, located in a bylane of Mumbra, a suburb of Mumbai. Starting off with doing wazu, or the obligatory washing of oneself before namaz, they ended their evening relishing biryani in the hall above the mosque.

None of these Hindus had ever stepped inside a masjid before.

“Going to a masjid in Mumbra? Are you out of your mind?” was the common reaction these Hindus encountered from friends — the shock stemming as much from the mention of a ‘masjid’ as from ‘Mumbra’, a place that was allegedly “internationally notorious for violent fanaticism”. A place where “no non-Muslim could go after sunset.’’

Vikhroli salesman D Gupta’s family didn’t even take him seriously when he told them about his plan. So when he returned home after his Mumbra visit, and casually mentioned where he’d been, his upset mother sent him off to “purify” himself with gau-mutra (cow urine) from the neighbourhood tabela before entering the house again.

Gupta remembers, as a 13-year-old, seeing students from a madarsa in his neighbourhood being beaten up by their teacher. An older friend said it was because the students had probably forgotten to curse Hindus enough, and warned Gupta to stay away from Muslims. The fear that had set in when he was a teenager vanished only after his recent visit to the mosque. Other friends had told him, at the time, that Muslims worshipped the Shiva lingam in masjids by pouring water over it, hence the mandatory tap at the entrance. And also that the Kaaba in Mecca, too, had a Shiva lingam inside it.

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Jamaat-e-Islami member Saif Asre heard another perception about his place of worship while he was manning a bookstall distributing Islamic literature. “Commending me on trying to spread knowledge about Islam, a Hindu man said that he had heard masjids were storehouses for swords, and that one room was reserved only for the bodies of those killed with them. Driven by curiosity, the man had ventured into a mosque — but only after posting a friend to stand guard outside and inform his family if anything happened to the man,” says Asre. “This shocked me. We had no idea these were the ideas Hindus had about masjids.” This encounter was the trigger for the ‘masjid parichay’ programme that has been successfully carried out, so far, by the Jamaat in Nanded and Mumbra.

The first batch of Hindus who visited the Mumbra mosque were all members of the Indian Social Movement, a Vikhroli-based NGO that believes — according to its leaders Dr Deepak Gaekwad and Anand Howal — in being “Indians first and last”. They even use the phrase ‘Jai Bharat’ as a greeting. The group conducts awareness workshops on the Constitution, and had done so for the Jamaat, too. At least three of them had grown up with Muslim neighbours, and pointed to 1985 as the year relations between the two communities started changing. That was the year the Ayodhya movement began.

The second batch did not know anyone from the Jamaat. Their curiosity was aroused after reading a Facebook post about “masjid parichay’’.

While not all these Hindus had farfetched and bizarre ideas about masjids, some of them assumed non-Muslims weren’t allowed inside. Their knowledge of mosques was limited to the azaan, the call they heard on loudspeakers five times a day. “Allah ho Akbar” was the only phrase they could make out in the azaan. Most thought it referred to Mughal emperor Akbar (it means ‘God is great’).

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The meaning of the azaan and other mysteries — the taps at the entrance to the masjid; the posture assumed for namaz, why it’s performed five times a day and the large turnout on Friday afternoons — were demystified for them by Asre. Helping him in demonstrating how namaz is performed, and how the azaan is called were four other Jamaat members, including a retired teacher and two software engineers. The latter revealed that when their work left them with no time to go to the nearest masjid for namaz, they prayed at their seat. Elevated parking lots in new office buildings made for ideal namaz spaces, where all the Muslims working on the premises could pray together, they said.

When Asre asked if there were any questions, nine-year-old Advait, who was there with his parents, Tarun Bharat journalist Bhatu Sawant and wife Kranti, put up his hand. What did the Arabic inscription on the wall mean? he asked. Later, he watched in wonder as the empty space where he had been running around a short while ago, filled up with men performing the evening namaz.

Asre revealed that thanks to the Facebook post, the Jamaat had received requests from many other Hindus, including a group of college girls. The visitors were taken to a hall in a building adjoining the mosque, where women pray on Fridays.

The Shia-Sunni divide, the burqa, the “intolerance” of Muslims who believed theirs was the only true faith — several questions were raised on these matters. But some questions remained unasked too, the participants admitted later. For instance, a question about the recurring campaigns organised by Indian Muslims in solidarity with Syria and the Rohingyas remained unarticulated.

“Those who attend such programmes will surely intervene when riots break out to explain that we are brothers,” hopes Howal, of the who felt the Quran expounds the same ideals of justice, equality and fraternity as the Indian Constitution. “If a boss reaches the masjid after his employee, he has to stand behind his employee, and during namaz, his head will be at the latter’s feet,” he pointed out, referring to the democratic nature of the Friday afternoon prayer, which must be held in congregation.

What about a reciprocal programme, where groups of Muslims can visit a temple? Asre felt Muslims were much more familiar with the Hindu religion than the other way around because even those who live in ghettos, encounter Hindus everywhere. While that is a debatable statement, the question also arises: Who would conduct such a programme? Would temple managements allow it, wondered Lokmat journalist Omkar Karambekar, as he returned from Mumbra. And, would Muslims who come to the temples, accept our ‘prasad’, was the question that bothered Gupta.

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source: http://www.mumbaimirror.indiatimes.com / Mumbai Mirror / Home> Mumbai> Cover Story / by Jyoti Punwani, Mumbai Mirror / March 18th, 2018