Category Archives: Arts, Culture & Entertainment

THREAD THE NEEDLE : A master embroider who was a victim of Gujarat riots pays tribute to Ahmedabad’s monuments

Ahmedabad, GUJARAT :

Asif Shaikh’s ornate art pieces are going on display at a design centre in New York.

Asif Shaikh
Asif Shaikh

In his teens, Asif Shaikh had tried hard to draw the famous tree of life latticework screen in the Sidi Sayyed Mosque of Ahmedabad. He was stippling a lot those days, making images out of minute pencil dots in the manner of old halftone newspaper prints. Though many admired the drawing, Shaikh was unhappy. It was not as perfect as the original.

Some three decades later, by now a master designer and embroider, Shaikh attempted the tree of life again. This time with the aari (awl) needle and gossamer-thin Thai silk yarn on the finest handwoven silk-linen from West Bengal. As the minute chain stitches appeared, white on white, he rediscovered his fascination with the ancient stone carving. His long artistic experience allowed him to render it perfectly in his own medium.

The Sidi Saiyyed mosque built in 1572, the final years of the Gujarat Sultanate, has 10 latticework panels that represent the best geometric designs. “There is an easy symmetry in the looping branches of the tree, the leaves and flowers,” said Shaikh. “And in the centre, almost imperceptible, is the strong straight Cyprus. I find it spiritually comforting.”

Shaikh’s show, Sacred Geometry, opens on August 2 at a New York design centre owned by the furniture designer Tucker Robbins, and will be on view for nearly two weeks. This, like his earlier exhibitions, will have exquisitely embroidered art pieces – high-end wall decor – which clients have already started to book. The essentially white-on-white collection is an ode to Ahmedabad: all the designs having been inspired by the stone and wood jaalis in historical monuments around the city.

Image courtesy: Asif Shaikh.
Image courtesy: Asif Shaikh.

With the Historic City of Ahmedabad, founded by Sultan Ahmad Shah in the 15th century, receiving World Heritage Status in July 2017, Shaikh’s celebration has new relevance. As a child he lived in the city outskirts, but the fort, mosques, tombs, havelis and later-era Hindu and Jain temples captivated him. Apart from the Sidi Saiyyed, he was inspired by the Rani Sipri Mosque, Sarkhej Roza and the Jama Masjid of Ahmedabad.

He however doesn’t make exact copies. Rather, he approaches them as a modern painter would, with his own perceptions and interpretations. “I don’t like spelling it out to the viewer,” said Shaikh. “I want them to appreciate or reject the designs freely. They should suggest their own titles to the pieces.”

Image courtesy: Asif Shaikh.
Image courtesy: Asif Shaikh.

In one work Shaikh has used parallel flowing lines. To some they may seem like rivulets but he was thinking of roots. The roots of a tree are never seen, he explains, yet they are the strongest part of the tree, holding it upright and sustaining it through all kinds of weather. “I was also thinking of my own roots, the ancient artistic traditions which are beckoning to me now. But I can never fully comprehend all that is latent in my cultural origins, so I have left some threads hanging free beyond the border.” There are two other patterns – with a circle in the centre and straight lines – where he has tried to create an optical illusion with close parallel and concentric lines, once again trying to grasp that which is mostly invisible. “The Sun’s rays are visible only occasionally when there are clouds,” he says. “But to viewers these two frames might suggest other things.”

Shaikh is completely self-taught. He used to sit for days watching old embroiders at work and practiced at home. He signed up for formal training as interior decorator but gained fame for his embroidering skills, long before he graduated. Today he is happy spreading the word on Indian craft traditions and developing new techniques for the artisans who work with him at his studio in Ahmedabad. For his use, he redesigned the Mughal-era frame for needlework called the Karchoibe and came up with new stitches.

Image courtesy: Asif Shaikh.
Image courtesy: Asif Shaikh.

For Sacred Geometry it was difficult to render the design on fabric, especially with thread that was one-fourth the width of normal embroidery thread. Shaikh is upset that he could not source silk embroidery thread from India and had to buy it from Thailand instead. “India was producing the twisted silk yarns needed for embroidery even a few years ago in Bangalore,” he said. “But now all you get is rayon. I cannot understand why silk yarn is not produced locally.”

His studio team of embroiders had never done anything like this before and they had to be guided step by step. The ancient artisans, who worked on wood, marble and sandstone, often used both the surface and the perforations for effect. To achieve that on cloth was difficult. Scholars claim that textile patterns were chosen by the early followers of Islam to make their monument as distinct as possible. From the close association of artists, mathematicians and philosophers emerged a unique form of decorative art that abjured human and animal forms for pure geometry. The patterns often repeated over and over again, mirrored in reverse colours and at times seeming to extend infinitely beyond borders seem to carry a philosophic message.

But Shaikh does not lay too much stress on the religious aspect because of the “rather sad trend in India today of labelling everything by religion”. Shaikh was witness to the murderous 2002 Gujarat riots and has since seen ugly discriminations. He was one of the victims when his neighbourhood in Ahmedabad was attacked by a rampaging mob in February. He suffered head wounds and had to be hospitalised. For months he couldn’t work. “Ahmedabad is like the rest of India, he said. “Congested roads, filth…we have it all. But like the rest of India there is also unbelievable richness and beauty of art and craft. And people, who will appreciate and support you, no matter what. I am proud to hold up this tiny fragment of heritage to the world.”

source: http://www.scroll.in / Scroll.in / Home> Magazine > Thread The Needle / by Sebanti Sarkar / July 24th, 2018

Meet Nadeem Hussain, a Budgam boy who designed a scoreboard out of door hinges

Chana Mohallah Village (Budgam District ), JAMMU & KASHMIR :

NadeemMPOs24jul2018

Budgam:

Nadeem Hussain Mir, 21, of district Budgam has designed a cricket scoreboard out of door hinges which has become a major attraction for the players and spectators at Budgam’s lone stadium in Paller village.

