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India and her Muslims

check out muslim bro in ahmedabad celebrating eid e milad...




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On the eve of Ramzan Eid, Alif ni Masjid and Sidi Sayed ki Jali near Teen Darwaza, AHMEDABAD CITY are lit up to set the mood for the festival.


Eid Mubarak, Entertainment - Hip & Happening - Ahmedabad Mirror,Ahmedabad Mirror
 
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check out this..for amity in gujarat between hindu and muslim bro..


The ahmedabad city's first Muslim woman mayor, Aneesa Mirza, the Leader of the Opposition in the Assembly, received the yatra when it reached the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation.

The local Muslim MLA, Usmangani Devdiwala, who yesterday presented to the main priest of the Jagdish temple a silver chariot, also greeted the yatra along with hundreds of Muslims.

The Hindu : Rath yatra peaceful in Ahmedabad


and must see






Jagannath Rath Yatra in Ahmedabad promotes amity



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Laughing at others unfortunate incidents will not solve pak.problems. .development is the only option..check this..

80 hindu temples demolished for illegal encroachment by Narendra Modi in Gujarat capital gandhinagar


GANDHINAGAR: Before you call Narendra Modi Hindutva's poster-boy, take this. Gujarat's capital, Gandhinagar, has razed to the ground 80 temples or their encroaching boundaries, since authorities began a drive against illegal encroachment in one month.

The campaign, which started on October 13, went into top gear on Wednesday when 15 small and medium temples were demolished on two roads. A lesson, perhaps, for twin-city Ahmedabad's civic authorities who have failed to carry out a Gujarat High Court directive against shrines obstructing movement of traffic in the city.

A team of officials from the Gandhinagar collectorate, police and forest officials participate in the demolition operation. A survey conducted by the Gandhinagar collectorate officials showed 107 temples having illegally come up along the main roads and about 312 in the interior areas of various sectors. All of these will be removed.

Apparently, the first temple was demolished around Diwali and there was not even a protest as the demolition was carried out in the dead of the night. Six temples around Gh-5 circle and adjoining areas vanished within hours.

Two days later, VHP organised a protest rally in Gandhinagar, supported by members of Mahagujarat Janata Party, comprising mainly of BJP rebels. The demolition drive can also be seen in the light of the recent arrest of VHP's Ahmedabad general secretary Ashwin Patel on sedition charges for circulating anti-Modi SMSes. ( Watch )

Gandhinagar collector Sanjeev Kumar says, ``This is part of the ongoing drive in which all encroachments are going to be removed. We will bring down any illegal structure on government land.''

GETTING GOD OUT OF WAY

Some big temples now gone

Panchmukhi Hanuman temple - Kh road
Rajrajeshrima Meldi Mata temple - Near Madhur dairy
Ghogha Baba temple - Gukalpura
Maa Ambaji temple - Gukalpura
Chehar Mata temple - Kh road
80 temples demolished in Modi's capital - India - The Times of India
 
Guys do you know whats the real problem? You guys think "ki tum logon (Pakistan) ne dunibhar ki Muslims ka theka le rakha hai."

Have any Indian Muslim asked for Pakistan's help? NO...Indian Muslim is capable of solving his problem.No need of your crocodile tears. On similar topic an Indian muslim has embarrassed your former president in front of whole world. This is a creepy attitude. Leave Indian Muslims alone. They don't need you. Better solve your own problems.

 
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Love Modi, make peace: Ahmedabad Imam

AHMEDABAD: Mufti Shabbir Ahmed Siddiqui (52) — the Imam of city’s biggest mosque, Jama Masjid — hails from Sirsa in Bihar. Living in Ahmedabad since 1982, Mufti Siddiqui is pitted against hardliners who feel he is soft on the Narendra Modi government with which he has been building bridges in turbulent times.

But he is unabashed about his admiration for the CM and would like Modi, already popular among the Shia muslims, to gain acceptance among the Sunnis too. The Imam calls the riots an ‘atrocity’ but adds that the projection of the riots was much graver than what had actually happened. “Time has come now to move on. It is seven years since the riots and people have already started forgetting what had happened,” he told TOI in an interview.

The Imam says Modi has ensured peace after 2002 and feels the chief minister had “lived up to expectations”. “Muslims too have an opportunity to prosper in the peaceful environment that the Modi government has created. Modi has provided an atmosphere which is conducive for those who want to trade peacefully in Gujarat,” he said.

