Wednesday, 31 December 2008
Indian of the Year 2008: India's choice - The Indian soldier, Ahmedabad's choice - Narendra Modi
Sunday, 28 December 2008
How today's common Indian Muslim is caught up between his love & patriotism for India on one hand & anti-India acts by Islamic radicals on the other
Teeja Tera Rang Tha Main To
Jiya Tere Dhang Se Main To
Tu Hi Tha Maula, Tu Hi Aan
Maula Mere Lele Meri Jaan
(I was the 3rd colour of your flag
I’ve lived as you wanted me to
You were my God, you were my pride
Oh God, take my life away)
Tere Sang Kheli Holi
Tere Sang Thi Diwali
Tere Anganon Ki Chhaya
Tere Sang Sawan Aaya
Pher Le Tu Chahe Nazaren Chahe Chura Le
Laut Ke Tu Aayega Re Shart Laga Le
(I played Holi with you
And celebrated Diwali with you
Your courtyard provided shade
You brought the rains
You can turn away from me if you want
But you’ll come back, I can bet on it)
Mitti Meri Bhi Bhuri
Wohi Mere Ghee Aur Churi
Wohi Ranjhe Mere Woh Heer
Wohi Sevaiyyan Wohi Kheer
Tujh Se Hi Rooth Na Re Tujhe Hi Manana
Tere Mera Naata Koi Dooja Na Jaana
(I too have walked on the same dark sand
I too have eaten the same ghee and churi
I too believe in the same Ranjha & Heer
I too eat the same sevaiyaan & kheer
You’re the one I get angry with and you’re the one I appease
No one else can understand our relationship)
Teeja Tera Rang Tha Main To
Jiya Tere Dhang Se Main To
Tu Hi Tha Maula, Tu Hi Aan
Maula Mere Lele Meri Jaan
(I was the 3rd colour of your flag
I’ve lived as you wanted me to
You were my God, you were my pride
Oh God, take my life away)
Saturday, 27 December 2008
Wife gambled away by husband. Cops say "its a trivial issue".
Friday, 26 December 2008
Saturday, 20 December 2008
Tuesday, 16 December 2008
Bush Shooed away
It was an emotional farewell, but not quite in the way US president George W Bush might have expected. His press conference in Baghdad took a dramatic turn as TV reporter Muntazer al-Zaidi shouted, ‘‘This is a goodbye kiss from the Iraqi people, dog,’’ and hurled a size 10 shoe at the US prez, forcing him to duck, followed by another, which sailed over Bush’s head. Zaidi, dragged away kicking and screaming and placed under detention, has been hailed by many Iraqis. Bush later laughed off the incident, saying, “I don't know what the guy said, but I saw his sole.”
2.9 crore cases pending across India
Ajmal Amir Kasab's Letter
Muslims raise united voice against terror
Don’t show bias in mourning the dead: Shatrughan Sinha
Tackle Corruption to fight Terror
One reason is that there is a close connection between corruption, patriotism and security. A corrupt society, where corruption has seeped deep into the veins of every segment, can never be patriotic and secure. Politicians are only as good as the society. It's not only our politicians who are corrupt. A large majority of our bureaucracy, government departments, police, or judiciary are no less corrupt. In fact we have accepted corruption as a part of life and have stopped addressing it as a cancer that it is.
Take the our regional passport offices, regional transport offices, property registration offices and customs for example. All these four departments (among a host of others) touch our security in different ways.
Outside all the regional passport offices flourishes an industry of touts favoured by the deep rooted corruption of its officials. The department is a source of extreme harassment of the young, old and infirm alike. Even as our Ministers advice the private sector for greater service orientation, the staff of the passport offices are not even required to wear their name tags, so that you cannot even complain about a corrupt employee who gives you the hardest time over trivia, even when he is willing to oblige a tout who may be producing a fake residential certificate. Clearly, given the system of eager palms and crumpled notes, it is not difficult for unsocial elements to get a passport on demand.
What about regional transport offices? Thanks to this serious rival of the previous department, we can get our licenses without ever taking a driving test ever. The local driving school (often an organization of touts themselves) and those passing for RTO officers can ensure that one does not have to be a real person to own or drive a vehicle. So even if we had the best of our intelligence agencies, it cannot ever trace that truck that exploded in the busy street or the car that was left behind by some desperadoes.
Land or property registration offices can of course give a run of the sleaze money to any. This incidentally is the only office in the country where you pay a bribe to pay your registration taxes. These are also the institutions where if you are a big enough crook, you can manage to register the same property in several different names and collect your sale proceeds from all of them, leaving those poor souls to fight legal battles for the rest of their lives in another corrupt institution – namely, the judiciary. Thus, even a Dawood Ibrahim can acquire property in his own name, in our devil-may-care land at will and also make those papers disappear at will, because his offerings to the priests can be substantial.
