Saturday, April 30, 2011

Syed Zia Khairabadi's poem "Woh Nazren" dedicated to his mother Syeda Sarfaraz Fatima Nashtar Khairabadi


Syeda Sarfaraz Fatima Nashtar Khairabadi
Happy Mother's Day
Syed Zia Khairabadi
Atlanta Georgia USA
وہ نظریں
 [اپنی  شفیق ماں سیّدہ سرفراز فاطمہ نشتر خیرابادی کی اُن محبّت اور شفقت بھری نظروں کے نام جو شاید آج بھی میراتعاقُب کرتی ہیں]

میری جا نِب کو تکتی ہوئ وہ مُحبّت کی نظریں
اپنی قُربت کا مُجھے اِحساس دِلا دیتی ہیں
رات  جو  اُٹھ جاوں اچانک کِسی  خُواب کے ڈر سے
میٹھی لوری  سی سنُا کر مُجھے پِھر  سُلا دیتی ہیں

وہ نظریں میرے درد کا مسیحا بن کر
میرے دِل کو میری روح کو  جِلا دیتی ہیں
گربھٹک جاوں  کِسی راہ  میں چلتے چلتے
وہ نظریں مُجھے منزل کا پتہ دیتی ہیں

دُور   ہو کر بھی ہر وقت میرے پاس ہیں وہ
دشِت مایوسی میری اُمید ہیں میری آس ہیں وہ
اُنکی قُربت کا  مُجھے ہر لمحہ گُماں ہوتا ہے
بہِر شفقت ہے جو اُن نظروں سے عیاں ہوتا ہے

وہ نظریں ہر وقت میرے دِل پہ اثر کرتی ہیں
مُجھ سے پتّھر کو وہ لال و گُہر کرتی ہیں
مُجھ پے برساتی ہیں اپنی مُحبّت کی بارش
دامِن زیست کو اپنی شفقت سے وہ تر کرتی ہیں

میری دُنیاں میرا عُقبا مادرِ آغوش رہی
زندگی میری ہر غم سے  سُبکدوش رہی
تیرگی میں مِلی  مُجھ کو ضیائے شفقت
زندگی درد کے آنگن سے روپوش رہی

یاد  آتا ہے مُجھے بچپن سے جوانی کا سفر
میرے قدموں کو تکا کرتی تھی اُن کی نظر
دیر ہو جائے اگر راہ میں کِسی بھی و جہہ
اپنی آغوش میں سما لیتی تھیں وہ دیدوتر

اُنکی یادوں کا ایک سایہ دار شجر
اپنےکاندھوں پر  اُٹھائے ہوئے مُحبّت  کے ثمر
دِل کے آنگن میں پنپا ہے پھلا پھولا ہے
دِل بِسمل اُن نظروں کو کہاں بھولا ہے

چاند کو دیکھ کر لگتا ہے کہ ماں ہے شاید
چاندنی آنکھوں کو میرے بہت بھلی لگتی ہے
جب بھی ہوتا ہے تنہائ کا اِحساس مُجھے
ماں کی گود   ستِارں  سے سجی لگتی ہے

چاند اپنی طرف بُلاتا ہے  مجُھے ماں کی طرح
چاندنی باہیں پھیلائے بڑھتی ہے مُجھے چھُونے کو
ایک سر گو شی سنُائ دیتی ہے  کہیں پاس میرے
آجا بیٹا کہ میں آئ ہوں تُجھے لینے کو

ہاتھ کا لمس مِرے ہاتھ  پے ہوتا ہے کُچھ ایسا
آنکھ کھُل جائے حقیقت میں گر یہ  خواب ہو کوئ
وہ سرگوشی، وہ باہیں، وہ شفقت، وہ نظریں
ایسا لگتا ہے یہ حقیقت میں مُلاقات ہو  کو ئ

وہ  نظریں اب بھی میری آنکھوں میں
گھومتی پِھرتی ہیں   مسُکراتی ہیں
وہ آوازیں  اب بھی میرے کانوں میں
گونجتی ہیں دِل کے تاروں کو جھنجھناتی ہیں

اور میں راتوں میں پچھلے پہر اُٹھ کر
بے قراری کے سمندر میں خود کو غرق پاتا ہوں
آنسووں سے بھِگوتا ہوں اپنے دامن کو
اور چپکے سے صحرا میں نِکل جاتا ہوں

