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Saudi Arabia strictly warns US Senate to stop interfering in Kingdom’s affairs

Riyadh – Saudi Arabia on Monday has strictly warned the Senate of United States of America to stop his unnecessary interference into Kingdom’s internal affairs.

The Saudi Foreign Minister, Adel Jubeir, released a statement warning the US Senate to mind his own business, and to stop being disrespect towards the Saudi leadership under King Salman and the Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

“The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia rejects the position expressed recently by the United States Senate, which was based upon unsubstantiated claims and allegations, and contained blatant interferences in the Kingdom’s internal affairs, undermining the Kingdom’s regional and international role,” the foreign ministry statement read.

“While the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia reaffirms its commitment to continue to further develop its relations with the United States of America, the Kingdom also expresses its concern regarding the positions that were expressed by members of an esteemed legislative body of an allied and friendly government, a government that the Kingdom, under the leadership of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques and the Crown Prince, holds at the highest regard, and with whom the Kingdom maintains deep strategic, political, economic, and security ties that were built over several decades to serve the interests of both countries and peoples,” the statement added.

Saudi Arabia said it categorically rejects any interference in its internal affairs, any and all accusations, in any manner, that “disrespect its leadership, represented by the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosque and the Crown Prince, and any attempts to undermine its sovereignty or diminish its stature”.

Saudi Arabia emphasized its integral role in the Arab and Muslim world, and reiterated that it will never seize from fulfilling its responsibilities.

Iranians convert to Christianity in Turkey in high numbers

By Fariba Nawa

Evangelical pastors say they will continue to preach the Bible because Turkey’s constitution gives them the right.

In a hotel conference room in Denizli, Turkey, about 60 Iranians sing along to songs praising Jesus mixed with Iranian pop music. When the music stops, American pastor Karl Vickery preaches with the help of a Persian translator.

“I’m not famous or rich. But I know Jesus. I have Jesus,” he says, with a Southern drawl. The Farsi-speaking Christian converts shout “Hallelujah!” and clap.

Vickery, who’s part of a visiting delegation from Beaumont, Texas, then offers to pray for each person in the room.

Women with hair dyed blond and short skirts and clean-shaven men in slacks stand up to pray in unison. Vickery puts his hand on one woman’s head and speaks in tongues. One man closes his eyes as tears fall. Another woman raises her hand and shouts “Isa,” Jesus’ name in Arabic and Persian. The room smells of sweat.

Among the parishioners are Farzana, a 37-year-old hairdresser from Tehran, and her daughter Andya, 3, who runs around, taking photos with her mother’s cellphone.

“It feels good. Our relationship to God becomes closer,” Farzana says. She doesn’t want to give her last name because she says her family in Iran might face persecution for her conversion. Her family knows she is a convert and they’re scared for their own safety inside Iran.

There are hundreds of thousands of Christians in Iran. Those considered part of the native Christian communities are permitted to practice their religion with restrictions, but a Muslim converting to Christianity is considered an apostate.

It is also illegal to convert from Islam in several other Muslim-majority countries, including Saudi Arabia, and punishable by jail time or death.

The converts in Turkey apply for asylum to a third country through the United Nations, claiming they would face religious persecution if they return home. Turkey hosts more than 3.5 million Syrians and other migrants escaping war and conflict.

The Turkish government allows freedom of religion and even protects churches in many cities, refugees are assigned to live in small conservative towns where they may face discrimination from the local population wary of evangelicals.

Despite local objections, evangelical pastors say they will continue to preach the Bible because Turkey’s constitution gives them the right.

Many foreign evangelicals left Turkey after a botched coup attempt in 2016, when American preacher Andrew Brunson was jailed and charged with terrorism. The high-profile case strained Turkish-U.S. relations until Brunson was released in October.

But refugees have continued to come, and demand for more churches has grown.

Sebnem Koser Akcapar, a sociology professor at Istanbul’s Koç University who has been studying refugees and their change of faith, says she has witnessed the rise in conversions.

“The numbers of Iranian refugees converting have grown tremendously over the years. A small church consisting of 20 to 30 families has become a much bigger congregation housing 80 to 100 people on a regular Sunday,” she says.

Akcapar believes only some of the refugees are genuine converts. Others are using religious persecution as a way to get to the West, which may be the only way for them to lead a normal life, she says.

