Tag Archives: Disney Land High School

Assam’s first Muslim woman IAS Fardina felicitated

 

Umme Fardina Adil
Umme Fardina Adil

Guwahati :

On this past 3rd May, a history was created very silently in Assam by a young Muslim girl. Umme Fardina Adil did what female members of her Muslim community in the Northeast state could not do in the last 66 years of Independence. By cracking India’s most coveted Civil Services examination, Fardina became first Muslim woman to become IAS in Assam. Her historic achievement could not be hidden long.

Umme Fardina Adil, a resident of Hatigaon in Guwahati, was felicitated by ERD Foundation and other organisations for her success in the Civil Services exam 2012 whose results were announced on 3rd May.  In the list of 998 successful candidates this year, Fardina got 319 rank.

Speaking at the function organised at Regional College of Higher Education (RCHE) in the city on Sunday, Mahbubul Hoque, Chairman ERD Foundation said, “Assam gave the only President of India from the North East – Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed. Assam also gave the first and only Muslim woman Chief Minister of the country – Anwara Timur. But it took Assam 66 years to produce the first Muslim woman IAS officer – Umme Fardina Adil.”

Hoque also informed the audience that the entrance test and interview of minority candidates opting for coaching for the IAS exam of 2014 was conducted at the same venue in the morning. It was organised by Zakat Foundation of India (ZFI) and coordinated by ERDF. The felicitation for Fardina was arranged in the afternoon to facilitate her interaction with all the aspiring minority community IAS candidates of 2014 from Assam who were also present at the venue.

L-R: Mahbubul Hoque, Chairman ERDF; HN Das, former Chief Secretary of Assam; Umme Fardina Adil; and Prof PK Abdul Azis, VC, University of Science & Technology Meghalaya at a function in Guwahati on 12th May 2013.
L-R: Mahbubul Hoque, Chairman ERDF; HN Das, former Chief Secretary of Assam; Umme Fardina Adil; and Prof PK Abdul Azis, VC, University of Science & Technology Meghalaya at a function in Guwahati on 12th May 2013.

Dr Ikramul Haque, Atiqur rahman Siddiqui and Mohammed Aleem from the Zakat Foundation of India, New Delhi were also present on the occasion.

Speaking during the felicitation programme, HN Das, former Chief Secretary of Assam & Director, Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Coaching Centre for Civil Services Examinations Guwahati said, “Financial hardship should not be a reason for not being able to sit for IAS examination. Now there are many organisations to support meritorious students to prepare for competitive examinations.”

Prof PK Abdul Azis, Vice Chancellor, University of Science & Technology Meghalaya, who was also a member of the IAS interview board for several years congratulated Fardina and offered her flowers and gifts on behalf of the University. Sabur Tapader and Ahmad Hussain offered gifts to Fardina on behalf of Unity Education Foundation and Pragjyotish Group of Institutions respectively.

Fardina, a former student of Disneyland School and Cotton College of Guwahati, informed the audience that she cleared the IAS in her first attempt and with about 8 months of preparation putting in about six hours every day. She said, she depended on newspapers and Wikipedia for gathering knowledge about new topics and never referred to any guide books.

Fardina encouraged the aspiring candidates for developing a politically neutral view and showing an aptitude for analytical dissection of the subject in question. She also asked the young generation to be socially committed, stressing that this attitude would see them through in any interview.

source: http://www.muslimmirror.com / Muslim Mirror / Home> Education / by Muslim Mirror News / May 13th, 2013

Umme Fardina Adil, AIR 319 (2012)

Umme-Fardina-AdilMPos17feb2014

Umme Fardina Adil achieved what other women of her community could not do for more than six decades.

She became the first Muslim woman from India’s northeastern region to clear the Union Public Service Commission exam since the country became independent.

“Allah’s blessings and my parents’ prayers,” Fardina summed up her success in an interview to Two Circles.net.

To become an officer of the Indian Administrative Service was her childhood dream.

“I was obviously very glad to clear the civil services exam at the very first attempt itself. It means a lot to me,” she added.

Now, she has another dream: make India free of open defecation.

“I have already started my work by research in low cost sanitation technologies,” said the cheerful woman who now works as a senior programmer with Accenture Services Private Limited. And her pet project is “Low Cost Sanitation Technologies.”

“I want to be an IAS so that I can work for society” by efficiently utilizing government resources, she added.

Several organizations in Guwahati have come forward to celebrate Fardina’s achievement.

“Assam gave the only President of India from the North East — Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed. Assam also gave the first and only Muslim woman Chief Minister of the country – Anwara Timur. But it took Assam 66 years to produce the first Muslim woman IAS officer,” Mahbubul Hoque, chairperson of the Education Research and Development Foudnation, the largest educational network in northeastern region, told a felicitation program.

Fardina was born and brought up in Guwahati, Assam’s commercial capital. She did her tenth grade from Disney Land High School, Khanapara, and the twelfth from Cotton College.

The she studied engineering from Mody Institute of Technology and Science, Rajasthan in Computer Science before taking up the job with the Accenture firm.

She said she would attempt the civil service exam again to improve her rank. “Since my ranking is 319 this time, I will not get IAS but will definitely try for this in future,” she explained.

Asked about the exam, she said it was definitely tough, “but with determination and hard work, it became a bit easier.”

Fardina says she gets excited over social causes.

She finds women in Assam in “a much better position” than their counterparts in northern India socially and economically.

At the same time, she realizes participation of Muslim women in public services is much lower than tribal and dalit women.

“It took 66 years of independence to produce a Muslim woman civil servant from Assam which is a very unfortunate scenario,” she said and added that the lacuna is not because of facilities are absent. I think it is due to lack of awareness,” she added.

She wants every Muslim woman to “believe strongly in their abilities and capabilities” and join every field to chase their dream. “And if they do so, I’m sure the entire scene will change,” Fardina predicted.

The aspiring civil servant says the increasing atrocities on women upset her.

When a girl was publicly outraged in Guwahati last year, she wrote a letter to the editor of The Hindu newspaper, “I have always been proud of my Assamese origin; for the first time, I am ashamed of it. It is time civil society in Assam woke up and ensured that such shameful incidents, so contrary to our culture, did not occur again.”

She termed the incident as “a shame on humanity” and said it made her realize her mother who used to tell her not to harbor any fear when in public. “If there is one bad person in the crowd, there will be 20 good people who will come forward to help you,” her mother told her.

“But when I read about a young girl’s molestation by a group of about 20 men on the busy streets of Guwahati with many people shooting the incident, but none coming forward to help, I realized my mother was wrong,” she wrote in the letter.

Fardina is convinced Indian women’s status would improve if they get equal opportunities from childhood. “There is no difference between a man and woman in their mental ability. Along with fulfilling duties as a daughter, sister, wife and mother, a woman should also think about herself as an individual,” she added.

A daughter should “have the complete right to take her decision independently like a son. Parents should convey that they believe in her ability and will support her always,” Fardina elaborated on ways to improve women’s lot in India.

The young Muslim woman says at times religions are misused to hinder women’s advancement, especially when social evils such as female infanticide and child marriage take place.

courtesy: Matters India

source: http://www.upscportal.com / Home> Success Story>Toppers Talk> IAS – Indian Adminstrative Services> UPSC