میرا ہاتھ تھام کر میری پیشانی پہ بوسہ دے کر
وہ نظریں مُجھے اپنے ہمراہ گھر لا تی ہیں
اپنی آغوش میں چھُپاکر میرا ننھا سا وُجود
وہ نظریں مُجھے غِم دوراں کی نظروں سے بچا لیتی ہیں
سیّد ضیاء خیرابادی

Shahzad Rizvi's short story "WE MEET AGAIN"

Parveen finally entered the classroom and Sultan’s wait came to an end. After taking attendance, the professor called out, “So, what is deductive logic?”
Silence gripped the classroom and every student sat still, hoping not to attract attention. Sultan looked around, then slowly raised his hand.
“Yes, Sultan!” The professor’s voice boomed and the class heaved a collective sigh of relief.
“Sir, all female students of Rashidia College are beautiful. Parveen is a female student of Rashidia College. Therefore, Parveen is beautiful.” A chorus of laughter arose, but the professor gave a sharp look and it quickly subsided.
“You’re right, Sultan,” said the professor. “What is the major premise in your example?”
“That all female students of Rashidia College are beautiful, sir.”
“Right again. What if you drew the conclusion without the minor premise?”
“Then sir, I would be calling Parveen beautiful without establishing that she’s a student of Rashidia College.”
The professor looked around the room and his eyes focused on Irfan. Irfan was engaged in exchanging notes about the girls with the boy sitting next to him. “Irfan, what is enthymeme?”
A devilish expression appeared on Irfan’s face. “Sir, all the girls of Rashidia College are ugly.” There were suppressed laughs from the boy’s section and the girls’ faces went grim.
“Very humorous, indeed,” said the professor, stonily. “Irfan, see me after class!”
As class ended and the students noisily poured out, Parveen broke away from the other girls and stationed herself in the hallway. When Sultan passed by, she asked, “Excuse me, may I have a word with you?”
“I would like nothing better.”
“Why did you do it?”
“Do what, Parveen?”
“Use my name to answer the professor.”
“I’m so sorry if it offended you.”
“Not that it offended me. It just drew unnecessary attention to me.”
“Will you find it in your heart to forgive me?”
“Of course…but there’s nothing to forgive.”
“I don’t know what got into me. I suppose I was just expressing my feelings. You are beautiful. Actually, you’re the most beautiful girl in the college.”
Parveen lowered her eyes and said shyly to the floor, “I’m having trouble in this class. I’m worried about failing in Logic. You seem to understand everything.”
“I’d be happy to help you with it.”
“That would be very kind of you. It would remove a great burden from my chest. But, I don’t want to impose on you.”
“It would be no imposition. The pleasure would be all mine. Just tell me when and where.”
Parveen thought for a moment and said, “Not here. I wouldn’t want to be seen by the other students. They would talk. Perhaps you could come to our house? I’ll ask my father and let you know tomorrow.” As Parveen and Sultan were concluding their conversation, Irfan passed by them with a swagger. He was wearing chic clothes and a cigarette dangled from his mouth. He cast a derisive look in their direction.
The next day when Sultan arrived at Parveen’s house, the sheer size of it overwhelmed him. Do people actually live like this? he asked himself. There were just the two of them, Parveen and her father, Mr. Rehman, and, of course, lots of servants. Parveen’s mother had died in childbirth. Sultan soon became a regular visitor and tutor. Parveen was not only doing well in Logic now, but in other subjects as well. Sultan’s help was making all the difference. Mr. Rehman was delighted to see the transformation of his only child from a failing student to an A student. He offered Sultan money for his efforts, but Sultan declined.
“I would like to marry you, Parveen, but I don’t know whether it could ever happen,” Sultan screwed up his courage to confess one day.
Parveen lowered her eyes and pondered. “You know the rules of our culture, Sultan. Here in India, it’s not the young people but the parents who make the decision about marriage. “
“I know that.”
“In the West, young people date and get to know each other. But there’s no such thing in our culture. What we’re doing is the next best thing to dating.”
“So, what would your father say?”
“To what? To our getting married? He would say that Sultan’s father should come and bring a formal proposal.” Sultan’s face became clouded. “What’s the matter?”
“Nothing…nothing at all,” Sultan said, distractedly, and left abruptly.
That night, at dinner, Parveen said to her father, “Abba, what do you think of Sultan?”
“He strikes me as a very good boy. He is smart, good-looking and well-mannered. Why do you ask, my child?”
“He would like to marry me, Abba.”
“Do you like him?”
“Yes, Abba.”
“But I have no idea about his family. I don’t know who his father is.”
“Maybe Sultan could bring him over some time and you can meet him?”
“Yes, that would be fine.”
The next day at college, Parveen mentioned this to Sultan, but he didn’t seem enthusiastic. That confused her. Was he serious about what he’d said, or had he just been playing with my emotions, she wondered? She fell asleep crying, and had a terrible dream.
When she was awakened the next morning by the maid bearing the breakfast tray, she was still under the spell of her nightmare. The maid informed her that her father had already left for the office. Parveen had no energy, but she realized that there was no college for a week; the break had started. She sipped her tea, but sent away the rest of the tray. She had no appetite. Her head was throbbing.