Stating that Modi actually does not need Muslim votes to win the elections, he said it was up to the Muslims to make friends with the chief minister. “Islam has in the past befriended even bigger fundamentalists,” he argues, adding that Muslims must appreciate the performance of the CM, if he is good.

He is also happy that the spread of the hardliner Tablighis in Gujarat, who have created numerous problems for him in recent years, has been checked by the Modi government by blocking the influx of foreign funds through ‘hawala’.

He said his battle with the Tabhlighis for the control of mosques across Gujarat would be won only if their foreign funding is stopped.

Love Modi, make peace: Ahmedabad Imam - Ahmedabad - City - The Times of India

Modi's new admirer: Ahmedabad's Imam

AHMEDABAD: Mufti Shabbir Ahmed Siddiqui, the Imam of Ahmedabad's biggest mosque, has found himself alone among the city's Muslim clerics. What has landed the 52-year-old Imam in trouble in his own community is his admiration for Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi.

Siddiqui, a native of Sirsa in Bihar, has been living in Ahmedabad since 1982. The hardliners in the community feel he is soft on the state government with which he has been building bridges in turbulent times.

But Siddiqui is unabashed about his admiration for the CM and would like Modi, already popular among Shia muslims, to gain acceptance among the Sunnis too. The Jama Masjid Imam calls the 2002 riots an "atrocity'' but adds that the projection of the riots was "much graver'' than what had actually happened. "The time has come now to move on. It is seven years since the riots and people have already started forgetting what had happened,'' he told TOI.

The Imam says Modi has ensured peace after 2002 and feels the chief minister has "lived up to the expectations''. "Muslims too have an opportunity to prosper in the peaceful environment that the Modi government has created. Modi has provided an atmosphere which is conducive for those who want to do business in Gujarat,'' he says.

According to Siddiqui, Modi does not need Muslim votes to win the elections. It is up to the Muslims to make friends with the chief minister, he says. "Islam has in the past befriended even bigger fundamentalists,'' he argues, adding Muslims must appreciate the performance of the CM, "if he is good''.

He is also happy that the spread of the hardliner Tablighis in Gujarat, who have created numerous problems for him in recent years, has been checked by the Modi government by blocking the influx of foreign funds through `hawala'. He says his battle with the Tabhlighis for the control of mosques across Gujarat would be won only if the flow of funds from abroad is stopped.

Modi's new admirer: Ahmedabad's Imam - India - The Times of India
 
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The death of even a single innocent person is a tragedy for which the perpetrators should be punished.

But there are many motivated and deeply dishonest people in India and abroad who are engaged in viciously spreading falsehoods about that sad incident.

Threads of this sort should not be allowed to get away with false propaganda. It is only fair that the other side be given a hearing. Here are a number of links:

Myths of Gujarat Riots

Myth 1: 2,000 Muslims were killed in the Gujarat riots

Myth 2: Muslims were ‘butchered’ in Gujarat

Myth 3: Whole of Gujarat was burning

Myth 4: The Gujarat police turned a blind eye to the rioting

Myth 5: Gujarat police was anti-Muslim

Myth 6: Gujarat riots were the ‘worst ever massacre’ in India

Myth 7: Only Muslims were rendered homeless and suffered economically

Myth 8: The Gujarat government was involved in the riots

Myth 9: Gujarat riots were like the 1984 anti-Sikh riots

Myth 10: Gujarat became a dangerous place to live in, in 2002

Myth 11: In Ehsan Jafri case, women were raped

Myth 12: The photo of Qutubuddin Ansari is genuine

Myth 13: Narendra Modi said:”Every action has equal and opposite reaction”

Myth 14: Sangh Parivar organizations like VHP organized the riots

Myth 15: Narendra Modi gave free hand to rioters for 3 days


P.S. --> I took this post from some other thread in this forum. Hope this would remove your misconception. BTW, I think you are intentionally flaming around. So you may continue with your rant. Thanks.
 
The death of even a single innocent person is a tragedy for which the perpetrators should be punished.

But there are many motivated and deeply dishonest people in India and abroad who are engaged in viciously spreading falsehoods about that sad incident.