The manually operated scoreboard has been erected on the fencing of the playground.
Nadeem, a resident of Budgam’s Chana Mohallah village presented his scoreboard during the knock-out matches of a local tournament here in which Kashmir’s famous cricketer Manzoor Pandav is also participating.
His invention has stirred interest among the spectators here who remain updated about the score during cricket matches.
“In 2017, I noticed that cricket fans here were unable to keep a track of score and then an idea of designing a manually operating scoreboard struck my mind.”
Nadeem told ‘Kashmir Images’ that he wanted to make a scoreboard that would be different from a traditional number plate board. “Once I saw my father, who is a carpenter, fixing joints of a door with the hinges; then and there I began work on designing a score board out of door hinges.”
Nadeem, who is a student of final year, says that he had shared the idea with his friends, but received a negative response from them. “My friends told me that it was not feasible to make a scoreboard out of door hinges.”
“In 2018, I shared the idea again with my friends and I was told to give my idea a practical shape and was also given five thousand rupees by the organisers of the tournament,” he says.
He says that first of all he made a graph which took him many days to complete it. “I fixed 63 hinges on a blackboard. In order to make the scoreboard visible I painted the inside of each hinge with black color and colored those hinges yellow outside.”
When asked what people think of his invention, he says, “Everyone is lauding my effort.”
Nadeem says that a local player and one of the organisers of the tournament, Rameez Hassan, helped him to give his idea a practical shape. “Without the support of Rameez, it was impossible to even think of making a scoreboard.”
Nadeem is a famous chess player of his locality. He claims that no opponent has ever defeated him in a chess game.
source: http://www.thekashmirimages.com / Kashmir Images / Home> Budgam / by Abid Hussain / July 22nd, 2018

Grandeur of Saif Gulshan lingers on 106 years later

Hyderabad, TELANGANA :

Maintained in pristine condition, it is used as Army mess.

Saif Gulshan was the residence of Sultan Saleh bin Ghalib al Quaiti, Nawab Saif Nawaz Jung, a prominent noble in the Nizam’s court.
Saif Gulshan was the residence of Sultan Saleh bin Ghalib al Quaiti, Nawab Saif Nawaz Jung, a prominent noble in the Nizam’s court.

Hyderabad:

The erstwhile Hyderabad state had the largest army in the country, and what is now the Sarojini Devi Eye Hospital was the first hospital for the Army here.

The First Lancers of the Hyderabad Army at Asafnagar is still being maintained in its original condition. All of this was originally part of the Golconda Fort and, not surprisingly, there are two Qutb Shahi-era tombs within this area. The Nizam had great respect for the army.

Saif Gulshan was the residence of Sultan Saleh bin Ghalib al Quaiti, Nawab Saif Nawaz Jung, a prominent noble in the Nizam’s court. Constructed in 1912 it has a mixture of European and Qutb Shahi styles. This residence is being maintained in pristine condition and is used as an Army mess.

SaifGulshan02MPOs21jul2018

The building has an elevated basement, which seemed to be in style those days. It has been built with great care, leaving a lot of open space, both in the front and at the sides. A well on one side of the house must have been the water source and it must have been an open and beautiful structure. There are many jharokas and the first floor has rooms. The terrace is covered by a low-tiled roof, which is supported on wooden posts.

The beautiful facade of the building has been well-maintained by the Army. A lot of wood, stained glass and stucco work has been used in the building, which has verandas on three sides, each one ending in a room. The windows look out to this narrow veranda, which has exquisite tiled flooring. The veranda has Gothic arches and since the entire building is on an elevation, it looks imposing. European influences and Indian elements blend wonderfully well in the building.

There is another impressive building about a 100 yards away. This too was connected to the army and officials must have lived here. Or it could have been a zanana. Smaller in size, that building is surrounded by wooden eaved projections with windows on all sides. There are four rooms with one in each corner and in those days the centre used to be a courtyard, open to the sky. It is now covered and is like a big hall. In 2012, the building bagged an Intach award. According to the citation, Awadh bin Abdullah, the founder of the al Quaiti clan, was the first to travel to India in the last quarter of the 18th century. During his brief stay in the country, Awadh is said to have served the Nizam during the Second Mysore War. His son Omar migrated to India in the early 19th century and after a brief stint with the Raja of Nagpur, ended up in Hyderabad as head of the Arab mercenaries who formed a bulk of the Nizam’s irregular troops.

The main structure of the building is flanked on either side by projecting blocks. “The structure is flanked on either side by projecting blocks crowned with tiled pyramids lending majesty to the structure. The central portion is surmounted by a highly decorated pediment which bears the monogram of Saif Nawab Jung in stucco,” says the Intach citation.

The interiors show that the building was well-planned, with huge arches and windows and doorways with stucco to highlight the structure.

A lot of wood has been used and there is a wooden staircase leading to the first floor. Elegance and form are the highlights of this building.

This building stands along with the other smaller building in the midst of a forest and a fountain, while a road nearby brings in the sound of traffic.

Well-kept and still maintained in its original form of limestone and brick, with a little bit of granite, the Army must be lauded for the care it has invested in maintaining this landmark building.

source: http://www.deccanchronicle.com / Deccan Chronicle / Home> Nation> Current Affairs / by Lalitha Iyer, Deccan Chronicle / July 15th, 2018

Rifa-e-aam Club – History Shrouded in Negligence

UTTAR PRADESH :

HIGHLIGHTS

Rifa-e-aam was where literary events were held to provide Rifa (happiness) to people

During struggle for independence, this club became the centre of anti-British activity

Rifa-e-Aam, Lucknow
Rifa-e-Aam, Lucknow

Lucknow:

The city of adab (etiquette) and tehzeeb (manners) was also an indispensable part of India’s freedom struggle. The Nawabs of Awadh or the rulers who governed the state of Awadh  during 18th and 19th centuries conspicuously nurtured syncretism, which became an integral  part of the culture in the Ganga-Jamuna belt.

