The Journey of Dr. Istikhar Ali and the Roads That Listen

NEW DELHI :

On a quiet October morning in Delhi, when most people begin their day scrolling through screens, Dr. Istikhar Ali adjusted his helmet, whispered a small prayer, and kick-started a motorcycle that would soon become a moving classroom, a counselling room, a travelling research lab – and sometimes, a silent companion.

His destination? Unknown.

His purpose? Crystal clear.

He wanted to take the conversation about mental health to places where such conversations were never held before.

This is the story of a young public-health scholar who turned India’s highways into corridors of compassion, its villages into forums of reflection, and its communities into partners in healing.

A Beginning Rooted in Delhi, Inspired by JNU

My first conversation with him began on a nostalgic note – about Delhi.

“I stayed four years in Delhi and visited JNU several times,” I told him.

He smiled and replied, “Strange… you came so close, but destiny didn’t let us meet. Maybe it waited for this moment.”

From there, he unfolded his journey – from his early education, his family’s values, to the rigorous intellectual environment of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), where his academic foundation in public health took shape. JNU not only gave him knowledge; it gave him a lens to look at human suffering not as isolated incidents, but as products of social, economic, and political realities. His research, activism, and writing reflect this lens deeply.

In his widely-read Scroll article, “Weary, Wary and Alone: From Delhi to Kerala, the Mental Distress Indians Struggle With” he documents the harsh truths he encountered during earlier travels: loneliness, anxiety, financial uncertainty, and the silent emotional burdens people carry across India.

In 26 days, he spoke to hundreds – students, farmers, teachers, journalists – each revealing how deeply mental suffering is woven into everyday life.

India, after all, is a country where, one in every seven Indians suffers from a mental health condition, over 200 million people face mental-health related distress, and close to 90% receive no treatment or support (NIMHANS & WHO reports).

Against this backdrop, one young man decided to ride, literally, into the heart of the problem.

The Ride Begins (Delhi to Kerala — 3,500 km of Listening, Healing, and Hope)

On 10 October 2025 – World Mental Health Day, Dr. Istikhar Ali began a 3,500 km solo motorcycle journey titled, “Ride for Mental Health: Beyond the Stigma.”

Supported by Snehi India and fuelled by nothing but conviction, he had no fixed plan – only a direction, and a determination to reach people who do not visit clinics, do not read scholarly journals, but silently battle overwhelming emotional storms.

His route spanned: Delhi → Jaipur → Ajmer → Beawar → Udaipur → Ahmedabad → Anand → Ankleshwar → Vapi → Mumbai → Ratnagiri → South Goa → Mangaluru → Kozhikode → Malappuram → Kannur

Every village, every town, every stop became a lesson in lived experience. Where formal institutions build walls, he created bridges – conducting, 10+ public sessions, 30+ group discussions, hundreds of one-to-one conversations, workshops in universities and NGOs, corner meetings in markets, talks in madrasas, community centres and mosques and media interviews across states.

What makes his journey unique is that it wasn’t a mental-health “campaign”. It was a human campaign. He listened more than he spoke. He observed before he intervened. He met people where they were, not where textbooks expect them to be. And sometimes, the roads listened to him too.

A Day with Him: My Encounter in South Goa

When I met him in South Goa, he had just completed a long stretch from Ratnagiri. Dusty, exhausted, carrying nothing but essentials on his bike, he still greeted me with an unmistakable warmth. We spent hours discussing his work, his fears, his determination.

At one point he said: “Azhar Bhai, I started this journey without any detailed plan. But at every turn, God opened a door. And today, He brought me to you before I move from Madgaon towards Udupi.”

His humility was striking. At a time when the world is becoming increasingly self-obsessed and digitally distracted, here was a man riding across states not for adventure but for others.

His mission is a reminder that:

  • Mental health is not an individual struggle.
  • It is shaped by society, economy, politics, faith, family, and culture.
  • Healing requires communities, not just clinics.

If he can bring even 1% improvement in awareness among the millions struggling silently, it will be a monumental contribution. Great reformers and thinkers across history started with small circles that eventually created waves. His work stands in that lineage – contemporary, deeply relevant, and urgently needed.

Stories from the Road – Where Pain Meets Courage

Across his ride, he encountered:

  • A college student in Udaipur hiding panic attacks from his family,
  • A migrant worker in Ankleshwar battling depression after job loss,
  • A young girl in Goa openly speaking about anxiety for the first time,
  • A madrasa student in Malappuram sharing the emotional pressure of expectations, and
  • A group of activists in Kerala discussing burnout and resilience.

Each conversation re-affirmed what he often says: “Mental health is not a private burden; it’s a public responsibility.”

Ending Where Faith and Learning Meet

Dr. Istikhar chose Wadihuda Institute of Research and Advanced Studies in Kannur as his final stop – not for symbolism, but for a deeper message. Malappuram is a place where faith meets social service, education meets responsibility, and spirituality meets community welfare. He believes mental-health awareness must be integrated with ta’leem (education), tarbiyya (character development) and dawah (community engagement).

His concluding session, “Mental Health Beyond Silence and Survival: Faith, Education and Community Resilience,” aims to bring together students, scholars, educators and community leaders to build a culture of emotional support and resilience.

A Scholar, A Listener, A Traveller – But Above All, A Servant of Humanity

Dr. Istikhar Ali is a rare combination:

  • A public health scholar trained at JNU,
  • A DAAD Fellow with international exposure,
  • A grassroots listener who sits with people on sidewalks,
  • A writer whose words reflect lived struggle, and
  • A traveller who rides not for thrill but for purpose.

He is not simply creating awareness; he is creating a movement. In an era of self-promotion, he chooses selfless service. In a time of noise, he chooses conversations that matter. In a society crushed by unspoken mental suffering, he chooses courage – both his and others’. His journey teaches us that healing is not always found in hospitals. Sometimes, it begins on dusty roads, under bus shelters, in chai shops, in classrooms, in mosques, in marketplaces, and in the hearts of people who finally feel heard.

The Road Ahead

When he concluded his ride in Kerala, his mission didn’t end; it expanded. He plans to compile a publication and visual report from the stories collected, build alliances with educational institutions, create youth-led support networks, train community volunteers, continue travelling across new states and to develop research documenting the social roots of mental distress.

Every revolution starts with a single step. He started with a motorcycle engine roaring in Delhi. Dr. Istikhar Ali is not merely riding a bike across India. He is riding across stigma, across silence, across fear – to build a more compassionate society.

