Archive for the 'Blogroll' Category

flood relief work in Pakistan

January 2, 2011

This is rather late. In August 2010, I had the opportunity to get closer to the frontline in Pakistan’s flood relief work. Admittedly, I have been quite aloof of all the happenings and developments thereafter with no reasonable excuse. In the next few lines, I will try to summarize my experience through pictures and words and hope it will shed reasonable light on the issues we saw on the ground.

For starters, we were sponsored to travel to District Khairpur by the Pakistan Medical Association, ours was a team of 4 people including a female pediatrician, a Harvard-trained public health specialist, a classmate from medical school and myself. We stayed at a guest house run by the Indus Resource Centre :

IRC guest house in Khairpur

This guest house had very comfortable air-conditioned rooms with reasonable power backup and seems to host a number of social workers/volunteers active in the area. It also had classrooms used for local workshops, a handcraft workshop/shop and an in-house cafeteria for guests and staff of the IRC. All in all, living here was a wonderful experience and many thanks to IRC!!

Within the district itself, we were guests of a proactive member of the governing political party in Pakistan, an Oxford-educated lady with all the right connections and comparatively greater will to soothe the pains that the people in her district were experiencing. In summary, her vision was great and her efforts were tireless but despite the reasonably resourceful position that she was in, her hands were tied and her impact was limited.  Oxbridge and Ivy League trained legislators in Pakistan cannot do much in the face of inept bureaucracy.

Our objectives were multiple: we had the good ear of the area’s administration, a rarity in Pakistan for middle-class individuals and hence, an opportunity to introduce public health measures; we were on the ground and in the field and able to interact with the affectees and so we also decided to help them with their immediate medical issues by conducting mobile medical camps. Finally, we were trained and able and we decided to collect data from our experience and invoke our own academic and social circles to guide future efforts and aid.

After settling down on our first night, we visited our first IDP camp (internally displaced people) the next morning. Like most camps in the area, this was a public school which was now housing refugees from surrounding areas. School had been cancelled for an indefinite period. For now, I will leave you with these two photograph:

More about this experience in follow-up posts.

A concept of “Us”

April 12, 2010

The twentieth century has been one of unprecedented progress in science and technology. So rapid, indeed, has been the pace of advance, that humanity is haunted by the awesome specter of possessing a level of technical competence far in excess of the measure of wisdom that would ensure its use to the advantage of all. The instinct to favor one’s own kind (however defined), at the expense of exploitation of the “outsider,” or of despoliation of the environment, appears to be so ingrained in the human psyche that it is unlikely to be overcome by mere rationality. Yet, if we are to avert the ever increasing danger of destroying ourselves, and perhaps our planet, by careless use or misuse of our own inventions; if we are to avoid the bitter repercussions that will surely come from failing to assist the economic, technological and political development of those less advantaged than ourselves; if we are to utilize to the full the most precious resource that we have, human beings, then we must broaden our concept of “us” from its present narrow confines to embrace the entire human race.

-John Rovert Rathgam, 1992

Alternative careers in science

September 6, 2009

So I was browsing through the Sanger library yesterday and came across a booklet on alternative careers for scientists published (quite recently I think) by AAAS (publishers of Science, the journal). Interesting stuff, I must say. I have always considered writing or science journalism as something I would like to do. The niche and need for science writing in Pakistan is quite appreciable. I think the same applies to other developing countries as well. Science writing intends to deliver the fruits of scientific discoveries to the understanding of common people. More so, it also guides public opinion on scientific initiatives and ongoing research and in turn, funding. From AAAS’s point of view, its a speciality job!! One that you take up when you decide to walk away from the bench. I wouldn’t disagree in the Western context because you do need to concentrate in an area to create quality. But in the South Asian context.. I wonder.. the need may be so high that it may perhaps be justified for science undergrads and graduate students to pick up the pen and start writing.. I am sure conventional news editors will only be pleased with the cheap pieces of writing (if good quality) they will be able to buy off the market…

Science + law = Intellectual property law…. yet another area that was highlighted. How applicable it is in Pakistan? I don’t think I am even equipped to answer that question but perhaps one of my esteemed readers specializing in law can advise?

Undergraduates who major in science in Pakistan can also consider following it up with degrees in public policy (or a CSS) and joining the beauracracy for scienctific policy making. Alternatively, science managers maybe something on the rise as well. A few months back, I came across a resume where the lady was a doctor and pursued an MBA following her MBBS and was now on the lookout for a managerial job in the pharmaceutical industry. Definitely one I have thought of in the past..

Oh well thats all, after a 6-month break…

Are there solutions to our problems?

January 9, 2009

When this blog was first started, it was meant to be a place for free flow of ideas so that we will be able to understand our problems and discuss possible solutions to such issues. Sadly we achieved very little along those lines perhaps because the list of problems that we face as a society is overwhelming. It is a quagmire that we have so far failed to untangle. There is corruption, poverty, crime, injustice, illiteracy, lawlessness, lack of civil sense, egos, self-praise…. the list is endless. Is there a way out?