Nawabs were the great connoisseurs of art, music, and architecture. Numerous monuments were built  during their time. One among those was Rifa-e-Aam, where literary events were held to provide  Rifa (happiness) to people. When the signboards outside several clubs and gymkhanas signalled ‘dogs and Indians’ to stay out, Rifa-e-Aam welcomed dissenting voices, credit for which  goes to the liberal Raja of Mahmudabad. The historic Lucknow Pact of 1916, between the Congress and Muslim League was signed here.

RifaeAaam02MPOs19jul2018

During India’s struggle for independence, this club became the centre of anti-British intellectual  activity.  In 1936, Anjuman Tarraqi Pasand Mussanafin-e-Hind or Progressive Writers’ Movement was born in this building, under the leadership of Syed Sajjad Zahir and Ahmed Ali. Soon a number of  eminent progressive litterateurs like Saadat Hasan Manto, Ismat Chughtai, Faiz Ahmad Faiz, Mulk Raj Anand, to name a few, joined the movement. To cap it, presidential address was delivered by Munshi Premchand.

During my recent visit to Lucknow, I asked the person who ferried me around the city, to take me to this forgotten monument, tucked away in the crowded lanes of Qaiserbagh. When Google map  ditched us due to poor network and left us amidst the labyrinth of congested by lanes, the human version of Google maps – paanwala (tobacco seller) helped us locate it. There stood the dilapidated structure which once upon a time heard the speeches of Mahatma Gandhi, Pandit Nehru, and many other visionaries.

The ground in the front of the monument is now a bus station. Lakshmi Narayan parked the car and since it had rained that morning, he asked me to get off from the other side to avoid a stagnated pool of water and filth. At present, one part of the decrepit structure is inhabited by a family of nonagenarian – C P Pandey, who was appointed as the caretaker of the club. The other portion is managed by the association and the only thing common between them is the illegal construction and encroachment, around which stands the cracking monument of Rifa, donning a lugubrious look.

I spent some time envisioning the past associated with it and wondering who is responsible for such sorry state of affairs today. Is it the people, ignorant of the past or the authority which has turned a blind eye to misdemeanour? Perhaps lack of pride in our glorious heritage.

I finally left with a heavy heart remembering Faiz and hoping one day Rifa would be restored.

source: http://www.travel.manoramaonline.com / OnManorama / Home> Travel> Reader’s Discovery / by Pragya Srivastava / July 17th, 2018

Maverick Melody Maker: Digital musician Salim Nair

Kochi, KERALA :

One of Kochi’s leading digital musicians, Salim Nair is busy getting his first digital record ready.

Digital musician Salim Nair (Photo |Albin Mathew/EPS)
Digital musician Salim Nair (Photo |Albin Mathew/EPS)

At his soundproof studio in Kochi, digital musician Salim Nair stands in front of his LinnStrument as well his Ableton Push 2 midi controller. He is dressed casually in a white cotton shirt and grey trousers. The bespectacled musician then gently starts with a tap of one of the keys on the midi controller. The sound of a piano can be heard. This performance is seen live on Facebook.

And the name of the instrumental song is called ‘When love rains’. Soon, he uses the sax, sitar and the flute. After a while, the sound becomes mesmerising; there is a rise and fall in the tone. Salim gets so involved in the playing that he keeps swaying from side to side. In his other songs, the instruments he uses include the sitar, sarangi, sarod, violin, santoor, saxophone, brass, and the keyboard. “I also use synthesised sounds,” he says. On YouTube and Facebook, he has put up over 60 song/videos.

“I call it a digital art music show,” says Salim. “[The late American writer] Susan Sontag has said art music requires the listener to put in a little bit of effort into listening. My songs have a slow and nuanced development. You can get bored. So my target audience is anybody who can appreciate music as more than just being a background sound.”

Now Salim is busy working on bringing out his first digital art album, ‘Decohered’, a collection of tone poems, a few of which are based loosely on the works of the late Urdu writer Faiz Ahmed Faiz. Asked the charms of Faiz, Salim says, “His poems are very lyrical. It is very amenable to a song structure. I look for poems that can give me an emotional flow.”A trained Carnatic musician since his childhood, Salim felt disappointed by the limitation of the traditional sound. “I used to play the flute and it is monophonic,” says Salim. “It cannot produce more than one sound.”

The other problem was the structure of Indian classical music. “Until 25 years ago, there were very specific caste-based restrictions about what you can sing and perform,” says Salim. “Most temple sanctums are closed to everybody except the Brahmins. The music was specifically created to support this hierarchical structure.”

That is the structure that Salim wants to break. “I am using Carnatic idioms and making my own rules,” he says. “Think of this: you spend 12 hours a day perfecting a song sung by composer Thyagaraja (1767-1847). What is the point of that? Express what you feel not what some singer felt 170 years ago.”It was only when Salim, an electrical engineer by profession went to Philadephia, USA, in 1999 that he had a change of mind. While there, he realised that he could use the computer as a primary music instrument. “It has more capabilities than my single flute,” says Salim, who relocated to Kochi in 2014 and is working as a software programmer.

Asked the difference between digital and analog music, Salim says, “In analog music, we are physically using an instrument to create music. In digital, I am just changing data and this creates a different kind of sound. The production method is the biggest difference between analog and digital music.”As to the charge that there is less soul in digital music, Salim says, “Is the violin natural? There is so much engineering that goes behind the making of a violin. On the other hand, digital music is more malleable. I am transferring what I am thinking directly. I don’t have the constraints of a physical object.”

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Magazine / July 07th, 2018

Touching a musical high

Kollam, KERALA / Chennai, TAMIL NADU :

Yazin Nizar | Photo Credit: special arrangement
Yazin Nizar | Photo Credit: special arrangement

Yazin Nizar is elated to have made a place for himself as a playback singer

It was in 2002 that Yazin Nizar made his debut as a playback singer in the movie Punarjani, around the same time that he bagged the top prize of Gandharvasangeetham, a music show on Kairali TV. But that didn’t help him get more films. In fact, he had to wait for nearly 10 years to get his big break. Nevertheless, 2014 has given him reasons to be chirpy. “I sang some hit numbers in Malayalam and Tamil. Even though my career didn’t start off with a bang, I have made steady progress as a singer,” says Yazin.