His journey is a reminder that the greatest service to God is service to His people, and that mental health is not a luxury; it’s an essential human right.

source: http://www.radiancenews.com / Radiance News / Home> Features> Focus / by Syed Azharuddin / Radiance News Bureau / November 17th, 2025

Legendary Mughal mosque unearthed in Delhi

DELHI :

Archeological Survey of India says the monument, which residents claim is the Akbarabadi Mosque demolished by the British in 1857, is definitely a ‘contemporary’ of the 17th century Red Fort.

Archaeologist D.N. Dimri(l) shows the artefacts unearthed from the site at Matia Mahal, Old Delhi.

Remains of a historical monument, unearthed a few steps from Jama Masjid, belong to the golden age of Mughal Empire.

Archeological Survey of India said the monument, which residents claim is the Akbarabadi Mosque demolished by the British in 1857, is definitely a “contemporary” of the 17th century Red Fort, though whether it was a mosque or not will be known only after a detailed survey of the area.

The site in Matia Mahal, near Daryaganj, has been drawing visitors in hordes since the past three weeks after the first proofs of the historical structure – pottery and carved stones – were discovered in the area.

On Wednesday, a 10 metre wide wall was discovered a few feet under the ground. Residents claimed the wall was a part of the boundary of the main prayer enclosure, supposed to be about 85 metre wide.

A sketch of the lost Akbarabadi Mosque. ASI officials said the discovery of the site is “indeed remarkable”.

“What we have here is a structure definitely of the time of the Red Fort. It is important due to its proximity both to the Jama Masjid and the Red Fort. The articles discovered from the site – Chinese porcelain, glaze pottery – belong to the period of the Mughals. What the structure exactly is will be known only after detailed survey,” superintending archaeologist Dr D.N. Dimri said.

But residents are confident that evidence of the structure being a mosque is present in the archives.

“We have maps clearly showing the structure of the Akbarabadi mosque in a book authored by the great scholar Sir Syed Ahmad Khan. There are illustrations of the mosque in the development plan of this area, issued by the Delhi government,” Matia Mahal MLA Shoaib Iqbal said.

source: http://www.indiatoday.in / India Today / Home> News> India> North / by Mail Today Bureau / published by AtMigration / July 07th, 2012

Syed Shahabuddin’s legacy commemorated by distinguished speakers at Delhi’s Ghalib Academy

BIHAR / DELHI :

New Delhi :

The 19th Memorial lecture commemorating the esteemed Urdu journalist Mahfoozur Rahman was held at the Ghalib Academy in Nizamuddin, Delhi. Mahfoozur Rahman, a distinguished journalist from India, was among the eminent Muslim journalists who passed away on February 6, 2010. Every year, one or two such memorial lectures are organized to honour his invaluable contributions.

This year’s lecture centred on the theme: “Syed Shahabuddin’s National and Milli Services.” Urdu journalist Wafa Azmi of Rashtriya Sahara newspaper, Delhi, delivered a meticulously prepared discourse on this subject. He emphasized that amidst those dedicated to religion, politics, culture, journalism, and social service, the late Syed Shahabuddin remains a prominent ambassador and distinguished IFS officer. Azmi underscored that omitting his name from discussions would be a disservice not only to him but also to society at large.

Wafa Azmi shared that Shahabuddin was born on November 4, 1935, near Gaya in Bihar—though some accounts suggest Ranchi as his birthplace. After completing his early education locally, he moved to Patna for higher studies, earning an MSc from Patna University. He also served there as a faculty member for a few years. During this period, he prepared for the Union Public Service Commission exams, qualified, and secured a high rank in the Indian Foreign Service (IFS).

His diplomatic career began as Deputy Consul General in New York. Over the years, Shahabuddin represented India in various countries, serving as an ambassador and diplomat. In 1978, he voluntarily retired from diplomatic service and ventured into Indian politics to address national issues.

Dr. Zafarul-Islam Khan a senior journalist, scholar and author shared his long-standing association with Shahabuddin, recalling that he was brought into the national fold by him. Initially a journalist, Shahabuddin invited him to participate in the All India Muslim Majlis-e-Mashawarat, where he was soon appointed General Secretary and later President. Dr. Zafarul-Islam praised Shahabuddin’s deep trust in him, both professionally and personally.

He recounted a personal experience from a 2003 trip to Kashmir with Shahabuddin, where sharing a room revealed his inner greatness—his early morning Fajr prayer and recitation of the Quran. Dr. Zafarul-Islam also highlighted Shahabuddin’s unwavering commitment to Indian constitutional principles, always insisting that all actions be within the framework of the Constitution, which he regarded as a sufficient safeguard of rights.

Furthermore, he mentioned that Shahabuddin launched the English-language magazine “Muslim India,” which he published from 1980 to 2000. In 2002, Shahabuddin asked him to resume publication, which he did for two years before halting due to financial constraints. Later, Shahabuddin revived the magazine, which continued to be published for several more years.

Dr. Zafarul-Islam lamented that although “Muslim India” was a quality publication, its readership remained limited, and it often operated at a loss. Despite this, it featured valuable discussions on Muslim and national issues. He revealed that he had compiled Shahabuddin’s editorials into two volumes, which are soon to be published and have been personally proofread by him. He also shared plans to publish a comprehensive volume of all Shahabuddin’s writings.

He clarified that Syed Shahabuddin was not a populist leader—a view reinforced after the demolition of the Babri Masjid. Moreover, Dr. Zafarul-Islam recounted Shahabuddin telling him that the idea of boycotting January 26, the Republic Day or wearing black bands was not his but originated from Azam Khan, and that Shahabuddin was compelled to accept it.

Senior journalist Masoom Moradabadi highlighted Shahabuddin’s heroic role during the Shah Bano case, when the Indian Muslim Personal Law Board launched the largest post-independence movement among Muslims, with Shahabuddin’s speeches drawing crowds in the hundreds of thousands.

Prof. Naseer Ahmad Khan, a close associate of Shahabuddin, expressed regret that despite his stature as a respected leader across educated circles and among the masses, only a modest funeral was held—attended by a few officials from Jamaat-e-Islami Hind, the Muslim League, and other organizations. He contrasted this with the funeral of Maulana Muhammad Ahmad Samar, which saw an estimated two to 2.5 lakh mourners, highlighting society’s oversight of Shahabuddin’s immense contributions.

