Followers

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

This reform must begin within


Why I appeal to Muslim leaders to themselves ban triple talaq, polygamy, introduce other gender-friendly reform and bring the practice of Islam closer to its spirit.

Once again the issue of triple talaq and polygamy has surfaced with Shayara Bano, a 35-year-old woman from Uttarakhand, recently filing a public interest litigation (PIL) before the Supreme Court. Women’s groups, Muslim and non-Muslim, are meeting to discuss the strategy to support the Supreme Court’s intervention in gettingMuslim women their rights under the Constitution. Other Muslim organisations, ulemas and maulanas through their legal counsels have argued that the court’s intervention would be tantamount to violation of their constitutional rights. They state that Islamic law is divine and should not be interfered with. Battle lines have thus been drawn. Underpinning this is the force of the Bharatiya Janata Party-led government, which has a declared agenda of bringing in the uniform civil code as one of its major election promises.
Let me stop for a recap. In 2000, as a member of the National Commission for Women (NCW), I released a report, ‘Voice of the Voiceless — Status of Muslim Women in India. It resulted from two years of public hearings I held all over India where Muslim women from poor and deprived sections told me their stories. Woman after woman spoke of her double disadvantage: abject poverty and harsh personal laws. In the report I retold their stories in their own voices and presented it to the government. Its recommendations were placed in three sections addressed to the Muslim leadership, to civil society and to the ulema. At the time the NCW chair was the feisty Mohini Giri, who completed her term before the report was released. I retired in 2000 and the new commission had limited interest in the subject, so the report became a dead letter.
Three years later in 2003 under the banner of Muslim Women’s Forum (MWF) I returned to the field for an impact assessment of the 2000 report. I discovered that nothing had changed on the ground. Obviously no section had taken notice of NCW’s recommendations. The MWF report had an aspirational title, ‘My Voice Shall Be Heard’.
Slow winds of change

Over the years other Muslim women’s organisations were formed such as STEPS in Tamil Nadu, Bharatiya Muslim Mahila Andolan (BMMA) and lately Bebaak Mahila Collective. The traditional Muslim organisations are also changing, although slowly, and the MWF must be credited for it. During my NCW tenure and later as co-chair, MWF, I had interacted with two chairs of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB), Maulana Ali Miyan and Qazi Mujahidul Islam Qasmi. Both were keen to show the world the true face of Islam so far as gender was concerned. The gender-sensitive views of Shia cleric Maulana Kalbe Sadiq were well known. At the time, the secretary of the AIMPLB was Syed Qasim Rasul Ilyas, who shared our concern and belief. In the years that followed, I became member, Planning Commission, in which capacity I met leaders such as Maulana Fazlur Rahim Mujaddidi. I found them interested in revealing to the world the gendered face of Islam.
A few other things happened. A few women were made members of the AIMPLB. Male spaces opened for women. In 2007 in Lucknow I became the world’s first woman qazi. No one issued a fatwa against me for performing a nikah, other than a maulana from Firangi Mahal in Lucknow. And his word was soon discarded by his own colleagues.
Today the Supreme Court has become active on Muslim women’s rights and the matter is bound to come up soon after the summer break. The case of Shayara Bano gives it urgency. A few groups are planning to intervene in support of the uniform civil code. They represent what is regarded as the ‘liberal’ view. On the other side, the ulemas are preparing to counter them with Islamic arguments.
Time for a reality check