Threads of this sort should not be allowed to get away with false propaganda. It is only fair that the other side be given a hearing. Here are a number of links:

Myths of Gujarat Riots

Myth 1: 2,000 Muslims were killed in the Gujarat riots

Myth 2: Muslims were ‘butchered’ in Gujarat

Myth 3: Whole of Gujarat was burning

Myth 4: The Gujarat police turned a blind eye to the rioting

Myth 5: Gujarat police was anti-Muslim

Myth 6: Gujarat riots were the ‘worst ever massacre’ in India

Myth 7: Only Muslims were rendered homeless and suffered economically

Myth 8: The Gujarat government was involved in the riots

Myth 9: Gujarat riots were like the 1984 anti-Sikh riots

Myth 10: Gujarat became a dangerous place to live in, in 2002

Myth 11: In Ehsan Jafri case, women were raped

Myth 12: The photo of Qutubuddin Ansari is genuine

Myth 13: Narendra Modi said:”Every action has equal and opposite reaction”

Myth 14: Sangh Parivar organizations like VHP organized the riots

Myth 15: Narendra Modi gave free hand to rioters for 3 days


P.S. --> I took this post from some other thread in this forum. Hope this would remove your misconception. BTW, I think you are intentionally flaming around. So you may continue with your rant. Thanks.

You got to get up pretty early in the morning for this !
 
P.S. --> I took this post from some other thread in this forum. Hope this would remove your misconception. BTW, I think you are intentionally flaming around. So you may continue with your rant. Thanks.

Yeah, everything is a misconception. :lol:

Good going :victory:
 
The death of even a single innocent person is a tragedy for which the perpetrators should be punished.

But there are many motivated and deeply dishonest people in India and abroad who are engaged in viciously spreading falsehoods about that sad incident.

Threads of this sort should not be allowed to get away with false propaganda. It is only fair that the other side be given a hearing. Here are a number of links:

Myths of Gujarat Riots

Myth 1: 2,000 Muslims were killed in the Gujarat riots

Myth 2: Muslims were ‘butchered’ in Gujarat

Myth 3: Whole of Gujarat was burning

Myth 4: The Gujarat police turned a blind eye to the rioting

Myth 5: Gujarat police was anti-Muslim

Myth 6: Gujarat riots were the ‘worst ever massacre’ in India

Myth 7: Only Muslims were rendered homeless and suffered economically

Myth 8: The Gujarat government was involved in the riots

Myth 9: Gujarat riots were like the 1984 anti-Sikh riots

Myth 10: Gujarat became a dangerous place to live in, in 2002

Myth 11: In Ehsan Jafri case, women were raped

Myth 12: The photo of Qutubuddin Ansari is genuine

Myth 13: Narendra Modi said:”Every action has equal and opposite reaction”

Myth 14: Sangh Parivar organizations like VHP organized the riots

Myth 15: Narendra Modi gave free hand to rioters for 3 days


P.S. --> I took this post from some other thread in this forum. Hope this would remove your misconception. BTW, I think you are intentionally flaming around. So you may continue with your rant. Thanks.

I think you have a very disturbed sleep last night. :bounce:

Wake up Man ! It is day time.

Fighter
 
Guided by 'zakat', a village funds its road and bridge


Indian Muslim
By Asit Srivastava, IANS,

Lucknow: Guided by 'zakat' - charity as envisaged by the Quran - villagers of Muslim-dominated Shirajpur in Uttar Pradesh have repaired roads, dug wells, established schools and are now building a bridge.

The village is located in Azamgarh, some 300 km from Lucknow, and its people say the apathy of public representatives towards their problems prompted them to take up development activities themselves.

"It may surprise you, but we have collected over Rs.65 lakh for our new project - the construction of the bridge over the Tamsa river," Ehsaanul Haq, 62, a former head of Shirajpur village, told IANS on phone from Azamgarh.

"The construction of the bridge has been initiated. We are eagerly waiting for the day when the project will be completed and the locals will get rid of the problems they face while travelling through the rugged terrain in the village," he added.

According to locals, once the 30-metre-long bridge is commissioned, it would provide proper connectivity between Shirajpur and other villages of Azamgarh.

Wahidulla Raj, 57, another resident of the Shirajpur, said: "From the business point of view also, the bridge would be quite useful, particularly for the farmers, who have to travel nearly 35 km to reach the markets of Azamgarh city to sell their produce.

"Once completed, the bridge would curtail the 35 km distance by nearly 15 km."

Villagers say it was over a decade ago that they started addressing civic problems in the village with zakat on the instructions of some visiting clerics.

"Some of the clerics were from Hyderabad and other cities outside Uttar Pradesh. Due to bad roads, water-logging, the clerics had to face several problems to reach our village," said Nisaar Ahmad, 64, who runs a printing press in the village.

"It was only during a majlis (meeting), while discussing the importance of zakat, that the clerics instructed us to develop our village through charity."