With more U.S. sanctions on Iran, Iranians are facing economic hardships and political pressure.

The United Pentecostal Church in Denizli can’t keep up with the demand, says the church’s Turkey representative Rick Robinson, who has lived in the country for 13 years. It has churches in eight Turkish cities and refugees are calling on them to open more.

He says the church provides a spiritual outlet for refugees, not financial support, and that he welcomes anyone regardless of whether they are genuinely converting or not.

Robinson thinks many of the congregants may not be believers, at least not at first. “There might even be some who start with the help just for the refugee status and become sincere,” he says matter-of-factly.

Robinson, a tall pastor with silver hair, welcomes the Iranians into the church with hugs and laughter.

Farzana says one reason she converted was the way Iran’s interpretation of Islam treats women. When she divorced an abusive husband, she says, an Iranian court granted him custody of her older son and daughter. Under Iran’s Shitte law, fathers get custody of older children.

“Mostly because of this I became disillusioned with Islam,” she says. “That judge sitting there and giving orders was completely siding with men. Everywhere in Iran men come before women.”

Farzana says she was shattered and felt lost after her children were taken away.

But a year later, Farzana married her current Iranian husband and they had Andya. She hired a high school friend to assist her in her thriving beauty salon, and soon her friend, a Christian convert, began to recruit her to Tehran’s secret churches.

“Once she began trusting me, she gave me photocopied writings and said, ‘I’m giving these to you as a gift. Go read them. These are the word of God,'” Farzana recalls.

Christian groups report that secret home churches are growing in Iran and one reason, says an award-winning Iranian athlete who converted to Christianity, is to rebel against the Shitte regime.

“The system of authority in Iran has put Iranians under a lot of pressure, and they don’t see any hope. They are in search of God, but they want to find another path because they’re discontent with the options they’ve been given,” says the athlete, who is part of the Denizli congregation. He didn’t feel safe sharing his name.

Many of the Iranians in Turkey say they converted in Iran and had to flee. Farzana says after three months of attending a home church, two men from the Revolutionary Guards who were watching her church detained her when they found a Bible in her car.

“The interrogator sat in front of me … he said you’re an apostate, you’re not ashamed of that. You’re creating problems in the country. I got scared and began to cry,” she says.

Farzana says she was released after her husband signed a form that she wouldn’t return to church. But her church advised her to leave Iran. A smuggler helped her family escape to Turkey, where they settled in Denizli, a city of 600,000 in southwest of the country. Farzana got a job at a Turkish beauty salon, found the Pentecostal church and applied for asylum, waiting to resettle in the West.

But the odds are against resettlement.

Selin Unal, the spokeswoman for the United Nations refugee agency in Turkey, wrote in an email that the U.N. doesn’t aggregate the number of religious persecution cases filed. They just process the most vulnerable, and only a handful of Iranians have resettled in the U.S. this year.

Other aid workers involved with refugees say religious persecution cases among converts have become so common that the U.N. has become distrustful.

Lanna Walsh, a spokeswoman for the U.N. International Organization for Migration, urges refugees to be honest on their asylum applications.

“If during the process, inconsistencies or inaccuracies in their stories are uncovered, then their case and application actually may be deemed inadmissible and they may not get another chance to apply,” Walsh says.

Anti-immigration policies sweeping the West also crush refugee hopes. President Trump and Vice President Pence said during their presidential campaign in 2016 they would allow Christian refugees to immigrate to the United States. Instead, Trump enforced a travel ban against citizens of seven Muslim countries, including Iran. The U.S. even denied entry to a group of native Iranian Christians in limbo in Austria, who had applied under a law that gives religious minorities the right to asylum. Those Iranians are suing the U.S.

Pastor Robinson backs Trump’s refugee policy. He says Turkey should allow Iranian refugees to live and work here. That way, Iranians can be closer to their families in Iran because the two countries share a border.

“I can tell you what I tell a lot of our people here. If you can make a life in this country, and it’s not a bad country … the chances of you seeing your family every year are almost guaranteed,” he says.

Yet refugees are only allowed to work in Turkey if a Turkish employer sponsors them, and that’s rare. Most have under-the-table jobs earning half of what Turks do. They also face a backlash from local communities, especially if they’re Christian converts.

Some Turks in Denizli complain that refugees are taking their jobs. One shop owner hung a banner that says “No Syrians, Iranians and Afghans are allowed in this shop.”