A few days ago, AIMPLB members met at Nadwatul Ulama in Lucknow where this matter was discussed. They arrived at conclusions which have been heard many times in the past. Any interference in Muslim personal law, they said, was against the fundamental right of freedom of religion which has been given to all citizens by the Constitution of India. They declared that Muslim women are satisfied with their rights under the Sharia and feel more protected than women of other faiths.
I am deeply concerned about the danger in all these formulations. Muslim clerics’ insistence on the same old arguments will not cut ice with the courts nor within very large sections of the community. Besides being self-centred, this argument is also fallacious vis-à-vis the Constitution. On the other side, the confrontational approach of the ‘secular’ groups in making a claim for state-based intervention might belittle the efforts the community is making towards self-democratisation.
The open fight between the two groups will turn hostile. It will provide masala to the electronic and social media, and stereotypical images of Muslim women and Muslim men will be flashed as the backdrop to sharply divided panels who will engage in mutual acrimony. At the same time, it might bring to the fore the fundamental fact that Muslims are not a monolithic group, they do not think in one voice, and the AIMPLB is less representative of Muslims than it imagines.
However, whichever side ‘wins’, the impact on internal democratisation and reform and on Muslim women who seek to negotiate their rights within the faith would be an unhappy one. Either the ulema will claim rights over all discourse, or the state would intervene to make things right. The agency of Muslim women and men who have been resisting certain practices would be undermined.
And the result? All the players will fall in the anti-Muslim Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh trap — the trap is evident in the daily dose of Muslim hate spewed by their leaders. Another fallout of this unwillingness of parties to engage with each others’ positions would be a crystallisation of gender stereotypes about Muslims. Lately a Member of Parliament, Sakshi Maharaj, has asked the judiciary to save Muslim women who are considered “pair ki jooti” (footwear) by Muslim men; worn when needed and discarded when not.
It is the Muslim awam, men and women, who will pay with their lives when trouble erupts. For close to 70 years we have been witness to leaders, Hindus and Muslims, taking advantage of polarisation to incite communal riots. In distant pockets, far away from places where such rhetoric is born, Muslims are killed, lynched, and burnt for reasons they do not understand. We read about places like Latehar in Jharkhand where one Mohd. Mazloom is strangled allegedly for being a cattle trader. Blood of both communities’ innocents will be shed. Instigators, both Hindu and Muslim, will not be harmed. This should be prevented at all costs.
A viable middle path

There is a middle path. What I am proposing is nothing new. It was stated in the NCW report of 2000. For this middle path, the AIMPLB has a key role because it has many followers. They should step off the old track and project before the world the true spirit of Islam which is avowedly most gender-friendly and gender-sensitive regardless of its heinous distortion by groups like the Islamic State. They should say that we Muslims have never practised what the Koran and the Prophet taught us.
In addition, without being defensive, they should show how over the years there has been an effort to liberalise the Sharia in light of the various schools of Fiqh (jurisprudence). They should say that women are free to use whichever school suits them best. For example Ahle Hadith completely forbids triple talaq. The ulemas should also acknowledge and respect the multiple forums for women such as the All India Shia Personal Law Board, the All India Muslim Women’s Personal Law Board. Newer Muslim women’s organisations such as the BMMA have developed their own Nikah Namas (marriage contracts). With all this internal churning, there is a movement towards pluralism and democratisation. The old establishment should declare that there is no impediment to women using these various fora. They should have the confidence to say that whether it is the AIMPLB or the Jamiatul Ulema, no one has the exclusive claim to speak for all Muslims.
Muslim organisations should also invoke empirical data such as the Census and National Family Health Survey to prove that in many matters, Muslim women are less victimised than women of other religions. For example, there is empirical data that more polygamy exists in religions other than Islam. That being the fact, it is evident that it is the ‘religious sanction’ given to it which causes the uproar. That sting should be taken away.
Some Muslim bodies and individuals are fighting to bring Muslim women closer to what was enjoined for them in Islam. Just days ago Telangana qazis stated that they have struck down case after case of “one-sided talaq”. This is closer to the core of Islam which gave women property rights hundreds of years ago, in a region where the practice was to bury the girl child at birth. From its very inception Islam created a revolution in giving the highest status to the ‘lowest’ creation.
A uniform civil code is the Directive Principle towards which the country had promised to move. But this is also the election promise of a government that believes in homogenisation rather than pluralism. My appeal to the Muslim leaders is to stop this imminent danger by speaking about their efforts at internal democratisation, and move much faster to bring the practice of Islam closer to its spirit. They can themselves ban triple talaq, polygamy and introduce other gender-friendly reform. By reforming itself in full public view, it will make the Supreme Court’s intervention infructuous, and thereby they would have done exactly what was intended when Islam was revealed.
(Syeda S. Hameed is a former member of the Planning Commission.)
Why Worry So Much?


