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Posted by Admin on 19, March, 2006 (1656 reads)
Blogoshere

Abdel Karim Suliman who was featured here earlier has been expelled from his university for expressing his views on his blog.

And when everybody wonders why aren't we hearing the moderates in the Islamic world speak out!

Abdel Karim Suliman, the Egyptian blogger who was arrested then released for his controversial views, was expelled from his university Al Azhar.

Abdel Karim Nabil Suliman [AKA: Kareem Amer] is a 22 year-old Egyptian student of law at the Azhar University in Egypt (Largest Islamic University in Egypt and the Islamic world), Damanhour Campus, and a women-rights activist. He also maintains his own blog where he posts articles expressing his views on the need for political reform as well as reforming Islam.

On Wednesday March 15th, 2006 Karim wrote on his blog under the “Events of Al Azhar Inquisition” saying:“Yesterday, I went to my college in Damanhour to attend the disciplinary council I was referred to because of my views and articles that I post online, the accusations ranged from defaming Islam to atheism to libel against the grand Imam of Al Azhar and some of the university scholarsKarim adds: (They simply turned criticism into libel and defamation, they considered the criticism of terrorist teachings as a derogatory act against religion), Karim went on to say ”

“ I did not try to deny the writing of these articles that they took as an incriminating evidence, but rather I insisted that they are my personal product despite their warnings that by admitting so, I might face many consequences”

On March 17th, 2006 the semi- official Algomhuria Egyptian newspaper published the following:“Professor Hamdi Shalany, PHD., Dean of the School of Islamic Sharia and Law in Damanhour decided to expel the student Abdel Karim Nabil Suliman for perpetrating acts and writings that defames religion in addition to defamation and libel against the grand Imam of Al Azhar The disciplinary council has submitted a copy of the investigation documents for public prosecution”.

Posted by Admin on 6, December, 2005 (2019 reads)
Blogoshere

Kush Tandon of Herodotus's The Histories (Being Creative, Ak Dhum) is calling for an essay on Indian Changing.

Quote:

One way to sum change in India is the chaos one sees on the road in Delhi or Hyderabad or Roorkee with modern cars, elephants, bullock-carts, cycles, and pedestrians all on the same crowded road surging forward in different directions, and jostling for space resulting in quite an exhilarating spectacle.


So how exactly does the westerner gauge the changes India is undergoing?

Well, our Kush Tandon sees prettier VJs on MTV for one! Wow. Now thats a great criterion. Very creative one too. And the food/service on Jet Airways was better he says.
How superficial and trivial a thing to measure India with! Only if sky-flying, MTV watching confused Desis get off their high horses and set their timid foot inside the rural India would they know what really is changing and what is not. They should really stop judging India by the comforts it can offer them while there waltz here for summer. Whining about toilets and airport amenities, potholes on roads and lack of decent cafes to drink their favorite brew is all that we hear from them. Can't be a lil' more creative on the complains, less self-centered perhaps?

Why not talk to a old granny who has seen India struggling for freedom and who today watches her favorite soap and politicians' bashan on digital TV- She will tell you what has changed. Or wander down to the village that has no electricity but has yet managed to send a local boy to the IAS. Or reach to the heights of Himalayas in Himachal and see farmer-wives harvest wild flowers and honey in their spare times. Walk in silence down the path with pilgrims going to Sabarimalai chanting and singing hymns. These are things that real India is made up of.
The change that everyone sees is material, but yet the soul lingers on watered down and diluted by the influential influences that modernity has borne down on Indian masses. Economics apart, poverty is yet a reality, and so is social injustice. The poorest of the poor haven't changed still.
While the media gleefully sings kumbaya with the cinema stars whom we as Indians revere more than gods, the brave soldier at the borders or the hardy doctor at some unknown village go unsung. No TV Channel or Newspaper deems it worthy to talk about the IITians and IIM grads who have given up on the ever glittering American dream to help India take a stride.
If creativity is the bloodline of Artists and Writers, Criticism, its watering hole.
Duane Alan Hahn once said, 'Concern over criticism clogs creativity'. My views here are a bit controversial and passionate; However, I welcome criticisms however vehement they are.. and I never indulge in censorship even of blatant irrational ones. I hope to expect the same from others, particularly from Kush Tandon. This is just an alternative viewpoint on the topic. Let me see if Tandon can handle some reprehension. The proof will be in his links.

Kush Tandon wants to see some creative writing on a topic he has come up with, 'India moves: I see a traffic jam with Toyotas, cows and elephants in Old-New Delhi'. Well, if he really loves creativity like the way he wears it on his sleeve, he should first reconsider his topic at once.
Creativity involves breaking out of established patterns to look at things in a different way. -Edward De Bono

Cows and traffic on Indian roads is a horse flogged to pulp and even evaporated. Every tom, dick and harry who comes to India as a journalists has but a few bullet pointed things to write about. First comes the proverbial holy cow! Next, the grinding poverty, the slum or street dwellers and then, the caste system. Like old wine, the perennial topic of the widows of Varanasi is a recent favorite.

