All posts by mpositiveone@gmail.com

Women’s Day: Meet first Muslim post woman Jameela

Hyderabad, TELANGANA :

Jameela
Jameela

Hyderabad:

Jameela a widow of Mahboobabad instead of mourning the death of her husband, joined her husband’s job and decided to bring her children on her own. She works as a post woman and delivers letters, telegrams and parcels etc. from one place to another.

Jameela belongs to Garla mandal in Mahboobabad district. Her husband Khaja Miya was a postman who died 10 years ago when their elder daughter was in 5th class and the younger daughter was in 3rd class. Jameela was facing a gloomy situation. Luckily Jameela got her husband’s job. Thus she became the first Muslim Post woman of the postal department.

At first, Jameela didn’t know how to ride a bicycle. She used to go by walk and deliver letters and parcels to houses. Now she has learnt to ride the bicycle. Initially, she was getting a salary of Rs. 6000 which was insufficient to meet her expenses. So she started selling sarees along with her job. Today she gets Rs. 10000 per month. Her elder daughter is doing engineering and the younger daughter is doing diploma course.

source: http://www.siasat.com / The Siasat Daily / Home> Featured News> Hyderabad> News> Top Stories / March 08th, 2018

MANUU student wins National Blind and deaf Championship in Judo

Hyderabad, TELANGANA :

Hyderabad:

Mr. Hassan Ali Bawazeer of ITI, Maulana Azad National Urdu University, has won the 5th National Blind and Deaf Judo Championships Award.

According to Prof. Mushtaq Ahmed I. Patel, Dean, Students Welfare, Bawazeer has participated under 55 kgs weight category in the Junior Blind Judo Championships – 2017 held at Scottish High International School, Gurgaon, Haryana recently, and secured first position in competition.

Mr. Awanish Kumar Awasthi (IAS), Chairman, Indian Blind and Para Judo Associations (IBAPJA) and Mr. Munawar Azar (World Referee), General Secretary, IBAPJA issued a certificate to Mr. Hasan Bawazeer, he said.

Mr. Bawazeer had previously won Gold Medal at Junior level Inter-District Judo Championship held at Nizamabad in November last year.

He was coached by Mr. M. A. Aziz, a well known expert in martial arts.

source: http://www.archive.siasat.com / The Siasat Daily / Home> Hyderabad> News> Sports / March 07th, 2017

Ghazal maestra fighting ill-health, penury

Lucknow, UTTAR PRADESH :

Zarina Begum undergoing treatment at a private hospital
Zarina Begum undergoing treatment at a private hospital

Lucknow :

As her handicapped middle-aged son, limps on his crutches up the staircase to the third floor of a private hospital in Lucknow’s River Bank Colony  area, Zarina Begum,  the last living court singer of Awadh, is being administered injections at the intensive care unit (ICU) where she is fighting both penury and ill-health.
Disciple of legendary Ghazal singer Begum Akhtar, 88-year-old Zarina Begum, who was the first recipient of the ‘Begum Akhtar Ghazal Award’ started by UP government in 2015, has been paralytic for the past nine years. It was on the day of Holi, on March 1, that she got extremely unwell, when her family took her first to Civil hospital and later shifted her to the private facility on March 5.

As a case of right side hemiparesis (pertaining to paralysis) she was diagnosed with urinary tract infection, altered sensorium, anaemia, fever, vomiting and weakness, to be looked after in the ICU under conservative treatment. The expenses estimate given by the hospital for her five-day treatment till now is around Rs 1 lakh. And this is not the final bill.

The last living singer of the ‘Baithak’ style of musical rendition, Zarina Begum has no income, a rented home in Aminabad’s Hata Khuda Baksh area and a deluge of medical bills.

“We are extremely worried about the money. How will the expenses be borne? I don’t even have Rs 400 in my pocket,” said her daughter, Rubina.  “My brother Ayub does not have his leg down the knee ever since he lost it to an accident almost 20 years ago. Ammi has been on the bed for the last many years, and can still recall ghazals and couplets,” she added. But it is not just the medical bills that the family is worried about.

Kin seek pension for Zarina Begum
The last government after many perusals had taken up her treatment expenses immediately. But what we also seek is pension for Zarina Begum, a job for Rubina and a battery driven rickshaw that Ayub can drive so that even after hospital treatment, there is some money to feed the mouth and bear regular medical bills,” said Zarina’s son-inlaw Naved.

There is almost a monthly Rs 10,000 expense that the family manages somehow for procuring medicines. “The home, a tin-roofed rented place might soon be sold by the tenant, which could leave us on the roads,” said Naved.