The day seemed an eternity. The usual time of Sultan’s arrival came and went, but there were no signs of him. When her father returned home from the office, he was concerned about her. “Should I phone Dr. Firdausi?” he asked, feeling her forehead.
“There’s nothing he can do to make me feel better, Abba,” Parveen said. Mr. Rahman embraced his suffering daughter.
For Parveen, each day was harder than the one before, but there was no news of Sultan. “Do you know where he lives, what his father does?” Mr. Rahman asked.
“No, Abba. I think he is in the government.”
“What’s his name?”
“I have no idea.”
“That poses a real problem.”
“I’m really concerned. For all I know, Sultan might be really ill,” Parveen fretted.
Mr. Rahman picked up a book and began to leaf through it. A postcard fell out. He picked it up and glanced at it. “This seems to be addressed to Sultan,” he said.
“Well, yes, it’s Sultan’s book.”
“His address is right here. Now, we know where he lives. We can go and see him.” Before Parveen had a chance to respond, Mr. Rahman was calling the servant for the car to be brought around.
When they set off, it was raining hard. The side windows were fogged up and it was difficult to see outside. But the chauffeur knew exactly where the house was and brought them to it. The car came to a stop facing its front door—engulfing it in the beams of the headlights. It was a tiny, tin-roofed, adobe structure. “There must be some mistake, Ghafoor. This cannot be Sultan’s house,” Mr. Rahman shouted over the noise of the rain. Before the chauffeur had a chance to answer, the door opened and a figure holding a battered, half-broken umbrella came out. It was unmistakably Sultan. He squinted his eyes and looked in the direction of the car, perhaps wondering what a car was doing there and who it might belong to. Cars were rarely seen in that neighborhood. The chauffeur jumped out, walked over and talked to him. An expression of horror flashed across Sultan’s face. Parveen felt it like a knife slicing her heart. He came over to the car window, greeted them and reluctantly invited them inside the house.
It was a tiny little room, with a low ceiling, dimly lit by a kerosene lamp. There was no furniture. A man was lying on one side, his head propped up by a fraying cushion. A woman sat on the other, her head covered. Scattered books, notebooks and writing equipment were in the middle. Sultan said, “My father has been sick for several days.”
Mr. Rahman looked intently at the face of the man. “Abdullah?”
The man responded in a feeble but excited voice: “Sahib!”
Parveen asked, “Do you know each other?”
Mr. Rahman answered, “Of course we know each other. Abdullah is a peon in my office. I had no idea that he was Sultan’s father.”
With Sultan’s help, the man sat up. “He is my only son, sir…my only child, the light of my life.”
Mr. Rahman said, “Your son and my daughter are in the same class. He has been coming to our house and helping her, but we hadn’t seen him for several days.”
“Sir, he has been looking after me.”
“How’re you feeling now?”
“I’m much better, sir. I hope to go back to work in a couple of days. I’m sorry if my absence caused you inconvenience, sir.”
“I’m sorry that you fell ill. It’s true that when you’re not around, nobody else looks after me as well as you do.” 
As the goodbyes were being said, Parveen whispered into Sultan’s ear: “This has been a most unusual revelation. Our fathers know each other.”
“Yes,” Sultan whispered back, sullenly. “Your father as a master and my father as a servant.”
“When will I see you?” Parveen asked.
“When our destinies bring us together.”
Parveen and her father were already leaving, as Sultan’s mother came out with two cups of tea in chipped earthenware mugs. “It’s rather late for us to have tea. It will keep us awake,” Mr. Rahman said brusquely, and they were gone.
****
When the results were announced by the university, Sultan stood first. With a first class degree, I should be able to get a job right away, he thought. He sent out dozens of applications but to no avail.
One day, as Sultan’s father was walking behind Mr. Rahman, holding an umbrella over his master’s head, he said, “Sir, this is big talk from my little mouth, and my tongue gets all curled up just talking about it. My son likes your daughter and…”
Mr. Rahman stopped walking, turned around and said, “Your son is a very good boy, but I can’t see him as my son-in-law.”
“I understand it fully, sir. First of all, our class difference, sir. And then he has no job and we live in a small one-room shack. Your daughter is accustomed to living in style. She would never be happy with us.”
“She thinks she would be, but she has a romantic view of poverty.”
“Sir, the children of rich homes want to experience poverty and the children of poor homes want to experience riches. It is always like that, sir.”
“I know. The grass is always greener on the other side. Abdullah, would you do something for me?”
“Anything, sir. I am the slave of your command.”
“Ask your son to write a letter to my daughter telling her that he doesn’t want to marry her anymore…that he’s changed his mind.”
“That will be very hard, sir. He is very serious about your daughter. But I promise, sir, I will get it done!”
Sultan’s letter did finally arrive. As Parveen licked her wounds, reading it over and over again in disbelief, Mr. Rahman began to receive marriage proposals for her. It had been hard to raise a daughter without a mother, and now he wanted her to get married into a good family where there would be lots of older women to guide her through married life. One proposal caught his eye. It was from a very prominent local family. When Mr. Rahman asked around, everyone said good things about them. But no one seemed to know much about the son, who was the main point of the whole enquiry.