Yasin Sarikaya, a Turkish cab driver in Denizli, is dismayed at the visible number of refugees working and living in his neighborhood. When he realizes that some of them are Muslims converting to Christianity, he becomes visibly upset.

“It’s a mistake to know Islam and what a widespread and pleasant religion it is, and then change to another religion,” Sarikaya says.

Many of the congregants say they have faced workplace discrimination. Farzana says her Turkish boss at the salon gave her cleaning work and refused to let her take a break after she shared that she was a convert.

“Before she found out I was a Christian, her interaction was different. It was much better,” she says.

Farzana eventually quit and is looking for another job.

Despite the challenges, the Iranians say the church is a place to release their sorrows and feel part of a community. But the church keeps its location and activities a secret for safety reasons. Some churches in Turkey request protection from local police.

For converts to prove they’re Christian for the asylum process, they have to get baptized. On a recent Friday, the pastors enter a swimming pool inside a Turkish bathhouse and help parishioners dressed in colorful robes dunk their head under the water. Behind a clear glass in the adjacent room, a half-naked man gets a rubdown from a bathhouse attendant.

Sabah Allahvardi, a 22-year-old university student, is excited about her baptism. She moved to Turkey six months ago. She and nine others exit the pool beaming and dripping wet. They will receive a certificate that documents their change of faith with hopes that they can live in a country with freedom and acceptance.

“I never thought this would happen to me in Iran, but now I’m really happy because my life is changing,” Allahvardi says shyly.

Fariba Nawa wrote this article from Denizli – Turkey for NPR.org

FAITH: Being grateful to parents by lowering the wings of humility

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by Zoha Fatima

Children imitate what they see. If we are good to our parents, we can hope—that our children will be good to us in future.

The Quran is the source of guidance, and if something comes next to Allah ﷻ – then it is without a doubt a very serious thing to ponder upon – an ayah of the Quran that emphasizes to show gratitude and obedience towards parents.

“And We have enjoined upon man [care] for his parents. His mother carried him, [increasing her] in weakness upon weakness, and his weaning is in two years. Be grateful to Me and to your parents; to Me is the [final] destination.” [Quran 31:14]

Honoring our parents means—obeying them, respecting them, lowering the wings of humility to them, restraining from showing displeasure to them, serving them, fulfilling their wishes, consulting them, listening to what they say, abstaining from stubbornness towards them, and showing sheer respect towards them in their life and after their death.

Allah ﷻ orders us in the Quran [17:24] – “And lower to them the wing of humility out of mercy and say, “My Lord, have mercy upon them as they brought me up [when I was] small.”

A man came to the Prophet Mohammed (ﷺ) and said, ‘O Messenger of God! Who among the people is the most worthy of my good companionship? The Prophet ﷺ said: Your mother. The man said, ‘Then who?’ The Prophet ﷺ said: Then your mother. The man further asked, ‘Then who?’ The Prophet ﷺ said: Then your mother. The man asked again, ‘Then who?’ The Prophet ﷺ said: Then your father. [Bukhari, Muslim]

Abdullah Ibn ‘Umar (رضي الله عنه) saw a Yemeni man going around the the Ka’bah in Makkah while carrying his mother on his back. This man said to Abdullah Ibn ‘Umar ؓ , “I am like a tame camel for her! I have carried her more than she carried me. Do you think I have paid her back, oh Ibn ‘Umar?” Abdullah Ibn ‘Umar ؓ replied, “No, not even one contraction [during childbirth]!!” [Bukhari]

Muslims should not adopt the attitudes of the popular culture in which mothers are nothing more than serving-girls, and fathers are nothing more than errand-boys.

We must combat what television and society teach us about how parents should be treated, rather we must teach them what Allah ﷻ and His Messenger (ﷺ) have said about rights of parents. Most importantly, we must teach them by setting the best example, by treating our parents with love, respect, honor, and tenderness they deserve.

Children imitate what they see. If we are good to our parents, we can hope—that our children will be good to us in future.

Lastly, I say, may Allah ﷻ grant us guidance to be good to our parents, and have mercy upon our parents, and forgive their mistakes and admit them into paradise.

Zoha Fatima is a ninth grade student of Indian International School Riyadh, she has a flare for writing and she dreams to be a writer.