Zakat is one of the five basic principles of Islam. According to the concept of zakat, every Muslim family has to give 2.5 percent of its possessions and surplus wealth to charity for the poor and needy.

Imbibing the instructions of the clerics, the villagers started with the repair of a small road and later started addressing other civic problems through donations.

A sizeable number of Muslims from Shirajpur, whose population is around 3,000, have their businesses in Maharashtra and other states of the country and they contribute generously to the development of their village.

"My son is in Mumbai and is doing very well with his cloth business. Though he manages to come home only once or twice a year, every time he visits he ensures generous contributions for development work," said Khurram Alam Nomaani, 65, another resident of Shirajpur.

The villagers say the apathy of public representatives in a way became their driving force.

"No development would have been possible if we had run after politicians or public representatives. Today, through zakat, we have managed to set up a proper drainage system, solve water problems and other civic issues," said Akhtar Hussain, who owns a medicine shop.

Charity has also helped install and repair hand pumps and set up electric poles in the village.

(Asit Srivastava can be contacted at asit.s@ians.in)


Guided by 'zakat', a village funds its road and bridge | TwoCircles.net
 
AIMPLB says no to Communal Violence Bill


Indian Muslim
By Faisal Fareed, TwoCircles.net,

Lucknow: Demand for revoking the court verdicts which are against the Islamic shariah by legislative procedure will figure during the three day 21st annual convention of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB) that began here today. The convention is being held at Islamic seminary Nadwatul Uloom besides a open house at Aishbagh eidgaah.

The board openly announced that modern views can never be introduced in the Islamic shariah. “All the laws have to be interpreted in reference to recognized muslim texts,” said Maulana Abdul Raheem Qureishi, the assistant general secretary of the board.


“This is not the first instance when court verdicts have been withdrawn by the legislature. Several such incidents have been reported in the past. We are only concerned with the verdicts which are against the basic tenets of our religion,” he said while interacting with reporters on Friday. He stated that representation to governments will be made for making effective changes through legislation for over ruling court verdicts delivered in the past.

“The board will discuss means for effective implementation of Darul Qaza (Islamic courts) across the country. Proper awareness programme will be held for Muslim fraternity in this regard so that such matters are not discussed in civil courts,” he said. Qureishi however ruled out that ‘triple talaq’ is on the agenda of the board. “All such issues are covered under our family law and we concerned over the court interference in these issues,” he added.

The board in coming two days will also discuss the proposed Communal Violence Bill. AIMPLB, spokeseperson, SQR Ilyas expressed his apprehension over the proposed bill terming it as ‘anti-Muslim’. “We rule out this Bill in its present format. Muslims have also been at the receiving end and this bill does not have provision for accountability for police and officials. We demand that our opinion should also be taken before finalizing the Bill,” said Ilyas. Putting forth their demand in the Bill, Ilyas said that preventive steps for communal violence, effective means to control the violence besides providing relief and rehabilitation to the victims should be clearly laid out in the bill.

Interestingly, the board will not take up the much debated Women's Reservation bill in its meeting. Terming it as outside the gambit of Muslim personal law Qureishi said: “We are only for the effective implementation of Islamic shariah while other issues are taken up by other Muslim orgnisations.” However in a guarded statement he stated that board does not discriminate on the basis of gender and it will elect 30 women members in coming two days.

On Liberhan Commission’s report the board maintained that report cannot be accepted in totality. “The findings of the report are accepted and demand that action should be taken against the perpetrators of crime. However the remarks on Muslims orgnaisation is not accepted. Government should step up the court procedure besides clubbing all the cases at one bench,” he said.


AIMPLB says no to Communal Violence Bill | TwoCircles.net
 
Fix responsibility of police in communal violence bill: Muslim forum

Indian Muslim
By TCN News,

Aligarh: The Forum for Muslim Studies & Analysis (FMSA) today sent a memorandum to Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh demanding amendment in communal violence bill to fix responsibility of police officers in dealing communal riots and suitable punishment to the erring police personnel. The Aligarh-based FMSA also demanded police reform to make the police department accountable.

While welcoming the government’s move to table and enact Communal Violence [Prevention, Control and Rehabilitation of Victims] Bill in the Parliament, FMSA demanded the “Bill should have clause to fix police responsibilities in dealing communal riots and suitable punishment to the erring police personnel should be incorporated in it.”

Other demands in the memorandum are:

*An exhaustive inquiry should be done in the riots/communal clashes and FIR should be lodged on the elements who mastermind whole show of violence.