When he mentioned this proposal to Parveen, she said, “I know Irfan. He was in my class.” On being questioned further, she said, “At this point, I don’t care who I marry, Abba. I just want to end your worry about me and get it over with.” Mr. Rahman decided to consider that a yes and informed Irfan’s parents about the acceptance. Soon, preparations for the wedding began and when it finally took place, it was one of the grandest weddings in the history of the city.
When Sultan emerged out of a deep depression, he knew he had to pick up the pieces of his shattered life. But where will I go? What will I do? I have no idea. The last thing he wanted was to go to Parveen’s father and beg for help. That chapter of his life was closed. He would of course carry Parveen’s love and memories of her in his heart forever and ever.
He came out of the alley where he lived and began to walk down the main road. He had no goal, no destination in mind. All of a sudden, he noticed droves of people on bicycles going in one direction. “Where are all those people going?” he asked someone.
“Heavy Electricals Limited. It’s a factory recently set up by the government. It manufactures heavy electrical equipment.” 
There must be a job for me in that outfit, he thought. After all, so many people are employed there. I should just follow them in and apply. But the next moment, doubt began to set in. How can I be sure that I’ll get a job at HEL when I’ve been turned down at every other place?  People with connections and the sons of influential people find jobs, but I’m neither. He kept walking, as the bicycles and pedestrians rushed past him on their way to work.
Suddenly, a thought struck him. Surely, the manufacturer must need some components, building all those big machines? Perhaps I can go into business for myself as a supplier of such components? A bicycle rental shop came into view. He walked over and rented a bike. He didn’t have enough money, but the man told him he could settle up later. He mounted the bike and joined the crowd. When he arrived at the complex, he couldn’t believe his eyes. For miles, the wilderness had been transformed; numerous buildings had risen, and a huge factory was under construction. Workers wearing hard hats were rushing around, heavy equipment was in operation, the noise was deafening. He didn’t know where to begin, or whom to talk to. Wheeling the bicycle, he walked around for quite a while. Over the noise of jumbled voices and clanking metal, he heard a middle-aged man barking orders in a booming voice. He walked up to him and asked, “May I speak to you, sir?”
“Not now!” the man said and walked away.
Sultan followed him. When the man stood still for a moment, Sultan shouted at him over the noise, “I’m not looking for a job, sir. I want to know if you need anything that I can supply?”
The man looked at him intently and then said, “Meet me in my office in an hour.” He resumed shouting orders at the workers. More than two hours later, the man entered his office, looking exhausted. With a sigh, he collapsed into the chair and said, “So what company are you with…what do you supply?”
“I don’t represent any company, sir. I’m an independent contractor.”
“You look awfully young to be a contractor. Anyway, it doesn’t matter. I am in dire need of nuts and bolts, nuts and bolts of different sizes. Thousands of them. We are in the business of manufacturing heavy equipment. We don’t want to be bothered making small parts like nuts and bolts. It wouldn’t be cost effective. Can you supply them?”
“Yes, sir,” Sultan answered, sounding confident, but shaking inside.
“Good!  Get in touch with my secretary and get the details.” The man got up and was gone.
Several hours later, when Sultan came back to the bicycle shop to return the bike, the owner said, “Mian, you’ve been gone for hours. I was beginning to worry. Where did you go?”
Sultan told him the whole story, adding, “I have made myself a nuts and bolts contractor, but I don’t know the first thing about them.”
“Actually, it’s very easy to make nuts and bolts. All you need is a lathe, a few tools and a supply of iron rods of different sizes, and you can produce nuts and bolts. I have to do it all the time to repair the bikes in my shop.”
“But I have no money to buy a lathe or the supplies you were mentioning.”
A man sitting next to the shop’s owner, presumably his friend, spoke through the betel-leaf he was chewing. “Go to the Small Business Administration, take this order from HEL with you and apply for a loan to start a small factory.”
“I don’t know where they’re located.”
“Look, the SBA is just around the corner from my office. You come and see me tomorrow. I’ll take you down there and introduce you to the right people.”
The owner of the shop said, “Today seems to be your lucky day. First, you land a contract, and then you meet my friend and me. He can lead you to the right people to get a loan and I can show you how to manufacture nuts and bolts.”
The friend said, “If we can make it happen, what will our share of the profits be?”
“I don’t know, sir. I haven’t done this kind of thing before.”
The shop owner said, “How about five percent each for the two of us?”
“Of course, sir. But I don’t know if there will be any profit. It all seems so outlandish…this manufacturing of nuts and bolts.”
The owner produced a paper and a pen. “It seems to me that we have a deal. Why don’t we set it down?”