And lastly our Customs. Relatively speaking, one might have had less opportunity to experience the full power of corruption here, unless of course you have ever undertaken a transfer of residence from the West. But this may be small change. The big ticket here involves a nexus between arms dealers and customs officials. Remember (but public memory is short) when none less than B P Verma, the Chairman of India's Central Board for Excise and Customs suspended and remanded to the custody of the Central Bureau of Investigation in 2001?
Hundreds of senior politicians, even senior defense personnel, judges and hordes of others have been caught on videos from time to time with their hands in the till. As a society, we are incapable of acting upon such cases, because our investigating agencies, our police and our judiciary together makes a huge corrupt and ineffective nexus. Even our routine appointments in government services, down to appointments and even transfers of teachers and police constables are not immune to corruption. If a constable or a teacher has paid a bribe for a position, what commitment can we expect of them on the job? Drive by any highway, and you will find the landscape dotted with illegal mining from the hills. How can we expect to protect our environment?
What we fail to realize is that any corruption is inherently unpatriotic. And those who are unpatriotic cannot have the moral fibre to guard their society. And if we are unable to address this huge problem of corruption, there is no point blaming our intelligence wings alone. Israel and the US have an upper hand against terror, because they have an upper hand on rank corruption. As a people, we all need a night vigil not against terror attacks, but a day and night vigil against our corruption. Corruption erodes patriotism and opens the gates for terrorism.
Sunday, 7 December 2008
Diego Maradona's comments on George Bush
Time to improve relations between police & minorities - by Shashi Tharoor
As the country copes with the aftermath of the horrors of Mumbai, the hard work of reconstruction, of rebuilding — of reimagining our country—has begun. One genuine cause of satisfaction must be that there was no demonization of our Muslim minority, which the terrorists must have hoped to provoke. The victims of the killers were from every faith, and Indians of every religion have stood united in their anger and determination. And yet it was just the weekend before the attacks that the PM had urged senior police officers not to widen “the fault lines in our society” and to act to “restore the faith of the people— especially those belonging to religious and ethnic minorities and the weaker sections — in the impartiality and effectiveness of the police.” His words reflected a real conundrum: the general public feels it is not adequately protected against the random violence of terrorists, but every pro-active policing effort seriously alienates India's largest minority community. Young Muslim men have been picked up and brutalized for no reason other than their demographic profile, and yet the sneering triumphalism of the terrorists’ Islamist propaganda seems to leave the authorities little choice. But if the efforts to stamp out the sources of terror merely incite the sullen resentment within which terrorism breeds, every crackdown will prove counter-productive. There has to be a better way. And there is. Indian dealt effectively with Sikh extremism by the skilful use of the talents of a pluralist state. The Khalistanis never succeeded in making their cause one of the Sikh community versus the Indian state. Instead, we saw the majority of Sikhs stay loyal to their country, as a largely Sikh police force, led by a charismatic Sikh officer, K.P.S. Gill, ably combated the minority of Sikh terrorists, while the Indian state orchestrated a democratic political process which brought elected Sikh leaders to power in Punjab. There is absolutely no reason why a similar approach cannot work with the Muslim community, the overwhelming majority of whom are proud and loyal Indians. To do so we must start by getting more Muslims into the security forces. There are well-known historical and sociological reasons that explain why Muslims are under-represented in the country's police forces, the Central Reserve Police and crucial gendarmeries like UP's Provincial Armed Constabulary. Obviously, we cannot infuse a significant number of Muslims into these forces overnight. But it's obvious that we need to enhance the recruitment and retention of minorities in the police forces and to conduct police outreach to minority communities. Such an approach would simultaneously reduce a major source of grievance in the Muslim community, increase the trust between the police and the people they are policing, and dramatically improve our own intelligence about currents within a community whose vulnerability to the blandishments of terror is high. We can learn some lessons from how other democracies have dealt with similar concerns. Despite the Sachar Commission report, few in India want to see an additional layer of reservations for minorities in state institutions. But Britain, which abjures quotas altogether, follows a policy of ‘positive action’ to help under-represented groups compete more effectively in the selection process for police jobs, and conducts extensive outreach work through mosques, black churches and community groups. We in India also need to recognize that if we want under-represented Muslims to compete effectively for police jobs, they need to feel the police is part of them, rather than an external entity. It’s clear we need to: actively solicit applications from minorities for the police at all levels (including the Provincial Armed Constabulary