These days, his song, ‘Kolusu Thenni Thenni’ from Cousins composed by M. Jayachandran [the “one crore song” that he sang with Tipu and Shreya Ghosal] is rocking the charts. Also, he is excited to have rendered the backing vocals for A. R. Rahman in Rajinikanth’s Lingaa, which is now in theatres, and the much-anticipated Vikram-starrer I. Meanwhile, his band comprising a group of friends has performed on many stages in India and abroad.

Now settled in Chennai, where he also has a flourishing career in the Tamil film industry, he was recently in the city to shoot for Music Mojo on Kappa TV and spend some time with his family in Pallimukku in Kollam district.

The 24-year-old says that he has had his share of struggles and disappointments. Post Gandharvasangeetham, though he was a member of the prize-winning team of the music show Sangeetha Mahayudham on Surya TV and title winner of a reality show on Jeevan TV, the journey has been no cake walk. “Although I recorded some songs with Sharreth sir and Shaan Rahman early in my career, they didn’t get noticed because the films didn’t do well. However, I got lucky by singing for Vidyasagar (‘Hayyo…’) in Spanish Masala. The songs in Thattathin Marayathu (‘Pranante naalangal’) and Ozhimuri (‘Vaakkinullile…’) came as a big bonus,” he says.

Later, he got a break in Tamil, thanks to his decision to move to Chennai to study for a management degree and pursue a career in music as well. His debut song, ‘Avatha Payya…’ from Paradesi, composed by G.V. Prakash Kumar, was a hit and he started getting more songs in Tamil. In the meantime, he got to sing in Telugu and Kannada as well.

“If there is a flood of singers in Malayalam, there are even more of them in Tamil. There must be some 25,000 registered singers in Chennai. What really makes me happy is that, be it in Malayalam or Tamil, I have worked with some of the best composers. The important fact is that my voice has never been stereotyped. I have sung songs of different genres and styles,” he says.

He credits his father, Nizar A., for his inclination to music. “More than my studies, my father took an interest in my singing career. He is a great music lover and a huge Mohammed Rafi fan. In fact, whenever we had power cuts, my father and I listen to Rafi songs on our battery-run tape recorder and sing along,” says Yazin, who has learnt Carnatic music.

With his good looks complementing his rich voice, he should be getting acting offers as well, right? “Oh…yes. I sang as well as acted in the Hindi song, ‘Zindagi…’ in Angry Babies in Love. But right now my focus is on singing. I want to sustain the good run and don’t want my career to fizzle out,” he signs off.

Short notes

Yazin has worked with composers Sharreth (Nalla Pattukare), Ouseppachan (Musafir), Deepak Dev (101 Weddings), Vidyasagar (Spanish Masala, Bhaiyya Bhaiyya), Bijibal ( Ozhimuri, Vikramadithyan, Angry Babies in Love), Shaan Rahman (Thattathin Marayathu, Praise the Lord), M. Jayachandran (Cousins), G. V. Prakash Kumar (Paradesi), Yuvan Sankar Raja (Poojai), Ghibran (Amarakavyam, Thirumanam Enum Nikah) and others.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Metroplus / by Athira M / Thiruvananthapuram – December 17th, 2014

Strokes of compassion

Lucknow, UTTAR PRADESH / Melbourne, AUSTRALIA :

Lucknow-born Bushra Hasan, who has made her mark in Australia through her Indian-influenced art, now wants to use it as a therapy.

Bushra Hasan
Bushra Hasan

If art enables us to find and lose ourselves at the same time, Lucknow-born graphic artist Bushra Hasan has used art to create an identity for herself Down Under, her new homeland. Hasan, who moved to Australia in 2013, has added beautiful hues to her varied creative portfolio.

In five years, her different strokes have left an indelible mark on the artistic landscape in Australia, and made Hasan a name to reckon with for her brushwork. Be it the painting of a life-size puppet elephant for Moomba Parade, or the Indian truck style art adorning the trams of Kolkata and Melbourne, or the recent community art workshop that she held for immigrants, the shades of her creative sensibilities have charmed one and all.

Armed with a mixed bag of experience in designing newspaper pages and magazine covers in India, Hasan moved to Australia’s cultural capital Melbourne after “falling in love with its vibrant, stylish and arty feel”. The City of Secrets embraced the artist and her India-influenced art with open arms, and she went on to join the Multicultural Arts Victoria (MAV) as Community Liaison Officer in 2018.

“I started looking for jobs after moving to Melbourne. In between, I also launched my art brand Indybindi and started putting its products in various makers’ market. People noticed my art and MAV expressed its keenness to hire me to conduct workshops. In January 2015, Moomba Parade organisers approached me to paint a life-size puppet elephant in Indian art style, and they have used it for all parades since then,” she says.

MAV introduced her to Roberto D’Andrea, a former tram conductor, and an activist who had been working on the unusual friendship between Melbourne Tramways and Kolkata Tramways for 21 years. “Kolkata Tramways had sent an SOS to all the tram-running cities requesting them to put pressure on the West Bengal government to rethink its decision to abolish trams in Kolkata. Only Roberto responded and went there with his team, collaborated with Indian activists and organised shows, etc., that worked and the state government postponed its decision,” she says, fondly recalling her artistic collaboration with Roberto. She used kitschy Indian truck art style to tell the story of 21 years that found its way to the trams of Kolkata to celebrate the iconic tram friendship between the two cities.

“Indian tribal art hugely inspires me, and I am proud to flaunt my Indian roots in my artwork,” she says. Hasan redesigned her artwork and turned it more colourful, and reflective of India’s diverse artistic culture and submitted her entry for the 5th edition of the annual Melbourne Art Trams project. She was one among the eight artists whose design made the cut, and Tramjatra, her artistic tribute, chugged along, happily for seven months from October 2017 to April 2018 on the trams in Melbourne.

