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Union Minister for Human Resource Development Kapil Sibal on Thursday held out
the categorical assurance that madrasas would be kept out of the purview of the
Right to Education (RTE) Act.
Mr. Sibal, who was addressing a large congregation of Muslim Ulema and
educationists, said the exemption to madrasas and other minority educational
institutions would be specified in a set of guidelines to be incorporated soon
in the RTE Act.
Mr. Sibal said the Muslim fear that the Act would endanger madrasa education was
unfounded in the context of the constitutional guarantees available to the
community to establish and run their own educational institutions. Door
door se hamara koi irada nahi hai(we
will not dream of interfering in your rights), he said.
The Minister's promise was met with deafening applause from the assembled Ulema
and Muslim leaders who, through the morning, had kept up the chant of threat to
madrasas. Speaker after speaker denounced the Act as an assault on the minority
right to run educational institutions guaranteed by Article 30 of the
Constitution. Many saw it as part of a world-wide design to target and subdue
the community.
Not against the Act
However, a small section of speakers among them the former Delhi State
Minorities Commission chairman Kamal Farooqui, Jamiat Ulama-i-Hind leader
Mahmood Madani and Islamic scholar and Jamaat-e-Islami Hind leader Maulana Syed
Jalauddin Umari clarified that while they had serious misgivings about the
Act's impact on Muslim religious education, they were not against the Act per
se. Nor did they want to convey the impression that Muslims opposed
universalisation of education.
Mr. Sibal drove home the point that the RTE Act with its emphasis on quality
education did not come a day too soon. For far too long, schools had got away
with offering poor quality education. It was the right of every child not only
to get education but to get good quality education.
He said the quality prescriptions in the Act applied to all schools, including
government and aided schools, and school managements could no longer hope to get
away with lame excuses. In an indirect dig at the audience which repeatedly
invoked Article 30, the Minister said, The emphasis in Article 30 is on
administration, not on maladministration.
NEW DELHI: In a sudden outpouring of concern for the Urdu
language, Lok Sabha members, cutting across party lines, on Thursday spoke in
one voice about making a concerted bid to promote the language through
academies, scholarships and advertisements in Urdu newspapers.
Though nearly every member peppered their speech in Urdu, politics clearly
topped the agenda as senior Cabinet ministers, including Mamta Banerjee, Farooq
Abdullah and Ghulam Nabi Azad, jumped on the bandwagon.
Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav raised the issue in the Zero Hour,
demanding that the language is in dire need of a greater push for promotion and
protection.
BJP deputy leader Gopinath Munde made a common cause with Yadav. Ditto for RJD's
Lalu Prasad and BSP's Dara Singh Chauhan.
Azad singled out Munde for praise for taking up Urdu's cause. NC's Abdullah
eulogised actor-politician Shatrughan Sinha for the contribution of the Indian
film industry in keeping the language alive.
CPI and CPM, too, were all praise for the language, while the Left's archrival
Banerjee played to the gallery by reciting several Urdu couplets, delineating
her "love" for the language.
Azad recounted his meeting with some editors of Urdu newspapers last week. They
briefed the minister about the sorry plight of the Urdu media, which has been
facing severe advertisement cruch for long. "Though Urdu newspapers are being
brought out from across the country, including the southern states,
unfortunately the language cannot claim any state as its own," Azad explained.
Speaker Meira Kumar urged the government to pay heed to the overwhelming
sentiments of the members about the pitiable condition of the language and its
media.
Responding to the discussion, finance minister Pranab Mukherjee noted that PM
Manmohan Singh had already instructed I&B ministry to ensure that Urdu media
"get due share of government-funded advertisements" through DAVP.
"Urdu is an integral part of our rich national heritage, and the government will
take all steps to strengthen it. I can assure you all appropriate steps will be
taken," he added.
Three prestigious Pakistani universities have started
outsourcing evaluation of dissertations on Urdu literature to Indian experts.
The exercise underpins the unusual ways in which the two countries -often
tethering on the edge of war -continue to connect.
India is where Pakistan's official language -Urdu -was born and many of its men
of letters had migrated to Pakistan after the Partition, such as Saadat Hassan
Manto.
The Karachi University, Qaide-Azam University, Islamabad, and the Alama Iqbal
National Open University, Karachi, have tied up with Anjuman Taraqqi Urdu-e-Hind
(Organisation for Progress of Urdu in India), a 110-year-old Delhi-based
institution, to have it examine, guide and assess Pakistani students pursuing
M.Phils and PhDs.
Anjuman Taraqqi Urdu-eHind has historical linkages with its Pakistani
counterpart, Anjuman Taraqqi Urdu-ePakistan. The outsourcing is notable, since
Pakistan continues to be a chief Urdu-speaking nation, though many ethnic
languages abound.
Indian scholars appear so taken in that they wanted to keep the original
manuscripts as trophies. Almost taking the cue, the Pakistan universities let
them do so.