Sultan set up a little workshop in a ramshackle tool-shed behind his house and began to produce small, medium, and large nuts and bolts. At first, there were setbacks, but he didn’t lose heart. He learned from his mistakes and production soon picked up. His machine shop had to take on employees and soon, it was working day and night, producing thousands of pieces daily. No sooner were they delivered when there was demand for more, such was the insatiable appetite of the giant factory. Sultan had to expand his operation and ultimately built a factory employing hundreds of people.
Years passed and he was a wealthy industrialist now, but he couldn’t forget Parveen. He often wondered how her marriage had worked out, how many children she had. They must be quite grown up now, he thought. He lived in a huge mansion, with a large staff and a personal valet, but he couldn’t drive the loneliness from his heart. For years, his family and friends pressed him to get married, but they gave up in the end.
To run the household a little better, the valet brought in a new housekeeper. The woman spoke very little and always kept her face covered with a veil. Sultan thought she must be very devout. From the moment she arrived, Sultan noticed that his needs began to be looked after with the utmost care. Things were done for him exactly the way he wanted them, before he even said anything. After a while, he got accustomed to having her around.
One late night, Sultan returned home from a business trip several days earlier than he had told the domestic staff. Exhausted; he headed straight for the bedroom. As he entered the room and turned the lights on, someone, a woman apparently, was sleeping on his bed. His housekeeper bolted up, wild-eyed with fear at being discovered there. As their eyes met, Sultan saw that there was something familiar about her face. “Parveen?” he uttered in disbelief. Despite the ravages of time, the face was unmistakably hers.
“Yes, it is I, Sultan!”
“So, you are the mysterious woman behind the veil?”
“Yes, it’s true.”
“I thought I would never see you again…after you married Irfan. Where is he? What are you doing here, working in my household? Why this mystery? You are the last person in the world I would have expected to see here!”
“I always knew that this moment would come someday, that I wouldn’t be able to keep my identity a secret forever. Perhaps I should tell you my story?”
“Please do. I’m dying to know.” Sultan sat down on the edge of the bed and gazed at Parveen in utter amazement.
“When you wrote that letter saying that you didn’t want to marry me, my heart broke. I read it over and over again and suffered with every reading. After that, you disappeared and I couldn’t ask you why. There was tremendous pressure from my father for me to get married. He was not in good health and he wanted to be sure that I was married off before he died. There were many proposals, but he liked the one from Irfan’s family the best. You can well understand my reaction to that, but at that point I couldn’t have cared less who I married. I’d lost you, so I just wanted to please my father. I wanted to remove this big worry from his head, so I said yes.”
“I came to know about your marriage and it was the most painful moment of my life.”
“You could’ve stopped it with a single word. I would never have married Irfan in a million years if you hadn’t written that letter, but I thought you never wanted to see me again. But now, as they say in English, that’s water over the dam. From day one, Irfan was horrible to me. He was drunk on our wedding night. He was abusive and constantly taunted me about you. He squandered his own money and the dowry I’d brought on drinking, gambling and whoring. One day, he died in the arms of a prostitute, drunk with bootleg liquor. At last, I was free of him, but penniless. My father, who couldn’t bear all this, suffered a heart-attack and died. On his deathbed, he asked forgiveness for having deceived me about you. He told me that you were forced to write that letter because your father was his peon and he didn’t want his daughter to marry so much beneath her social station. That opened my eyes to what had happened and made me feel terrible on your behalf. I finally understood what heartache and humiliation you must have suffered.”
“You’re right about that. To this day, I still haven’t recovered from it.”
“I don’t doubt it. Anyway, more than anything I wanted to reach out to you and comfort you. It was not hard to find you. Newspapers had written so much about your success, about your rags to riches story. But I didn’t know how to go about it. I felt so ashamed about what had been done to you and I didn’t have the courage to face you. I decided to enter your life as your housekeeper. That way, I could atone for my father’s mistreatment of you, and be near you. Besides, I needed the job. I had nothing left to live on.” As Parveen finished her story, she began to sob. Sultan took her in his arms and showered her with kisses. They held each other for a long time—making up for all the lost years. They were transported in ecstasy.
The next morning, bright sunrays woke them up. “It’s a new day and a new beginning in our lives,” said Parveen.
“Shall we do what we should have done years ago?” asked Sultan, holding her tighter.
“Absolutely! But for now, as your housekeeper, I should get up and look after your breakfast.”
“Don’t you mean, as the mistress of this household, you should look after our breakfast?” They both burst out laughing.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