Father Solomon George, the guest of honour, remarked that the stories and media reports about Shahabuddin barely scratch the surface of his efforts in social welfare and minority rights. As a fellow minority, he emphasized the importance of reflecting on why minority leaders often become vulnerable at critical moments, especially in today’s India.

Mr. Nisar Khan moderated the event, which was attended by notable Urdu personalities and presided over by retired Professor Abdul Haq of Delhi University, an esteemed scholar of Urdu and Persian literature.

In his presidential address, Professor Abdul Haq expressed his gratitude for the opportunity to participate in this gathering. He extended heartfelt congratulations to Shahabuddin, recalling his first meeting with him during Chandrashekhar’s tenure as Prime Minister. He reminisced that Shahabuddin was then a shining star in Muslim politics, actively listening to the Prime Minister’s serious discussions on the Babri Masjid issue.

This event served as a fitting tribute to a truly remarkable leader who left an indelible mark on society through his dedicated service and unwavering principles.

source: http://www.indiatomorrow.net / India Tomorrow / Home> Politics> Society / by Zillur Rahman Haider / December 02nd, 2025

125-year-old dispute between two breakaway Shia Dawoodi Jamaats resolved by Maharashtra Minorities Commission

Nagpur, MAHARASHTRA :

New Delhi :

In a landmark action ensuring communal harmony, the 125-year-old Mehdi Bagh-Chimthanawala dispute between two breakaway Shia Dawoodi Jamaats in Nagpur, which had dragged through courts for decades, has finally been resolved peacefully through mediation by the Maharashtra State Minorities Commission.

The century-old conflict, rooted in religious succession and property issues, was settled in just 14 days, marking one of the swiftest and most historic arbitrations in the history of Maharashtra. The Commission’s chairperson, Pyare Khan, who enjoys the rank of the Minister of State, played a pivotal role in brokering peace between the two warring sects.

The case had a long judicial history and it was argued by some of India’s most renowned lawyers and heard by eminent judges. Interestingly, it reached a conclusion in only two hearings before Khan, who persuaded both the parties to arrive at an amicable understanding. The final order, based on a settlement deed signed on January 21, 2025, was officially issued on November 11, 2025.

The roots of the Mehdi Bagh-Chimthanawala conflict trace back to 1840, following the death of Syedna Badruddin Saheb, the 46th Dai of the Dawoodi Bohra sect. Disagreement over his successor led to the formation of two factions, known as Atba-e-Malak Jamaat and Mehdi Bagh Institution, by Maulana Malak Saheb and his followers in Nagpur in 1891.

After Maulana Malak Saheb’s death in 1899, the institution split into Mehdi Bagh and Chimthanawala groups. The Mehdi Bagh sect recognised Maulana Badruddin Ghulam Husain Malak Saheb as its spiritual head, while the Chimthanawala group followed Maulana Abdul Qadir Chimthanawala. Over time, disputes over religious leadership, property ownership, and financial control escalated, with both sides accusing each other of mismanagement, religious misconduct, and inciting communal tension.

The contested property, estimated to be worth over Rs. 4,000 crore, became the focal point of multiple lawsuits across decades in the Bombay High Court and the Supreme Court. The dispute witnessed some of India’s most eminent advocates representing both camps. On behalf of the Mehdi Bagh group, legal stalwarts such as Fali Nariman, Kapil Sibal, P. Chidambaram, Uday Lalit, K.K. Venugopal, Gopal Subramanium, and others appeared. Representing the Chimthanawala faction were Soli Sorabjee, Andhyarujina, C. Sundaram, and Rohinton Nariman, among several others.

Under the agreement reached through the Commission’s mediation, the property listed under Special Civil Suit No. 143/1967 was declared as Mehdi Bagh Waqf, to be administered by Maulana Amiruddin Malak Saheb. Maulana Abde Ali Chimthanawala will manage the Dawoodi Atba-e-Malak Wakf, Atba-e-Humayun, and Baitul Aman trusts.

While both sects agreed not to interfere in each other’s religious affairs, all pending litigations across the country will be withdrawn by mutual consent. Declaring the settlement as a “historic milestone in communal harmony,” Khan said this was not just the end of a legal dispute but a triumph of peace and understanding.

“The bitterness of 125 years has been replaced by brotherhood. The Maharashtra Minorities Commission has proven that any conflict can be resolved through dialogue and mutual respect,” Khan said. The resolution of the 125-year-old Mehdi Bagh-Chimthanawala dispute stands as a remarkable example of restorative justice and interfaith harmony, bringing closure to one of Nagpur’s and India’s oldest community conflicts.

The case reached the Commission after 73 members of the Mehdi Bagh institution filed a complaint against Abde Ali Chimthanawala and others, alleging violations of religious, financial, and personal rights. The first hearing took place on January 7, 2025, attended by representatives from both sides — four members from Mehdi Bagh and advocates R.S. Singh and Abdullah Khan representing the Chimthanawala group.

Following Khan’s suggestion to seek reconciliation, both parties returned on January 21, 2025, agreeing to a mutual settlement. The final order was officially issued on November 11, 2025, bringing closure to a dispute that had divided the Dawoodi Bohra community for more than a century.

Expressing satisfaction over the outcome, Sadique Razzak Chimthanawala, son of Maulana Abde Ali Saheb Chimthanawala, said: “We are content with the settlement deed and grateful that this long-standing dispute has ended peacefully.”

Afzal Mehdi, a member of the Mahdi Bagh legal team, echoed the sentiment, stating, “This is a historic day for both communities. Our relations with the Chimthanawala group have improved, and we are confident that such disputes will not arise again. We sincerely thank Minorities Commission chief Pyare Khan for his efforts.”

source: http://www.indiatomorrow.net / India Tomorrow / Home> National Interest / by India Tomorrow Correspondent / November 29th, 2025

Irjik and Vati-cha Vyavahar: A Confluence of Konkani Culture and Islamic Faith

KONKAN / INDIA :

video

Mumbai :

To understand a person’s character, nature, and values, it is enough to look at their neighbour. Your neighbour acts as a social mirror for you. There are many reasons for this. The people with whom we spend the most time unconsciously influence our thoughts and behaviour. If your neighbour is good, well-cultured, and helpful, it is highly likely that you are also like that or strive to be so. Conversely, if your neighbour is quarrelsome, selfish, or has bad habits, and you get along with them, people may conclude that you either share those same flaws or are indifferent to such things.