and the Central Reserve Police); offer special catch-up courses open only to members of the minority communities that will prepare them for the entrance examinations; at the moment few feel qualified to take the exams, and fewer still pass; and require police officers to work with community organizations, mosques and madrasas to encourage minorities to apply. In other words, instead of more “reservations”, with the resentment that breeds, let us make it easier for minorities to join the police. But let's not stop with recruitment: we also need to focus on the retention and progression of minority officers. Unless young people from minorities see that the police service offers real career opportunities and a good quality of life in the workplace, they will not overcome their negative perceptions. The fact that, in many Western countries, there are several officers from the visible minorities now at senior officer rank, sends a powerful message to these communities. In India, the promotion of minority police personnel at senior and middle levels and using them as visible symbols of the police force would constitute a powerful model to the minority community. We could also take a leaf out of Britain's book in what they do to combat racism within the police, as well as enhance cross-cultural knowledge, offering training courses to white officers that include a ‘long weekend’ spent living with a minority family. Britain is far from perfect — as the current discrimination case filed by Deputy Commissioner Tariq Ghafoor suggests — but many Hindu policemen, especially in Gujarat and the suburbs of Mumbai, would benefit immeasurably by spending a few days in a Muslim mohalla. Let's face it: if our police are not properly and continuously trained in minority relations, the current problems will continue. Of course India is not Britain, and no foreign ideas can simply be imported wholesale into our country. But we must acknowledge the grave risk to the national fabric of any community being alienated from the police. Our police forces must reflect the diversity of India. Such a policy would be the “other side of the coin” to a tough security policy which is indispensable to reassure the common urban resident, terrorized by the bomb blasts, that the Government can keep them safe.
Shah Rukh Khan's comments on the kind of Islamic leadership or rather lack of Islamic leadership
Saturday, 6 December 2008
Height of absurdity: School boys hired for PM's security at Rs 100 a day
The local police deployed a group of 20 to 22 youths aged between 18 and 22 to keep vigil in the area from tree tops with the District Intelligence Bureau providing them with security passes.
The boys were hired to keep vigil for two days and were promised Rs 100 per day since Friday for their services, police said.
Is Cricket killing other sports in India?
Cricket has also been used as a bridge between two nations, as seen in the recent India-Pakistan series. The stunning live coverage of cricket is also a reason for the demise of other sports.
When Gopi Chand won the all-England badminton championship in Britain no one cheered or cared because in the same week Harbajan Singh took a hat-trick and V. V. S. Laxman scored 281 in the Kolkata Test against Australia.
No one remembers the Olympic bronze medals won by tennis star Leander Paes (Atlanta, 1996) and weightlifter Karnam Malleswari (Sydney, 2000), but Anil Kumble's 10-wicket haul, Harbhajan's hat-trick, and Virender Sehwag's 309 will be evergreen in memory.
People don't know how to play other sports or what the rules of other games are. But they are well conversant with cricket. Irfan Pathan has only five months of experience in international cricket, but he is famous because of advertisement assignments. In fact, hockey is our national game and India has won many gold medals in the Olympics, but all we remember is Kapil Dev's team winning the cricket World Cup in 1983.
As I mentioned earlier, the media, Board, Government and sponsors are the culprits for cricket ruling the roost, to the detriment of other sports in India.
INDIA - The Land of Contradictions
- Matthew Hayden's opinions of India are half-cooked redneck tosh, this nation remains, as ever, the 'Land of contradictions'
- For a supposed third-world country, India can assemble a veritable army of TV stations, radio frequencies, newspapers and websites to defend its reputation as a thrusting economic power. True, if half of those working in the media were building new homes then India would probably be a better place, but then you could also say the same about England.
- India, of course, is not ''a third-world country''. India, as we have all been taught, is a ''land of contradictions.'' It is a land that can pay Hayden US$375,000 to play for Chennai Super Kings in the Indian Premier League then irritate him when it takes half-an-hour to move a sightscreen. ''Land of contradictions'' is such a cliché that a Google search brings up 268,000 results, and here is the latest addition.
Local Terrorists?
- MNS, Sena attack north Indian Rly exam candidates: (Indianexpress..com)
MUMBAI, OCTOBER 19: Activists of Raj Thackeray-led Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) and later those of the Shiv Sena today attacked 17 railway board examination centres in suburban Mumbai, protesting “inadequate representation” to locals and chased away candidates from north India.
- Fears of MNS backlash prompted 'Deshdrohi' ban (Expressindia.com)
Mumbai, November 13: Maharashtra government's two-month ban on 'Deshdrohi', the film reportedly based on north Indian migrants to Mumbai, comes after city police took into consideration the backlash from MNS and others if the film was allowed to be released in the present format.