*Apart from defined central/state relations, in the communal clashes, centre should have legal authority to intervene, to ward off possibilities of communal approaches on the part of state administration.

*Several police Reform Commissions have been constituted earlier but their recommendations are getting dust. Police reform is an urgent step, which UPA government should take.

*Police department should reflect nation’s populace. Every community must be represented in it to ensure smooth functioning.

*A uniform compensation policy should be evolved for the victims of the communal riots. Compensation should not be an political or ideological lines.

*Fast Track courts should be established to deal cases of communal violence on the lines of terrorism and also courts should have powers to try erring police personnel also.


FMSA General Secretary Jasim Mohammad has sent a copy of the memorandum to Union Law Minister, Union Home Minister, Sonia Gandhi, Chairperson, UPA and Rahul Gandhi, MP, Lok Sabha.

Fix responsibility of police in communal violence bill: Muslim forum | TwoCircles.net
 
TOI Front Page Feed, dated 27th March 2010.

Desh bhakton ki pol-patti aik bar phir khul kar saamnay aa gayi hai.

Fighter


Advani gave fiery speech on Dec 6, says his then-PSO



Refutes LK’s Claim That He Was Helpless Spectator To Demolition


Manjari Mishra | TNN



Rae Bareli: L K Advani’s attempt to distance himself from the Babri demolition got a jolt on Friday. Anju Gupta, senior IPS officer and an eyewitness to the destruction at Ayodhya on December 6, 1992, accused the BJP veteran of delivering a provocative speech to the throng of kar sevaks who eventually tore down the Babri mosque.

The IPS officer also did not support Advani’s claims that the demolition saddened him(Magarmach kay aanso.... Fighter) and that he had tried to restrain kar sevaks from bringing down the mosque.


Gupta’s testimony in the special CBI court here trying the Babri accused is significant because, as Advani’s personal security officer, she was supposed to shadow him in Ayodhya. She can thus convincingly claim to have seen and heard the actions and utterances of the saffron stalwart on that eventful day.

The IPS officer said that Advani delivered a “bahut joshila” (highly inflammatory) speech, adding that ‘‘his address generated much excitement” in the crowd. According to her, Advani declared that a Ram Mandir would be constructed on the same 2.77 acre land. “‘Mandir wahin banega’, Advani repeated the statement a number of times,’’ she said.

Gupta had given a detailed account of actions of Advani and his colleagues to the court earlier too.

Her reiterating the same in a trial which has dragged on for years with no sign of coming to a close need not necessarily aggravate legal troubles for Advani immediately. Nor should it cause political complications for him or his party which still revels in its defiance over Ayodhya.

But it undercuts Advani’s attempt to claim that he was a helpless spectator to the December 6 demolition.

The testimony, in fact, may appear to link the demolition to the speech, with the 1990-batch IPS officer saying that the final assault on the mosque began soon after Advani finished speaking.

Saying that she could not hear the entire speech as she had to go out for a brief period to oversee VIP fleet parking arrangements, Gupta said that upon her return, she noticed a crowd climbing the structure with pickaxes, spades and hooked ropes of the kind used in circuses.

‘I saw sweets being distributed, people embracing’


Rae Bareli: Senior IPS officer Anju Gupta’s description of happenings at Ayodhya on the fateful day undercuts L K Advani’s claim that the demolition left him a sad man. Advani has regretted the act of demolition, terming December 6, 1992 “the saddest day in my life”. The claim, however, is not borne out by Gupta’s description of what followed the razing of the Babri mosque. The IPS officer told the court about celebrations that broke out among the leaders of BJP and VHP as the mosque came down, and did not sort those who felt sad from those who were jubiliant.

‘‘The sight of the structure crashing down led to much euphoria among the dignatories present on the dais of the Ram Katha Manch. I saw sweets being distributed, people congratulating and embracing each other,’’ Gupta said. She continued, ‘‘The Ram Katha Manch, actually a single-storied building 150-170 metres away from the disputed structure, was a beehive of activity. Among the people who flitted in and out, I could recognise apart from Advani, Murli Manohar Joshi, Vishnu Hari Dalmia, Vinay Katiyar, Uma Bharati, Sadhvi Rithambhara, Acharya Dharmendra Dev and Shrish Chand Dixit.’’