We can choose our friends, but the choice of our neighbours is not always in our hands. In such a situation, how you behave with your neighbour reveals your true nature. If your neighbour is good and you have an amicable relationship, it shows that you value goodness. Similarly, if your neighbour is troublesome, how you handle the situation reveals your patience, understanding, or resilience. Whether you argue with them, ignore them, or find a solution through mutual understanding provides an insight into your personality.

Especially in small villages or traditional societies, a person’s reputation often depends on the testimony of their neighbours. For any new relationship (for instance, when a marriage proposal is considered) or for financial transactions, people first inquire with the neighbours. The ‘Character Certificate’ given by a neighbour is considered the most reliable. If your neighbours speak well of you, your standing in society increases.

In India, particularly in rural and semi-urban areas, ‘Shejardharma’ (the ethos of neighbourliness) is given great importance. Life here is not individualistic but communal. Your every transaction, your joys, and your sorrows are not yours alone; they belong to the community and especially to your neighbours. Your neighbour is your first companion in joy and sorrow and your first witness, which is why your identity is intrinsically linked with theirs.

The soil of Konkan is not just a land of red laterite stones and verdant areca nut groves; it is a soft fabric woven with the threads of different faiths and cultures. The lives of its people are as indebted to the salty sea breeze and the mighty rains of the Sahyadris as they are to the harmony of Hindu-Muslim communities living together for generations. Two living and eloquent symbols of this unity are ‘Irjik’ and ‘Vati-cha Vyavahar’. Both these traditions have crossed the walls of religion and blended so seamlessly into the lives of the Muslim community of Konkan that they have become a part of their very faith.

Irjik: Brotherhood that Blossoms from Sweat

The Muslim community of Konkan is of this very soil, raised in its air and water. Rice farming is the backbone of their lives too, so during the hustle of planting and harvesting, helping one another was not a choice but a necessity. Out of this need, the tradition of ‘Irjik’ or ‘Saavad’, an exchange of sweat and labour, naturally took root among them. This was not merely a convenience but an effortless rule of life. Even today, in the villages of Konkan, a Muslim farmer lends his shoulder to his Hindu neighbour’s rice planting, and the Hindu brother rushes to help with his work.

According to a famous saying, “A man is known by his neighbour.” In Konkan, this identity is not confined to the walls of a house; it reaches down to the footprints in the mud. ‘Irjik’ is not just help with work; it is the sowing of a pure sentiment. Islamic teachings give this sentiment a deeper and more sublime meaning.

The Holy Qur’an, in Surah Al-Ma’idah, commands, “And cooperate in righteousness and piety.” وَتَعَاوَنُوا۟ عَلَى ٱلْبِرِّ وَٱلتَّقْوَىٰ ۖ وَلَا تَعَاوَنُوا۟ عَلَى ٱلْإِثْمِ وَٱلْعُدْوَٰنِ – Holy Quran, Surah Al-Ma’idah, Ayah 2 (Chapter 5, Verse 2) (Cooperate in righteousness and God-consciousness (Taqwa), and do not cooperate in sin and aggression.”) The practice of ‘Irjik’ is the finest example of this command, as it facilitates help for a good cause (agriculture) through mutual cooperation. ‘Irjik’ is the earthly, soil-level manifestation of this divine command. When a neighbour is in difficulty, what could be a greater act of virtue than coming together to work so that the work in their field is completed on time?

In Islam, Huquq ul-Ibad (the rights of fellow human beings) are given the highest status, and within that, the rights of the neighbour (Huquq al-Jar) are considered paramount. The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ stated unequivocally, “He is not a believer who eats his fill while his neighbour beside him goes hungry.” (ليس المؤمن الذي يشبع وجاره جائع إلى جنبه” Hadith – BukhariMusnad Ahmad). This Hadith clarifies that Iman (faith) is not limited to personal worship but is tied to social responsibility. To be unaware of a neighbour’s hunger is considered a sign of diminished faith. This teaching is not confined to hunger; it applies to every need of a neighbour. Lending a helping hand to a neighbour burdened by work is the very soul of that teaching.

‘Irjik’ is a humane solution to economic inequality. Even someone who does not have money to pay for labour can cultivate their farm with dignity because of this tradition. Here, ‘labour’ is the greatest currency, and this spirit of equality is very close to Islamic ideology. Therefore, when the Muslim community of Konkan gathers for ‘Irjik’, they are not just planting rice seedlings; through their actions, they are also cultivating the values of cooperation, brotherhood, and social justice.

Vati-cha Vyavahar: The Sweetness of Affection

The ‘vati’ (bowl) that circulates among the homes of Konkan is not just an exchange of food; it is a continuous flow of affection and warmth from the heart. This practice is just as alive in the Muslim households of Konkan. On Eid al-Fitr, their celebration is incomplete until the sweetness of Sheer-Khurma reaches the neighbour’s house. They find no peace until a share of the sacrifice from Eid al-Adha is given to the neighbour. This is not just a custom; it is a beautiful expression of their faith.

Islam has given such importance to neighbourliness that it is said, “The Angel Jibra’il (Gabriel) kept advising me about the rights of the neighbour so frequently that I thought he would command him to be an heir.” (مازال جبريل يوصيني بالجار حتى ظننت أنه سيورثه Hadith – Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim). This shows the immense significance given to the rights of a neighbour in Islam. Inheritance rights are typically reserved for blood relatives, but the emphasis was so great that it seemed a neighbour might be granted a share. In the light of this teaching, the ‘Vati-cha Vyavahar’ ceases to be a mere social courtesy and becomes a religious duty, an Ibadat (act of worship).

Another heart-warming teaching of the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ is, “When you prepare a broth (stew), add more water to it and send some to your neighbours.” (يا أبا ذر إذا طبخت مرقة فأكثر ماءها وتعاهد جيرانك Hadith – Sahih Muslim). This teaching is extremely practical. It tells us to cultivate the habit of sharing whatever we have, even if it is a little. The idea behind the ‘Vati-cha Vyavahar’ is precisely this: to include one’s neighbour in the joy created in one’s own home. The message is so simple and beautiful! True happiness lies in sharing whatever you have, no matter how little. ‘Vati-cha Vyavahar’ is the essence of this teaching. That bowl is a small token of affection that enhances the sweetness in relationships. This is because, according to Islamic tradition, “Exchange gifts, and you will love one another.” (تهادوا تحابوا Hadith – Bukhari). This is a small but highly effective teaching. Giving gifts removes mutual resentments and increases love and affection. ‘Vati-cha Vyavahar’ is a beautiful manifestation of this teaching, where affection is exchanged without any expectation. The unwritten rule of never returning an offered bowl empty is an unspoken agreement to maintain the continuity of this flow of love.

