by admin | May 25, 2021 | Books, Entrepreneurship
Muslim neighbourhood of Shaheen Bagh in Delhi’s Okhla area emerged as a symbol of a vibrant democracy and secular pilgrimage during nation-wide protests against Citizenship Amendment Act. “Shaheen Bagh: From a Protest to a Movement”, set to be launched this month, is a moving tale of the brave women who created history by raising their voice for the deprived and the discriminated. Following are excerpts from the preface of the book authored by Zia us Salam and Uzma Ausaf.

We live in the age of constant vilification of the other, of muzzling speech and equating dissent with treachery. The worst though is an organised campaign equating criticism of the government with the criticism of the nation, akin to being a traitor. There is no depth too low to sink, no words too slanderous, no character assassination too immoral when it comes to tackling the opponents.
The exemplary Shaheen Bagh women – steadfast, resolute, united and almost unbelievable peaceniks – have experienced the worst, and lived to tell the tale. With their incredible powers of patience and abiding belief in ahimsa, they turned a protest into a satyagraha, even a movement.
It started one bleak December evening. The students of Jamia Millia Islamia had been subjected to the worst brutality ever to visit a university campus in Delhi in recent years. Not just students who had been protesting against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) but those studying in the university library or praying in the mosque were at the receiving end of police fury. The police, allegedly hurling the most communal of abuses at the students, used tear gas in the library, leaving hundreds suffocating. Tables and chairs were smashed, window panes reduced to shards, bones were broken – a student even lost his eye. There were visuals of blood on the prayer mats in the mosque.
The most abiding image though was of four Jamia girls shielding a male student from the collective blows of police personnel who had dragged him out of the house by his collar. Even as two girls physically shielded the guy from the blows of the policemen, two other girls looked the policemen in the eye, fearlessly, fiercely. The hijab-wearing girls flinched not a second, compelling the cops to retreat. The girls were later identified as Ayesha Renna and Ladeeda Sakhaloon; the guy whose life they saved was Shaheen – he escaped with a bleeding nose and a fractured arm. The image summed up how the women were going to respond to any atrocity in the anti-CAA stir. It tore to pieces many an image of coy, speechless and powerless Muslim women.
Even as images of blood in the mosque and a boy with a bandaged eye caused consternation among the locals, the stir spread to the most unimaginable of places – Shaheen Bagh. Beyond people in the vicinity, not many were aware of its whereabouts. The largely working-class neighbourhood with its fair sprinkling of the wealthy and well educated was to soon become the epicentre of the struggle against the CAA, national Register of Citizens (NRC), and a bit later, the National Population Register (NPR). Men and women, the young and the old, used Google Maps to find their way through to Shaheen Bagh. Not just the Indian media and local politicians, the media across the world took note of a protest led by Muslim women taking on the Hindutva-espousing government.
A piece in The Washington Post stated: “As the temperature in India’s capital plunged on a recent evening, Rehana Khatun bundled her 29-day-old daughter in a fuzzy quilt and went out for her new nightly activity: participating in a sit-in against the government. Khatun, 28, is a mother of three who rarely leaves her neighbourhood in southeast Delhi. She is one of a few hundred Muslim women – including grandmothers and children – who have occupied a stretch of road for a month, undeterred by rain, cold or threats, as a sign of opposition to a new law that excludes Muslim migrants from a fast track to citizenship. She sits cross-legged as she settles in for another night of speeches under bright blue and yellow tarps held up by narrow poles. ‘Our fight is for our Constitution, our country, our survival’, she said.

Shaheen Bagh Delhi ki Dadi Maaen: These 90-year old women who were leading the protest against CAA, NRC and NPR, speaking to press.
The protest in the capital’s Shaheen Bagh neighbourhood has become an enduring symbol of the demonstrations that have swept India over the new law, which was passed in December. Most of the women are homemakers, many in hijabs, and their long-running vigil has been featured on prime-time news shows, inspired similar sit-ins and attracted solidarity from across India. On Sunday, the protest attracted its largest crowd yet, according to locals, as thousands of supporters packed the narrow lanes surrounding the area.”