When will Centre stop discrimination against Madhya Pradesh?


By Ataullah Faizan
Bhopal, April 26, 2011
The apathy on the part of UPA-led Central government towards Madhya Pradesh, it seems, has refused to die down. It has become the habit of the Congress-led government to keep withholding funds for various schemes meant for the BJP-governed state. Latest in the series is the funds to be released to meet the arrears accruing due to enhanced pay scale teachers, reports SMS News & Feature agency.
As the Centre has not released these funds, Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan has urged the Union government to immediately release central share for disbursement of arrears of UGC pay scales to the teachers.
In his letter to the Union Minister for Human Resources Development Kapil Sibal, the Chief Minister said that Madhya Pradesh is the first state in the country to have implemented the new UGC scales with effect from January 2006. However, due to non-release of central share, arrears could not be paid to the teachers, he added.
The Chief Minister said that the Union Human Resources Development Ministry had suggested that the state government should release the arrears and then claim central share as reimbursement. Describing the stand of the Union Ministry as patently unfair, Chouhan said that the central share is 80 percent of the arrears and amounts to Rs. 400 crore.
The Chief Minister urged Sibal to reconsider the matter and issue necessary instructions to immediately release the central share.
Chouhan has also urged the Centre to clear the proposal regarding setting up of International Buddhist University at Sanchi in Raisen district.
In his letter to the Union Minister for Human Resource Development Kapil Sibbal, the Chief Minister said that the joint declaration issued on the State visit of the president of Lanka Mahindra Rajapakse to India in June 2010, recognizes that the shared culture and civilizational links provide a bedrock of bilateral relations. The Chief Minister said that in November 2009, the Mahabodhi Society of Sri Lanka proposed to set up Sanchi International Buddhist University (SIBU) in Sanchi, district Raisen, Madhya Pradesh. He said that the state government has identified 65 acres of land near Sanchi Stupa that would be made available for the SIBU.
Chouhan apprised Sibal that the proposal to establish SIBU was submitted to the Ministry fo External Affairs, which forwarded the proposal to Minister of Human Resources Development for clearance. He said that the Department of Higher Education, Govt. of Madhya Pradesh has also written to Ms. Vibha Puri Das, Secretary of Human Resources Development for expediting the clearance process.  It is to be seen as to when the Union minister takes note of the Chief Minister’s requests and release the much-awaited funds.
It may be noted that the state government, the Chief Ministers and even BJP MPs from the state had to show great resentment over the Central government’s attitude towards the BJP-ruled state. On March 21, the BJP Members of Parliament from Madhya Pradesh, led by the Leader of the Opposition in Lok Sabha Sushma Swaraj, staged a sit-in and demonstrated before the statue of Mahatma Gandhi in the Parliament premises in New Delhi, to protest against ''step-motherly behaviour'' with the state by the Centre.