A billion lives, thousands of years of history and rich heritage, hundreds of varied cuisine, dresses, languages, architectures, landscapes and cultures have failed to do what a few cows on some busy street has achieved. They have unwillingly become the everlasting icons of India, for those who have failed to go deeper and beyond the shallowness of a few visits and scenes. Unless they who wish to know India take the plunge to live here (even in the big cities) for a year or so, they will never realize what they miss. Sometimes, this is a sorry thing and I almost feel pity for them.

Foreigners and NRI's who come to India tend to stay on the dotted lines of a pre-determined itinerary. While tourists follow the guide, NRI's tread the path to relatives and friends, shopping and urgent attempts to devour and see all that they can before their pithy holidays run out. They still go back hungry, making mental notes to allocate more time for their planned trip next time. There are still others who go back repulsed, hating the experience and wowing never to return to see the dirt, squalor and horrible corruption of the Babus. It is good to outright hate India, that way, one is never confused about loving India halfhearted.

India means a trillion things for a billion people. Yet for the majority outside of her, it is still a land of snake-charmers, Suttee (satis), caste and maharajas on elephants. This outright redundant petrified perception must change. Also India as a recreational disneyland for holidaying and fertile grounds for bride-hunting for NRI's should undergo a radical mophism. They should feel an inalienable part of this landscape, ready to embrace their land of origins without psychological strings attached and must endeavor to look at India with much more than just nostalgia and patronising feeling of feeding her with foreign exchange or technology. And that is for their own sake.

And for India's sake, please ignore the blissful cow! unless you feel that they ought to be slaughtered and minced into hamburgers the very next second.

Posted by Admin on 4, December, 2005 (644 reads)
Blogoshere

Press Plagiarist of the Year Award 2005

has been announced...

The proud recipient is.... Peter Wright, Editor of 'The Mail on sunday'. with 46% of the votes.

The bad news is that nobody bothered to nominate the rag that goes by the name, 'The Times of India'. Nobody nominated the 'Street Whore Chronicles' either.
[you know one, you know the other too]

Slashdot got a discussion going!

Posted by Admin on 1, December, 2005 (776 reads)
Blogoshere

I was going through the November 28th edition of 'The New Indian Express' published from Chennai (An Edition of Indian Express).
On page 5, was the hallmark full page advertisement of the great IIPM with the usual Arindam Chaudhuri extolling the virtues of his Diploma Mill.

On page 4 came this shocker which demonstrates the amount of research and fact checking, mainstream journalists tend to do even in this age of the almighty Google.

Chennai becomes blogger city

By K Praveen Kumar
Chennai, Nov 27: It's official. Chennai leads the list of metros in blogging.

Blogs, one of the most easily-maintainable forms of personal websites, is fast emerging as an alternative media. Angry youngsters, who don't get a chance to air their views in public forums, litterateurs, who lack media space, ad political activists, who seek open-minded discussions - all find blogs as an alternative medium to put their views arss. And Chennai, which is all set to become the number one city in the Indian IT sector, tops the chart with 293 blogs, according to statistics posted in india.blogstreet.com.

It was not long ago when the sizzling star of Kollywood, Trisha, got into the eye of a storm when an anonymous visitor posted an obscene video of her's in one of the blogs. Else-where, an IBM company employee had to resign after she posted some objectionable information regarding the Indian Institute of Project Management (IIPM), Delhi, in her blog.

.. The article continued...


Wow! Mr. K Praveen Kumar, the author of this article has a bad case of 'Stuck counting the Columns Of Morgagni' syndrome and has confused tremedously between Gaurav Sabnis - former employee of IBM who resigned to uphold his principles instead of giving in to IIPM's corporate arm-twisting strategies, Rashmi Bansal - Editor of JAM magazine which started it all, and Varna - another victim of IIPM's legal diarhorric threats.

To top it all, Praveen Kumar refers to IIPM as Delhi's Indian Institute of Project Management! Wow!
He has probably read the acronym 'IIPM', never cared to read or find out more about the issue and with the characteristic arrogance that most journalists are blessed with, went on to write an article in the IE. (There is indeed many other IIPM's.. and one Indian Institute of Project Management at Chennai too)

Can we see a erratum or clarification, Mr. Praveen Kumar? Perhaps you would elaborate on the IIPM matter once you have acquainted fully with it? - Start here! (Desipundit's summary + links)
Oh, otherwise, thanks for writing about the blogosphere! Sure you worded it all positively, yet your article had to be frisked.




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