“My own health, as also Rubina’s, has gone down with the continued strain we bear in keeping up with the treatments. I have sent several letters of requests to the state government, but there has been no response on the pension or the battery rickshaw or anything to do with employment,” he said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Lucknow News / by Yusra Hussain / TNN / March 08th, 2018

Gouhar Sultana at the helm

Hyderabad, TELANGANA :

Gouhar Sultana at the helm
Gouhar Sultana at the helm

Hyderabad:

Three from Hyderabad Cricket Association, including skipper Gouhar Sultana and four from Andhra CA, including vice-captain, figure in the South Zone team that will participate in the Senior Inter-Zonal three-day tournament to be held at Kerala from March 18 to April 5.

Squad: 

Gouher Sultana (Capt), S Hima Bindu (V-capt), D Hema Latha, I Nethra, Shubha Satish, N Anusha, T Shanti, Asha S, Nirajana Nagarajan, Sunanda Yatrekar, Sanjana Batni (wk), Sravanthi Naidu, Ananya Upendran, Santoshi Rane, Namitha Ojha (wk); Stand-bys: T Mallika, C Prathyush, Himani Yadav, Nikita Malik, Vinavi Gurav, VM Kavya.

source: http://www.thehansindia.com / The Hans India / Home> Sports /The Hans India / March 04th, 2018

The ballad of the Khan Sahib

Madurai, TAMIL NADU :

KhanSahibMPOs07mar2018

One explanation for Kamal Haasan launching his political party in Madurai was that his hero was Maruthanayagam Pillai, soldier, rebel and valiant son of the district.

It was about this hero that he wanted to make a film extraordinaire several years ago.

I was on the fringe of the project as, coining a term, the factioneer, engineering fact with fiction.

Part of the fiction is the name Maruthanayagam. More factual is the name Yusuf Khan, and it’s as Yusuf Khan he’s a military hero of mine. Much has been written about this soldier of fortune, but the Tamil ballad Khan Saibu Sandai (The War of Khan Sahib) offers much more personal detail. In it Maruthanayagam finds no mention; who it sings of is “the hero who belongs to the Alim family”. Adding, “…let me sing the story of the brave warrior of Sikkandar Sahib”.

Whatever his lineage, it is agreed he ran away from Panaiyur in the Pandya heartland and worked with Jacques Law in Pondicherry c.1744, where, possibly, he learnt his soldiering.

 

Then we hear of him with a troop of Nellore lances-for-hire teaming with Chanda Sahib and the French to besiege Robert Clive in 1751 at Arcot. Seeing him in action, Clive bought over the Nellore Subedar, as he called Yusuf Khan, who the next year helped Clive win at Kaveripakkam. Later, after action near Srirangam, Clive was told by a friend, “Your Nellore sepoys are glorious fellows, their Subedar as good a man as ever breathed. He is my sole dependence.”

Next, when the French besieged Nawab Wallajah and his British protectors in Trichy, Yusuf Khan lost not one food convoy from Madras over three months. Stringer Lawrence, ‘The Father of the Indian Army’, wrote, “He is an excellent partisan… brave and resolute, but cool and sensible in action – in short, a born soldier, and better of his colour I never saw … He never spares himself, but is out on all parties…” All this led to Lawrence recommending Yusuf Khan being made “Commandant of all the Sepoys” in 1754 and for a gold medal from the Company.

With the Nawab and the Company unable to collect revenue from the southern districts they had won, Khan Saheb who had been responsible for the gains was appointed Governor of Madurai.

Over the next three years, he subdued the local chieftains, collected revenue and earned a reputation for outstanding administration. But Yusuf Khan could never get away from soldiering. When Lally besieged Madras in 1758-59, he failed, because Yusuf Khan, racing up from Madurai, cut almost daily over two months Lally’s supply lines. Lally was to say, “They were like the flies, no sooner beat off from one part, they came to another.” Yusuf Khan was a master of guerilla warfare.

With such praise, Yusuf Khan began growing more ambitious. When he found revenue he collected going mostly to Wallajah from the English, he decided to rebel. He hoped for support from Hyder Ali (which never came) and from the French, who supplied a few hundred mercenaries led by a Marchand.

From August to November 1763 the English besieged Madurai, constantly shelling it, but unable to breach Yusuf Khan’s defences. They then withdrew to regroup. In February 1764, they recommenced the siege, but without significant progress. Yusuf Khan sent them a message early in April 1764: “As long as I have a drop of blood in my body I shall never render the place to nobody.”