Film actress booked by Egyptian Authorities for promoting see-through dress

Cairo – Egyptian Authorities under Abdul-Fateh al-Sisi administration charged a film actress for wearing black see-through dress at a Film Festival in Cairo on Thursday.

According to the state-owned newspaper, Al-Ahram Gate, the actress apologized to families she may have angered by her outfit choice and said she did not expect it would cause so much anger.

“I would like to apologize again, as an actress with good and positive credit with my fans, and I hope everyone can understand that I had good intentions and did not wish to anger anyone,” she tweeted.

Despite films are produced and promoted in Muslim countries like Egypt, promoting skimpy, see-through dresses in public is a serious offence.

Turkey is the world’s worst place for journalists: Report

NewYork (Reuters) – Despite Turkey claims to be champion of the liberalism and secularism, it still remains the world’s worst offender against press freedom, the Committee to Protect Journalists said on Thursday, with at least 68 journalists imprisoned for anti-state charges.

Turkey has previously said its crackdown is justified because of an attempted coup to overthrow the government in 2016.

There were 251 journalists jailed for doing their jobs as of Dec. 1, the CPJ said in an annual study. For the third consecutive year, more than half are in Turkey, China and Egypt, where authorities have accused reporters of anti-governmental activities.

“It looks like a trend now,” the report’s author, Elana Beiser, said in an interview. “It looks like the new normal.”

The number of journalists imprisoned on charges of “false news” rose to 28, up from 21 last year and nine in 2016, according to the CPJ, a U.S.-based nonprofit that promotes press freedom.

The report criticized U.S. President Donald Trump for frequently characterizing negative media coverage as “fake news,” a phrase that is also used by leaders against their critics in countries like the Philippines and Turkey.

Meanwhile, when asked about journalists being jailed, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said: “Legal measures are not taken because of these suspects’ or criminals’ professions. This is unrelated.”

The overall number of jailed journalists is down eight percent from last year’s record high of 272, the CPJ said.

The CPJ said there are dozens of reporters missing or kidnapped in the Middle East and North Africa, including several held by Houthis in Yemen.

Saudi Arabia invites Russian Nuclear Scientists to conduct Workshop

Riyadh – ROSATOM State Atomic Energy Corporation organized a workshop on Russian nuclear technologies in Riyadh on Dec. 5 for representatives of Saudi companies. The event was held at the Council of Saudi Chambers of Commerce.

Alexander Voronkov, CEO of ROSATOM Regional Center in Middle East and North Africa, stressed that during the competitive dialogue ROSATOM offered the most advanced and serial project of Russian designed VVER-1200 reactor of Generation 3+.

The reactor type fully complies with modern international safety and security standards and already implemented in Russia.

“ROSATOM has a vast experience of projects implementation in nuclear newcomer countries where NPP construction project refers to forming of nuclear infrastructure from scratch.

Therefore, we are certain in fulfilling the assistance of any kind and at stage of nuclear project: engineering, construction and operation of nuclear power plant, nuclear fuel supply, service and modernization of power units, personnel training and public acceptance of the project. Scope of our possibilities is limitless,” Voronkov pointed out.

In the framework of the workshop, representatives of Rusatom Overseas (part of ROSATOM State Corporation) shared with the audience detailed information about evolutionary VVER technology which is currently being used for implementation of 36 power units construction projects in 12 countries around the globe. Most part of the workshop was dedicated to presentation of the Russian offer for Saudi Arabia in NPP construction project of large capacity and localization opportunities for local suppliers within nuclear project implementation.

Milos Mostecky, vice president of Rusatom Overseas, highlighted the vast experience of ROSATOM in engaging local suppliers while projects implementation abroad.

“We are confident that Saudi companies are ready to take part in large-scale projects in power sector. Our Saudi partners are willing to participate in NPP construction in Saudi Arabia and think highly to perspective of cooperation with Rosatom,” Mostecky added.

In June 2018, ROSATOM was shortlisted to the next stage of competitive dialogue on Saudi Arabia’s first nuclear power project.

Russia and Saudi Arabia signed an Intergovernmental Agreement on cooperation in the field of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes. On Oct. 5, 2017, ROSATOM and King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy signed Program for Cooperation in the peaceful uses of nuclear energy.

According to the program, Russia and Saudi Arabia intended to cooperate in the field of small and medium reactors, nuclear infrastructure development, consideration of prospects for establishing a center for nuclear science and technology in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia based on a Russian-design research reactor etc.