‘Irjik’ and ‘Vati-cha Vyavahar’, these Konkani traditions, play a dual role for the Muslim community. On one hand, they connect them to the shared culture of this land, and on the other, they give them an opportunity to live their Islamic values and faith in practice. Therefore, when a bowl goes from a Muslim home in Konkan to a neighbour, it is not just a dish; it is imbued with a legacy of generations and the noble message of Islamic brotherhood. This, indeed, is the true wealth of Konkan.

The spirit of cooperation at the root of ‘Irjik’ is one of the foundational principles of Islam.

Ta’awun (Mutual Cooperation): The Holy Quran explicitly states (Surah Al-Ma’idah, Ayah 2), “And cooperate in righteousness and piety.” ‘Irjik’ is a practical and living example of this command. Helping one’s neighbour or community member in their work is considered not just a social duty but also a virtuous religious act.

Al-Faza’a (الفزعة): This is an Arabic word which means “to rush swiftly to someone’s aid. When a sudden calamity befalls a village or a tribe (e.g., a fire, an enemy attack, or the sudden threat of rain during harvest), a call for help is made. In response to this call, the entire village or tribe comes together and works without any charge. This practice is similar to the urgent and collective nature of ‘Irjik’.

Al-’Awna (العونة): This word is the closest in meaning to ‘Irjik’. Al-’Awna means “planned collective help.” People in a village come together, especially for agricultural work (harvesting, threshing), building a house, or digging a well. They help each other in turns. The practice operates on the principle that “today I will help with your work, and tomorrow you will help with mine.” There is no monetary transaction involved, only an exchange of labour.

Although the practice of ‘Irjik’ in Konkan is known by its local name, the underlying spirit of collective cooperation, reciprocal labour, and brotherhood is universal. This very spirit is the soul of Islamic teachings, and many practices similar to Irjik, such as Al-Faza’a and Al-’Awna, exist in Arab culture to this day.

[The writer is Executive Editor of “SHODHAN”, the Marathi weekly published from Mumbai, Contact: 8976533404]

source: http://www.radiancenews.com / Radiance News / Home> Features / by Shahjahan Magdum / Radiance News Bureau / November 21st, 2025

Sir Shafaat Ahmed’s Brief Pre-Independence Political Career Has Lessons for Contemporary India

Moradabad, Uttar Pradesh / BRITISH INDIA :

Muslims not affiliated to political parties have very little chance of making it to public life.

Sir Shafaat Ahmed (left) in Egypt with Jinnah and his sister Fatima.

On September 2, 1946, members of the Interim Government took oath in Delhi. The Interim Government was formed to facilitate the transfer of power from the British to Indians, and consisted entirely of Indians, except for the Viceroy and the commander-in-chief. The plan was for it to have a total of 14 members which was to include five Hindus, five Muslims, and one member each from the Scheduled Caste, Parsi, Sikh and Christian communities, but before it finally took office, there was much debate and politicking, some of its acrimonious, about its composition and structure.

Only 12 positions were finally filled: Jawaharlal Nehru, Sardar Patel, Rajendra Prasad, C. Rajagopalchari, Sarat Chandra Bose, Dr John Matthai, Sardar Baldev Singh, Jagjivan Ram, C.H. Bhabha, Asaf Ali, Syed Ali Zaheer and Sir Shafaat Ahmed. Mohammed Ali Jinnah, who had broken away from the Congress, stayed away as he wanted the Muslim members to be only from the Muslim League. One of the names he objected to was that of Sir Shafaat Ahmed Khan, a scholar politician.

His appointment offers an example of how to the political trajectory of ‘independent’ – i.e. non-politically affiliated – Muslims in India has been fraught with strife.

The inclusion of these three Muslims undermined Jinnah’s constant demand that all Muslim members of the Interim Government should be from the League. “The Viceroy only added insult to injury by nominating three Muslims who, he knows, do not command either the respect or the confidence of Muslim India,” said Jinnah after Viceroy Wavell’s announcement. The inclusion of Sir Shafaat had particularly riled the Muslim League because he had left it over fundamental differences. While in the League, he had defended it publicly but also disagreed on many issues – the final parting came when the League asked that titles given by the British be returned, and Sir Shafaat disagreed strongly.

On the evening of August 24, 1946, as Sir Shafaat was returning from his walk, he was attacked by two youngsters near Darbhanga House (which now houses a school) in Shimla. He received deep wounds on his head, chest and neck. The incident happened just a few hours after Wavell announced on radio that Sir Shafaat would be a member of the Executive Council. This was a rare and outrageous physical attack on a high-ranking Muslim, and is also a telling statement on the precarious position of the independent Muslim.

Jinnah’s notion of non-League Muslim leaders as lacking respect among Muslims was central to his self-declared position as the sole spokesman of the community. He also argued that even the Congress be not allowed to nominate a Muslim, a condition that was never accepted by the British. The attack on Sir Shafaat Ahmed was reflective of the rather restricted space in the political firmament for Muslims who were not in either the Congress or the Muslim League camp. Two more Muslim leaders could have been inducted in the Interim Government (to take the total number of Muslims to five), but the questions of acceptability and legitimacy of any non-League, non-Congress Muslim prevented that.

‘Congress Moslem’

Reporting on the tussle over the composition of the Interim Government, newspaper reports would describe the Muslim members as either “Congress Moslem”, “non-League Moslem”. For, as the formation of the Interim Government shows, there was hardly any scope for the ‘Muslim’ equivalent of a C.H. Bhabha, who was a businessman, or the Sikh leader Sardar Baldev Singh, both independent of political affiliations, a situation which continues even now.

Discussing the problems facing the composition of the Executive Council with Leo Amery, the secretary of state for India, Viceroy Wavell on June 20, 1945 wrote from Delhi: “The main difficulty is likely to arise over non-League Moslems if Congress insist on putting forward Moslem names. There would also be difficulty in inclusion of non-League non-Congress Moslems.” This is very similar to independent Muslim political actors/formations, not aligned with big parties, struggling to gain legitimacy or patronage.

Sir Shafaat’s inclusion may indicate that there was a scope for a non-Congress non-League Muslim, but it was predicated by the non-participation of Jinnah’s League. On October 26, 1946, three members – Sarat Bose, Sir Shafaat and Syed Zaheer – resigned to make way for the Muslim League, after Jinnah agreed to join the Interim Government.