Worry causes fear, anxiety , tension and stress. Worriers become sick because of all the problems that are eating into their vitals. Worry usually occurs when we find ourselves faced with a likely outcome we think will be detrimental to us. But how can we be so certain? Maybe some good comes out of it as well. So why despair and agonise over something that may actually turn out well, if not now, perhaps in the long term?
A king once accidentally lost his little finger in an accident.His close friend and minister, however, exclaimed that it was a fine thing that had happened.Shocked at his insensitive remark, the king dismissed him.Even then, the minister who'd just lost his job remarked that his expulsion could be for his good. This puzzled the king.Some time later, the king lost his way during an excursion in a jungle and was captured by cannibals. They were planning to put him in the pot over the fire when they noticed he had a finger missing. An `incomplete' human being was unacceptable to the gods, so they released him. The king realised that losing his finger earlier had, in fact, helped save his life.
“But tell me,“ asked the king of the minister after returning to the palace and reinstating him, “what good came of your expulsion?“ The minister replied, “If you had not expelled me, I would probably have accompanied you to the jungle and both of us would've been caught by the cannibals. You would have been back here safely today , but because my body is whole, I wouldn't have!“


Tuesday, April 26, 2016

How To Measure Poverty


A neat separation of poverty estimates and entitlements won’t pass muster.



There wAS much hope about the work that Arvind Panagariya was mandated to do on the measurement of poverty. I, for one, have held from the 1980s that the official poverty line that emerged from a taskforce I chaired in 1976-77 should be shelved. Panagariya has reportedly suggested that the Tendulkar Committee’s report should be accepted for poverty estimation but socio-economic indicators, say, as collected by the Socio-Economic Caste Census, should be used to determine entitlement for benefits, an approach suggested earlier by N.C. Saxena. This is important because while earlier Centrally sponsored schemes have been curtailed, a large number of new schemes have been announced in the Union budget. The Panagariya Panel on poverty has separated the two exercises — entitlement for schemes and poverty estimates, the latter to be used for assessments of economic performance.
The Tendulkar Committee had, in fact, used the official poverty line or the Alagh poverty line, based on cut-off points defined in terms of calorie consumption. Happy with the existing urban poverty ratio or head-count ratio of 25.7 per cent derived from the Alagh taskforce — as adapted for price adjustment from time to time — it suggested that the expenditure required to meet this goal should be the poverty line for both rural and, of course, urban areas. We are critical of the official poverty line, but they “found it desirable in the interest of continuity to situate it in some generally acceptable aspect of the present exercise”. Like Banquo’s ghost, the Alagh taskforce cast its shadow, possibly since Tendulkar was a member.
But the Tendulkar report had many advantages. For one, it shifted the emphasis from calories to food demand. In its logical structure, the Alagh taskforce permitted this but the focus then was on foodgrains, with price elasticities calculated separately for the rich and the poor, leading to dual pricing. The Tendulkar Committee framework calculates the food purchasing power and then lets the poor substitute between food items.
It works in a framework where the state will not have the responsibility for the education and health needs, or for that matter drinking water needs, of the poor. Here, the Tendulkar Committee was one-sided in stating that “the earlier poverty lines assumed that basic social services of health and education would be supplied by the state”. It did not clarify that the taskforce stated that the state must have a “basic needs plan” and give it the highest priority.
The Tendulkar report had a concept of inclusive growth where the state does not take on itself such pro-poor responsibilities but provides income supplements. It shows that with these supplements, the new poverty line would correspond to standards that would lead to physical nutrition norms being met on an average. Statistically, this part of the report, overlaying averages of nutrition norms with food expenditure is creative. A more serious issue is that if expenditures on education and health are included in the poverty line calculations, how do we account for public expenditures on them — or are we happy with double counting?
But will the present standard dividing the poor and the rich, and that too based on the 1979 line in urban areas, be acceptable as a norm?
I have been making the point that following nutrition norms does not require policy to go overboard. Here, the Saxena Committee for defining concepts for the next BPL census goes overboard and comes out with very high numbers. Food security can be achieved at much lower costs than Saxena suggests, but he scores in his emphasis on access to social facilities and asset and education opportunities, for which he suggests a system of deprivation points based on many indicators, including caste, asset positions, educational achievements, and so on. Saxena recognises that different entitlement systems will be required for different facilities — a valid point but a real-world nightmare.
There are, therefore, many debatable issues. In the excellent technical note to the BPL report, K.L. Datta has explained at length the complexity of the relationship between calorie consumption and poverty, and P. Sainath the issue that some facilities have to be universally provided. Saxena takes on the issue of entitlements head-on, but Tendulkar sidesteps it. Panagariya will have to cope with all this and it is likely that a neat separation of poverty estimation and entitlements won’t pass muster.
The writer, former vice chancellor of Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi, is professor emeritus, Sardar Patel Institute, Ahmedabad.
Source: Indian Express, 26-04-2016