"There has been criticism from various quarters, specially the north Indian leaders over the state's law and order situation in the backdrop of Raj Thackeray-led MNS' violent agitation against north Indians. Police did not want to take any chance," a senior Home Department official said.
- MNS is like a terrorist organisation: Lalu (NDTV.com)
- Gujarat violence (Wikipedia.org)
In February 2002, while Narendra Modi was the Chief Minister of Gujarat, violence broke out across the state claiming around 1000 lives. Independent estimates by human rights groups and NGOs place the figure higher to around 2000. The official estimate stated that 790 Muslims and 254 Hindus were killed, 223 people were reported missing and 2,500 were injured.More than one hundred and fifty thousand people were displaced. Organisations such as Human Rights Watch criticised the Indian government for its failure to address the resulting humanitarian crisis. Overwhelming majority of the displaced were Muslims who had to flee their homes for refugee camps due to riots. The root cause of riots was attributed to the Godhra Train Burning incident in which 58 Hindu Kar Sevaks were burnt alive in a train carriage. The Banerjee committee, set up by Railway Minister Lalu Prasad in September 2004, in its report submitted in 2005 had said the burning of S-6 coach of Sabarmati express on February 27, 2002 was an accident.
Investigations, judicial and non-governmental
Subsequent reports from Human Rights Watch and the national Human Rights Commission claimed that Modi and his ministers had a tacit, if not explicit, complicity in the riots. The report was quoted and expanded on by the United States State Department's country human rights reports for 2003. The National Human Rights Commission criticized the government, pointing to "a comprehensive failure on the part of the State Government of Gujarat to control persistent violations of rights.The claims of Human Rights Watch and associated groups were rejected by Modi, the BJP and its supporters as politically motivated.
A judicial commission constituted to examine allegations of Gujarat state administration's involvement in the riots of 2002 has said twice so far that there was no evidence as yet to implicate either Modi or his administration in the riots.
An October 2007 report by the investigative newsmagazine Tehelka quoted several Sangh Parivar activists claiming that Modi was personally aware of the planning for the riots
POST-MUMBAI, MOTORMOUTH NETAS TAKE A BREAK
TIMES NEWS NETWORK
New Delhi: The usually voluble lot are silent. And those who dabbled in smartness have either fallen off the power perch or have stumbled, apologised and are now quiet. 26/11 is proving to be the modulator of political motormouths who, contrary to their trait, are weighing silence in gold. Ubiquitous dramatis personae Raj Thackeray, Amar Singh, Mayawati, Rajnath Singh and Narendra Modi, who dominated headlines and TV screens till Mumbai was raided by Pak-sponsored fidayeen, have simply melted away from public view. The vanishing act is a conscious decision to stay out of the firing line owing to public anger against politicians, especially those with aggressive sectarian agenda. A past master of glib quotes said, “I have simply decided to keep quiet. Why risk anger of agitated masses.” The view is held across party lines. Managing public profile against a groundswell of antipolitician mood is proving a tough task. Maharashtra CM Vilasrao Deshmukh may have escaped the sack had he not taken movie man Ram Gopal Verma to the Taj in what is being dubbed “terror tourism”. His deputy R R Patil has fallen for trying to defend his role as home minister by diminishing the magnitude of Mumbai terror. Narendra Modi got swayed by his ‘iron man’ hype to forget that politicians, post-Mumbai, were a strict no-no. Kerala CM V S Achuthanandan tripped on the same trick. Though Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi tried to brazen it out by dumbing down the public fury as “powder & lipstick” campaign, BJP quickly disowned him.Virtues of silence are being discovered across the political spectrum. “I saw the fate of Modi and VS. What did Vilasrao do wrong? It is just the mood around,” said a senior politician, advocating low profile for his creed. If 26/11 is the defining moment in their behavioural pattern, the evidence is incontrovertible. Raj Thackeray virtually monopolised the media space since his henchmen kicked off a campaign against North Indians in October. The focus was firmly on him when he visited his estranged ailing uncle Bal Thackeray on November 23. Three days later, when commandos from Bangalore and Dehradun died for Mumbaikars, he vanished with his campaign. Observers say with their existence threatened, the middleclasses are seeing caste and religion agendas as villains. In fact, the fear of attracting popular anger has squeezed out otherwise acceptable bombastic statements on defeating terror. SP brass, which seized on post-Batla House anger among Muslims to run a shrill campaign against Congress, has forgotten it, as it appears, for good.