She recently led a nine-day long art exhibition for people to share their ‘immigrant journey’ through art at the Emerge In The North festival. “The workshop was an effective step towards building relationships within the community,” she says.

Having used art to create an identity, she wants to use it to heal others. Talking about her next project, she says, “I want to do a lot more to keep myself creatively engaged. I am working on a module that will focus on helping children who are victims of sexual abuse to overcome their trauma through art therapy, heal themselves, and emerge stronger.”

Meet Arsh Ali, a young archaeologist

Allahabad, UTTAR PRADESH :

Early start: Arsh Ali shows off his mummified shark. | Photo Credit: Rajeev Bhatt
Early start: Arsh Ali shows off his mummified shark. | Photo Credit: Rajeev Bhatt

At 17, Arsh Ali is an archaeology prodigy, already participating in ASI digs and seminars

Three months ago, Arsh Ali lost a coveted member of his aquarium: his little pet shark. But instead of disposing of its body, Arsh buried it in a tray filled with natron. A complex salt known for its ability to dry things up, natron is naturally available in Egypt, but Arsh had to create it by mixing multiple chemical elements.

He has learnt the method from the ancient Egyptians, about whom he knows much. “There is no foul smell or any organisms growing in it, even after so many days,” says Arsh, smiling proudly and pointing to the tray with the dead shark in the lawn of his house in Allahabad. His goal is to mummify his pet shark just like the ancient Egyptians did.

Pharaoh bread

Arsh’s knowledge of Egyptian history, archaeology and mummification runs deep: he has researched coffins, funerary hieroglyphic inscriptions and even knows how to make bread like the ancient Egyptian did. “Every other day he cooks something for me,” laughs Fatima Ali, Arsh’s mother.

At 17, Arsh is already an archaeologist, although he doesn’t have a formal degree yet. Unlike most kids his age, Arsh spends much of his time researching ancient history, visiting digs, attending seminars, and delivering lectures on history and archaeology.

Acknowledging his talent, the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) has been inviting Arsh since 2015 to their programmes, seminars, excavations and explorations, a privilege often restricted to post-graduate students of archaeology. Arsh has so far taken part in seven excavations and explorations. His first tryst was with the excavations at Binjor in Rajasthan in 2015-16 under the ASI, followed by those in Rakhigarhi, the largest known Harappan site in Harayana, conducted under the supervision of Deccan College in Pune.

“The Harappans were excellent craftsmen. Even 5,000 years ago, they produced a lot of things,” says Arsh as he describes each dig in detail. The cupboard of his room is crammed with specimens he has brought back from sites for further study: wheat grains, terracotta bangles, pot shards, shells, neolithic tools, starfish, and an octopus.

Arsh’s adventure with art and archaeology started early. His parents, Fatima and Faisal, were convinced from the start that their son was special — when he was six, for example, he sat at a restaurant in Kathmandu and sketched the Pashupati temple on a paper napkin in one shot, down to every dome and flag.

When he was in Class VIII, during a visit to Bara Imambara in Lucknow, the family met the site conservator of ASI who was impressed with Arsh’s knowledge. One thing led to another and soon Arsh was participating in ASI fieldwork.

Arsh knows 15 languages, including Hebrew, Arabic, Brahmi, Greek, Ugaritic, Nabatean and Phoenician, besides Kharosthi and Hieroglyphics. He credits his precocious knowledge to curiosity and reading. “I did nothing but read books, and purchased nothing but books every time I got an opportunity,” he says.

Smitten with Anubis

Ancient Egypt had him hooked early. “When I was five, I had an encyclopedia on Ancient Egypt. I didn’t knew how to read and write then, but that’s when I came across an image of Anubis, half-human, half-jackal.” He was smitten with the Egyptian god of mummification.

Arsh’s archaeological interest has culminated in a quest: he wants to establish the evidence of the existence of Buddhism in Egypt by tracing the route of the Buddhist emissaries of the Mauryan emperor Ashoka in Ptolemaic Egypt in particular, and the Hellenistic world in general.

He delivered a lecture on the subject at the National Museum in Delhi last month, and visited Egypt a few months ago.

Arsh was allowed access to the antiquities at the national museums in Cairo and Alexandria, where he came across plenty of evidence to substantiate his theory: a coin with details of King Ashoka, literary references, terracotta items, objects of Indian art, and Brahmi inscriptions on pots. When asked about future plans, Arsh says, “I want to gift something to the world, something that might be useful.”

omar.rashid@thehindu.co.in

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Society> Profile / by Oman Rashid / July 14th, 2018

Ali Khan Mahmudabad on the making of North Indian Muslim identity via poetry, politics, religion

Mahmudabad (Sitapur District), UTTAR PRADESH :

Dr Ali Khan Mahmudabad has come to be one of the world’s foremost voices on Muslim issues. His writing spans across publications and languages, from Huffington Post to The Indian Express, from Urdu to French. Outside of being a journalist, he teaches history and political science at Ashoka University and also advises think tanks on subjects such as politics, religion and security in South and West Asia.

In his new book The Making of North Indian Muslim Identity: Poetry, Politics, and Religion 1850–1950, he talks about the role of poetry in expressing identity, particularly what it meant to be both Muslim and Indian in a time of sociopolitical exigency. The book charts the rich history of the mushā‘irah (poetic symposium) and investigates changing notions of nationality and patriotism in that space. It offers new perspectives on how Muslim intellectuals, poets, political leaders, and journalists conceived of and expressed their relationship to India and to the trans-national Muslim community.

Mahmudabad spoke to Firstpost about the impact of literature and poetry on shaping political identity and the role of Muslim identity in Indian politics.

Why have you chosen to look at Muslim-Indian identity from the viewpoint of the mushā‘irah?

