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Good news filtered from media streams


  Page 19 of 38 pages « FirstP  <  17 18 19 20 21 >  Last »     [Full listing]

 Sep 23, 2006 : Model madrassas of Bengal

It seems madrassas in Marxist-run state of Bengal have no adverse image problem. How come? Pakistan, whose madrassas are often profiled as terror schools, wanted to know and asked the state government.

Jayanth Jacob, reporting in the New Indian Express today, says the reasons are simple and few. Madrassas in the state are not exclusively for muslim children only. Other communities send their children too. Nor are they for boys only; nearly 65% are girls.Finally, appointment of teachers is done by the government- the only extra qualification specified is that the candidates have a knowledge of Islam and its culture. The state spends a whopping Rs130 crores in running madrassas.

Is socialism a better mullah?


 Sep 22, 2006 : Muslim enthusiasm for Sanskrit

The Hindu today has a story on Murthuzaviya Educational and Cultural Foundation, a Muslim organisation in Chennai’s Triplicane area, which has been offering Sanskrit language courses for 30 years. In that time, over a 1,000 have enrolled for the course and over 200 have gone on to pass the Kovidh examination conducted by the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan. Several of them are Muslims, especially girls. One of them, Misbah Fathima has a master’s degree in Mathematics but wants to teach Sanskrit.

In the light of Muslims’ recent protests about compulsory singing of Vande Mataram because of its idolatrous tone, this enthusiasm for Sanskrit shows that it belongs no one religion exclusively nor that it has only ecclesiastical use. The full story


 Sep 22, 2006 : Supreme Court strikes two blows

In just one week India’s Supreme Court struck two blows in favour of furthering democracy.

In a landmark judgment, a 3 member bench headed by the Chief Justice directed the government to implement the reforms suggested by various National Police Commissions [NPC] since 1979. Now reforms cannot be postponed after January 2007.

The malaise of politician-police nexus is due to the powers vested in the former to appoint and transfer of police officers at will and convenience. Various NPCs have concurred that this nexus is best broken by independent bodies to manage this function. Separation of criminal investigation from maintaining law and order is another measure expected to come into force. Collusion to protect criminals who serve political ends can be expected to diminish. The full judgment

The same week the Supreme Court also ordered implementation of the Lyngdoh Committee recommendations to regulate elections in universities. These have been proxy battlefields for political parties. Now “students” above 28, those with criminal records or with less than 75% attendance are barred from participating in elections. There are other measures as well.
 Commentary



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