A section on these dissertations, Gosha-e-Ibne Insha, inside Tarraqui's Shibli
Memorial Library is to be launched by Pakistan's high commissioner in New Delhi
Shahid Malik, on August 6.
The research areas often focus on politics, history, afsana (a fiction genre)
and personalities. The manuscripts give me a unique view of current Pakistani
politics and life, said Khaliq Anjum, an 80-year-old Indian Urdu expert, who
heads Tarraqui Urdu.
Indian scholars in demand include S.R. Kidwai and Aslam Parvez. I think the
collaboration shows Pakistani academia's trust of competency and objectivity of
Indian Urdu expertise, Shibli Memorial Library's librarian Shahid Khan said.
The news that girls have scored over boys in madrasa exams in Uttar Pradesh shows that change does not always have to be dramatic to be useful. Rather, it is more important that change is sustainable and long-lasting if it is to be effective. There are several feel-good cliches about the importance of the education of women which share the same underlying thought process when you give the power of knowledge and free thought hitherto denied to any group of people, you empower them and that betters us all.
Uttar Pradesh is home to not only Indias poorest and backward people, it also contains most of Indias poorest Muslims. This madrasa news is, therefore, heartening on two counts. It shows that education is bringing light not just to Muslim homes but also to the girl child, who is traditionally neglected and denied by most communities in India.
Girls from a total of over 1.34 lakh students who sat for the UP
Madrasa Boards exams have scored an overall pass percentage of 90% compared to 86% for boys. Moreover, more girls have secured first division compared to boys. The number of girls who sat for the exam has gone up from about 28,000 last year to 35,000 this year. Many of these girls are from small towns and villages and this means that they have defeated several odds to achieve so much.
Muslims in India suffer not just from social discrimination, which affects many minority groups in our society, but also from a widespread insularity and backwardness within the Muslim community itself. Girls, therefore, have to fight a double prejudice from within and without and have to show great courage and determination if they want to break free.
But this is how change comes. Education breaks barriers as it blows away the cobwebs of fear, false beliefs, ignorance, prejudice, misplaced conservatism, shibboleths of stifling tradition and everything else which holds us back as humans. By giving children a taste of the spirit of adventure and enquiry, it is as if new life is being breathed into them.
Muslims in India have long been pawns in a number of political games, played by both the right and the left. As a result, religious leaders have had a field day in asserting their authority over the Muslim masses. The madrasa results are a pointer that people are quietly willing to strike out on their own.
DAMASCUS, Syria Syria has forbidden the country's students and
teachers from wearing the niqab the full Islamic veil that reveals
only a woman's eyes taking aim at a garment many see as political.
The
ban shows a rare point of agreement between Syria's secular,
authoritarian government and the democracies of Europe: Both view the
niqab as a potentially destabilizing threat.
"We have given
directives to all universities to ban niqab-wearing women from
registering," a government official in Damascus told The Associated
Press on Monday.
The order affects both public and private
universities and aims to protect Syria's secular identity, said the
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to speak publicly about the issue. Hundreds of primary school
teachers who were wearing the niqab at government-run schools were
transferred last month to administrative jobs, he added.
The ban,
issued Sunday by the Education Ministry, does not affect the hijab, or
headscarf, which is far more common in Syria than the niqab's billowing
black robes.
Syria is the latest in a string of nations from
Europe to the Middle East to weigh in on the veil, perhaps the most
visible symbol of conservative Islam. Veils have spread in other
secular-leaning Arab countries, such as Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon, with
Jordan's government trying to discourage them by playing up reports of
robbers who wear veils as masks.
Turkey bans Muslim headscarves in
universities, with many saying attempts to allow them in schools amount
to an attack on modern Turkey's secular laws.
The issue has been
debated across Europe, where France, Spain, Belgium and the Netherlands
are considering banning the niqab on the grounds it is degrading to
women.
Last week, France's lower house of parliament
overwhelmingly approved a ban on both the niqab and the burqa, which
covers even a woman's eyes, in an effort to define and protect French
values a move that angered many in the country's large Muslim
community.
The measure goes before the Senate in September; its
biggest hurdle could come when France's constitutional watchdog
scrutinizes it later. A controversial 2004 law in France earlier
prohibited Muslim headscarves and other "ostentatious" religious symbols
in the classrooms of French primary and secondary public schools.
Opponents
say such bans violate freedom of religion and personal choice, and will
stigmatize all Muslims.
In Damascus, a 19-year-old university
student who would give only her first name, Duaa, said she hopes to
continue wearing her niqab to classes when the next term begins in the
fall, despite the ban.
Otherwise, she said, she will not be able
to study.
"The niqab is a religious obligation," said the woman,
who would not give her surname because she was uncomfortable speaking
out against the ban. "I cannot go without it."