Against all odds, the resolute women of Shaheen Bagh gave the nation hope. Inspired by the intrepid girls in Jamia, the weather-beaten, wizened women of Shaheen Bagh took to the streets, concerned as they were for the safety of their grandchildren studying in the university. Most hailed from families that had either not allowed these women to study when they were young or could not afford to provide them education. Now, in the autumn of their life, these women saw education as an opportunity for upward mobility in life. For years, they had emphasised good education for their children. When their children or grandchildren went to study in Jamia, they took pride in it. Also, there was unexpressed safety; they knew the youngsters had gone virtually next door to study as the university was less than two kilometres away from their homes.
Jamia offered them hope for a better future, and the reality of a secure and stable today. They could reasonably expect them to reach home safely after their classes. The policemen on the rampage in the university on 15 December 2019 shattered many such innocent dreams. The Shaheen Bagh women could no longer keep quiet. The men in uniform had entered the campus, indulged in violence in the library; they had not even spared the mosque. ‘The testimonies from those present in Jamia suggest that the police targeted individuals indiscriminately, even entering the mosque on campus and hurting a local cleric’, India Today later reported. No place was deemed safe. Pushed to the wall in this battle for survival, the Shaheen Bagh women came out; first only a handful, then hundreds, at times even thousands. It was to define not just the way protests shaped up against the new divisive and discriminatory law, but how the nation looked at women in general, and Muslim women in particular.
It reminded many old-timers of the scenes in Old Delhi during the time of the emergency when women came out of their homes to form a human shield around Turkman gate against the bulldozers sent to demolish their houses. Or when they came out of Dojana house near Jama Masjid in Old Delhi and hid their husbands, sons and brothers from activists allegedly rounding up men for coercive vasectomy. Brave as those actions were, they were consigned to the inner recesses of the mind in the relentless momentum of time. Only a handful like Shabbeeran, one of the grandmothers at the Shaheen Bagh protest, remembered.
The protest started after the Jamia violence, where the students had been protesting against the CAA. The women took the onus on themselves. They could not leave their children to fight this battle alone; the mothers in them rebelled against the thought of staying at home, or merely offering their prayers five times a day. God does not change the condition of people until they themselves make an effort, many reminded themselves. They stepped out, and for the first time in their life, occupied a public space, Road 13A, which links Mathura Road in Delhi with Noida.
The arterial road is much used by commuters from Noida, Delhi and Faridabad. The women had never been a part of any public protest, no rally, no march, no dharna, nothing. They were the unsung homemakers whose area of operation was confined to home and hearth. They were adept at keeping everything in order at home so that the menfolk could go out, study and earn a living. Many claimed they had not even been down to the local grocer in their life. Or seen the insides of a mosque down the lane. Yet, here they were, stepping out of their comfort zone, raising their voice against the CAA, reaching out to larger society, demolishing walls, building bridges, discovering a voice they probably never thought they had.
They came out to sit in a dharna first on the evening of 15 December 2019. In less than a week, the spotlight shifted from Jamia, Jantar Mantar, Jama Masjid, India Gate, all important protest sites in the struggle against CAA, to the hitherto little-known dirt-laden lanes of Shaheen Bagh. To be in Shaheen Bagh was something else. It was magical; it was exhilarating. It was like watching the triumph of the human spirit, the victory of fortitude against adversity.
Soon, it became a pilgrimage centre of secular India harping on the notions of a shared past. Muslim women were shortly joined by Hindu sisters; some came in from colonies like Lajpat Nagar and Sarita Vihar, others joined gradually from neighbouring cities like Chandigarh, Jaipur and Ghaziabad. A little later, a formidable Sikh contingent arrived as reinforcement. Then a delegation of Christian nuns came in, giving Shaheen Bagh the look of a miniature India. Some came from Kerala, some from Chhattisgarh, some from Punjab, and the women of Shaheen Bagh accommodated them all. And the protest began showing signs of a movement.