This brief elevation to a top public office was the highpoint in the political career of Sir Shafaat. In January 1947, there were talks of appointing him as India’s high commissioner to Canada, but it never happened. He had been a member of the UP Legislative Council in the 1920s, part of the Muslim delegation to the Round Table conference and also was India’s high commissioner to South Africa from 1941 to 1944.

Sir Shafaat’s entry to politics was through academia, and not through the popular routes of law or journalism. He is perhaps best remembered as a historian who played a role in the establishment of the Indian History Congress and presided over its first meeting in June 1935 in Pune. As chairman of the Modern Indian History at University of Allahabad he started the Journal of Indian History in 1924. He also taught at University of Madras and Aligarh Muslim University.

He died in Shimla in July 1947, having fallen ill two months earlier. Reporting his death the Congress-supporting Bombay Chronicle noted: “During the greater part of his public career, Dr Shafaat Ahmed Khan, an eminent professor of History and a politician, belonged to a school of thought and activity which quite rightly did not find favour with nationalist India and the Congress. That is why the news of his inclusion in the first Interim Cabinet was received with surprise rather than satisfaction.”

This characterisation of his appointment by the Bombay Chronicle as a “surprise rather than satisfaction” was at odds with the official Congress stand, but was still more charitable than the views of those who placed a greater importance on the joint participation of the Congress and the League in the Interim government. Reflective of the wider mood of the period, Sir Chimanlal Setalvad, for example, termed Sir Shafaat’s inclusion as “unfortunate” and “provocative” to the Muslim League, signifying that the idea of a representative national government during the high politics of Partition could only include Muslims from the League and the Congress.

Muslim representation today

It is only in retrospect that we can assess the figure of Sir Shafaat in the context of the idea of Muslim representation, which requires moving away from the dominant narratives of Congress-Muslim League matrix in the years leading to Partition. It seems that the restrictive bracketing of the nature of Muslim representation is not new, and has a tradition of being inherently inimical to independent voices and movements. It has now taken a much uglier turn.

In colonial India, there was a strong Muslim political presence in Punjab and Bengal, which has continued post-Independence in the form of IUML, MIM and other regional parties. But the story of the national level since then has been different. In independent India, Muslims voted largely for the Congress, which also gave a platform to community leaders. But now with the Congress’s electoral losses, the political sphere has shrunk.

In the current Lok Sabha (like the previous one) too, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) does not have a single Muslim. As the dominant political party, this situation raises a larger existential question on the conception of a Muslim politician itself.

The recent rhetoric of ‘UPSC jihad’, implying the infiltration of the civil services by Muslims, further shows the discomfort in certain sections of the Indian society over Muslims holding positions in public life. Whether it is bureaucracy or politics, it is clear that a narrative of hate and fear, driven by a dangerous construction of undesirability of Muslims in high offices seems to be the driving impulse.

The percentage of Muslim bureaucrats in India has been historically low, and the community’s shrinking political representation in Parliament brings to focus the vexed issue of Muslim representation and shows that walking the political terrain for Muslims has been difficult without patronage from established parties.

Danish Khan is a UK-based journalist and a doctoral candidate at University of Oxford.   

source: http://www.thewire.in / The Wire / Home> Analysis> History / by Danish Khan / September 02nd, 2020

Married off at 14, Binziya’s search for self-respect drives pursuit of learning

Malappuram, KERALA :

Binziya was forced to abandon her studies when her family arranged her marriage in 1997.

Malappuram :

Married off at 14, confined within domestic boundaries for decades, and once ashamed to admit she had studied only up to Class 9, a woman from Malappuram has now rewritten her destiny through education. After 29 years of marriage, Makkaraparambha native Binziya has emerged with a postgraduate degree in psychology, proving that dreams delayed are never dreams denied.

Binziya was forced to abandon her studies when her family arranged her marriage in 1997. One year later, she became a mother. As the eldest daughter-in-law in a large joint family, she was tasked with looking after her husband’s younger siblings and managing all household responsibilities.

“I was still a child. But I had to act like a grown woman because everyone expected me to be one,” she recalls. Education became a distant memory as cooking, cleaning and childcare took over her life. “There was no space for my wishes. My daughter and later my son became my world. But deep inside, I always missed learning.”

A turning point came when the family shifted to their own home. She came to know about the government’s literacy mission and decided to ask her husband if she could attempt the Class 10 equivalency examination. “My husband supported me without hesitation. When I passed with good marks, I cried. I felt alive again,” she says. She went on to complete her higher secondary education next before enrolling for a BA English programme through distance education in 2020.

But her heart was always set on psychology. “I have gone through many emotional struggles in life. Who understands pain better than a woman? I wanted to learn psychology so that I could help others like me,” she says.

The biggest driving force behind her educational pursuit was her own self-respect. “Whenever someone asked me how much I had studied, I felt ashamed to say Class 9. That shame pushed me to continue learning. I wanted to feel proud of myself,” she explains.

Her years of effort finally came to fruition as she completed her MA in psychology. Binziya says she hopes her story encourages other women who were denied opportunities. “There are many women like me in Malappuram who are married off too early and remain confined to their homes. I want them to know that education is still possible.”

She is also proud of the change within her own family. “My daughter completed her Plus-II before marriage. She has finished her degree and is preparing for postgraduate studies. It makes me happy that she will not have to carry the same regrets I once had.”

Binziya now dreams of becoming a practising psychologist and providing support to homemakers who struggle.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Kerala / by Lakshmi Athira / November 28th, 2025

Vizag professor develops sensor-based Braille learning device to help visually impaired children learn

Vizag, ANDHRA PRADESH :

The device includes a ‘Help Me’ button that alerts the teacher whenever a student needs intervention, improving classroom management.

Mohammed Khwaja Muinuddin Chisti, Assistant Professor in the Department of EECE from GITAM Deemed to be University, has developed an embedded Braille Learning Assistant Embedded Kit (LAEK).Photo | G Satyanarayana

Visakhapatnam :

For many visually impaired children, the journey to literacy begins with the touch of a fingertip. But mastering Braille is often a slow and demanding process that requires constant one-on-one support from teachers, a challenge in schools where trained instructors are scarce and classrooms are full. For families living far from specialised schools, opportunities are even fewer, leaving children dependent on others for even the basics of reading and communication.