Nadia, a
44-year-old science teacher in Damascus who was reassigned last month
because of her veil, said: "Wearing my niqab is a personal decision."
"It
reflects my freedom," she said, also declining to give her full name.
In
European countries, particularly France, the debate has turned on
questions of how to integrate immigrants and balance a minority's rights
with secular opinion that the garb is an affront to women.
But in
the Middle East particularly Syria and Egypt, where there have been
efforts to ban the niqab in the dorms of public universities experts
say the issue underscores the gulf between the secular elite and largely
impoverished lower classes who find solace in religion.
Some
observers say the bans also stem in part from fear of dissent.
The
niqab is not widespread in Syria, although it has become more common in
recent years, a development that has not gone unnoticed by the
authoritarian government.
"We are witnessing a rapid income gap
growing in Syria there is a wealthy ostentatious class of people who
are making money and wearing European clothes," said Joshua Landis, an
American professor and Syria expert who runs a blog called Syria
Comment.
The lower classes are feeling the squeeze, he said.
"It's
almost inevitable that there's going to be backlash. The worry is that
it's going to find its expression in greater Islamic radicalism," Landis
said.
Four decades of secular rule under the Baath Party have
largely muted sectarian differences in Syria, although the state is
quick to quash any dissent. In the 1980s, Syria crushed a bloody
campaign by Sunni militants to topple the regime of then-President Hafez
Assad.
The veil is linked to Salafism, a movement that models
itself on early Islam with a doctrine that is similar to Saudi Arabia's.
In the broad spectrum of Islamic thought, Salafism is on the extreme
conservative end.
In Gaza, radical Muslim groups encourage women
to cover their faces and even conceal the shape of their shoulders by
using layers of drapes.
It's a mistake to view the niqab as a
"personal freedom," Bassam Qadhi, a Syrian women's rights activist, told
local media recently.
"It is rather a declaration of extremism,"
Qadhi said.
Sunday Mid Day spoke with the Shahi Imam of the
Jama Masjid on the Islamic tradition of wearing the veil that dates
back to 300 BC, after the lower house of parliament in France approved a
ban on sporting the burqa in public, on Tuesday
Syed Ahmed Bukhari
A
man of many controversies, the Shahi Imam of Jama Masjid, Syed Ahmed
Bukhari, is never short of quotable quotes. From calling actress Shabana
Azmi a 'nachnewali-gaanewali' to jumping to Saudi Arabian King
Abdullah's offer to renovate the Jama Masjid, he has always managed to
be in the news.
In a telephonic interview with MiD DAY, the Imam
put forth his views on France's ban on the burqa, a veil that dates
back to 300 BC.
France lower house of parliament
unanimously passed the burqa ban. Your reaction.
These days
Muslims all over the world have to put up with negative things. It's
not just about a restriction on the burqa. What is the problem with the
burqa? In logon ko burqa aur Islam se nafrat hai (these people hate the
burqa and Islam). The intention is very clear. They don't like Muslims,
and the followers of Islam.
How would you justify the
presence of the burqa in modern society?
In modern society,
Muslims women are involved in all sorts of work despite wearing the
burqa. What is the problem then? Why is wearing a veil being
restricted? For over 1,400 years, Muslims around the world have been
following their tradition by wearing the burqa. I can't understand the
aim behind the ban. Why put a pabandi (restriction)?
People who
want to follow Islam will observe purdah one way or the other. They will
not desist from following their religion just because someone is
pressurising them. Islam talwar ke zor par nahin hataa hai aur na kabhi
hatega (Islam has never bowed to the sword and never will). For those
who don't want to follow the custom, all I'll say is, it's their
problem.
The burqa is seen as a symbol of subservience.
It
is important for a woman to cover herself properly in front of unknown
men. Men inevitably look at women who wear shorts or mini skirts.
Covering yourself has always been important in Islam, dusro ki nazron se
bachne ke liye.
A woman
wearing a veil stands in a street of Lyon, eastern France. Pic/AFP
photo
The French
immigration minister called the burqa a "walking coffin." Comment.
They
can do whatever they want. What Frenchwomen wear is not beyond
criticism. On one hand you say you don't want to hurt people's feelings,
then you go ahead and do exactly that.
This is why Muslims
think they are being discriminated against, and don't get justice
anywhere. That's why they are raising their voice and holding
demonstrations and protests. What else can they do?
According
to a survey, 5 million Muslims in France want the burqa banned. Are a
large chunk of global Muslims against the burqa?
Do all
Muslims wear the burqa even in India? Those who cover up, do it out of
their own free will. Drinking was also haram for 1,400 years. But there
are a lot of Muslims who drink. What can you do? But haram toh haram
hai.
In the UK, Tory leader Philip Holloborne has tabled a
private members' bill that wants to make covering faces in public places
illegal. The UK Independence Party also supports it.
You can't
justify things like these. But the entire world wants the same thing.