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Saturday 30 March 2019


GOOD NEWS
In The Name Of  ALLAH – “The Most Beneficent & Merciful”
It  gives me immense pleasure to inform you that
Mohammed Omer Khan, General Secretaries,
Bengal Educational & Social Trust (BEST),Rahmah Foundation (RF),
is going for Umrah by the grace of ALLAH. He will leave Kolkata on
Monday the 8th April 2019 morning and will back to Kolkata on
Monday 22nd April 2019. He will first visit Makkah for Umrah and
then will visit Madina for Ziyarat. He requested to all please pray
to ALLAH for his safe Journey and to accept his Umrah.
Aameen Summah Aameen
Rabiul Molla, Assitt. Gen. Secy. BEST, RF.


Thursday 14 March 2019

FACT FINDING REPORT OF BURNING OF 200 HOUSES IN MEERUT

On 5 March, 2019 about 200 houses belonging to mostly daily wage category of Muslim community  were burned by personnel of Cantonment Board along with local police as the Cantonment Board has been laying claim to their land in Budhia ka Baag or Mahigran or Macheran, a name derived from fishing trade, in Meerut city. It is interesting that the same Cantonment Board people first allowed people to settle and build houses on this piece of land by accepting bribes, otherwise how could 200 houses have come up? But some people also claim that not the entire piece of land belongs of Cantonment Board, some of it has been bought by them and the ownership is private. However, whatever documents they had have now been burned. On 5 March, 2019 first the police came and demolished one house at 4:30 pm and then the settlement was up in flames by 5:15 pm. The fire brigade did not arrive until a couple of hours later by which time the entire settlement was reduced to ashes. No government official has visited the area so far, neither is there any possibility of any compensation arriving from authorities. So far only some local Muslim politicians have come forward to offer some relief.  Two contact numbers in the settlement:

Mohammad Bilal, Moazzin of Masjid, 8979056369, Dilshad, 9027702362.
Site visit conducted by Faisal Khan, 9999746196, Sandeep Pandey and
Shabbir Husain Dar, 7889568297
Khudai Khidmatgar and Lok Rajniti Manch and NAPM

Tuesday 5 March 2019

Law Coaching in Kolkata by Common Law Academy (CLA)

Common Law Academy (CLA)  is going to start Coaching for LL.B, LL.M and Other Law Entrance Exam" at Kolkata for the session 2019-20.
Total Course Fees : Rs. 40,000  only (For 12 months)
During Admission you have to Pay Rs.20,000 and after 3 months rest of the amount you have to pay.  
Eligibility  Criteria :
For LL.B : Higher Secondary with 45% Marks
Duration of Coaching: 12 Months
Course Fees: Rs. 40,000/-

For LL.M : Must be LL.B passed
Duration of Coaching: 08 Months
Course Fees: Rs. 40,000/-



Specialty:
·        Experienced Faculty
·        Small Batches
·        Course Duration : 12 months
·        Class Timings: 11:30 - 1:30 pm and 2:00 - 4:00 PM
     (Every Sat & Sunday)
·        Regular Class Test
·        Mock Test
·        Motivational Classes will be taken by Retd. Judges /
.   Unsuccessful Candidate will get free coaching who doesn't clear the entrance in 1st attempt after taking guidance from our academy


Important dates & Times :
Last date for application  : 23.03. 2019
Walk in Interview :   24.03 2019
Declaration of Result : 31.03 2019
Date of Admission : 31.03. 2019 onward
Commencement of Class : 06.04.2019

  • For Admission Form and Queries Please Contact
 COMMON  LAW ACADEMY
Dilkhusa St. Near Muslim Girls Hostel