It is a fact that the same problems have been faced by humanity since its inception. There has hardly been a time when there was no hardship, bloodshed or crime on the face of this earth. Does that also mean there will never be such a time? I don’t think the sane human mind wants to accept that possibility and hence our efforts in the direction of the absolute Truth. Human nature in itself does not appreciate crime. If it did, we would have never made this blog or had countless discussions over tea and lunch or in the quad or with family about why everything is so wrong! If it is true that man by nature is pure, why is there so much bloodshed in our world? Why is there so much injustice, so much crime, so many lies and so much suffering?

Are inequality and poverty the underlying reasons behind people’s sufferings? If so, communism and socialism should have solved people’s problems. However, is there a difference between communist societies and the central jail? Is every criminal or doer of injustice a poor person? Obviously not, you don’t have to look far beyond the leaders of our own country to find your answer. Perhaps then, poverty is not the only reason there is crime. But there is still some weight in the poverty argument because if I were poor, I would not have been writing this blog. If I were poor and had not had a meal all day, I would have been so worried about making ends meet, corruption would have been a word irrelevant for me. If I were at the verge of death by hunger, theft would have been justified in my mind. So perhaps poverty is ONE factor, definitely not the only factor because doers of injustice include poor and rich alike.

What else, then, contributes to problems in this society? Is it education? Perhaps..because they say education gives a person perspective. It enables a person to overcome our first problem, poverty. If you are educated, you are more likely to make an income and hence overcome your poverty. But tell me, is every educated person around you free from injustice? So many leaders and ordinary people have studied at Ivy League universities (supposedly the best in education we all dream of) and are still engaged in injustice. They are educated and rich and they are still corrupt or they still encourage injustice to meet their own needs. Perhaps then poverty and education are not the only TWO factors that are causing our problems.

What is it then, that is the key to our problems? What is it that keeps both, a poor illiterate farmer and a rich educated businessman, away from injustice, from wrong doings and makes them the ideal members of this society? Perhaps our answer lies in morality. If I were to put it more blatantly, I would say, our answer lies in the belief of existence of a Master and that of the hereafter. It is when this belief guides our lives in this world that morality, civic sense and rightful recognition and respect of people’s rights are automatically inculcated into our lives. It is not possible to have a society that is centered around the existence of Allah and still have poverty and illiteracy flourishing. On the contrary, the popular brand of this belief in Pakistan today seems to encourage the two instead of eradicating them. This flavor of God’s order in the universe that does not result in the well being of a society in this world and only makes promises for the hereafter is the THIRD problem we need to get over.

So the answer to the question, are there solutions to our problems as a society, is Yes. What we really need is an all-inclusive approach that at least targets the three problems identified above. Morality in its true sense cannot stem but from belief in Allah (called any name by different religions) and any society that centers itself around this belief is bound to succeed in this world and hence, in the hereafter. The need is for people who feel the pain to recognize this as definite solution to our problems and make an action plan to achieve it. I am not suggesting an overnight revolution of any sorts because there is no such thing as an overnight revolution. All revolutions in history started as thoughts and actions of a small group of people that were so attractive and useful that they grew in number and in space and eventually wiped off the status quo. All I am suggesting is we put our minds together and start working on solving these problems. We can start by recognizing the role of Allah in our own lives and guiding our actions accordingly. The rest will follow.

Happy Eid

December 9, 2008

Its the second eid of the year for Muslims at this time of the year. They call it Eid-ul-Azha (the Eid of Sacrifice). 

I was at the Eid prayers this morning and the Imam narrated an interesting story. A beggar once approached a roadside fruit seller. He said “Allah ke naam pe ek aam dedo baba” (Give me a mango to eat in the name of Allah). The fruit seller thought a few seconds, then looked for the older stock he had and gave him an overripe mango to eat.

A few minutes later, the beggar approached again and this time, he gave the fruit seller a 5 ruppee coin and asked for a mango. The fruit seller gave him a fresh ripe mango to have right away. The beggar then questioned: What is worth more in your eyes? A 5 ruppee coin or the name of Allah.

Burqa meets Bikini

December 7, 2008

Thats right. Just came across an Australian designer that has come up with Burqini. Its a special sports wear that combines a fitting hood upper with long pants to let Muslim women take part in a variety of sports including swimming!! Take a look.

daily_telegraphphoto-burqini1

Pakistanis: we abhor Mumbai attacks and desire the strongest punishment for those involved

November 30, 2008

As hell unfolded in Mumbai in the past three days, there was an atmosphere of disbelief and a feeling of detestment in hearts and minds of average Pakistanis. Sustaining bomb blasts is one thing, BOOM, they happen and people die but after a few hours, the community gets some breathing time, some time to absorb the shock and dealing with the aftermath (and sadly, we move on). But to live through sustained terror episode that lasted 72 hours is probably a lot different.

Perhaps the most important question now for Indians and the rest of the world is WHO were these people? We probably will never find out. But who ever they were, if these attacks took place in the name of Pakistan and in the name of Islam, I think these people have the most skewed perceptions of these ideoligies that I have ever seen!!

What is more unfortunate is a blame game that has started between archrivals, the last thing that this region or either country wants is armed conflict between the too. Indians have been traditionally overzealous when it comes to their motherland and have always been too quick to blame Pakistan for all the mishaps that ever happen in it. 

