Tuesday, June 12, 2007

From slum to Infosys: The story of Fatima Salar Shaik



Fatima and her husband(Khabrein.info Exclusive) Himmate mardan madade khuda. Efforts bring God’s help. The proverb rarely looked so true. It would have never looked true without the bravado and efforts put up by people like Fatima and her husband Shaik Salar, a young pani puri vendor who along with a young bride nurtured a dream. A dream of making his young wife, all of 15 years an engineer.
But the difference with this couple from ordinary dreams that never materialise was that both Fatima and her husband toiled for it for several years, at times sleeping without food, for they had to buy a book for her engineering course the next day, and Shaik putting in more hours at his pani puri cart to get some extra rupees to fund his wife’s college fee.
“But it all was worth it”, says Shaik Salar with full smile. People wanted to dissuade me from sending my wife first to school and then to engineering college saying that “my wife would leave me if she completes her engineering” Salar goes on to say.
Fatima, a brilliant student throughout was married off to Shaik Salar when she was all of 15. Her parents forcibly took her out of school and arranged her marriage with a young boy who sold pani puri on his hand cart. Not very uncommon throughout India. Fatima thought that with her marriage it was an end of her dreams. But dreams at times materialize from very unlikely places. When she shared her dream with her husband she found that he agreed readily. “When I shared my dreams with my husband to become an engineer some day he was very supportive” says Fatima. He started saving money from his meager income.
It was all the more difficult in an impoverished slum with majority of them Muslims to convince people that she was not doing an un-Islamic job by pursuing a course in engineering even after her marriage. “It is un-Islamic to go to college for a Muslim woman after marriage. She should stay home and look after her household work” people would suggest to both Salar and Fatima. The neighbours even went to the extent of approaching her mother to ask her daughter not to join the college, says Fatima. But her mother Razia stood with the young couple and never asked her what her neighbours were demanding.
Despite all odds Fatima was able to complete her course at Gayatri Vidya Parishad College of Engineering with high marks and was given a plum posting by Infosys, the software giant in a campus selection. The girl whose husbands was hardly able to get Rs 150 a day after working with his pani puri hand cart would be drawing an initial salary of around Rs 25000 a month. In fact, she is the first student from the college to get into Infosys.
Though Fatima was assisted by Andhra Pradesh State Minorities Finance Corporation that helped her pay her fee, it was Salar who paid Rs 60000 from his meager savings and some loan that he got from his friends.
Fatima would be joining Infosys after a three months training. And then both of them would relocate to her new office. Fatima is all praise for her husband. “It was only he who made it possible. He happily faced all the hardship only because he wanted to make my dream true” says she.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

Indian Muslims are a well to do community in the US: Rasheed Ahmed


Indian Muslims are a well to do community in the US: Rasheed Ahmed

Interview with Rasheed Ahmed, president Indian Muslim Council-USA

Rasheed Ahmed is the president of Indian Muslim Council-USA, one of the best organized Indian Muslim organizations in America. Born in Hyderabad, India, Rasheed Ahmed is based in Chicago and is vice president of an IT company. Here in this interview with khabrein editor Syed Ubaidur Rahman he talks about Indian Muslim diaspora in the US, their contribution in the US society and what IMC-USA is doing for the community in the US. Excerpts:
Q-How NRIs are seen in the US?Ans-Increasingly NRIs are seen as tech savvy community due to dominant share of IT outsourcing business as well as prevalence of Indian decent professionals in IT industry in US. Indian Americans have been known in the healthcare sector due to their prominence in the field both in numbers and expertise as physicians and surgeons. However, Indian Americans are making inroads in other fields like business and media. In the hotel-motel segment of hospitality industry, Indian Americans own or manage a significant percentage of market share. India’s emergence as a regional power and increasing global profile has a positive affect on NRIs in US.