From its inception, Islam fostered a culture of ‘orality’. Poetry, of course, was and has been one of the most important ways in which Muslims have grappled with questions to do with religion, culture, politics, history not to forget love! This tradition of reciting poetry publicly and the prominence poets were accorded by society in general and elites in particular continued before and during the life of the Prophet and thus gradually poetry became interwoven and inextricably linked with many Islamic traditions beyond just the Arabic speaking world. The tradition of public poetry recitals was a prominent part of various other Muslim societies, notably Persian, though what sets the mushā‘irah apart is that it is, as is argued in the books, part of a distinctly Indo-Islamic heritage. In India, of course, there was already a long tradition of such gatherings such as the gosthi in Malyalam or the Kavigon in Bangla.

Ali Khan Mahmudabad's new book is titled The Making of North Indian Muslim Identity: Poetry, Politics, and Religion 1850–1950

Ali Khan Mahmudabad’s new book is titled The Making of North Indian Muslim Identity: Poetry, Politics, and Religion 1850–1950

In India, political polarisation that began to crystallise in the 19th century largely revolved around religion and language. The so-called Urdu-Hindi language divide is perceived to have been one such intractable binary and there has been much academic work questioning this. The differences that did exist tended to focus on the script but with the mushā’irah, an oral space, the problem was script was of course absent. This combined with the fact that the main theme of ghazals was to do with absent beloveds meant that the mushā’irah was a cosmopolitan space that acted as a bridge between members of various communities. The importance of the mushā’irah was also underscored by the fact that the British also chose to patronise them and use them to try and catalyse new directions in Urdu poetry that dealt with the material and natural world. Despite this, of course, the power of the ghazal — the power of love  continued and to this day remains a unique feature of the mushā’irahs history. In the quest for locating and trying to understand what the ‘public sphere’ was composed of in the period before the creation of the Indian nation-state, the mushā’irah offers a window into how poets from a variety of backgrounds were grappling with rapidly changing social, political, cultural, economic, religious and even technological changes. Although not within the purview of this book, but part of my other research focuses on other spaces that have not been explored enough because our conception of what constitutes the public sphere derives mostly from European definitions. Thus spaces in and around shrines and temples, public religious processions and other institutions, both physical and more liminal, allow us to track the manner in which people were reacting to the tumultuous changes at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century.

How do you think the Indian Muslim identity has evolved since 1950?

Rather than speaking of evolution, it is better to speak of changes. Of course in a country as large as India it is impossible to generalise. There are dozens of different schools of thought and sects beyond the lazy binary that people are prone to use of Shia and Sunni. However, it is safe to say that following the Constituent Assembly debates and in the decades following partition, questions to do with Muslims in the political sphere largely revolved around cultural, religious and linguistic rights and social (eg. caste), political and economic questions do not get as much attention.

Apart from this, the manner in which land reform was carried out, particularly in a place like Uttar Pradesh, meant that many institutions, like religious trusts, madrassas and charities amongst others looked elsewhere for patronage, often looking to the greater Middle East. More recently with market liberalisation, ease of travel and the rise of social media new questions have begun to arise about what it means to be authentically Muslim as Indians see how people in other parts of the Muslim world practice their religion. Indeed many of the identity problems that emerge in many parts of the world are precisely because the Mirpuri, Bengali or Bihari Muslim is forced to confront questions about his or her religious and cultural practice when they meet Arabs, North Africans, Turks, Iranians and others at the local mosque who do things a different way. A substantial number of Muslims from various parts of India have also now spent considerable time working in various parts of the Arabian Peninsula and this too has brought about interesting socio-cultural and religious changes although data is still hard to come by.

All these aspects have also had an impact on material culture. I think this has also sadly led to a number of misconceptions. For instance, a prominent columnist complained that she was seeing many more hijabs than she used. Of course, she saw this a sign of increasing religiosity but the truth is that a lot of these women who choose to wear the hijab are doing so and coming out to work rather than staying at home as might have been more common even a few decades ago. The hijab in a sense has been something that has facilitated this transition. This is just a small example but the point is that young Muslims are adapting to the times while also proudly being rooted in their religious identity.

Politically speaking, it was already clear pre-1947 that there is no such thing as a Muslim vote bank although this myth is still propagated by parties seeking to polarise or counter-polarise electorates and one thing that remains the same from, say, the 1937 election to now is that while voting Muslims take into account a huge range of local and regional factors and therefore do not vote solely on the basis of religious identity.

Do you think that literature and poetry still have the same effect in shaping sociopolitical identity?

Literature and poetry continue to have a very important role to play. Mushā’irahs are as important as ever and are held everywhere, from small towns in UP to Delhi and even Dallas and Dubai. Poets tend to be revered and although most literary critics and scholars would say that the quality and level of poetry has fallen drastically, the fact remains that poetry, in whatever form, still remains an important form of entertainment and even political resistance. The rise of literature festivals — like Rekhta  the popularity of Rana Safvi’s #shair and Javed Akhtar’s ‘Rediscover Poetry’ as a paid service for Tata Sky’s Television network are just some examples of how Urdu in particular remains curiously popular despite the number of official Urdu speakers in North India falling according to latest census figures.

Away from the internet and large metropolises, poets like Kumar Vishwas and Imran Pratapgarhi recite to audiences of thousands even in far removed and remote areas they are treated like rock stars. Some critics complain that the quality of this poetry leaves much to be desired but then again I think these poets are responding to changes taking place in society and are able to detect the pulse of the people which often means that it might not be high literature or refined poetry but nonetheless it reflects the tastes and mindsets of the audience. Literature in various Indian languages continues to be tremendously important and has a high readership across the country despite the fact that English is muscling out these languages because it has more utility in ‘aspirational’ India.

You explore the idea of hubb-e watanī in your book. In what ways did patriotism evolve under the purview of your book?