Why the world should unite against terror instead of blaming each other
A proof of the fact that - TERROR HAS NO RELIGION
"nearly 40 per cent of the people killed across the city were Muslims"
TV Terrorism
Anil Dharker (from the Times of India)
Sixty hours after the 26/11 trauma began and the last terrorist had been killed, one first heard the phrase “TV terrorism”. Did that mean terror on TV? No, was the common reply. We mean TV terror. Since then the phrase keeps recurring in conversations and there’s now no doubt what it means: there are many viewers who feel that our television channels in their coverage of the horrific attack on Mumbai unleashed their own brand of terror. The criticism centres on four charges. The first is of elitism. In those 60 hours when television covered the carnage, attention was focused almost exclusively on the Taj and Oberoi hotels with some time given to the commando operations at Nariman House. There was virtually no airtime given to the attacks on Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus (CST) or Cama Hospital. Yet the mayhem began there and 54 people were killed. Is that because the dead there were not from the elite? Is that because grieving relatives and friends of those killed are more photogenic when they are fair of skin and well-dressed and their mourning is more restrained? TV channels may well say that they concentrated on the hotels and Nariman House because they were continuing stories, whereas the incidents at CST and Cama were over within the first few hours of the attacks. But their reluctance to go back to these sites and tell viewers of what happened is an omission that cannot be easily justified. It’s not as if there were no stories there. There were enough human interest angles to be covered, like the chaiwala who risked his life to save people, or the motorman of an incoming train who made people get off on a safer platform, or the startling fact that nearly 40 per cent of the people killed across the city were Muslims. The second criticism is about TV channels becoming the unwitting tools of the terrorists. During the siege of the Taj almost all channels ran the story that 150 people had taken refuge in its Chambers Club. When they were given the signal to leave they found the terrorists waiting for them; only a few escaped being brutally gunned down. The inference is clear. We, sitting in our homes weren’t the only ones watching television. The terrorists were too. Then there were the NSG commandos — quite rightly everyone’s heroes. But even heroes are not able to resist the lure of television. There they were sitting in a group in their black cat uniforms as if posing for a passing out photograph, though their faces were covered to mask their identities. Their spokesman though wore a diaphanous black cloth over his face through which you could see his features. But that wasn’t all he revealed. He spoke of the difficulties of the operation, about the problems of moving around in the hotel in the dark when they didn’t have drawings of the interior layouts. The first rule of battle is that you do not reveal your weaknesses to the enemy. Yet here was the NSG doing just that. Who requested the briefing? Did the channels not see the inherent danger in this exercise? The third criticism is about the channels’ competitiveness. In a time of national calamity many people say, why was there so much emphasis on airing ‘exclusives’? On the fourth point, there is near-complete unanimity. “Why were the anchors so loud and hysterical? Why couldn’t they be more restrained?” As it happens, there were quite a number of television journalists who were balanced, moderate and tried to be dispassionate. And then there were others who shouted rather than spoke and were emotional to the point of being overwrought. These anchors may have become genuinely overcharged because of the situation but viewers want them to be detached, composed and objective. I saw first-hand how tireless, persistent and yes, brave, TV journalists and their crew were on the field, quite often laying themselves open to being killed by a stray bullet or sniper fire. Yet, the growing criticism shows that this can be counterproductive. Clearly it’s time for TV networks to introspect.
Friday, 5 December 2008
The US Petro-dollar scam (The real reason behind the wars against Afghanistan and Iraq)
Back in 1971, the USA printed and spent far more paper money than it could cover by gold. When the French demanded redemption of its dollar holdings in gold, The USA discovered that it could not honour the debt, thus committing an act of bankruptcy. So the USA went to the Saudis and cut a deal - we'll keep you in power, no mater what you do, as long as OPEC denominate all sales of oil in US dollars. The deal was done.
From that point, every nation that needed to buy oil had to firstly hold US dollars, which meant that they exchanged their goods and services for dollars, which the Americans just printed. The Americans boiught their oil literally for free by printing those dollars and using inflation to reduce their value. The ultimate free lunch for the Americans at the expense of the rest of the world.
However, the scam began to unravel when Saddam Hussein started selling Iraq's oil directly for Euro, abrogating the cosy arrangement the Americans had with OPEC. Thus Saddam had to be stopped. How? He could not be persuaded, so the USA concocted up a pretext to wage war and invade Iraq and the first thing the Americans did was to revert sales of oil back to dollars. The currency crisis was averted for the moment.
But Hugo Chavez also started selling Venezuelan oil for currencies other than dollars, so there were a number of attempts on his life and "regime change", traceable right back to the CIA. The petrodollar cat was out of the bag.
Iran, watching all of this, decided to kick The Great Satan in the goolies and do the same thing - sell oil for every currency EXCEPT US dollars. All of a sudden, despite intrusive IAEA inspections and compliance with the NPT and the inalienable right to enrich uranium, Iran became the next big threat.