Gupta also did not support Advani’s claim that he had tried to stop the kar sevaks, suggesting that he was actually concerned about kar sevaks who injured themselves during the demolition. According to the officer, it was she who told Advani that a crowd had broken in and was demolishing the structure, and that a number of people had fallen off the dome and were critically injured. ‘‘Reports of kar sevaks being injured upset Advani. He demanded to be led to the site so that he could persuade kar sevaks to come down. Advised against this, Advani dropped the idea and deputed Uma Bharati instead,’’ she said.

The officer also accused other leaders of BJP/VHP combine — Vinay Katiyar, Uma Bharti, Sadhvi Rithambhara — of making provocative speeches.

While approaching the manch, Gupta could hear speakers saying from the dais, ‘‘Kar savek upar se nahi neeche se kar seva karen (Kar sevaks should work from the bottom and not from the top).’’ Gupta also claimed to have heard Sadhvi Rithambhara urging the crowd repeatedly, ‘‘Ek dhakka aur do (give one more push). Explaining away the smoke rising from a distance, Uma Bharati said that the Muslims had set fire to their houses and now the time had come for Hindus to have their government at the Centre,’’ she said.





A cop who makes waves

A1990-batch IPS officer, Anju Gupta played a huge role in administrative arrangements in Faizabad in the days before the Babri Masjid demolition. As additional superintendent of police in Lucknow in the early 90s, the physics post-graduate cracked down on criminals. Married to batchmate Shafi Hasan Rizvi, she received the Police Medal for meritorious services in 2009.
 
Muslims Debate Need for New Islamist-backed Political Party

The men behind the new party insist that it is not a Jamaat front, though critics argue otherwise, pointing out that the top-brass of the party are mostly senior Jamaat activists, reports Yogi Sikand

The floating of a new political party, styling itself the 'Welfare Party of India', by the Jamaat-e Islami Hind late last week has, predictably, set off a vigorous debate in Indian Muslim circles.

The men behind the party insist that it is not a Jamaat front, though critics argue otherwise, pointing out that the top-brass of the party are mostly senior Jamaat activists and that everyone knows that the party has been set up under the orders, and with the blessings, of the Jamaat top-brass. The party, for its part, explains its agenda in predictable terms: of promoting 'genuine' democracy, secularism, human rights, social justice and so on. The subtext that underlies its justification for its formation is that Indian Muslims have been denied justice by existing political parties, and so a new party is necessary to secure justice for them, in addition to other marginalised communities.

No sooner had the WPI been officially launched in New Delhi than Muslim supporters as well as critics began posting their comments on various, mainly Indian Muslim, websites, arguing for and against the party. Some, mostly members or sympathisers of the Jamaat, hailed the new party as a welcome development.

One such enthusiast praised the Jamaat as supposedly being a team of dedicated and sincere Muslims, and hoped that the new party would help bring 'morals and ethics' into the Indian political system where, he said, they were badly missing and sorely needed. He even opined that the WPI and its 'value-based politics' would be 'a role- model for other political parties in India.'

Another supporter claimed that by setting up the WPI, the Jamaat was working for the broader 'Islamic cause' because, he claimed, echoing the Jamaat's consistent line, 'Islam is a complete way of life, with solutions to all problems, and it does not recognise any distinction between religion and politics.' The WPI, he hoped, would help the Jamaat in its agenda of 'establishing Islam' or iqamat-e deen, in all spheres of Indian social life -- possibly a subtle reference to working for the eventual formation of an Islamic State (on which the Jamaat's understanding of Islam is based) in India.

Yet another ardent supporter welcomed the formation of the party by expressing the hope that it would consolidate Muslim votes across India, which would make Muslims a political force to reckon with, as a result of which other parties would no longer be able to ignore them or take them for granted. This, he argued, would be a powerful counter to forces that were bent on further marginalising Muslims.

The floating of the party was met with trenchant criticism by many other Muslims, however, who feared that it boded ill, rather than auguring well, for Indian Muslims. One such critic, who identified himself as a 'Salafi', thereby indicating his affiliation with Saudi-style Salafi Wahhabism, argued that by forming a party that would operate within the Indian system of democratic politics, the Jamaat had accepted democracy and, therefore, had turned its back on its original agenda of struggling to establish an Islamic caliphate in India. In doing so, he claimed, it had abandoned the vision of the Jamaat's founder, Syed Abul Ala Maududi, who had been viscerally opposed to democracy as a man-made, and, therefore, 'un-Islamic', system. He warned the Jamaat that if truly wished to establish the caliphate, which considered an Islamic imperative, 'it could not do so by remaining enslaved to the existing false and polytheistic political system.'