A faculty member at GITAM Deemed to be University, Visakhapatnam, is hoping to change that. Mohammed Khwaja Muinuddin Chisti, Assistant Professor in the Department of EECE, has developed an embedded Braille Learning Assistant Embedded Kit (LAEK), a simple, sensor-based device that allows visually impaired children to learn Braille independently, either at home or in school.

The device is a 3 × 2 hollow hemispherical Braille cell fitted with sensors that identify the dot patterns placed by the student. Once the pattern is detected, the system decodes it and provides audio feedback by announcing the corresponding letter, number or instruction. This makes it possible for students to practise and revise lessons without waiting for a teacher to guide every step. “In many schools, one teacher has to train 30 or 40 visually impaired children, and each child needs personal attention for Braille practice,” Chisti remarked, adding, “Many students hesitate to ask the same doubt again. I wanted to create something that lets them learn comfortably at their own pace.”

The device includes a ‘Help Me’ button that alerts the teacher whenever a student needs intervention, improving classroom management. The balls used to form patterns are designed to stay within reach even if dropped, and the device is chargeable, eliminating the difficulty of replacing batteries.

“The tool is also aimed at children who cannot attend blind schools due to distance or lack of accessibility. Parents can guide their child’s learning at home using the same pattern-based method followed in classrooms. Depending on the child’s learning ability, all basic Braille alphabets can be learnt within a few weeks,” Chisti stated.

Before developing this tool, Chisti created a ‘Walking Assistant’ device, a wearable tool that alerts visually impaired users about obstacles through vibrations and sound. His interactions with students and teachers during that project sparked the idea for a more focused educational device.

“When I visited blind schools to donate the walking aids, I saw the kind of effort teachers put in, and how much time it takes for each child to grasp Braille,” he said.

“I felt technology could ease that pressure and help children become confident, independent learners.”

The new learning assistant has been filed for patent registration. Chisti hopes to manufacture and distribute multiple units to blind schools using research grants and donor support.

Future upgrades may include computer vision and speech recognition to help students identify people around them and navigate with greater confidence.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Good News / by Usha Peri / November 30th, 2025

What Indian Cities Owe to Islam

INDIA :

The cities created in the Deccan by Muslim leaders introduced the concept of public space to the Indian world. 

Photograph of Aurangabad from the Allardyce Collection: Album of views and portraits in Berar and Hyderabad, taken by an unknown photographer in the 1860s. This view is of the Kham River, the city lies along its right bank. Photo: Public domain/Wikipedia.

When India specialists examine what Islam has brought to the country, they often focus on cultural aspects such as language, poetry, music, painting, culinary arts, or spirituality. They rarely consider the urban dimension. 

Certainly, historians and geographers readily examine how what the Marçais brothers called “the Islamic city” spread throughout India, but mainly to see it as an exogenous institution, even an enclave sheltering an elite that came from outside and was cut off from society. Pratyush Shankar’s recent book covers this dimension, of course, but goes further.

In History of Urban Form of India, a work based on the analysis of 42 Indian cities, the author distinguishes three types of cities – which form the three parts of the book: ancient cities, medieval cities, and cities produced by the modern state.

Ancient cities, apart from those of the Indus civilisation, are mainly epitomised in the “temple cities” of southern India. While medieval cities follow several different patterns, Pratyush Shankar distinguishes above all between merchant cities – typical of Gujarat – those of the Himalayas (whose form is conditioned by the terrain), and those built by Muslims in the Deccan.

Comparing them proves very useful in understanding Islam’s contribution to the Indian civilisation – something Pratyush Shankar helps us to do, without attempting it himself – thanks to his morphological approach to the city: he is interested only in the form of the city, not in its local mode of governance or its relationship with the state.  

All Indian cities inherited a significant part of their form or structure from the caste system. Pratyush Shankar points out in the introduction that the “Caste system had a huge impact in determining the location and formation of neighbourhood clusters that were inward looking (in cases of Jodhpur and Udaipur) and the possibility to shut off from the city by controlling the gates (Pols of Ahmedabad)”. 

History of Urban Form of IndiaFrom Beginning till 1900’s, Pratyush Shankar, OUP, 2024.

The caste logic is naturally at work in the “temple city”:

“The idea of using a Brahmin settlement (with a temple) for creating a surplus economy was central to the birth of cities in South India. This was legitimized through the Brahminical ideology of the Brahmin-Kshatriya coalition expressed through Vedic and puranic religion”.

And naturally, the “temple city” is “divided into various sectors based on function differentiation that was represented through various caste-based housing. The caste system was strictly observed and manifested itself in the planning of these urban centers”.

The cities built by Muslim leaders from the 14th century onwards in the Deccan did not escape the caste system – especially since distinguishing between Hindu and Islamic cities constitutes “a very simplistic binary” that does not reflect a much more complex reality. But these medieval cities of the Deccan added something new to the urban form that had prevailed in the country until then. This innovation did not take place within the city, but outside – and still, that was a key element of the city dynamics: not far from the city walls, but well outside the city itself, Sufi saints settled in an almost systematic manner. They deliberately distanced themselves from the city to show their detachment from material things and live in peace. At the same time, the inhabitants revered them: “People would leave the material city behind to spend a day at the sacred Sufi sites and return by evening”. 

After their death, these saints were buried in the very place where they stood, and a mausoleum called “Dargah” was built around their tomb, the size of which varied according to the popularity of the saint. 

What Pratyush Shankar does not say is that throughout society, Sufi saints were attributed with considerable powers, even beyond death: many devotees continued to visit the Dargah centuries after the saint’s death to ask him to grant their wishes (whether it be to have a child, to be cured of an illness, or to pass exams). This votive logic, due to its transactional nature, transcends social barriers of all kinds: Hindus, Christians, Sikhs, etc. worship Sufi saints, people from all walks of life, from the elite to the lower castes, rub shoulders at the Dargah and, finally, even in the Holy of Holies, women and men are admitted on an equal footing. But Pratyush Shankar assumes that the reader what I have mentioned above when he concludes:

“The unique contribution of the Deccan cities was perhaps not so much in any extraordinary formation within, but rather in the development of the prominent district of the Sufi saints and the suburbs. Sufi saints were popular amongst the masses and provided the much-needed counterpoint to the state. If the city represented the material world of trade, commerce, and power, the suburban precincts of Sufi tombs were just the opposite; a sacred and spiritual space with frugal infrastructure which is out there in the lap of nature. Over the centuries, this typology took firm root as these complexes of tombs became public places that were frequented by city dwellers like a pilgrimage out of the city, as they often lay just outside the fort walls of the city”.