Sure, Iran was a threat to the USA, but not because of anything nuclear. What Iran was doing was compounding the economic destruction of the USA by becoming another member of the oil producers club that were bypassing NYMEX and IPE and selling oil for Euro, Yen and other currencies.
The problem for the USA is that those dollars fund not only the American lifestyle and the free lunch at the expense of the rest of the world, but they fund the US military, which is used to force the American will onto nations that threaten the USA economically, such as Iran.
So the shell game is coming to an end for the Americans. As the nations of the world find that they can buy oil for their own currencies instead of holding paper US dollars, more OPEC nations will abandon the dollar. The worst thing for the Americans is that eventually, they will also have to buy their oil with Euro or Rubles instead of just printing paper money to get it.
That will be the end of the American Empire, the end of funding for the US military and the destruction of the US economy. This is why Iran is so dangerous and has to be stopped. It's nothing to do with nukes, just as it was nothing to do with WMD in Iraq.
Actually the biggest WMD threat to the USA is the economic weapon. The great scam is coming to an end and there's not a lot that the USA can do about it, except start another world war. And can't you see that coming?
Mumbai Terror Phone Call
India's Muslims in crisis
Muslim society in India collapsed. The British imposed English as the official language. The impact was cataclysmic. Muslims went from near 100% literacy to 20% within a half-century. The country's educated Muslim élite was effectively blocked from administrative jobs in the government. Between 1858 and 1878, only 57 out of 3,100 graduates of Calcutta University — then the center of South Asian education — were Muslims. While discrimination by both Hindus and the British played a role, it was as if the whole of Muslim society had retreated to lick its collective wounds.
Out of this period of introspection, two rival movements emerged to foster an Islamic ascendancy. Revivalist groups blamed the collapse of their empire on a society that had strayed too far from the teachings of the Koran. They promoted a return to a purer form of Islam, modeled on the life of the Prophet Muhammad. Others embraced the modern ways of their new rulers, seeking Muslim advancement through the pursuit of Western sciences, culture and law. From these movements two great Islamic institutions were born: Darul Uloom Deoband in northern India, rivaled only by Al Azhar University in Cairo for its teaching of Islam, and Aligarh Muslim University, a secular institution that promoted Muslim culture, philosophy and languages but left religion to the mosque. These two schools embody the fundamental split that continues to divide Islam in the subcontinent today. "You could say that Deoband and Aligarh are husband and wife, born from the same historical events," says Adil Siddiqui, information coordinator for Deoband. "But they live at daggers drawn."
The campus at Deoband is only a three-hour drive from New Delhi through the modern megasuburb of Noida. Strip malls and monster shopping complexes have consumed many of the mango groves that once framed the road to Deoband, but the contemporary world stops at the gate. The courtyards are packed with bearded young men wearing long, collared shirts and white caps. The air thrums with the voices of hundreds of students reciting the Koran from open-door classrooms.
Today, more than 9,000 Deobandi madrasahs are scattered throughout India, Afghanistan and Pakistan, most infamously the Dara-ul-Uloom Haqaniya Akora Khattak, near Peshawar, Pakistan, where Mullah Mohammed Omar and several other leaders of Afghanistan's Taliban first tasted a life lived in accordance with Shari'a. Siddiqui visibly stiffens when those names are brought up. They have become synonymous with Islamic radicalism, and Siddiqui is careful to dissociate his institution from those who carry on its traditions, without actually condemning their actions. "Our books are being taught there," he says. "They have the same system and rules. But if someone is following the path of terrorism, it is because of local compulsions and local politics."
Sir Syed Ahmad Khan, who founded the Anglo-Mohammedan Oriental College at Aligarh in 1877, studied under the same teachers as the founders of Deoband. But he believed that the downfall of India's Muslims was due to their unwillingness to embrace modern ways. He decoupled religion from education and in his school sought to emulate the culture and training of India's new colonial masters. Islamic culture was part of the curriculum, but so were the latest advances in sciences, medicine and Western philosophy. The medium was English, the better to prepare students for civil-service jobs. He called his school the Oxford of the East. In architecture alone, the campus lives up to that name. A euphoric blend of clock towers, crenellated battlements, Mughal arches, domes and the staid red brick of Victorian institutions that only India's enthusiastic embrace of all things European could produce, the central campus of Aligarh today is haven to a diverse crowd of male and female, Hindu and Muslim students. Its law and medicine schools are among the top-ranked in India, but so are its arts faculty and Quranic Studies Centre. "With all this diversity, language, culture, secularism was the only way to go forward as a nation," says Aligarh's vice chancellor, P.K. Abdul Azis. "It was the new religion."