Barkas: Migrated Yemeni diaspora in Hyderabad

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By Aftab Hussain Kola

Can you believe that there is a large settlement of Yemeni descent people in India’s Hyderabad? Barkas, about 4 kms from the iconic Charminar, presents a slice of Yemen.

Here, a large number of Arabs from Yemen, called Hadhramis, have settled down having migrated from their country of origin for many generations.

Most of them were employed in the Nizam government. Barkas was home to the former employees of Nizams, the sovereigns of the erstwhile princely state of Hyderabad. The colony originally used to serve as the Military Barracks of the former ruler of Hyderabad – the Nizam.

Men with Arabian facial features clad in Yemeni lungis (wraparound kilt) or Futah ambling around the colony’s narrow lanes is a regular sight that intrigue outsiders.

History records that Hadhramis of Yemen have migrated for centuries in large numbers, establishing a diaspora that extends around the Indian Ocean, Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf states.

The Hadhramaut region, one of the southern governorates of Yemen, today has around 1.5 million inhabitants. Though migration began during the 3rd Hijri century (eighth century in the Gregorian calendar) but Hyderabad connection is of not that old. A good number of Hadramis had already migrated on India’s West Coast in the ninth century AD.

World War II

According to Salam Bin Juman Bamraan, of Yemeni origin, who lives in Barkas, “My father Juman Saleh Bamraan took the ship to Mumbai in 1942 during the World War II since the situation in Yemen was not conducive for living.

“When my father came to Hyderabad the Nizam of Hyderabad was kind enough to give him a job. My father married a local Muslim woman and thus we integrated into the Hyderabadi community. Our language at home was Arabic until recently but after my father died we converse in Deccani Urdu.”

Though Salam did go to Kuwait for work but did not return to Yemen.

Yemen served as a trans-shipment center for luxury goods — particularly spices — originating in India and points farther east and also as a Haj route for pilgrims coming from India.

So, migration was happening to and fro. There were thousands of traders from India doing business in Yemen, mainly Aden and Sana.

Dhirubhai Ambani, the founder of the now famous Reliance Group, also started his career as a trader in Aden and his famous son Mukesh Ambani, Reliance Industries Limited chairman, was also born in Aden.

300,000 strong Diaspora

These age-old ties between India and Yemen are reflected now by the presence of nearly 300,000 strong Yemeni-origin Diaspora in India and a vibrant Indian-origin Diaspora in Yemen.

Besides India, almost all Arabs in Southeast Asia and India trace their ancestry to Hadhramaut.

Five and six generations after their forefathers made Hyderabad their homes, many have retained their culture and traits. The members of this well-knit community are now integrated in Hyderabad.

Homecomings had already begun dropping off in the 1970s as Yemen became more politically disturbed.

A documentary by Adam Sawab, a Yemeni student who did journalism from Osmania University titled ‘Barkas – A Small Yemen in India’ as part of his course shed light on Hadhramis living in Hyderabad’s Barkas.

The documentary reported that Barkas is a habitat for mainly members of the Chaush community, who are direct descendants of the Hadhrami – military men in the Hadhramaut region in Yemen, there are 52 Yemeni tribes in Hyderabad.

Settled Yemeni tribes

Some of the Yemeni tribes settled here are those of al-Saadi, al-Nahdi, al-Yamani, Barabaa, al-Amoodi, al-Saqqaf, Bamraan, al-Aidroos, al-Saadi among others.

“During the time of the Nizam’s rule, the Arab population here increased and slowly settled mainly in the Army barracks, now Barkas, on the outskirts of the city,” Adam stated in his documentary.

Sheikh Mohammed Azzan Jabari, whose grandfather came from Yemen in 1940 and was employed in Nizam’s army, says that their culture is of mixed origin with strands from Arabs and local.

Having his own textiles business in Barkas, he says, “We are into third generation. Our weddings still encompass elements of Arabic traditions like nikah is performed in Barkas’ jame masjid and we play the duff which is a Yemeni custom. We still relish Yemeni traditional breakfasts items like mandi, fuul (a dish made of cooked fava beans), hareesa (savory porridge), etc and mandi, kabsa as meals. I think Barkas is home to more than 60,000 Yemeni descent people.”