The word is out: “public space”!

The cities created in the Deccan by Muslim leaders in the 14th century introduced the concept of public space to the Indian world, which had ignored  it until then due to the deep cleavages that divided society along lines of religion, caste, and gender. This is a contribution of Islam to India that some would call paradoxical, given that the image of this religion, today, is often dominated by the idea of segregation, even exclusion. But before Islam entered India, such open spaces did not exist in the country. 

View of the Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi, 1830, 1843 (oil on canvas) by Colonel Robert Smith (fl.1880-90). Photo: Wikimedia Commons.

Certainly, ascetics established their ashrams out of cities – like Ramana Maharshi’s cave above Tiruvannamalai – but his followers did not disturb him there, and when they did, they interacted with him on the mode of the guru-shishya parampara, whereas around the Dargah, one would find play grounds as well as picnic sites.   

In his book, Pratyush Shankar confines this contribution to the Deccan, but it is tempting to argue that the innovation he points to can be found throughout India. In the north too, Sufi saints settled on the outskirts of cities  – did Nizamuddin not choose to live far from Delhi?  – and their mausoleums still offer the image of a public space open to all. This is even more striking when the Dargah is still surrounded by greenery, even though it has been incorporated into the city, such as Sarkhej Roza in Ahmedabad or Feroz Shah Kotla in Delhi, where Anand Taneja has clearly shown that people from all walks of life still gather today, as befits a public space!                    

Christophe Jaffrelot is Senior Research Fellow at CERI-Sciences Po/CNRS, Paris, Professor of Indian Politics and Sociology at King’s College London, Non resident Scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and Chair of the British Association for South Asian Studies.

source: http://www.thewire.in / The Wire / Home> English> Opinion> Urban / by Christophe Jaffrelot / October 18th, 2025

When Gujarat’s Kachchhi Traders Had the World in Their Palms

GUJARAT :

By recreating a whole world around a group of traders in western India, Chhaya Goswami’s Globalization before Its Time is business history as it should be.

A Dutch trading ship from the late 17th-century. Credit: Wikimedia

The Arabian Sea has a special place in Indian business history. For centuries the cities and settlements on the Arabian Sea littoral traded with each other, exchanging Indian textiles for horse, armaments, pearls and ivory. In turn, some of the textiles were passed on to the Atlantic slave trade in Africa as a medium of exchange, or sent overland to European markets. Coastal merchants indigenous to the region bordering the sea engaged in this business and developed sophisticated systems of banking and shipbuilding to support the mercantile enterprise. The Hindu and Muslim traders of Kachchh were examples of such groups of people.

In the 17th century, the Arabian Sea trade flourished thanks to the control that three powerful empires – the Ottoman in Turkey, the Safavid in Iran and the Mughal in India – exercised on some of the key seaports, and regular transactions amongst them. This was also the time when the European merchant companies established themselves in the Indian Ocean trade, even though the Portuguese had arrived in this world somewhat earlier. In the second half of the eighteenth century, the Mughal empire had almost collapsed and its access to the Arabian Sea ports had long come to an end. Europeans were in the ascendance.

What happened to the indigenous traders and bankers during this period of transition? Two contending stories exist on this question. The first says that they lost ground to the Europeans while their patrons lost political power. The second says that the indigenous traders found partnerships and agency with the Europeans lucrative, and as their fortunes flourished, the Europeans gained in political power. Both stories overstate the Europeans’ commercial prowess and understate the Indians’ capacity to shape the course of history.

Chhaya Goswami’s book is a corrective to such biased histories. It shows that the Kachchhi traders did gain from European trade, and withstood well the decline of empires, but they could do so thanks to their own resources, which included well-developed institutions of commerce and banking, knowledge of the seas, shipping, and shipbuilding, past history of collaborating with political actors, and access to both maritime and overland trading routes.

The book is divided into four chapters, each one of substantial length. Chapter one explores the special characteristics of Kachchh that make it a “land of entrepreneurs”. Chapters two and three describe Kachchhi traders’ activities in Muscat and Zanzibar respectively, and chapter four deals with some of the prominent firms in the maritime trade, and how a few of them extended their operations beyond the southwest Asia region.

Why Kachchh? What is special about the region that it should produce so many merchant groups? The convenient location of the region on a navigable part of the eastern Arabian Sea, as well as the Mandvi port, of course, supplies a part of the answer.

Another part of the answer has to do with politics. The western coastal regions were ruled by small states that depended heavily on income from trade. This dependence was due to the poor agricultural conditions in the region. In turn, these states, though nominally vassals of the Mughals, could exercise a great deal of independence in policy. They used their freedom to create a model of rule where merchants and bankers had a prominent place, not only during warfare, the all-too-common palace intrigues or disasters, but also in normal times. Merchants and bankers helped the business of governance by collecting taxes, revenue farming, making loans, and taking part in administration, whereas the states helped them by offering lucrative contracts and implicitly recognising their laws and practices.

But the political and geographical environment explains little unless we also consider the social and institutional basis of entrepreneurship in the region. The merchant groups in question were ready to establish diaspora networks in port cities around the Arabian Sea. They conducted extensive and complicated financial operations including bill and insurance, and their bills were acceptable to the distant trading points thanks to the diaspora network.

The book shows in interesting detail how Vaishnavite temples and monasteries became effectively banks, clearing houses, and guarantors of reputation. Community law had great force. The merchants had considerable interest in shipbuilding, which in turn encouraged timber trade. In banking, trading, shipbuilding, and navigation, master-apprentice hierarchies were highly developed, showing how much skills were valued and how skills formed.

The book is well-researched and builds on the author’s deep knowledge of vernacular sources and the regional context. It is business history as business history should be, that is, it succeeds in recreating a whole world around a group of traders, and fills an important gap in Indian economic history scholarship.

One wishes, at the same time, that the author had tried to place the Kachchhi traders more firmly in debates on the 18th century economic transition in southern Asia, and attempted some comparative discussion of trading ‘firms’ in Kachchh and elsewhere in the world. Surely the Europeans operated in the same world, with a very different model of a firm. Did the difference matter to institutional and political change? But, perhaps wisely, Goswami’s book steers clear of dry historiography. Instead, it keeps in mind its readers – who will no doubt find the material presented fascinating and the quality of the narrative superb.

Tirthankar Roy is a professor at the London School of Economics and Political Science.

source: http://www.thewire.in / The Wire / Home> English> Books / by Tirthankar Roy / July 04th, 2016