English attack after attack was beaten back, many a British officer, once his comrades, killed. A British officer wrote: “You’ll easily form an idea of Yusuf Khan’s abilities from his being able to keep together a body of men of different nations, who with cheerfulness undergo the greatest miseries on his account; wretches who have stood two severe sieges, one assault and a blockade of many months.”

By September 1764 Yusuf Khan was prepared to negotiate surrender terms. The English insisted on unconditional surrender. And Marchand and his ilk, impatient with the negotiations (or heavily bribed), acted, arresting Yusuf Khan and surrendering Madurai on October 15, 1764.

The Company wanted Khan Saheb brought to trial in Madras, but Lawrence ordered him given to the Nawab who immediately hanged him and desecrated the body. He was buried where he was executed, two miles west of Madurai, his tomb at Samattipuram a dargah to some, a pallivasal (mosque) to others, but venerated by all in the Pandya country.

Footnote: A dissertation by Dr Asadulla Khan, then of New College, discusses Yusuf Khan’s family. It would appear that he married a Christian girl, Maza, c.1759; father, very likely Portuguese or French, her mother, possibly, a Maravar, a community which she often interceded for with Khan Saheb. They had a son, Mohammed Sultan, born c.1762. As a young man he joined Hyder Ali’s army. Mother and son, it is suggested, sought refuge in Mysore after fleeing Madurai.

The boats on the Canal

It was a lively presentation that Manohar Devadoss made recently at the Madras Literary Society on his life with books, most he’d illustrated. One striking illustration at the presentation is what I feature today; a boat in full sail on the Buckingham Canal. Mano says he saw this long country boat near Pulicat in 1966 and thought it “an artist’s delight”. His sketch became the first subject of “our heritage greeting card project,” ‘our’ being wife Mahema, who used to write the text for the illustrations he did for greeting cards they sold for charities.

Mahema concluded that year: “These boats are very picturesque, with sails billowing in the breeze. When there is no breeze, the boats are sometimes dragged by the boatmen from along the banks, their bare bodies glistening in the sun. As the boats approach the city, the sails are lowered so that they could pass under the numerous bridges. The men then punt the boats in rhythm to their melodious folk songs.” Taken up as he was with them, Mano did his first oil painting that year, based on his sketch, and several water-colours in later years, one of which I feature.

The chronicler of Madras that is Chennai tells stories of people, places, and events from the years gone by, and sometimes from today.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Society> Madras Miscellany – History & Culture / by S. Muthiah / March 06th, 2018

This lecturer does not just preach

Konaje,( Mangaluru ), KARNATAKA :

Marzooq Ahmed during his ‘Whole Week Only On Wheels’ initiative in Mangaluru.
Marzooq Ahmed during his ‘Whole Week Only On Wheels’ initiative in Mangaluru.

Marzooq Ahmed keeps his vow and uses non-motorised transport for a week

This lecturer with a polytechnic believes in practising and not preaching as he has kept his vow of pedalling for a whole week to spread awareness on non-motorised transport.

Marzooq Ahmed, lecturer in Civil Engineering with P.A. Polytechnic, Konaje, took up the initiative — Wwoow Factor (Whole Week Only On Wheels) — on February 26. Till Sunday, he either rode a bicycle or walked to any place he happened to travel.

To begin with, Mr. Ahmed rode to his institute every day instead of using any motorised transport. With the support of the principal, K.P. Soofie, and his colleagues in the institute, Mr. Ahmed also conducted awareness programmes to 750-odd students explaining to them the benefits of non-motorised transport, including reduced carbon footprint.

He told the students: “I believe that as an individual I cannot do escalating work but as a socially responsible citizen I can sit on a saddle and steer my thoughts and actions by pedalling to make a small drop in the ocean accountable, to improve the quality of the air that we all inhale.”

Students do their bit

Students too shared a bit of their knowledge and practice on non-motorised transport. While Vishnu and Fareen highlighted the importance of carpooling and reduced dependence on motorised vehicles for short distances, Tilak spoke about the benefits of cycling and how it helps environment conservation. Sapnaz added the concluding statement at the awareness programme by saying, “The actions we show now will reflect in our future. We need to uphold and undertake right measures to control pollution now.”

While Mr. Ahmed is used to regular rides being a member of Mangalore Bicycle Club (MBC), he rode from the institute to Circuit House in the city on Thursday afternoon when the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board opened its continuous weather monitoring centre to show his commitment.