Well, it took a book to answer this question so you will have to read it! What I try and trace is how people’s sense of belonging and rootedness changed over a period of more than 100 years. So I start with the shahr ashob genre, literally the affliction or lament of the city, in Urdu as opposed to its Persian roots. Many poets following Nadir Shah and Ahmad Shah Abdali’s attacks on Delhi fled and articulated a sense of grief and longing for the loss of their homes. Of course, this was an elite response and was limited in its scope but what is interesting is that people used poetry to confront this trauma, as poets have for millennia. This displacement and loss continued into the 19th century and the trauma of 1857 was again grappled with through poetry.

Following the rise of the colonial government and its desire to ‘order’ society through census’, categorisation, knowledge creation etc and the influx of new ideas of what constituted the natural world, of nationhood and citizenship, people had to yet again grapple with an entirely new vocabulary. I would go so far as to say a new moral vocabulary was created to cope with these changes and this even affected something like poetry because the British tried to ‘reason’ that poets should give up their more ‘hedonistic’ symbols and concentrate on writing natural poetry. The nazm as a form of poetry really fully came about in this period of the last quarter of the 19th century. The importance of the local and regional remained but it is safe to say that there was something of a shift from imagining India in more metaphysical terms to articulating a more material conception. In a sense, I think this is where the problem began because it is much easier to differ about material identifiers than metaphysical ideas. People from various communities obviously had different ideas of the material markers that defined India. In addition to this, an understanding of ‘their’ history, which at the time was particularly influenced by what the British and others came to define as history, became more exclusionist and the categories through which people defined themselves more rigid.

At the same time the telegraph, ease of travel and print technology opened up new vistas for people and so news from Ottoman Turkey or Libya could travel to India relatively quickly. Imperialism and colonialism’s global net of oppression also opened up people to the suffering of others and thus you begin to see the umma or community of Muslims emerge as a political category. Of course, the umma is not something new to this period and has its roots in the Quran but the manner in which it was seen towards the end of the 19th century is somewhat new. Interestingly, the spectre of ‘pan-Islamism’ or some kind of global Muslim threat that is often talked about today can already be seen in colonial archives where movements for freedom and independence were immediately dismissed as the result of the violent machinations of Muslims.

Today the question of Qaum vs Umma or nation vs community is something that is brought up again and again all over the world but I hope that my work shows is that these two categories need not be contradictory and indeed how poets, in particular, were able to negotiate both while also being anchored in the local or regional. I think the tragedy is that identity as it exists in the modern age privileges binary and fixity or even rigidity while we see that even in the period before the creation of the Indian nation-state, people had managed to come up with novel ways of resolving perceived tensions which demonstrated how fluid and malleable identities were.

A man reads the Quran on his cellphone. REUTERS
A man reads the Quran on his cellphone. REUTERS

How have your students influenced the way you look at your work?

Most of this work was carried out before I began teaching, but I have used some of it in my class called ‘Political Thought in the Age of Nationalism.’ My students come from highly diverse backgrounds from all over India and even from other parts of the world and so it is useful to see how deep differences go within a small group of 10-12 people let alone an entire country. Many of the students have pushed me to think more about Partition and its aftermath, particularly because many of them, indeed many of us, inherit history which we might not always have the tools to deconstruct and understand. On the first day of classes, I ask students to write an essay on what nationalism means to them and I allow them to write in any style they wish. These essays have been eye-opening for me in terms of trying to understand how from a very young age people are exposed to narratives and stories that that on the face of it are harmless but put in a larger perspective show just how divisive they can be. What was refreshing to see was how the students were already critically aware of this and indeed it was interesting for me to see and try and understand the mechanisms through which these young people have tried to resolve or reconfigure pressing questions to do with their identity. Sometimes, there has been a student who points out a new way of reading or understanding a poem based on a perspective that had eluded me. While this might be articulated through asking a question, the question in itself allows me to learn and this is truly one of the pleasures of teaching.

You have seen the Muslim identity expressed in many different ways across the globe. How similar or different is the Muslim identity in the Middle East from that of India?

Nowadays it has become very fashionable to talk of Indian Islam, particularly in counter-terrorism and countering violent extremism circles (CVE). I am afraid this kind of talk is rather reductionist and frankly is more telling of the political exigencies faced by political and security establishments rather than anything deeper. Of course, because of historic differences and more importantly because of language and culture, there are differences in the manner in which Islam became embedded in different geographic areas but this does not mean that its essence is different in India from say Iran or Egypt. In fact, I would caution you in using the binary of the Middle East and India because both these terms also gloss over the fact that there is huge diversity in them internally.

During Hajj, for instance, people are largely divided according to nationality but traditionally and even now there is an awareness, even a recognition I would say, amongst the Muslims who go on the pilgrimage of a shared spiritual bond with people from vastly different ethnic, racial and cultural backgrounds. Now the fact remains that the rituals, customs and manner in which Islam is practiced in India is inevitably affected by the fact that these came about over the course of centuries in a particular context. Thus, in terms of even something as abstract as beauty or aesthetics, there will be a difference between how an Algerian Muslim defines what is beautiful and how a North Indian Muslim might define it. Both will be circumscribed by parameters that are laid out according to Islamic principles, and these might be very broad, but within these, they might be radically different.

You see, religion cannot exist in isolation from culture, language and I would even say geography and technology — and so the differences that we see between various parts of the Muslim world are not simply religious differences but also differences that arise from these other factors. Of course with the rise of the internet and social media, people are grappling with the mind-boggling diversity amongst Muslims across the world, particularly as debates rage about what is and what is not authentically Islamic. In some instances, there is probably an insecurity that develops when people in South Asia or South East Asia see how Muslims practice their religion in the Arab world but these are such large changes that I don’t think much can be done about them. The rise of a more puritanical and literalist Islam across the world is as much the result of the modern world than anything else because it needs the least amount of cultural mediation and seeks to create a more uniform globalised Muslim identity. Of course, these are issues that will play out over the next decades and it is too early to begin to make any kind of substantial claims.