The truth is, today, Pakistan is burning in a fire that was created through its own intelligence agencies a few decades back. But mind you, it might have been stupid of them to fall into this ditch but it was not ISI alone who masterminded the entire operation. During the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the CIA channeled millions of dollars and sophisticated weaponary to the anti-Soviet fighters in Afghanistan. These were the resources that led to the birth of Taliban. Once Russia was defeated in Afghanistan, the CIA pulled out its support completely leaving it upto the ISI and Pakistani government to deal with the aftermath of their misgivings. An entire generation had been brought up playing with AK-47s and hand grenades instead of teddies and cars. What we are dealing with today in Pakistan is this generation of Taliban and those who are influenced by their ideoligies of extremism. They have turned Pakistan into a complete war zone and have exported their ideologies and capabilities to all parts of the world in the name of Islam.

Mind you, we don’t know yet if the attackers in Mumbai have anything to do with the same extremists we deal with in Pakistan (now on a daily basis). But all terrorism where innocent people die should be abhored. When a bomb took off at McDonald’s on Sea view several years back, I recalled how I had been to the same restaurant only a week back. When some died, I recalled how it could have been me too. When I saw attacks in Mumbai, I realized how it could have been Karachi under fire and how many of us could have been the common innocent people who died.

Open source Optical Mark Recognition: a handy tool for cross-sectional research

September 30, 2008

For a medical student, questionnaire-based short term cross-sectional studies are shortcuts to research papers. A little more effort in study design and we can turn them into some kind of case-control study or at least publish it in a fairly reputed journal, a feat for someone at our level.

While designing one such cross sectional study, a friend wondered if we can use a scantron-like system on our questionnaire to automate data entry. This would save us time and increase accuracy, at least relatively. On each questionnaire, there could be bubbles to shade for multiple-choice questions, just like SAT or TOEFL. Once we get the questionnaire back from our respondents, we would shade out corresponding bubbles for the choices they made. Then, we would simply run it through a document feeding scanner (not a flatbed, that would be way more laborius) and finally, run it through a computer program that would look at the scanned file, see what bubbles are shaded, translate that into what choices the respondent made and make it available in a format friendly to SPSS or some other statistical package. Looking at shaded areas and recognizing them is called Optical Mark Recognition or OMR.

A little research and I found that there were no open-source or freeware/shareware OMR solutions available except one developed by Aaditeshwar Seth at Udai Waterloo Chapter. It was called the Udai OMR tool and developed for an Indian NGO initially, later made available for all NGO and non-profit use. The tool is written in Java and although it is not the most user-friendly piece of software around, it is the only free OMR software and it actually works. Once you make a questionnaire with the right spots to shade using the templates they provide on their website, you first scan an all-bubbles-shaded questionnaire for the program to recognize where to look for. Then, you assign variables and values to all sites recognized and finally, you start reading your forms. It reads one form at a time and writes the data to a text file. So for each page/form, you have to run the program again and it makes a new text file.

About 3-4 days of continuous fidgeting with this and then about a day to automate so that multiple pages can be read in a sequence and the data is handled and stored into a quick database and there, the next study I am part of is using OMR :)

iyav.org is a fraud

September 29, 2008

I came across this website, http://www.iyav.org/. Its a website for an organization called International Youth Alliance for Victory and it goes on about how they are holding a conference about domestic abuse and women’s rights over 8 days in October 2008 with the first 4 days in USA and the last 4 in Netherlands. Be aware!! this conference is a scam, an internet fraud that wants to collect money from you. 

I found the conference interesting and decided to write to the given email address. In reply, I was sent several details right away and how everything would be worked out by the conference organizers to arrange my travel, visa, ticket and stay in the USA and in Netherlands. All I was required to do was make a booking at a hotel in Netherlands that they have made arrangements with for 4 days. This was needed to facilitate my US visa as proof that I will leave / disembark from USA upon completion of the first leg of the conference. 

The hotel they mentioned had the website http://www.marktlaanhotels.com/. So I decided to write to hotel and ask for my reservation and received an almost instant response within a few hours. All along, I was told that the only requirement that I had to fulfil RIGHT AWAY was pay 240 pounds to the hotel to confirm my reservation either through wire transfer or through Western Union. Once I sent the receipt, they will arrange for my US and Netherlands visa, all by themselves, and even arrange for my ticket to be delivered to KLM Airlines in Pakistan so that I can collect it and travel.. Exciting, isn’t it? Everything paid for, visa arranged, all for FREE?

-Thats when it struck me. All of this was too good to be true. This was too good a deal, who are the sponsors I questioned? They said UN Youth Fund and Citibank America, I searched online but found no such instance on their respective websites.

-On further thought, I realized my entire conversation took place over email over a weekend. Between the so-called conference organizers and the hotel, we exchanged about 8 emails in 36 hours between saturday and sunday, are they absolutely that vacant to reply every email in a few hours that too on a weekend?

-On every attempt to call on the US number given,  I met the answering machine

-Both websites look like they have been designed in someone’s backyard. For an organization that claims to have held such a conference for several years, this is unlikely. 