On February 12, Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan called off his indefinite fast on getting assurance from the Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh to resolve the issues concerning the state. It is worth noticing here that Mr. Chouhan had proposed to observe indefinite fast in protest against the Centre ignoring important issues of Madhya Pradesh including release of relief package for frost-hit farmers. The Chief Minister, while addressing people at local BHEL Dussehra ground said that the Prime Minister in a telephonic conversation at Raj Bhavan in presence of the Governor Mr. Rameshwar Thakur this morning gave assurance to take action on all issues pending with the Centre. He said that the Prime Minister has assured positive action on the issues urging him to defer the fast.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Dr Shahzad Rizvi: A great writer of East and West : by Dr Syeda Imrana Nashtar Khairabadi

Dr Shahzad Rizvi, an Indian born but now aUScitizen, has emerged like a bright sun on the horizon of English Literature,with the shining rays of fine qualities. He belongs to the renowned scholarly family of Hazrat Allama Fazle Haq Khairabadi of  which boasts several poets, writers and scholars of  Urdu,  Hindi, English, Persian and Arabic.
Dr Rizvi is a handsome man of good personality, strong character ,and fine habits. His great qualities include humility, intelligence, gentleness  sympathy, kindness, reliability  ,nobility, and learning. He is self-made person of dedication, competence, diligence, hard work, and great understanding .He shines  in  his roles  as son ,brother and  husband. He currently lives inWashington,D.C.with his lovely and loving wife and daughter .A loving attitude  among family members is a little thing but makes a big difference. That is why his  home gives a foretaste ofParadise.
 Dr Shahzad Rizvi is a strong poet in the English language. He has equal command of thought and expression, language and literature, art    and style. His poetry is full of spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings, sentiments, emotions, thoughts, and passion and adorned by perfect  qualities of language. His beautiful poem “She and I” depicts the domestic situation of a husband and wife living under the same roof  but with a faulty emotional connection.
Dr Rizvi is an excellent fiction writer in English. He is the author of several books. His recent book, “The Last Resident,” is the love story of a British diplomat Nigel Hadley and an Indian Princess  Mehrun Nisa. The novel depicts the meeting of Eastern and Western heritage and culture. The story goes back to Indian history beforeIndependence. The plot, characters, events, setting, location, conflict, climax and resolution are remarkable. The very important message of this novel lies in its portrayal of persons of all religions-Muslims, Hindus, Christians and Jews–living and working in mutual harmony and respect. This novel gives an eye to understanding the essence of all religions, and  in this way promotes global peace. Today the world is encircled with severe problems: terrorism ,turmoil, hatred, doubt,  rage and cruelty. “The Last Resident” suggests a hopeful solution to these problems. The beautiful novel  binds all of mankind with the silky thread of love. Love is supreme. It doesn’t see the boundaries of caste , creed ,nation ,or religion.
 The novel “The Last Resident” is set in the beautiful city ofBhopal, the heart of Madhya Pradesh, which is aPrincelyStateofIndia.Bhopal, the city of  attractive lakes, is famous for its fascinating royal history and culture. The book is cinematic, and would
readily lend itself  to a film version. Whether in Bollywood orHollywood, this love story would be bound to succeed, with its handsome hero ,beautiful princess and  other royal  characters, its sweeping  historical  and cultural  perspective, its enchanting  plot, its literary excellence ,and  its enobling theme. No doubt, the film based on this novel will be a big commercial success.
In addition to ‘The Last Resident”discussed above, Dr Rizvi’s works include:
1.”Behind the Veil”
The saga of spirited Rashida, determined to marry an author whose work she admires but whom she has never met. She and her family must cope with the cascade of misfortunes that befall them, as a result of her stubborn romantic idealism.
2.”Mayu”
A Finnish woman with an alcoholic father and an unfaithful husband tries to find happiness with an Indian boyfriend, but must contend with the scars that life has given her and her own internal conflicts.
3.”A Window in the Wall”
Short stories, some set in and others in the West. The title story tells of young civil  servant in love with  his beautiful  neighbour, who, it seems , is a ghost.
4.”The Boy who Flew”
Imaginative stories of  for Children. Illustrated by Laurie McLaughlin ward.
 5.”Scattered Petals”
Selected poems depict the poet’s journey, from missed connections, heartache,  and false starts,to true and lasting love.
 More information is available at Dr. Rizvi’s Website
,http://www.kahani.org.
 Dr. Shahzad Rizvi, as well as being an outstanding writer, is also an insightful translator of poetry. His translation of Muslim Saleem’s ghazals shows his masterful command of both Urdu and English. These translations have two remarkable qualities : they keep the beauty of the ghazals intact in translations, and they will also enable people around the world ,who do not know Urdu language, to enjoy the harmony of the haunting ghazals of   Muslim
Saleem.
 Dr.Rizvi, in addition to English and Urdu, has  a good command of several other languages of East
and West. His efforts are great. His endeavours are appreciable. May Allah (SWT) give him a healthy, happy, and long life with his family. And brighten and lighten his path in the journey of life. Amin.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Dr Shahzad Rizvi on Muslim Saleem and revelation of his poetic art