What role do you think religion plays in India’s politics today? How do you think the Muslim identity is represented in Indian politics today, if at all?

Religion is ubiquitous in Indian politics. Our Constitution, which I think is a remarkable document, is something that is anchored in values and principles that took more than 300 years to organically emerge from within Europe’s public sphere: universities, newspapers, town squares, cafes, salons, associations and clubs, etc. They were an organic part of the tumultuous history of the reformation and enlightenment. However, they came to our part of the world through imperial and colonial networks and thus did not emerge from a bottom-up social churn within our own societies. This is not to say that the principles themselves are not relevant but the larger argument is that they were not embedded in our society and our languages. A new political and indeed moral vocabulary was constructed but I would argue this did not necessarily translate well  or was not translated  into terms that made sense for people whose entire identity and worldview stemmed from and revolved around their religious identity. The point is that it was assumed that people would transcend their religious identity and thus the country would gradually imbibe the values of the constitution but as we can see this is at best a fraught project. Until and unless we can seriously locate the values of the constitution and endow them with a moral legitimacy in the eyes of those who are religious, we will continue to see a fractured political landscape. For example, for some Dalit movements across India the constitution is almost a scared document because it has morally empowered them but sadly this is not the case for many others. For many people, whether Hindu, Muslim, Sikh or Christian, their ideas of right and wrong stem from their religious beliefs and the attendant vocabulary and the constitution merely serves as a legal list of do’s and don’ts to put it crudely. How many people will honestly admit that they see the constitution as a ‘moral authority.’

As for how I think Muslim identity is represented in Indian politics today, well unfortunately I think that Muslim identity is only spoken of in terms of platitudes and generalisations. This is partly because the community’s leadership has been in the hands of people who have had a vested interest in promoting insecurity and emphasising issues that, although important, detract from the very real political, social and economic needs of the Muslims. As I said earlier, Muslims have almost never voted en bloc, yet talk of Muslim vote banks is prevalent. Together with this Muslims are nearly always labelled as backward and needing ‘upliftment’ but very few people are ready to admit the systemic and institutional factors that have brought Muslims to such a pass. Today to speak of discrimination is to allegedly play victim politics, to draw attention to the Sachar report is to beg for sops, to ask for rights and security is to seek appeasement. It seems that Muslims are now political untouchables. This is dangerous because exclusion nearly always breeds discontent and eventually can catalyse extreme reactions.

Muslims are caught in a vicious circle between the machinations of so-called Muslim leaders whose politics thrives on catalysing fear and insecurity and the systematic manner in which the politicians evoke the spectre of the ‘muslim threat’ or indeed of the Muslim vote bloc in elections. The political marginalisation of the Muslims is, of course, something that needs to also be seen in the light of the global pressure of the so-called war on terror. From my experience in the field, Muslims want the same things as everyone else, autonomy, dignity, security, justice and the access to the facilities and institutions of the state.

Who are the writers and poets who inspire your own style of writing?

I must admit that much of who inspires me depends on the context I find myself in, but on the whole, I can say that in Urdu Mir Taqi Mir, Majaz Lucknawi and Faiz are always sources of comfort. In Pharsi Fakhruddin Iraqi and Bedil and amongst the modern poets Fareedoon Moshiri. In English, my own supervisor, the late Professor CA Bayly’s style of writing. The poetry of Auden and Yeats. I really like Chimamanda Adichie’s writing style. I think the person whose ‘voice’ I really admire is that of my mother, who from a young age read her stories and work to us and inspired us to read often and widely.

Whom and what are you reading right now?

In Praise of Shadows by Junichiro Tanizaki, Religion as Critique: Islamic Critical Thinking from Mecca to the Marketplace by Irfan Ahmad, Debt by David Graebar, Idrak-e Zawal-e Ummat (Understanding the Fall of the [Muslim] Community) (Vol. 1) by Rashid Shaz, Mahzalah al-‘Aql al-Bashari (Mockery of the Human Mind) by Iraqi intellectual Ali al-Wardi and Vimal Kumar’s poetry collection Hatya se Atmhatya Tak.

source: http://www.firstpost.com / FirstPost. / Home> Latest News> Living News / by Payal Shah / July 15th, 2018

An Ustad is helping Kerala discover Hindustani ragas

Padapparamba (Malappuram District) , KERALA :

Ustad Farook Ali Chand inducting a student by tying a symbolic knot around her wrist, on Sunday.
Ustad Farook Ali Chand inducting a student by tying a symbolic knot around her wrist, on Sunday.

Farook Ali Chand teaches ‘pure music’ at Padapparamba

Listening to riyaaz (practice) of Hindustani ragas in faraway Kerala may sound like a cultural medley, but a music academy launched four years ago in a village ambience at Padapparamba, near here, is doing just that. And it follows the world famous Bhendi Bazaar Gharana.

Ustad Farook Ali Chand, renowned Hindustani classical music trainer of Bhendi Bazaar Gharana known for his meticulous and systematic teaching style has taken up the responsibility of imparting classical music lessons in the original form.

“I want Keralites to learn Indian classical music in all its purity. Although many people in Kerala have been showing a great love for Hindustani music, most do not understand it,” said Ustad Chand here on Sunday.

Religion of music

As part of the plan, the Ustad launched his fortnightly class at Shaikh Ba Kaja Mueenuddin Music Academy, an institution set up by a philanthropist to spread humanistic values through Hindustani music, at Padapparamba on Sunday.

Students from different parts of the State are attending his classes. “It doesn’t matter which religion you follow. There is only one religion in music,” the Ustad told his students comprising children and adults alike.

“Classical music is vast. Ghazal is only a part of it where you enjoy imaginative freedom,” he said humming a well-known song of Ghulam Ali, who was a disciple of the Gharana.

“You have great singers like Lata Mangeshkar and Manna De from this gharana,” the Ustad said. He said Keralites showed an inclination towards Hindustani owing to its imaginative freedom.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Kerala / by Abdul Latheef Naha / July 16th, 2018