-The only venue information they mention for the conference in Memphis. Now if I recall correctly, there is more than one city called Memphis in the USA. On further, probing they did not respond.

-The information text about domestic abuse on their website has been completely copied, you can make sure for yourself by copying the text and searchin for the whole paragraph on google. You will find the entire paragraph there.

-Finally, WHOIS information on both websites traces back to a similar physical address and essentially the same webserver.

Beware!!! this is one of the most organized scams I have seen so far on the internet. This person, whoever he or she is, tailors every email sent to the person addressed so that it is almost impossible to detect that this is a fraud. I request the authorities to identify this person by using the wire transfer information or western union information that they send on email:

Bank Name:              POSTBANK NETHERLANDS

Account Name:           A O AMADI

Account no:               34 90 569

IBAN:                        NL38 PSTB 0003 490569

SWIFT CODE: BIC:    PSTBNL 21

ADDRESS:               kruisweg 32, 2011 LC    

CITY:                        Haarlem

COUNTRY:                The Netherlands

Western Union:

FIRST NAME: Augustine Obinna

LAST NAME:  Amadi.

ADDRESS:               kruisweg 36, 2011 LC    

CITY:                        Haarlem

COUNTRY:                The Netherlands

Please don’t fall for this scam. Especially youth from India and Pakistan, it seems this person has targeted his activities towards this region specifically.

The revolution that peaked in Karbala on the day of Ashura

January 13, 2008

Regardless of the external form of faith that one follows and regardless of religious, sectarian and political associations, it is human nature to celebrate (wo)men of honor and dignity and recall stories of honesty, justice and sacrifice: to reflect, to learn, to mimic and to practice. Such a pinnacle of honor, dignity, self-sacrifice, justice and honesty was the struggle of Imam Husain that took place nearly 1400 years ago in Karbala, Iraq.

As magnificent as the event and its effects are, this topic remains the subject of several questions and arguments put forth by people from all sects and religions. What is Karbala? Why do you still commemorate it annually? Is it still relevant? Was it not all about political might and power? For all those in an honest search of answers, this is a modest attempt.

I am posting a talk by Abdullah Yusufali, a well known Sunni Muslim translator of the Holy Quran, delivered in 1931. I understand that it is rather long; if you are pressed for time, just scroll down and read from Lesson of the Tragedy onwards:

Sorrow as a Bond of Union

I am going to talk this afternoon about a very solemn subject, the martyrdom of Imam Husain at Kerbela, of which we are celebrating the anniversary. As the Chairman has very rightly pointed out, it is one of those wonderful events in our religious history about which all sects are agreed. More than that, in this room I have the honour of addressing some people who do not belong to our religious persuasion, but I venture to think that the view I put forward today may be of interest to them from its historical, its moral and its spiritual significance. Indeed, when we consider the background of that great tragedy, and all that has happened during the 1289 lunar years since, we cannot fail to be convinced that some events of sorrow and apparent defeat are really the very things which are calculated to bring about, or lead us towards, the union of humanity.

How Martyrdom healed divisions

When we invite strangers or guests and make them free of our family circle, that means the greatest outflowing of our hearts to them. The events that I am going to describe refer to some of the most touching incidents of our domestic history in their spiritual aspect. We ask our brethren of other faiths to come, and share with us some of the thoughts which are called forth by this event. As a matter of fact all students of history are aware that the horrors that are connected with the great event of Kerbela did more than anything else to unite together the various contending factions which had unfortunately appeared at that early stage of Muslim history. You know the old Persian saying applied to the Prophet:

Tu barae wasl kardan amadi;
Ni barae fasl kardan amadi.
“Thou camest to the world to unite, not to divide.”

That was wonderfully exemplified by the sorrows and sufferings and finally the martyrdom of Imam Husain.

Commemoration of great virtues

There has been in our history a tendency sometimes to celebrate the event merely by wailing and tribulation, or sometimes by symbols like the Tazias that you see in India, – Taboots as some people call them. Well, symbolism or visible emblems may sometimes be useful in certain circumstances as tending to crystallise ideas. But I think the Muslims of India of the present day are quite ready to adopt a more effective way of celebrating the martyrdom, and that is by contemplating the great virtues of the martyr, trying to understand the significance of the events in which he took part, and translating those great moral and spiritual lessons into their own lives. From that point of view I think you will agree that it is good that we should sit together, even people of different faiths, – sit together and consider the great historic event, in which were exemplified such soul-stirring virtues as those of unshaken faith, undaunted courage, thought for others, willing self-sacrifice, steadfastness in the right and unflinching war against the wrong. Islam has a history of beautiful domestic affections, of sufferings and of spiritual endeavour, second to none in the world. That side of Muslim history, although to me the most precious, is, I am sorry to say, often neglected. It is most important that we should call attention to it, reiterated attention, the attention of our own people as well as the attention of those who are interested in historical and religious truth. If there is anything precious in Islamic history it is not the wars, or the politics, or the brilliant expansion, or the glorious conquests, or even the intellectual spoils which our ancestors gathered. In these matters, our history, like all history, has its lights and shades. What we need especially to emphasise is the spirit of organisation, of brotherhood, of undaunted courage in moral and spiritual life.