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India Inc. to raise H-1B visa issue in US

www.khabrein.info : New Delhi, June 5: A group of corporate India leaders, currently visiting the US to promote Indo-US trade, is likely to raise the controversial issue of H-1B visa facility at meetings with high-profile politicians and businessmen, the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) said Tuesday.
Last month, two US senators had queried nine Indian IT companies on allegations of misuse of the H-1B visa programme, a non-immigrant visa that allows US employers to seek temporary help from skilled foreigners.
The National Association of Software and Service Companies (Nasscom), the Indian lobby group, wrote to the two Senators - Chuck Grassley and Richard Durbin - saying H-1B visas are beneficial to both US and Indian companies, as well as the US economy.
Read more
http://www.khabrein.info/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1203&Itemid=61

First click for NRI Investors

By Kul Bhushan
www.khabrein.info : When an NRI wants to invest in India, what is his first step? Look for opportunities in India through different government bodies promised as 'a one-stop shop'. As if all the existing bodies to attract investment were not enough, the ministry for overseas Indians launched a new one last week - the Overseas Indian Facilitation Centre (OIFC).
Exploring on the Net, the NRI will come up with many different sites of the Indian government crying for foreign investment to India, especially from NRIs. Frustrated by India's red tape, NRIs want 'a single window' to handle all their queries and hold their hand until they get the approvals.
NRIs have been promised and provided 'a single window' to invest in India time and again. Much before the Internet and since the days of forms that were filled up by hand, the one stop point of contact for NRI investors has always existed in one form or the other.
All these government-run facilities, as part of different ministries, remained overburdened with red tape and bogged by infinite delays. Over time, they morphed into new ones promising to be better - and faster - than before.
Read more:
http://www.khabrein.info/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1234&Itemid=61

Urdu as medium is endangering the Muslim students

By Firoz Bakht Ahmed

www.khabrein.info : As things are, India is forging ahead now, but its Muslim minority is still largely primitive and uneducated. It is the responsibility of Muslims more than anybody else to see to it that the community does not lose out on an enlightened education.
Now that the Urdu medium schools' results are out, these stand absolutely exposed. "Right from the beginning of this session to now, 74 Urdu-medium books of Class 1-12 are not available and there are 50 vacancies for various subjects in most Urdu medium schools," laments Maroof Khan, the headmaster of Zakir Hussain Memorial School, an Urdu-medium school of Delhi. It's a shocking revelation.
The bane of the Urdu medium schools is non-availability of teachers, particularly in mathematics, English and the sciences.

Read more:
http://www.khabrein.info/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1204&Itemid=88

The issue of taking oath in the name of Allah

Khabrein Editorial Desk

New Delhi, June 6: The issue of taking oath in the name of Allah finally reached the apex court late last month. The Supreme Court has accepted the issue for hearing after the court re-opens after summer vacations. A Supreme Court bench headed by Chief Justice K G Balakrishnan, posted the issue for hearing after the vacation. The petition was filed by Madhu Parumala, vice president of the Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha, Kerala unit. Madhu had filed the special leave petition against the Kerala High Court's July 21, 2006 order which had upheld the validity of the oath taken by 11 state legislators belonging to different political parties in the name of Allah during the last year's Assembly elections.
Madhu argued that taking oath in the name of Allah was unconstitutional and violated Article 188 and third Schedule of the Constitution under which a Member of the Legislature or Parliament has to swear only in the name of God or solemnly affirm.
http://www.khabrein.info/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1218&Itemid=88

Makka Masjid blast victims unable to come out of shock

By Khabrein Staff Reporter:

Hyderabad, June 7: People whose relatives were killed in Hyderabad’s historical Makkah Masjid blast, or those who were injured on the occasion or in the subsequent police firing are unable to come to terms with what happened with them. The worst is the case of those who lost not only relatives but also the sole bread earner of the family. The bomb attack on the 17th century mosque, the worst in the city’s history, has shattered the dreams of several families and changed the lives of many forever
Makka Masjid of Hyderabad, one of the biggest mosques in India witnessed a powerful bomb blast on May 17 while thousands of Muslims were in the mosque for offering Friday prayers. The mosque built by Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah, the 6th Sultan of Hyderabad was built in 1617.

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http://www.khabrein.info/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1241&Itemid=88

Central Waqf Council holds its 51st meeting

By Khabrein Staff Reporter,

New Delhi, June 7: The apex Waqf body in the country, Central Wakf Council has decided not to give any grant to an organisation more than once in five years. The Council has also decided that it would not give any grant to an organization that has received any financial assistance from Maulana Azad Education Foundation for vocational training/ITI.
The Minority affairs Minister Abdur Rahman Antulay presided over the 51st 51st meeting of the Central Wakf that took these decision last week. Council presided over by Minister for Minorities Affairs A R Antulay here last week. On the issue of Maulana Azad Education Foundation’s refusal to consider the applications of educational institutions run by various Wakf Boards, it was agreed that the Minority Affairs Ministry will take appropriate action to make such Wakfs eligible for grants from the Foundation.

Read more:
http://www.khabrein.info/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1247&Itemid=88