So, if you want to experience Yemeni culture with a plateful of mandi (as the area is teeming with restaurants selling delectable mandi) head to Hyderabad’s Barkas locality.

Article first published on Al Arabiya English.

The rise of Eight Muslim MLAs in Rajasthan

by Aas Kaif

The Rajasthan elections are out and the Congress is all set to form a government in the state along with also doing the same in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh. The ousting of the BJP from Rajasthan has also resulted in a larger number of Muslim candidates being elected to the Rajasthan assembly, even though interestingly this is the first time that no Muslim won from the BJP since 1998.  Compared with 2013 elections when the Rajasthan assembly had only two Muslim MLAs, this election resulted in seven Muslims from Congress and one Muslim from BSP winning. The Congress had given tickets to 15 Muslims in these elections.

Rafeek Khan, Adarshnagar Constituency.

Rafeek Khan of Congress won from Adarsh Nagar seat with a margin of 12,553 over BJP’s Ashok Pamami, who was the current MLA of the region. In Kishan pole, Amin Kagzi won by a narrow margin of  a little less than 1,500 votes. The closest fight among the eight Muslim candidates was for Saleh Mohammed from Pokhran, who beat Pratap Pani from the BJP by a margin of just 929 votes. The same could not be said about Zahida Khan, however. The only Muslim female candidate who won, Khan received over one lakh votes. She defeated her closest candidate by a margin of over 39,000 votes. Along with Khan, another strong victory for Muslim candidates came from Danish Abrar, who is also the party’s spokesperson for the state. Abrar beat popular BJP leader Ashok Meena by a margin of over 25,000 votes. The other Muslim candidates who won on a Congress seat were Hakam Ali from Fatehpur and Amin Khan from Shau constituency.

Hakim Ali Khan.

Interestingly, the only non-Congress Muslim candidate who won from Rajasthancame not from the BJP but the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP). Ali won by a margin of over 25,000 against Nempal Singh of the Samajwadi Party with the Congress and the BJP relegated to third and fourth respectively.

WajibAli Naagar constituency.

The only BJP candidate who won in 2013 elections, Mohammed Younus, was essentially turned into a sacrificial lamb for these elections. Younus, who was the number two to Vasundhara Raje, was made to change his constituency on the last day and to make matters worse, he was made to contest against Sachin Pilotin Tonk. No surprises, then, that Younus lost by over 56,000 votes to Pilot whopolled over one lakh votes.

Amin Khan who won for the 5th time.

These elections across five states have resulted in a total of 19 Muslim candidates winning across Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Telangana and Chattisgarh. While Rajasthan and Telangana saw eight Muslim candidates each, two Muslim candidates won from Madhya Pradesh while one Muslim candidate also won from Chattisgarh. No Muslim candidate contested from Mizoram.

Sohail Mohammed with his father Ghazi Fakeer from Pohkhran.

Article first published on Two Circles.

Minor Earthquake in Dubai, nothing damaged

Dubai – A minor earthquake of about 2.1 magnitude was recorded in the UAE on Wednesday afternoon, however no damages have been reported so far.

According to the National Center of Meteorology (NCM), the epicentre was recorded in East Masafi at 4.01pm (UAE time) on Wednesday and was recorded in nine NCM seismic stations, including in Banah, Shaam, Al Faqah and Al Ain.

The Sharjah Center for Astronomy and Space Sciences also reported light tremors in Ras Al Khaimah.

“Minor tremor was slightly felt by the residents without any effect,” NCM said.

According to the National Seismic Network (NSN), a 7.2 magnitude earthquake on the Richter scale was recorded in the South Atlantic Ocean at 6.26am on Tuesday.

مسلمان خوش کس وجہ سے – کانگریس کی جیت یا بی جے پی کی ہار سے؟

صفی الرحمن ابن مسلم فیضی بندوی

ہاں اس ایلکشن سے ایک بات ضرور ثابت ہوگٸی کہ ہندوستان میں جمہوریت ابھی زندہ ہے

مسلمانوں یا کہہ لیں سیکولر ھندوستانیوں کے خوشی کیوجہ کانگریس کی جیت یا بی جے پی کی ہار نہیں ، بلکہ خوشی اس ذھنیت کی ہار کیوجہ سے ہے ، جو ملک میں بدامنی ، فرقہ پرستی ، ھندتوادی ، ذھنیت کے سبب مسلمانوں ، دلتوں ، بلکہ ہر وہ شخص جو ان کے اس ذھنیت کا مخالف ہے ، اسے اینٹی نیشنل ، ھندو دشمن کہہ کر موب لنچنگ کے ذریعہ موت کے گھاٹ اتارنے والے ، اور فسادیوں ، پلاتکاریوں کو شہہ دینے والوں کی ہار کیوجہ سے ہے ،