Plan of discourse

I propose first to give you an idea of the geographical setting and the historical background. Then I want very briefly to refer to the actual events that happened in the Muharram, and finally to draw your attention to the great lessons which we can learn from them.

Geographical Picture

In placing before you a geographical picture of the tract of country in which the great tragedy was enacted, I consider myself fortunate in having my own personal memories to draw upon. They make the picture vivid to my mind, and they may help you also. When I visited those scenes in 1928, I remember going down from Baghdad through all that country watered by the Euphrates river. As I crossed the river by a bridge of boats at Al-Musaiyib on a fine April morning, my thoughts leapt over centuries and centuries. To the left of the main river you have the old classic ground of Babylonian history; you have the railway station of Hilla; you have the ruins of the city of Babylon, witnessing to one of the greatest civilisations of antiquity. It was so mingled with the dust that it is only in recent years that we have begun to understand its magnitude and magnificence. Then you have the great river system of the Euphrates, the Furat as it is called, a river unlike any other river we know. It takes its rise in many sources from the mountains of Eastern Armenia, and sweeping in great zig-zags through rocky country, it finally skirts the desert as we see it now. Wherever it or its interlacing branches or canals can reach, it has converted the desert into fruitful cultivated country; in the picturesque phrase, it has made the desert blossom as the rose. It skirts round the Eastern edge of the Syrian desert and then flows into marshy land. In a tract not far from Kerbela itself there are lakes which receive its waters, and act as reservoirs. Lower down it unites with the other river, the Tigris, and the united rivers flow in the name of the Shatt-al-Arab into the Persian Gulf.

Abundant water & tragedy of thirst

From the most ancient times this tract of the lower Euphrates has been a garden. It was a cradle of early civilisation, a meeting place between Sumer and Arab, and later between the Persians and Arabs. It is a rich, well watered country, with date-palms and pomegranate groves. Its fruitful fields can feed populous cities and its luscious pastures attract the nomad Arabs of the desert, with their great flocks and herds. It is of particularly tragic significance that on the border of such a well-watered land, should have been enacted the tragedy of great and good men dying of thirst and slaughtered because they refused to bend the knee to the forces of iniquity. The English poet’s lines “Water, water everywhere, and not a drop to drink” are brought home forcibly to you in this borderland between abundant water and desolate sands.

Kerbela and Its Great Dome

I remember the emotion with which I approached Kerbela from the East. The rays of the morning sun gilt the Gumbaz-i-Faiz, the great dome that crowns the building containing the tomb of Imam Husain. Kerbela actually stands on one of the great caravan routes of the desert. Today the river city of Kufa, once a Khilafat capital, is a mere village, and the city of Najaf is famous for the tomb of Hazrat Ali, but of little commercial importance. Kerbela, this outpost of the desert, is a mart and a meeting ground as well as a sacred place. It is the port of the desert, just as Basra, lower down, is a port for the Persian Gulf. Beautifully kept is the road to the mausoleum, to which all through the year come pilgrims from all parts of the world. Beautiful coloured enamelled tiles decorate the building. Inside, in the ceiling and upper walls, there is a great deal of glass mosaic. The glass seems to catch and reflect the light. The effect is that of rich coruscations of light combined with the solemnity of a closed building. The tomb itself is in a sort of inner grill, and below the ground is a sort of cave, where is shown the actual place where the Martyr fell. The city of Najaf is just about 40 miles to the South, with the tomb of Hazrat Ali on the high ground. You can see the golden dome for miles around. Just four miles from Najaf and connected with it by a tramway, is the deserted city of Kufa. The mosque is large, but bare and practically unused. The blue dome and the Mihrab of enamelled tiles bear witness to the ancient glory of the place.

Cities and their Cultural Meaning

The building of Kufa and Basra, the two great outposts of the Muslim Empire, in the 16th year of the Hijra, was a visible symbol that Islam was pushing its strength and building up a new civilisation, not only in a military sense, but in moral and social ideas and in the sciences and arts. The old effete cities did not content it, any more than the old and effete systems which it displaced. Nor was it content with the first steps it took. It was always examining, testing, discarding, re-fashioning its own handiwork. There was always a party that wanted to stand on old ways, to take cities like Damascus readymade, that loved ease and the path of least resistance. But the greater souls stretched out to new frontiers – of ideas as well as geography. They felt that old seats were like dead wood breeding worms and rottenness that were a danger to higher forms of life. The clash between them was part of the tragedy of Kerbela. Behind the building of new cities there is often the burgeoning of new ideas. Let us therefore examine the matter a little more closely. It will reveal the hidden springs of some very interesting history.