Helpline No: 8240518796

With best wishes

Advocate Sabnam Sultana

Friday 1 March 2019

Is AMU “anti-national”? Those who say so don’t know its history


in Communal Harmony — by Abhay Kumar — February 19, 2019
Normalcy at the historic Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) is yet to be restored. Like yours, my heart also trembles at the latest bolt of lightning that has struck AMU.
Around 14 students, including the former and current office-bearers of AMU Students’ Union, have been booked under sedition charges. In the FIR filed on Wednesday, it is alleged that they had raised anti-national slogans on campus.
The charges against them appear unsubstantiated. The complainant, Mukesh Lodhi, belongs to a saffron outfit. He is the Aligarh district president of Bhartiya Janta Yuva Morcha, an outfit affiliated to the RSS and the BJP.
Similarly, all the witnesses in the JNU controversy are also from saffron groups.
Ever since the BJP government came to power in 2014, it has used the tag of ‘anti-national’ to silence any voice of dissent.
Like AMU, JNU students and teachers too have been branded as “anti-nationals”, “Jinnah-supporters” and “Pakistani supporters”.
The Hindutva forces, backed up by the communal media, keep spewing venom against the so-called “anti-nationals” but their whole team has never produced any evidence in public or in court to prove the charges.
More unfortunate is the inflammatory role being played by the media. Let me narrate a personal experience. An hour before writing this piece, a journalist came to me and asked for my views on the recent suicide attack on the paramilitary forces in Pulwama, Jammu and Kashmir. He came to me with a prejudiced mind: “Afzal Guru par bada juloos  nikla thaa, kya jawanon ko le kar kuchh JNU mein hua?” (A big procession was taken out in favour of Afzal Guru, has such procession been organised in JNU against the Pulwama attack?)
In fact he was not asking a question but laying a trap for me. He thought that in JNU people would have celebrated the attack. Shameful, isn’t it? He did not spend a minute to check the fact. The Left organisations including the CPI, the CPM, the CPI-ML, JNU Students Union did condemn the attack in strong words.
What JNU has experienced in the last three years, AMU has been more or less experiencing for so many years. This has to do with the tag ‘Muslim’ with AMU.
Not only the communal forces but also the “good” Sanghi in the secular parties have often demonised AMU as “anti-national”.
But the study of history in an impartial way does not uphold such baseless charges. Established in the late 19th century by Sir Syed Ahmad Khan, AMU tried to remove Muslims’ educational backwardness and it succeeded to a large extent. Though, the term Muslim was attached to AMU from its inception, its doors have never been closed on non-Muslims. Several distinguished students and teachers who embellished this university were not Muslims by faith.
As far as political leaning is concerned, AMU has been evolving. While the formative years of AMU saw its intellectuals showing reluctance towards agitational politics, the arrival of Gandhi in the 1920s and 1930s, did not leave it unaffected. AMU was a favourite place for Gandhi and he found several friends from there during the Khilafat Movement. Even the formation of Jamia Millia Islamia, following the Congress’ call for establishment of separate educational institute based on national education policy, was carried out by the students of AMU.
The charge against AMU that it provided a “base” to the pro-Pakistan movement is a half-truth. True, the Muslim League was able to draw a group of supporters from the AMU campus in the 1940s but there were also others who were opposed to the League. That is why we cannot paint the whole university with the same brush.
Those who lay the charges that AMU supported League’s demand of Pakistan should look at the history holistically. Is it not a fact that the Congress, the League and the Hindu Mahasabha worked together till the late 1930s? Is it not true that even the Congress leadership was divided over its relation with the League and the demand of Pakistan? Is it not true that Patel, Nehru and later Gandhi accepted the demand of Pakistan to the heartbreak of Maulana Azad?
Those who create the bogey of anti-nationalism and separatism and then link it to AMU, should never forget that Partition did not take place because a group from AMU supported the League.
The historical condition was developing rather worsening so fast in the late 1930s and 1940s that without accepting a federal structure and sharing power between Hindus and Muslims, no one could have averted the division of the country. If power is not shared and minority voices are not accommodated, it would lead to instability as we saw in the late 1940s.
It was the same reason that the division of the country could not be stopped despite the fact that a large group of Muslims in the Sub-Continent led by Maulana Azad opposed it tooth and nail. The failure of the Congress to accommodate the demands of the League, as some of them were seen as “high” and “disproportionate” to the legitimate share of Muslims, was strong reason for the division of the country. Equating the birth of Pakistan and idea of separatism with AMU do not stand the test of historical reality.
The communal narrative often hides the fact that pre and post-Partition, AMU has been a stronghold of the Left. A galaxy of poets, lyricists, novelists, writers, historians and social scientists with a clear Left leaning have all come from AMU. Particularly in the field of Urdu Shayari and medieval history, the university has got international fame and it has made India feel proud world over. In the field of sciences, the university has produced among the best engineers and doctors. Some of them have gone abroad, particularly in the West Asia, Europe and the USA and won both remittance and goodwill for the country.
At a time when the educational status of Muslims has become worse than Dalits on several important parameters, the role of AMU assumes an even greater significance and relevance. The Sachar Report and the Ranganath Mishra Report, both of them being constituted by the Union Government, have asked the establishment to urgently work for educational uplift of Muslims.
In order to do this, the government should have given more funds and facilities to AMU and other minority institutes. In fact, the need of the hour is to open more and more AMUs in several parts of the country, particularly in those areas where Muslim population is concentrated.
Instead of doing this, the ruling regime is doing politics. We should not forget that the complainant belongs to the youth-wing of the BJP that is in power in both UP and the Centre. While the BJP is using the plank of anti-nationalism, the earlier regimes demonised AMU as being ‘fundamentalist’. Note that the controversy over the minority status to AMU has a long history, predating the Modi-Yogi regime.
Resorting to such communal politics may silence opponents and bring rich electoral dividends for the saffron party, but in long-run it will create an atmosphere of mistrust, hatred and injustice in society. (First published at beyondheadlines.in)
(Abhay Kumar has recently submitted his PhD at Centre of Historical Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. A regular contributor to newspapers and news portals, Kumar has been working on the broad theme of the Indian Muslims and Social Justice. His other writings are available at abhaykumar.org. You may write to him at debatingissues@gmail.com)