Besides riding bicycle and inspiring his students, Mr. Ahmed is also interacting with the public to create awareness about environment conservation. On Saturday, he spoke to several students in Belthangady taluk as part of his mission.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Karnataka / by Anil Kumar Sastry / Mangaluru – March 04th, 2018

Disability rights crusader Javed Abidi dies at 53

Aligarh, UTTAR PRADESH / NEW DELHI :

JavedAbediMPOs05mar2018

New Delhi :

India’s global face of disability rights movement,  Javed Abidi , died of chest infection on Sunday. He was 53.

Abidi, who founded the Disability Rights Group (DRG), and was serving as the director of the National Centre for Promotion of Employment  for Disabled People, is survived by his mother and two siblings.
Born in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, he was diagnosed with spina bifida. Abidi wasn’t operated on for eight years, and as a result, suffered nerve damage. At the age of ten, he injured himself in a fall and required another operation. After this, his family moved to the United States and Javed Abidi received care at the Boston Children’s Hospital and the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago. At the age of 15, he started using a wheelchair. Abidi, despite difficulties, studied at Wright State University , and in 1989, moved to India seeking a career in journalism.

The 1990s were marked by drastic changes in the disability sector of India through his DRG. He was instrumental in drafting the 1995 disability Act and forcing the inclusion of missing disabilities like autism, dyslexia in the new RPwD Act 2016. He was appointed the vice-chairman of the International Disability Alliance  2013.

“We have lost the most prominent voice of our sector. We have lost an international leader as he was the sole voice of the Global South. He pioneered the cross-disability movement in India and galvanized disability issues as developmental and human rights based issues. An era ends with Javed ji,” said disability rights’ activist, Dr Satendra Singh, Delhi University.

Abidi successfully led several path breaking advocacy initiatives in India, including the drafting and enactment of the Disability Act of 1995, inclusion of disability as a separate category in the Census; India’s ratification of CRPD in 2007, and setting up of a separate Department of Disability Affairs. Most recently, he led the movement towards India’s new disability rights law – the Persons with Disabilities Act 2016.

Abidi strongly believed that empowerment of persons with disabilities is connected to education, which in turn hinges on accessibility. And all three are not possible without enabling laws and policies.

“The world has lost is brightest crusader for disability rights. As an impassioned advocate of ‘Nothing About Us, Without Us’, he has given voice to an ‘invisible minority’ by catalysing path breaking changes in the policy and legislative space,” said Reeta Gupta, Abidi’s long-term friend and supporter in advocacy of disability rights in India.

Abidi started working for Sonia Gandhi in 1993, creating and building the Rajiv Gandhi Foundation’s disabilities Unit. A year later, he founded a small advocate group called the DRG and started raising awareness for the disabled people of India. A large pro-disability rights movement arose, with the goal of getting the Parliament to implement a bill of rights for the disabled.

Abidi led a protest before Parliament on December 19, 1995, that pushed Parliament into passing the Persons with Disabilities Act on December 22, 1995. In 2004, his letter to Chief Justice of India on making the polling booths accessible to persons with disabilities was converted into writ petition. Supreme Court of India then passed direction to make electoral process accessible.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> India News / by Manash Pratim Gohain / TNN / March 04th, 2018

Young Rizvi shoots 10m air pistol gold, creates record on World Cup debut

Meerut, UTTAR PRADESH :

RizviMPOs05mar2018

Highlights 

  • Rizvi pipped Rio Games gold medallist Christian Reitz and teammate Jitu Rai for the yellow metal
  • He broke Japanese legend Tomoyuki Matsuda’s record of 241.8, which was created last year
  • Rizvi displayed confidence and it reflected in his performance as he shot only seven shots below 10

_______________________________________________________________

Pune :

Shooting in his first ISSF World Cup,  Shahzar Rizvi showed nerves of steel as he clinched gold with a world record score in the men’s 10m air pistol event at ISSF World Cup in Guadalajara, Mexico, on Saturday.

Rizvi, 24, pipped Rio Games gold medallist Christian Reitz and teammate Jitu Rai for the yellow metal by scoring 242.3 in the final.

He broke Japanese legend Tomoyuki Matsuda’s record of 241.8, which was created in October last year.

Reitz finished second with a score of 239.7, while Rai secured bronze after scoring 219 in the final.

Another Indian, Om Prakash Mitharval, 23, who was also participating in his first senior World Cup, missed out on winning a medal after finishing fourth with a score of 198.4.

This is perhaps the first time that three Indians had entered the medal round of a World Cup.