Vicissitudes of Mecca and Medina

The great cities of Islam at its birth were Mecca and Medina. Mecca, the centre of old Arabian pilgrimage, the birthplace of the Prophet, rejected the Prophet’s teaching, and cast him off. Its idolatry was effete; its tribal exclusiveness was effete; its ferocity against the Teacher of the New Light was effete. The Prophet shook its dust off his feet, and went to Medina. It was the well-watered city of Yathrib, with a considerable Jewish population. It received with eagerness the teaching of the Prophet; it gave asylum to him and his Companions and Helpers. He reconstituted it and it became the new City of Light. Mecca, with its old gods and its old superstitions, tried to subdue this new Light and destroy it. The human odds were in favour of Mecca. But God’s purpose upheld the Light, and subdued the old Mecca. But the Prophet came to build as well as to destroy. He destroyed the old paganism, and lighted a new beacon in Mecca – the beacon of Arab unity and human brotherhood. When the Prophet’s life ended on this earth, his spirit remained. It inspired his people and led them from victory to victory. Where moral or spiritual and material victories go hand in hand, the spirit of man advances all along the line. But sometimes there is a material victory, with a spiritual fall, and sometimes there is a spiritual victory with a material fall, and then we have tragedy.

Spirit of Damascus

Islam’s first extension was towards Syria, where the power was centred in the city of Damascus. Among living cities it is probably the oldest city in the world. Its bazaars are thronged with men of all nations, and the luxuries of all nations find ready welcome there. If you come to it westward from the Syrian desert, as I did, the contrast is complete, both in the country and in the people. From the parched desert sands you come to fountains and vineyards, orchards and the hum of traffic. From the simple, sturdy, independent, frank Arab, you come to the soft, luxurious, sophisticated Syrian. That contrast was forced on the Muslims when Damascus became a Muslim city. They were in a different moral and spiritual atmosphere. Some succumbed to the softening influences of ambition, luxury, wealth pride of race, love of ease, and so on. Islam stood always as the champion of the great rugged moral virtues. It wanted no compromise with evil in any shape or form, with luxury, with idleness, with the seductions of this world. It was a protest against these things. And yet the representatives of that protest got softened at Damascus. They aped the decadent princes of the world instead of striving to be leaders of spiritual thought. Discipline was relaxed, and governors aspired to be greater than the Khalifas. This bore bitter fruit later.

Snare of Riches

Meanwhile Persia came within the Muslim orbit. When Medain was captured in the year 16 of the Hijra, and the battle of Jalula broke the Persian resistance, some military booty was brought to Medina – gems, pearls, rubies, diamonds, swords of gold and silver. A great celebration was held in honour of the splendid victory and the valour of the Arab army. In the midst of the celebration they found the Caliph of the day actually weeping. One said to him, “What! a time of joy and thou sheddest tears?” “Yes”, he said, “I foresee that the riches will become a snare, a spring of worldliness and envy, and in the end a calamity to my people.” For the Arab valued, above all, simplicity of life, openness of character, and bravery in face of danger. Their women fought with them and shared their dangers. They were not caged creatures for the pleasures of the senses. They showed their mettle in the early fighting round the head of the Persian Gulf. When the Muslims were hard pressed, their women turned the scale in their favour. They made their veils into flags, and marched in battle array. The enemy mistook them for reinforcements and abandoned the field. Thus an impending defeat was turned into a victory.

Basra and Kufa: town-planning

In Mesopotamia the Muslims did not base their power on old and effete Persian cities, but built new outposts for themselves. The first they built was Basra at the head of the Persian Gulf, in the 17th year of the Hijra. And what a great city it became! Not great in war and conquest, not great in trade and commerce, but great in learning and culture in its best day, – alas! also great in its spirit of faction and degeneracy in the days of its decline! But its situation and climate were not at all suited to the Arab character. It was low and moist, damp and enervating. In the same year the Arabs built another city not far off from the Gulf and yet well suited to be a port of the desert, as Kerbela became afterwards. This was the city of Kufa, built in the same year as Basra, but in a more bracing climate. It was the first experiment in town-planning in Islam. In the centre was a square for the principal mosque. That square was adorned with shady avenues. Another square was set apart for the trafficking of the market. The streets were all laid out intersecting and their width was fixed. The main thoroughfares for such traffic as they had (we must not imagine the sort of traffic we see in Charing Cross) were made 60 feet wide; the cross streets were 30 feet wide; and even the little lanes for pedestrians were regulated to a width of 10.5 feet. Kufa became a centre of light and learning. The Khalifa Hazrat Ali lived and died there.

Rivalry and poison of Damascus

But its rival, the city of Damascus, fattened on luxury and Byzantine magnificence. Its tinsel glory sapped the foundations of loyalty and the soldierly virtues. Its poison spread through the Muslim world. Governors wanted to be kings. Pomp and selfishness, ease and idleness and dissipation grew as a canker; wines and spirituous liquors, scepticism, cynicism and social vices became so rampant that the protests of the men of God were drowned in mockery. Mecca, which was to have been a symbolical spiritual centre, was neglected or dishonoured. Damascus and Syria became centres of a worldliness and arrogance which cut at the basic roots of Islam.