Criticism of the WPI on such supposedly 'Islamic' grounds seemed to be less of a concern for most other Muslim opponents of the party who commented on it on various websites and online discussion groups. Instead, many of them expressed the worry that by entering the field of electoral politics, the Jamaat would give a fillip to anti-Muslim Hindutva forces. If the WPI intended to consolidate Muslim votes, it was bound, they argued, to further widen existing antagonisms between Hindus and Muslims, which would only benefit the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh.

An irate Munaf Zeena, an Indian Muslim based in London, remarked that the WPI 'seems destined to create a predictable onslaught on the Muslim community of India', predicting that the party would also fail in its ambition to politically unite the Indian Muslims because most of them were not ideologically linked to the Jamaat. Instead of setting up 'separate' platforms like the WPI, which could only result in 'chaos', he sensibly urged that 'all Indians should work together for the benefit of all.'

Another such commentator argued that the WPI would serve as 'a boon and bonanza for the RSS'. He reminded the Indian Muslims of the advice given to them by Abul Kalam Azad soon after the Partition -- to desist from setting up their own political party on the grounds that this would strengthen Hindu reactionary forces. Sadly, he said, the Jamaat leaders had ignored this sage advice, and he accused them of being politically illiterate. Rather that jumping into the political arena, he went on, Jamaat leaders should concentrate on promoting modern education among Muslims, including among themselves, which, he remarked, was woefully lacking.

Yet another critic, a certain Dr. Mookhi Amir Ali, likened the WPI to the BJP and opined that the two would have a symbiotic relationship with each other while posing a grave danger to secular, democratic and progressive forces. He scoffed at the claims of the WPI of being a 'truly' secular, and not an exclusively Muslim, party. Simply because one of its several vice-presidents was a Catholic priest who recited the Gayatri Mantra at the inauguration of the party, it did not make it secular, he insisted.

'The Welfare Party of India, spawned from the Jamaat-e Islami Hind, reminds one of the BJP, the offspring of the mother RSS. Its Christian vice-president Father Abraham Joseph brings back memories of the BJP's almost permanent vice-president, a Muslim Sikandar Bakht. When Ashok Singhal of the VHP hears of the Gayatri Mantra being chanted at the launch of the WPI, he will exclaim, "I am loving it!"' Mookhi caustically remarked.

In a similar vein, in a mail sent to members of the progressive Indian Muslim online discussion group, The Moderate Voice, a critic, calling himself simply 'Ansari', mocked the claims of the WPI of being genuinely committed to secularism, democracy and social justice. '"Welfare Party" by Jamaat-e Islami? Hahaha! Must be a joke,' he scoffed. 'The main aim of the Jamaat is to establish an Islamic State in India on the lines of the caliphate. […] The Jamaat is a mirror image of the Hindutva parties. Let it first deny [this] claim before trying to fool people in the name of welfare.'

In a similar vein, a certain Dr Irfan Waheed, writing in NewAgeIslam.com, claimed that the WPI might give a boost to unwanted tendencies among Muslims, and that it might incline them even more towards conservatism, and even possibly extremism. 'There is a possibility,' he wrote, 'that the rise of a right-wing Muslim political party like the WPI will give rise to radical Islamic thought and a rigid un-pluralistic outlook among the Muslims who have very successfully integrated themselves into the secular and cultural atmosphere of the country while retaining their religious identity.'

Dr Waheed also noted that the claims of the WPI of being genuinely committed to social justice could easily be questioned by its critics. For instance, he explained, the WPI would be unable to deny that the Jamaat's ideological mentor, Syed Maududi, was on record as having declared that 'he did not bother if the Hindus treat the Muslims of India worse that the mlechhas' because 'he was only bothered about making Pakistan an Islamic state at any cost.'

Further, he went on, the Jamaat could not deny that the Pakistani Jamaat-e Islami, then under Maududi, 'not only extended ideological support to the Pakistani military' in the 1971 Bangladesh liberation struggle, 'but actually formed a militia whose members fought the Bengalis, killed and raped both Muslim and Hindu women and declared that no library in Bangladesh would have any book on secular topics either by Hindu writers or Muslim writers.'

In other words, what Dr Waheed seemed to suggest, the devastatingly stained record, as far as secularism, democracy and social justice were concerned, of the Jamaat's own founder Syed Maududi rendered the Jamaat morally totally incapable of defending what it presented as the rationale for the floating of the WPI.