UGC implementing scheme to provide Heritage Grants to universities and colleges

New Delhi: The University Grants Commission (UGC) has informed that it   is implementing a scheme during XII plan to provide Heritage Grants to universities and colleges which are more than 100 years old and accorded the Special Heritage Status by the UGC. The guidelines of the scheme of “Granting Special Heritage Status to Universities and Colleges” are available at http://www.ugc.ac.in/pdfnews/4170650_ Guidelines-for-Heritage.pdf . The scheme guidelines have provision for grants for conservation work and offering short term certificate or diploma programme in any of the heritage branches. This is however dependent on the specific institutional requirements and evaluation by the UGC Expert Committee. As on date 19 Colleges have been recommended for funding under the scheme. The details of grants allocated to these colleges, college-wise, is at http://www.ugc.ac.in/pdfnews/8647293­­_Heritage-website.pdf .
 
The UGC has informed that it had received proposals, under the scheme, from three colleges in the state of Karnataka.  Proposal from one college namely University College, Hampankatta, District Mangalore was approved for funding under the scheme. The remaining two colleges viz. St. Aloysius (A) College, District Mangalore and St. Josesph’s (A) College, District Bangalore were not recommended by the UGC as these colleges did not fulfil the eligibility criteria prescribed under the scheme.

This information was given by the Union Human Resource Development Minister, Smt. Smriti Zubin Irani today in a written reply to a Lok Sabha question.


Source: indiaeducationdiary, 26-04-2016
There are 41 Central Universities under HRD Ministry

New Delhi: At present, there are 41 Central Universities under the administrative control of the Ministry of Human Resource Development. The total number of sanctioned teaching posts in various Central Universities is 16,600 (2371 Professor, 4708 Associate Professor, 9521 Assistant Professor). 

Occurring of vacancies and filling them up is a continuous process. Ministry of HRD and UGC continuously monitor it with Universities. However, the onus of filling up the teaching posts lies on Central Universities which are autonomous bodies created under Acts of Parliament. 

This issue has been discussed in the Conference of Vice-Chancellors of the Central Universities held on 4th – 5th February, 2015 and Visitor’s Conference on 4th -6th November, 2015 which was chaired by the President of India. In the Vice Chancellors’ Conference and Visitor’s Conference, the Vice Chancellors were exhorted to fill up the vacant position of teachers in a time bound manner. Further, it was also discussed in a meeting with Vice Chancellors of Central Universities on 18th February, 2016. With the appointment of regular Vice Chancellors and providing of Visitor’s nominees to all Central Universities for Selection Committees for teachers, the process of filling up of vacant teaching posts has gathered momentum. 

This information was given by the Union Human Resource Development Minister, Smt. Smriti Zubin Irani today in a written reply to a Lok Sabha question. 

Source: Indiaeducationdiary, 26-04-2016
Emptiness is a Paradox


Shunyata is a key concept in Buddhist philosophy , more specifically in the ontology of Mahayana Buddhism, “Form is emptiness, and emptiness is form.“ This is the paradox of the concept. Emptiness is nonexistence but not nothingness.Also, it is not non-reality . Emptiness means that an object, animate or inanimate, does not have its own existence independently . It has its meaning and existence only when all the elements or components it is made of come into play and we can understand and impute its existence clearly . The Buddhist concept of emptiness is often taken as nihilism. Nihilism as a concept means that reality is unknown and unknowable, and that nothing exists.
Plato held the view that there is an ideal essence in everything that we have around us, whether animate or inanimate.The Dalai Lama says that shunyata is the absence of an absolute essence or independent existence. If a thing exists, it is because of several other factors. One might as well ask: is it possible to have a partless phenomenon? According to the Madhyamika school of thought, there can be no phenomenon without constituents.Every phenomenon in the universe has to have parts or constituents to come into being.
The Dalai Lama says, “As your insight into the ultimate nature is deepened and enhanced, you will develop a perception of reality from which you will perceive phenomena and events as sort of illusory . And that mode of perceiving reality will permeate all your interactions with reality .“

Monday, April 25, 2016

Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents

Vol. 51, Issue No. 17, 23 Apr, 2016

Editorials

50 Years of EPW

Strategic Affairs

Commentary

Book Reviews

Perspectives

Review of Urban Affairs

Special Articles

Current Statistics

Appointments/Programmes/Announcements

Letters

Web Exclusives