Husain the Righteous refused to bow to worldliness and power

We have brought the story down to the 60th year of the Hijra. Yazid assumed the power at Damascus. He cared nothing for the most sacred ideals of the people. He was not even interested in the ordinary business affairs of administration. His passion was hunting, and he sought power for self-gratification. The discipline and self-abnegation, the strong faith and earnest endeavour, the freedom and sense of social equality which had been the motive forces of Islam, were divorced from power. The throne at Damascus had become a worldly throne based on the most selfish ideas of personal and family aggrandisement, instead of a spiritual office, with a sense of God-given responsibility. The decay of morals spread among the people. There was one man who could stem the tide. That was Imam Husain. He, the grandson of the Prophet, could speak without fear, for fear was foreign to his nature. But his blameless and irreproachable life was in itself a reproach to those who had other standards. They sought to silence him, but he could not be silenced. They sought to bribe him, but he could not be bribed. They sought to waylay him and get him into their Power. What is more, they wanted him to recognise the tyranny and expressly to support it. For they knew that the conscience of the people might awaken at any time, and sweep them away unless the holy man supported their cause. The holy man was prepared to die rather than surrender the principles for which he stood.

Driven from city to city

Medina was the centre of Husain’s teaching. They made Medina impossible for him. He left Medina and went to Mecca, hoping that he would be left alone. But he was not left alone. The Syrian forces invaded Mecca. The invasion was repelled, not by Husain but by other people. For Husain, though the bravest of the brave, had no army and no worldly weapons. His existence itself was an offence in the eyes of his enemies. His life was in danger, and the lives of all those nearest and dearest to him. He had friends everywhere, but they were afraid to speak out. They were not as brave as he was. But in distant Kufa, a party grew up which said: “We are disgusted with these events, and we must have Imam Husain to take asylum with us.” So they sent and invited the Imam to leave Mecca, come to them, live in their midst, and be their honoured teacher and guide. His father’s memory was held in reverence in Kufa. The Governor of Kufa was friendly, and the people eager to welcome him. But alas, Kufa had neither strength, nor courage, nor constancy. Kufa, geographically only 40 miles from Kerbela, was the occasion of the tragedy of Kerbela. And now Kufa is nearly gone, and Kerbela remains as the lasting memorial of the martyrdom.

Invitation from Kufa

When the Kufa invitation reached the Imam, he pondered over it, weighed its possibilities, and consulted his friends. He sent over his cousin Muslim to study the situation on the spot and report to him. The report was favourable, and he decided to go. He had a strong presentiment of danger. Many of his friends in Mecca advised him against it. But could he abandon his mission when Kufa was calling for it? Was he the man to be deterred, because his enemies were laying their plots for him, at Damascus and at Kufa? At least, it was suggested, he might leave his family behind. But his family and his immediate dependants would not hear of it. It was a united family, pre-eminent in the purity of its life and in its domestic virtues and domestic affections. If there was danger for its head, they would share it. The Imam was not going on a mere ceremonial visit. There was responsible work to do, and they must be by his side, to support him in spite of all its perils and consequences. Shallow critics scent political ambition in the Imam’s act. But would a man with political ambitions march without an army against what might be called the enemy country, scheming to get him into its power, and prepared to use all their resources, military, political and financial, against him?

Journey through the desert

Imam Husain left Mecca for Kufa with all his family including his little children. Later news from Kufa itself was disconcerting. The friendly governor had been displaced by one prepared more ruthlessly to carry out Yazid’s plans. If Husain was to go there at all, he must go there quickly, or his friends themselves would be in danger. On the other hand, Mecca itself was no less dangerous to him and his family. It was the month of September by the solar calendar, and no one would take a long desert journey in that heat, except under a sense of duty. By the lunar calendar it was the month of pilgrimage at Mecca. But he did not stop for the pilgrimage. He pushed on, with his family and dependants, in all numbering about 90 or 100 people, men, women and children. They must have gone by forced marches through the desert. They covered the 900 miles of the desert in little over three weeks. When they came within a few miles of Kufa, at the edge of the desert, they met people from Kufa. It was then that they heard of the terrible murder of Husain’s cousin Muslim, who had been sent on in advance. A poet that came by dissuaded the Imam from going further. “For,” he said epigramatically, “the heart of the city is with thee but its sword is with thine enemies, and the issue is with God.” What was to be done? They were three weeks’ journey from the city they had left. In the city to which they were going their own messenger had been foully murdered as well as his children. They did not know what the actual situation was then in Kufa. But they were determined not to desert their friends.

Call to Surrender or Die

Presently messengers came from Kufa, and Imam Husain was asked to surrender. Imam Husain offered to take one of three alternatives. He wanted no political power and no revenge. He said “I came to defend my own people. If I am too late, give me the choice of three alternatives: either to return to Mecca; or to face Yazid himself at Damascus; or if my very presence is distasteful to him and you, I do not wish to cause more divisions among the Muslims. Let me at least go to a distant frontier, where, if fighting must be done, I will fight against the enemies of Islam.” Every one of these alternatives was refused. What they wanted was to destroy his life, or better still, to get him to surrender, to surrender to the very forces against which he was protesting, to declare his adherence to those who were defying the law of God and man, and to tolerate all the abuses which were bringing the name of Islam into disgrace. Of course he did not surrender. But what was he to do? He had no army. He had reasons to suppose that many of his friends from distant parts would rally round him, and come and defend him with their swords and bodies. But time was necessary, and he was not going to gain time by feigned compliance. He turned a little round to the left, the way that would have led him to Yazid himself, at Damascus. He camped in the plain of Kerbela.