This fracture in religious doctrine — whether Islam should embrace the modern or revert to its fundamental origins — between two schools less than a day's donkey ride apart when they were founded, was barely remarked upon at the time. But over the course of the next 100 years, that tiny crack would split Islam into two warring ideologies with repercussions that reverberate around the world to this day. Before the split became a crisis, however, the founders of the Deoband and Aligarh universities shared the common goal of an independent India. Pedagogical leanings were overlooked as students and staff of both institutions joined with Hindus across the subcontinent to remove the yoke of colonial rule in the early decades of the 20th century.
Two Faiths, Two Nations But nationalistic trends were pulling at the fragile alliance, and India began to splinter along ethnic and religious lines. Following World War I, a populist Muslim poet-philosopher by the name of Muhammad Iqbal framed the Islamic zeitgeist when he questioned the position of minority Muslims in a future, independent India. The solution, Iqbal proposed, was an independent state for Muslim-majority provinces in northwestern India, a separate country where Muslims would rule themselves. The idea of Pakistan was born.
Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the Savile Row–suited lawyer who midwifed Pakistan into existence on Aug. 14, 1947, was notoriously ambiguous about how he envisioned the country once it became an independent state. Both he and Iqbal, who were friends until the poet's death in 1938, had repeatedly stated their dream for a "modern, moderate and very enlightened Pakistan," says Sharifuddin Pirzada, Jinnah's personal secretary. Jinnah's own wish was that the Pakistani people, as members of a new, modern and democratic nation, would decide the country's direction.
But rarely in Pakistan's history have its people lived Jinnah's vision of a modern Muslim democracy. Only three times in its 62-year history has Pakistan seen a peaceful, democratic transition of power. With four disparate provinces, more than a dozen languages and dialects, and powerful neighbors, the country's leaders — be they Presidents, Prime Ministers or army chiefs — have been forced to knit the nation together with the only thing Pakistanis have in common: religion.
Following the 1971 civil war, when East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, broke away, the populist Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto embarked on a Muslim-identity program to prevent the country from fracturing further. General Mohammed Zia ul-Haq continued the Islamization campaign when he overthrew Bhutto in 1977, hoping to garner favor with the religious parties, the only constituency available to a military dictator. He instituted Shari'a courts, made blasphemy illegal and established laws that punished fornicators with lashes and held that rape victims could be convicted of adultery. When the Soviet Union invaded neighboring Afghanistan in December 1979, Pakistan was already poised for its own Islamic revolution.
Almost overnight, thousands of refugees poured over the border into Pakistan. Camps mushroomed, and so did madrasahs. Ostensibly created to educate the refugees, they provided the ideal recruiting ground for a new breed of soldier: mujahedin, or holy warriors, trained to vanquish the infidel invaders in America's proxy war with the Soviet Union. Thousands of Pakistanis joined fellow Muslims from across the world to fight the Soviets. As far away as Karachi, high school kids started wearing "jihadi jackets," the pocketed vests popular with the mujahedin. Says Hamid Gul, then head of the Pakistan intelligence agency charged with arming and training the mujahedin: "In the 1980s, the world watched the people of Afghanistan stand up to tyranny, oppression and slavery. The spirit of jihad was rekindled, and it gave a new vision to the youth of Pakistan."
But jihad, as it is described in the Koran, does not end merely with political gain. It ends in a perfect Islamic state. The West's, and Pakistan's, cynical resurrection of something so profoundly powerful and complex unleashed a force that gave root to al-Qaeda's rage, the Taliban's dream of an Islamic utopia in Afghanistan, and in the dozens of radical Islamic groups rapidly replicating themselves in India and around the world today. "The promise of jihad was never fulfilled," says Gul. "Is it any wonder the fighting continues to this day?" Religion may have been used to unite Pakistan, but it is also tearing it apart.
India Today In India, Islam is, in contrast, the other — purged by the British, denigrated by the Hindu right, mistrusted by the majority, marginalized by society. There are nearly as many Muslims in India as in all of Pakistan, but in a nation of more than a billion, they are still a minority, with all the burdens that minorities anywhere carry. Government surveys show that Muslims live shorter, poorer and unhealthier lives than Hindus and are often excluded from the better jobs. To be sure, there are Muslim success stories in the booming economy. Azim Premji, the founder of the outsourcing giant Wipro, is one of the richest individuals in India. But for many Muslims, the inequality of the boom has reinforced their exclusion.
Kashmir, a Muslim-dominated state whose fate had been left undecided in the chaos that led up to partition, remains a suppurating wound in India's Muslim psyche. As the cause of three wars between India and Pakistan — one of which nearly went nuclear in 1999 — Kashmir has become a symbol of profound injustice to Indian Muslims, who believe that their government cares little for Kashmir's claim of independence — which is based upon a 1948 U.N. resolution promising a plebiscite to determine the Kashmiri people's future. That frustration has spilled into the rest of India in the form of several devastating terrorist attacks that have made Indian Muslims both perpetrators and victims.