Challenging this view, a few commentators opined that the WPI would actually help promote moderation and act as a dampener to fringe extremist elements among Muslims, rather than promoting radicalism. Thus, a certain Ilyas Ameen pointed out that what he characterised as a radical Islamist outfit, the Popular Front of India, was spreading 'like cancer' across the country, and noted that this boded ill for Hindu-Muslim relations. He suggested that the Jamaat could act as a counter to the Popular Front, by weaning away Muslims who had been attracted by the Front's rhetoric.

Another such critic, who chose to remain anonymous, said that because Muslims lacked an all-India party till now, 'some extreme groups tried to fill the vacuum', but this had 'brought only humiliation' to the Indian Muslims. Hence, he hoped, the Jamaat's political party could help curb such radical tendencies.

Critics voiced their apprehensions about the WPI using other arguments, too. One anonymous commentator scoffed at the claims of the Jamaat of being sincerely committed to Muslim welfare by pointing out that it had done little, if at all, all these years for the social and economic development of the poor among the Muslims, accusing Jamaat leaders of being interested only in feathering their own nests.

'Many of them have sent their children abroad, to the Gulf and even to the USA, where they live comfortably and have become exceedingly rich. That is a true measure of their supposed commitment to the plight of the Indian Muslims!' he remarked. He further noted, 'The Jamaat and WPI harp on democracy and secularism in India, where we Muslims are a minority, but they, like other Islamists, vehemently denounce secular democracy as anti-Islamic in Muslim-majority countries. Is this not hypocrisy? Why don't they condemn the persecution of non-Muslim minorities in Muslim countries, often in the name of Islam, if they are really sincere about social justice, which is what they claim the WPI will struggle for in India?'

Similarly, a certain Pervez Yusuf mocked the claims of the Jamaat, including the men behind the WPI, of being dedicated to the welfare of the Indian Muslims. 'Their social work is only visible in Abul Fazl Enclave', he sarcastically remarked about the Jamaat, referring to the Muslim locality in New Delhi where the Jamaat has its national headquarters.

Questioning the Jamaat's and WPI's claims of disinterested community activism, he added, 'They collect funds from Middle East,' leaving it to readers to make of this not-so-cryptic statement what they wanted. Likewise, a certain Wajid caustically remarked that the leaders of the Jamaat were 'intellectually corrupt, ambitious and power hungry' and suggested that the WPI could hardly be expected to live up to its tall claims.

Other critics feared that far from consolidating Muslim votes and thereby empowering the Indian Muslims, as it claimed it would, the WPI would only further fragment the Muslim electorate. One anonymous critic pointed out that numerous Muslim parties in the past had failed, such as the maverick politician Syed Shahabuddin's Insaf Party, the short-lived Ulema Council of India, the Tamil Nadu Muslim Makkal Katchi, and so on, and raised the possibility that the WPI could go the same way, too.

A certain Tahira Hasan suggested that the WPI might follow other such Muslim political parties, which, in her words, 'just do not work for community', but, instead, enter into pacts with 'mainstream' parties in order to promote the interests of their leaders. Such parties, she went on, 'never raise voices against assaults on Muslims', while 'secular' non-Muslims do so, thus suggesting that Muslims must look to the latter rather than the former for hope to secure justice for themselves.

Another such commentator, Zaheer Ali, opined that by entering into the political arena, the Jamaat would be forced to make ideological compromises, indicating, for instance, the recent support given to the CPI(M) by the Jamaat in Kerala [ Images ], although ideologically the Jamaat was vociferously opposed to Communism.

Several of these comments on the WPI, whether for or against, were hosted on okhlatimes.com, a website run by Asad, a young Muslim man based in Okhla, the same locality in New Delhi where the Jamaat has its national headquarters. In an article on the WPI hosted on the website, a commentator noted that from discussions about the party on Facebook, for instance, 'it could be made out' that the Jamaat 'is fast losing its respectability.' In another article on the WPI on the same website, tellingly titled, 'All is Not Well With the Jamaat-e Islami Hind', Asad himself wrote:

'Over the years, the JEIH [Jamaat] has undergone a sea change. Of late, it has built swanky offices in Abul Fazal Enclave, equipped with all the latest facilities. Also, its senior members don't miss the opportunity to share a podium with powerful politicians. Most of the senior JEIH leaders have adjusted to the changing time well by giving up a frugal lifestyle. Will it also adapt to the Indian politics that is out-and-out corrupt?'

And that is a question that is troubling numerous Muslims concerned about the implications of the WPI for Indian Muslim politics.



Yogi Sikand
 
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