As said to the co-author Ziya Us Salam by the illustrious historian Romila Thapar, who visited Shaheen Bagh after the women had been sitting in protest for eight weeks came back with this impression: “Women are finding their voice through Shaheen Bagh. We know all the struggles that women have had to go through in this country over the past fifty years. One of the manifestations of the success of that struggle is Shaheen Bagh. The struggle is led by some Muslim women, the kind who are never in the limelight, never given any publicity, and who are dismissed as just housewives. They are asserting their personality, and airing an opinion that is important. It is all very, very impressive. Nobody would have thought such strong resistance to emanate from such a quarter. The unexpectedness of it all has only added to a feeling of exhilaration. At the same time, it is the subterranean self that people do not express regularly but when they are pushed to the wall, they react. Shaheen Bagh is not about the CAA any longer, it is an assertion of a different, much more fundamental strength.”
Indeed, it was an assertion of a different kind. Though technically against the CAA-NPR-NRC trilogy, it was actually a cry of anguish against all the wrongs inflicted on the community and on the women. And Muslim women, often erroneously regarded as timid sex bags, hit back at such notions. Many women, in personal conversations, elucidated the reasons for protest.
‘We kept quiet when the Supreme Court said the demolition of Babri Masjid was wrong but still gave the site of the mosque to the attackers. We kept our counsel when the government claimed it had freed Muslim women from the danger of triple talaq but formed a law without consulting Muslim women. We kept quiet when they [criminals allegedly belonging to Gau Raksha Samitis] lynched our men in the name of cow protection. But now with CAA, NRC and NPR, it was a question of our fundamental existence. When they are beginning to question our right to be called an Indian, what is the point of any property, any bank balance? We know what happened in Assam.
‘We know what our home minister said again and again, explaining the chronology. We were nervous, we were edgy with all the aggressive sloganeering going on. Then they hit our children. At that time, we said, this much and no further. We went door to door, called each other out knowing if we do not raise our voice today, we would be silenced forever. The choice was simple: either sit at the protest today or prepare to sit in a detention centre a few years later,’ said Saima Siddiqui on 12 January 2020, the day the protest registered the highest footfall with estimates ranging from 50,000 to 150,000.
by admin | May 25, 2021 | Entrepreneurship, Interviews, Women Entrepreneur

Dr. Munnazza Afreen
Dr. Munnazza Afreen (PhD. M.A., M.Ed., MBA in Edu Mgt.) She has been teaching/mentoring young minds for a decade. She was conferred PhD degree from University of Mumbai in 2017. She has received best paper award in 2015 international Business & Education conference held in London. She has published research based papers in national and international journals. Her area of research was enhancement of English language communication skills. She has keen interest in training and development. She has trained students in soft skills. She is a prolific reader and has travelled to England, Australia, and UAE. She has co-author a book titled “An Introduction to Education” which was published by USA based publication house.
What is the conference all about?
National Conference on Technology is first of its kind conference to be held to promote the innovation, entrepreneurship, and awareness especially amongst female students and rural students at MMANTC, Mansoora Malegaon on 23rd & 24th Feb 2019. The conference aims to bring together researchers, scientists, industry experts, academicians and policy makers to promote STEM, and specially promote & encourage women’s participation in STEM.
Can you brief MMANTC?
MMANTC stands for Maulana Mukhtar Ahmed Nadvi Technical Campus (MMANTC). Maulana Mukhtar Ahmad Nadvi Technical Campus (MMANTC) is located at the outskirts of Malegaon, the textile township of northern Maharashtra. The college offers Degree and Diploma courses in Mechanical, Civil, Electrical and Electronics and Telecommunication Engineering since 2012.
The Technical Campus has been a dream project of the Society’s President, Maulana Arshad Mukhtar, a great visionary, philanthropist, industrialist, educationist, and a worthy son of a worthy father, Maulana Mukhtar Ahmad Nadvi, who founded Jamia Mohammediya Education Society (JMES) in the year 1978. JMES has twelve institutions running in various parts of the country. Maulana Mukhtar Ahmad Nadvi strongly believed that only through education would the people of India, gain the vision of the future while preserving their timeless cultural values. Maulana Arshad Mukhtar, having taken the mantle from him in the year 2007, has been painting the canvas with such elegance that Jamia Mohammediya Education Society is now a name in the country to reckon with.
What are the highlights of the conference?