With a score of 579, Rizvi was the top-scorer among the Indians and second in the top-eight qualifiers, while Rai was third with a score of 578. This is the first World Cup for Rizvi, and so is for Mitharval, who was fourth with a score of 576.

In the final, the Indians got off to good starts. After completion of 10 shots, Rizvi, with 99.4 points was second behind Brazil’s Julio Almeida (101.8), while Rai and Mitharval kept themselves in top-5.
Rizvi displayed confidence and it reflected in his performance as the Meerut boy shot only seven shots below 10. His best was 10.8, while his lowest shot was an 8.5.

Rai on the other hand was a little inconsistent. His 10 shots ranged between 9 to 9.9 that pulled him down in the ranking. Just before the 20th shot, the Army shooter was at risk of getting eliminated, but he saved himself by shooting 10.6 and 10.4 to finish 0.1 point ahead of Mitharval, who shot 10.7 and 9.2 to finish with 198.4 points.

Meanwhile, in the women’s 10m air rifle event, teenager Mehuli Ghosh, along with Apurvi Chandela  and Anjum Moudgil entered the final along with three Chinese shooters.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> News> Sports News> Shooting  / by Tushar Dutt / TNN  / March 04th, 2018

Bodybuilder in hijab, the head-turner at Mr. Kerala

Orakkatteri, Kozhikode , KERALA :

 Majiziya Bhanu takes part in the Mr. Kerala contest.
Majiziya Bhanu takes part in the Mr. Kerala contest.

Majiziya, winner in women’s category, is also a powerlifter

Quite a few were shocked when Majiziya Bhanu was announced the winner in the women’s category of the Mr. Kerala competition in Kochi recently. But the one most stumped was Majiziya herself. She had entered the bodybuilding circuit, which is mostly a male bastion, and managed to reconstruct the familiar image of the woman bodybuilder. The 23-year-old posed in a hijab, probably the only woman in the State to do so. And, it was her first time in such a contest.

The last one-and-a-half years were eventful for Majiziya, a final year BDS student from Orkatteri in Kozhikode. As a child, she was into athletics and other sports and had maintained a strong physique.

Boxing plans

She took an interest in boxing in 2016, but soon dropped out as she was not allowed to enter the boxing ring wearing braces. She then turned her attention to powerlifting and was declared the ‘Strong Woman of Kerala’ thrice by the Kerala Powerlifting Association. She got silver medal in the Asian Powerlifting Championship in 2017.

The idea of bodybuilding popped up recently. “I was apprehensive about taking part as it involved much skin show,” Majiziya said. “But then I came across some videos of Egyptian women bodybuilders and decided to adopt the costumes they used.”

She did not know how to pose, and being too nervous, couldn’t even smile while on stage. But thanks to fellow male bodybuilders from Kozhikode who encouraged her and officials who tipped her on the importance of smile, she gained confidence by the time she reached the finals. “The clothes were never a problem as the judges were experienced enough to assess a clothed person’s build,” Majiziya explained.

Source of support

She considers her family and fiance, who encourages her in her endeavours, as her greatest strength. Majiziya, who competes in the 52-kilogram category, now dreams of taking part in the World Powerlifting Championship.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Kerala / by Aabha Raveendran / Kozhikode – March 05th, 2018

Affan Yesvi, A Social Activist From Kashmir Participates In UN Conference

JAMMU & KASHMIR :

AffanMPOs04mar2018

United Nations (KNB):

Affan Yesvi, a young social activist from Kashmir participated in a 3 days United Nations Global Sustainability Development Goals SDGs Conference – A global preparatory meet in support of SDG7 at 2018 High-Level Political Forum in Bangkok, Thailand.
Pertinent to mention that at a very young age he founded a non-profit organization by the name of ‘The Inner Call – a forum for Evolution, Development and Awareness’ in 2009. The organization has been contributing in spheres of mental health, environment protection, women empowerment, youth activities and social research, with the sole aim of promoting human values. The organization has also organized various legal awareness camps.
The United Nations High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF), serving as the central platform for follow-up and review of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
To help provide a solid substantive foundation for the review of SDG7, a global preparatory meeting in support of the review of SDG7 at the 2018 High-Level Political Forum, jointly organized by United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA) and United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), was held from  21-23 February 2018 at the United Nations Conference Centre in Bangkok, Thailand. (KNB)
source: http://www.kashmirnewsbureau.com / Kashmir News Bureau / Home / Jammu & Kashmir / March 01st, 2018