مسلمانوں کیلٸے اگر ایمانداری سے کہا جاٸے تو بھاجپا اور کانگریس میں اتنا ہی فرق ہے جتنا کافر اور منافق میں ، یعنی کانگریس کی بعض خطرناکیاں مسلمانوں کیلٸے بھاجپا سے بھی سخت ثابت ہوٸیں ہیں ، لیکن بھاجپا نے دیش کے امن و امان کو ہی ھندتوا اور ظلم و بربریت کی بھٹی میں جھونک دیا ہے ، اس کا بدیل کانگریس کے علاوہ کوٸی نہیں رہا ، اس وجہ فرقہ پرستوں کی ہار خوشی کا باعث ہے ، ورنہ آزادی کے بعد سے اب تک مسلمانوں کی زبوں حالی کی ذمہ دار ، تعلیمی سیاسی معاشی حیثیت سے کانگریس ہی ہے ، اور آر ایس ایس جیسی کٹر پنتھی ھندو تنظیموں کی گود میں کھیل کر ہی کیاگیا ہے ، کانگریس ہی کی دین ہے کہ بھاجپا یہاں تک پہونچی ہے ، کہ دیش کا کونہ کونہ ظلم و بربریت ، موب لنچنگ ، بلاتکار اور اس کے بعد بے رحمی سے قتل ، تعلیم یافتہ نوجوانوں کا معاشی قتل ، طلبا ٕ کا تعلیمی قتل ، کسانوں کا زرعی قتل ، اور تجارت پیشہ لوگوں کا تجارتی قتل ، سرعام ہورہا ہے ۔ اور شرپسندوں کے حوصلے بڑھے جارہے ہیں ۔

ہاں اس ایلکشن سے ایک بات ضرور ثابت ہوگٸی کہ ہندوستان میں جمہوریت ابھی زندہ ہے ، نفرت پھیلانے والوں سے مضبوط ابھی امن پسند ہیں ، اور جب تک ملک میں سبودھ سنگھ جیسے انصاف پسند انسپکٹر موجود رہیں گے ملک کا امن باقی رہے گا ، جس طرح انہوں نے جان کی قربانی دے کر ایک بڑے خون خرابے سے ملک کو بچا لیا ، یہ بہت بڑی بات تھی ، ورنہ سیاسی پالیسی کے تحت تبلیغی اجتماع کے موقع سے پوری پلاننگ کے ساتھ فساد کی غرض سے بلند شہر میں گاٶ کشی کا ڈرامہ رچا گیا تھا ۔

ان حالات میں یہ الکشن لڑاگیا تھا اسی لٸے یہ فسادیوں اور امن پسندوں کا امتحان بھی تھا ، جس میں امن پسند ، ترقی پسند لوگوں کی کامیابی ہوٸی ۔

کانگریس کو چاہیٸے کہ ھوش کے ناخن لے ، پرانی غلطیوں سے سبق سیکھے ، انسانیت کو باقی رکھے ، دشمنوں کی چالوں کو سمجھیں ، کانگریسی دور میں جتنے بے گناہ مسلمان نوجوان جیلوں میں ڈالے گٸے سب اسی کم فہمی کا نتیجہ تھا ۔

اس لٸے اپنی پالیسیوں کو بدل کر سب کے حقوق کا پاس و لحاظ رکھتے ہو ٸے کام کریں ، تو اس ملک کو فرقہ پرستوں سے بچایا جا سکتا ہے اور ارتقا ٕ کی نٸی راہ دی جاسکتی ہے ۔

صفی الرحمن ابن مسلم فیضی بندوی الجبيل سعودی میں رہتے ہے، اور وہ مذہبی اور سماجی معاملات پر لکھتے ہے۔

خصوصی نوٹ: اس سیکشن میں لکھنے والوں کی طرف سے اظہار خیالات ان کے اپنے ہیں اور اس ویب سائٹ کی نقطہ نظر کی عکاسی نہیں کرتے ہیں.