As one of the aims of the conference is to promote women’s participation in STEM, we have invited Ainul Attar Madam who is Former, Deputy Director DTE, Former, Joint Secretary of Minority Development Department, Government of Maharashtra, Ex-Executive council member od I.S.T.E., New Delhi. She will be the great source of inspiration for rural girl students. At the same time we have requested Dr. Tausif Malik Sahab who is Treasurer, Democrats Abroad India (Democratic Party USA’s International chapter), Founder MAHAbfic.com (Maharashtra Blockchain Fintech ICO Crypto currency) Pune, GCCStartup.News, All India Muslim Business Startup Network (AIMBSN), IndiaStartupFest.com, Muslim Spelling Bee, USA, Chicago to join us as Chief Guest at our event. I am sure he will give our attendees a unique perspective towards technology. He is a legend in his field. Students will surely be benefited with his presence. To complete the list of jewels we also have dignitaries -Prof. (Dr.) N. B. Pasalkar Sahab, Dr. A. K. Kureshi, Dr. Neha Dand, Shahzed Lehry and Altaf Pirjade.
What is the focus of the conference?
Conference specifically focuses on publication with our publication partner IOSR Journal, JMES Startup Showcase, JMES Hackathon, networking, branding and most importantly campus recruitment of college students.
Any Message would you like to convey to the readers ?
Yes, of course! All the readers are requested to contact us for Sponsorship, Media Partnership, JMES Hackathon, JMES Startups Showcase, Strategic Partnerships and Recruitment & Internship opportunities. They can contact me via Email facultydevelopment.jmes@gmail.com. Thank you
by admin | May 25, 2021 | Entrepreneurship, Interviews, Women Entrepreneur
By Sugandha Rawal,
New Delhi : For Sania Mirza, becoming a mother has been “the most eventful thing” in her life, but she is now working on getting herself back on the tennis court. The tennis star says playing at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics seems like a realistic goal, but she doesn’t want to put too much pressure on herself.
“Being pregnant and having a baby was probably the most eventful thing that happened to me, but having said that, it has been over two months now, and I am coming back in shape and losing all the weight,” Sania told IANS on the phone from Hyderabad.
“My fitness trainer is coming in February. And the goal, hopefully, is to try to get back at the end of the year and start playing competitive (tennis) again,” she added.
Sania and Pakistani cricketer husband Shoaib Malik were blessed with a son last October. They have named the little one Izhaan Mirza-Malik.
Her game has always been a priority in her life and she is not losing sight of it even now.
“As a tennis player, life changes very quickly. We don’t know what we are doing from one day to another. But most definitely, it (playing at 2020 Tokyo Olympics) is at the back of my head. Honestly, in 2016, if you asked me if I will be making it to the next Olympics, I would have said ‘no’ and I think I did say ‘no’.
“But now if I do come back at the end of the year, which is the plan, it looks like a realistic possibility. But I don’t want to put too much pressure on myself because I do have an infant in my house.”
The star athlete wants to balance it out.
“We will see how it goes. The goal is to try to get fit again. I have lost a lot of weight already and (to) start training (soon) and getting back into shape… is still a long way ahead. That is why I am giving myself (time till the) end of the year,” said Sania, who got married to Shoaib in a traditional Hyderabadi Muslim wedding ceremony on April 12, 2010.
At the moment, she is enjoying being a mother to Izhaan. She says embracing motherhood has helped her stumble upon some of her own hidden personality traits.
“As women, while we are growing up, we always know that we will get married one day and have kids. And I think we underestimate what our bodies can do — that is produce another human being. And I think that is a realisation you can have when you actually are in that position,” she said.
Sania says earlier everything was about herself as her profession demanded a lot.
But, she added: “Motherhood and pregnancy have made me realise that I can be a very selfless person and I don’t need to put an effort into it.
“I want everything in the world for my child — more than I want for anyone else, including myself. And I think that selflessness you figure out that you have inside you, only after you have the baby.”
The star says motherhood was an “overwhelming (experience) in the beginning”.
“Now I am getting used to it. We both are getting used to a pattern. But this is probably the best feeling that I ever had. Every time he looks at me and smiles, it is the most amazing feeling ever,” she said.
On the drastic changes that motherhood has brought about, Sania said: “As athletes, our whole life revolves around ourselves, our training, our food, our matches and our sleep. And right now it is not. It is the most selfless thing in the world. Everything revolves around him.”