Water cut off; Inflexible will, Devotion and Chivalry

For ten days messages passed backwards and forwards between Kerbela and Kufa. Kufa wanted surrender and recognition. That was the one thing the Imam could not consent to. Every other alternative was refused by Kufa, under the instructions from Damascus. Those fateful ten days were the first ten days of the month of Muharram, of the year 61 of the Hijra. The final crisis was on the 10th day, the Ashura day, which we are commemorating. During the first seven days various kinds of pressure were brought to bear on the Imam, but his will was inflexible. It was not a question of a fight, for there were but 70 men against 4,000. The little band was surrounded and insulted, but they held together so firmly that they could not be harmed. On the 8th day the water supply was cut off. The Euphrates and its abundant streams were within sight, but the way was barred. Prodigies of valour were performed in getting water. Challenges were made for single combat according to Arab custom. And the enemy were half-hearted, while the Imam’s men fought in contempt of death, and always accounted for more men than they lost. On the evening of the 9th day, the little son of the Imam was ill. He had fever and was dying of thirst. They tried to get a drop of water. But that was refused point blank and so they made the resolve that they would, rather than surrender, die to the last man in the cause for which they had come. Imam Husain offered to send away his people. He said, “They are after my person; my family and my people can go back.” But everyone refused to go. They said they would stand by him to the last, and they did. They were not cowards; they were soldiers born and bred; and they fought as heroes, with devotion and with chivalry.

The Final Agony; placid face of the man of God

On the day of Ashura, the 10th day, Imam Husain’s own person was surrounded by his enemies. He was brave to the last. He was cruelly mutilated. His sacred head was cut off while in the act of prayer. A mad orgy of triumph was celebrated over his body. In this crisis we have details of what took place hour by hour. He had 45 wounds from the enemies’ swords and javelins, and 35 arrows pierced his body. His left arm was cut off, and a javelin pierced through his breast. After all that agony, when his head was lifted up on a spear, his face was the placid face of a man of God. All the men of that gallant band were exterminated and their bodies trampled under foot by the horses. The only male survivor was a child, Husain’s son Ali, surnamed Zain-ul-’Abidin – “The Glory of the Devout.” He lived in retirement, studying, interpreting, and teaching his father’s high spiritual principles for the rest of his life.

Heroism of the Women

There were women: for example, Zainab the sister of the Imam, Sakina his little daughter, and Shahr-i-Banu, his wife, at Kerbela. A great deal of poetic literature has sprung up in Muslim languages, describing the touching scenes in which they figure. Even in their grief and their tears they are heroic. They lament the tragedy in simple, loving, human terms. But they are also conscious of the noble dignity of their nearness to a life of truth reaching its goal in the precious crown of martyrdom. One of the best-known poets of this kind is the Urdu poet Anis, who lived in Lucknow, and died in 1874.

Lesson of the Tragedy

That briefly is the story. What is the lesson? There is of course the physical suffering in martyrdom, and all sorrow and suffering claim our sympathy, —- the dearest, purest, most outflowing sympathy that we can give. But there is a greater suffering than physical suffering. That is when a valiant soul seems to stand against the world; when the noblest motives are reviled and mocked; when truth seems to suffer an eclipse. It may even seem that the martyr has but to say a word of compliance, do a little deed of non-resistance; and much sorrow and suffering would be saved; and the insidious whisper comes: “Truth after all can never die.” That is perfectly true. Abstract truth can never die. It is independent of man’s cognition. But the whole battle is for man’s keeping hold of truth and righteousness. And that can only be done by the highest examples of man’s conduct – spiritual striving and suffering enduring firmness of faith and purpose, patience and courage where ordinary mortals would give in or be cowed down, the sacrifice of ordinary motives to supreme truth in scorn of consequence. The martyr bears witness, and the witness redeems what would otherwise be called failure. It so happened with Husain. For all were touched by the story of his martyrdom, and it gave the deathblow to the politics of Damascus and all it stood for. And Muharram has still the power to unite the different schools of thought in Islam, and make a powerful appeal to non-Muslims also.

Explorers of Spiritual Territory

That, to my mind, is the supreme significance of martyrdom. All human history shows that the human spirit strives in many directions, deriving strength and sustenance from many sources. Our bodies, our physical powers, have developed or evolved from earlier forms, after many struggles and defeats. Our intellect has had its martyrs, and our great explorers have often gone forth with the martyrs’ spirit. All honour to them. But the highest honour must still lie with the great explorers of spiritual territory, those who faced fearful odds and refused to surrender to evil. Rather than allow a stigma to attach to sacred things, they paid with their own lives the penalty of resistance. The first kind of resistance offered by the Imam was when he went from city to city, hunted about from place to place, but making no compromise with evil. Then was offered the choice of an effectual but dangerous attempt at clearing the house of God, or living at ease for himself by tacit abandonment of his striving friends. He chose the path of danger with duty and honour, and never swerved from it giving up his life freely and bravely. His story purifies our emotions. We can best honour his memory by allowing it to teach us courage and constancy.

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