A mounting sense of persecution, fueled by the government's seeming reluctance to address the brutal anti-Muslim riots that killed more than 2,000 in the state of Gujarat in 2002, has aided the cause of homegrown militant groups. They include the banned Student Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), which was accused of detonating nine bombs in Mumbai during the course of 2003, killing close to 80. The 2006 terrorist attacks on the Mumbai commuter-rail system that killed 183 people were also blamed on SIMI as well as the pro-Kashmir Pakistani terrorist group Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT). Those incidents exposed the all-too-common Hindu belief that Muslims aren't really Indian. "LeT, SIMI — it doesn't matter who was behind these attacks. They are all children of [Pervez] Musharraf," sneered Manish Shah, a Mumbai resident who lost his best friend in the explosions, referring to the then President of Pakistan. In India, unlike Pakistan, Islam does not unify but divide.
Still, many South Asian Muslims insist Islam is the one and only force that can bring the subcontinent together and return it to pre-eminence as a single whole. "We [Muslims] were the legal rulers of India, and in 1857 the British took that away from us," says Tarik Jan, a gentle-mannered scholar at Islamabad's Institute of Policy Studies. "In 1947 they should have given that back to the Muslims." Jan is no militant, but he pines for the golden era of the Mughal period in the 1700s and has a fervent desire to see India, Pakistan and Bangladesh reunited under Islamic rule.
That sense of injustice is at the root of Muslim identity today. It has permeated every aspect of society and forms the basis of rising Islamic radicalism on the subcontinent. "People are hungry for justice," says Ahmed Rashid, a Pakistani journalist and author of the new book Descent into Chaos. "It is perceived to be the fundamental promise of the Koran." These twin phenomena — the longing many Muslims feel to see their religion restored as the subcontinent's core, and the marks of both piety and extremism Islam bears — reflect the lack of strong political and civic institutions in the region for people to have faith in. If the subcontinent's governments can't provide those institutions, then terrorists like the Trident's mysterious caller will continue asking questions. And providing their own answers.
— With reporting by Jyoti Thottam / Mumbai and Ershad Mahmud / Islamabad
Captured Terrorist - Ajmal Amir Kasav - tells his story
Excerpt from an article in Times of India - 2nd December, 2008 - ‘Enough is enough’ by Mumbaikar Farah Khan Ali-jewellery designer and DJ Aqeel’s wife
What is 'The Difference'?
It’s an effort by a few youngsters who realize the desire and feel the need to liberate people’s minds and lives from the shackles of stereotypical & irrational thinking and imitative lifestyles because we believe that the root cause of most evils is – the way we think.
‘The Difference’ implies:
-That we want to and can make a difference in the lives of people
-That we are different because we are a group of the youth and by the youth but for people of all ages
-That we are also different because we work mainly on the Mindsets of the Youth
Aims:
· Initiating thought processes in the minds of youngsters by changing stereotypical mindsets, challenging irrational beliefs and encouraging them to dare to think out of the box
· Giving a platform to those who are already liberated and want to make a difference but are unable to because of lack of opportunities/ideas
· Concentrating on the overall development of youngsters by nurturing any talents they have and encouraging them to discover more about themselves and about the world we live in
The Path:
1. Presenting unadulterated, accurate realities to the youth and challenging stereotypes by
-Conducting regular discussions and debates to present facts collected by state and non-state actors thereby bringing them face-to-face with the reality
-Organizing relevant film and documentary screenings
-Making trips to affected/sensitive areas to give youngsters an opportunity to see and judge for themselves
-Conveying our message via mediums that appeal to youngsters like - concerts, competitions, sports tournaments etc
-Conducting studies and employing other means of gathering information and using the findings to generate awareness among people
2. Giving a platform to those who want to make a difference by
-Making them a part of our group
-Forming a network of young people across various schools and colleges in the World
-Telling them about & facilitating educational and career opportunities in the field of Social and Human Development
3. Concentrating on their overall development by
-Identifying any talents they have/want to develop and nurturing those by organizing specialized training
-Encouraging arousal of their interest in culture, sports and uncommon academic fields
-Organizing formal and informal counseling
“The salvation of the world will be brought about by people thinking”
– Carlyle
"This world demands the qualities of youth: not a time of life but a state of mind, a temper of the will, a quality of imagination, a predominance of courage over timidity, of the appetite for adventure over the love of ease."
– Robert Kennedy
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The Difference
A group of the youth
&
by the youth
e-mail: thedifference.mail@gmail.com