(Sugandha Rawal can be contacted at sugandha.r@ians.in )
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | News, Politics
Srinagar : Former Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti said on Monday that the Triple Talaq bill will create more problems for Muslim women as it will disturb the family structure among Muslims.
Addressing a press conference here, Mehbooba Mufti said that since she personally faced the problems of a broken marriage, she thought it important that she should speak up on the issue.
“Being a Muslim woman who has gone through a broken marriage, I thought I should speak up on the Triple Talaq bill.
“After separation from her husband, the biggest problem for the woman is to raise her children.
“By bringing in the Triple Talaq bill, the BJP is entering our homes. This will disturb our family life and there will be more problems for women and men economically.
“I have gone through a broken marriage and I feel that women face the biggest challenge economically after her marriage fails.”
Mehbooba Mufti accused the BJP of dividing India on religious and sectarian lines.
“The bill is the second assault on Muslims after the financial onslaught against them through bans on mutton and leather industries.
“When we talk about reservations for Muslims, the BJP rejects it on religious lines. But when it comes to this kind of law, they run to Parliament,” she said.
She called for a consensus on the issue adding that Muslims always abide by the law.
—IANS
by admin | May 25, 2021 | Opinions
By M. Burhanuddin Qasmi,
There is no disappointment if the Anti Talaq Bill is passed in the Lok Sabha today (27 Dec. 2018). The outcome was expected as the ruling party has absolute majority in the lower house of Indian Parliament and to display its muscle power the government would by all means pass this Bill.
However, to me, the take aways from today’s debate in the Parliament are:
(1). The whole opposition has clearly opposed this Bill and demanded it is to be sent to Select Committee.
(2). Some opposition speakers have spoken very well against the motion while participating in the debate.
(3). There was some clarity in the opposition as what it has been opposing and why unlike the earlier debate on the same Bill in the same Lok Sabha.
(4) The standard of debate today in the Parliament was high and content came out was important and educative for many.
(5). A few members of the AIMPLB have done hardwork last week and met important opposition leaders from West Bengal to Hyderabad which had partly paid positively.
(6). On the other hand, some speakers from the opposition were lacking in counter arguments, statistics and in putting their views across as how this new Bill is useless, communal and against basic tenets of Indian constitution and Islam.
(6). The opposition failed to state that this Bill is against all Muslims denominations including Shia sect and Salfi school, and plainly against Islam. Among Muslims across the world, the debate on Triple Talaq, has always been, if instant Triple Talaq is three or one effective. The Bill made it completely null and void which is against Qur’an thus against fundamental rights of a minority group and against basic principle of our constitution.
(7). The entire opposition also failed to strongly question the government as how a ‘no-crime’ becomes ‘crime’. Talaq, Talaq, Talaq is meaningless according to this Bill as well as according to the Supreme Court order in 2017. How mere utterance of a meaningless word does become a crime?
(8). The opposition also failed to ask the government about a precise and concise definition of Talaq-e Bida’t.
(9). The opposition could not clarify that this Bill is against Muslim women because it is taking away their rights of Khula (Talaq from wife’s side), guaranteed by their religion – Islam.
(10). The lack of a planned and unity-effort from the larger opposition was clearly visible. They were opposing but without a unanimous tune.
Will this Bill pass in RS?
I am not sure. I am, rather confident that this Bill can be stopped in Rajya Sabha subject to seriousness from the opposition and more preparation from All India Muslim Personal Law Board. It is time for the Board to find out who the speakers will be in the upper house when the Bill is presented there – in Rajya Sabha and brief them with concrete evidence and rational arguments that this Bill itself is utterly against both constitution and women. It is biased against male members of a particular community and a destructve instrument for family life. It is unjust and inhuman.
In a democracy number is important. The Board has already gathered authentic data where 90 percent Muslim women are against this Bill. This information needs to be put by the opposition before the highest legislative house of India. The Board needs to walk to the doors of all opposition parties who have strengths in Rajya Sabha like SP, BSP, AIADMK, DMK along with Congress, TMC, TDP and TRS.
(Author is editor of Eastern Crescent and based in Mumbai.)