A few months ago my sister, Dr. Imrana Nashtar, who was Reader in Aligarh University and now lives in the United States, informed me that a gentleman in Bhopal was preparing a directory of Urdu poets and his name is Mr. Muslim Saleem - thus I was introduced to Mr. Saleem in absentia. When I logged on to his blogs my introduction to him became complete:  I discovered his poetic prowess through his Urdu poetry. I thought that it would be a shame if the international readers would be deprived from enjoyment of his marvelous poems. His poems reveal his novel way of looking at the issues of life. His each couplet is so much packed with depth of thought that a careless and an uninitiated reader may miss what the poet is trying to convey. His does not write just for the sake of writing - as Urdu writers have been saying "literature for the sake of literature" - but, with a purpose and a mission in mind. From that standpoint, I think, it would not be an exaggeration to say that he is not only an observer and commentator of life, but, a social reformer. Slowly but assuredly his art has been maturing over the decades and certainly his profession as a journalist has given him diversity and a unique opportunity to grow as a person and as an artist. He does not sit at his desk every morning faithfully and start crafting verses - dragging unwilling, half-baked, and screaming lines out of the hold of his creative self - but relies on the inner creative fountains when by some unknown force they are turned on and there is a deluge of poetry. As Mr. Muslim Saleem writes himself about his creative process in "Aamad aamad"
and I quote:

"Sometime I don't write poetry for weeks or years at a time. And when the flow begins, whether I am in the office or traveling or just staying in one place, couplets, one after the other, start tumbling out of me. Some times, after a fallow period of years, for  ten – fifteen days it seems that someone has pushed the button of creativity in me; during these days I am almost in a trance, swaying back and forth, and in that state I welcome the new arrivals. When the couplets produced by my inner self during this period leave such a remarkable impression on me, a being of modest learning, then I breathe with satisfaction that the people of taste will certainly like them."


For the reason I mentioned earlier, I try to find time in my very busy life in Washington to translate his poetry because I regard it a worthy task as well as I would like Mr. Muslim Saleem's art to be known internationally. Hence I have translated his ghazal:

"WO SIRF TABASSUM KI ZABAN BOL RAHA HAI:"


In silence, he is revealing every secret
He is only speaking the language of smiles

Hunter - congratulations - get ready your trap
Your quarry of my heart is poised to fly

Though he is putting sweet melodies into the ear
Beware! He may poison the cup of your life

Attired in the robes of civilization
Packs of carnivores have been residing within the community


Love, such an unusual thing - though the beloved is silent
And yet, every limb of his speaks volumes of her emotions


- Dr. Shahzad A. Rizvi
**********************************************************

(Ghazal in roman script:
Khamoshi se har raz-e-nihan khol raha hai
Wo sirf tabussum ki zaban bol raha hai
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Sayyado Mubarak ho, chalo daam bichhao
Seene mein parinda koi par tol raha hai
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Wo zeest ke pyale mein kaheen zahr na bhar de
Kano mein jo awaz ka ras ghol raha hai
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Ulfat bhi ajab shai hai, wo khamosh hai lekin
Us shokh ka har azw-e-badan bol raha hai
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Tehzeeb ki poshak se jimson ko saja kar
Basti mein darindon ka ghol raha hai
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Meanings’
1. Raz-e-nihan : Deep secret
2. Daam : Net
3. Zeest : Life
4. Azw-e-badan : Part of body
5. Poshak : Attire, dress
6. Darindon : Beasts,  
7. ghol : group


Friday, April 22, 2011

‘Woman and Me’ by Dr Shahzad Rizvi

Gliding in the sun-rays
Her body touched the strings of my heart.
Her music created kaleidoscopic images.
I fell in step with her.
We traversed many a galaxy.
Then, all of a sudden,
She dissolved into light and engulfed me.
I was ecstatic.
The union gave me more than a million others might.
Now the essence of this woman
Is an integral part of me.
It gives me the fuel of life, hope, happiness.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Translation of the poem "jab ham ne zindagi ki gineen rahaten tamam" of Muslim Saleem by Dr. Shahzad Rizvi

Translation of the poem "jab ham ne zindagi ki gineen rahaten tamam"  of  Muslim Saleem by  Dr. Shahzad Rizvi
When we counted all the comforts of life
Years and years became concentrated in just a few moments
It seems a huge tree even now
Though the ravages of time have destroyed all its roots
It felt always as if the awaited one will come to me
But the echo of the footsteps turned away as it got  near me
I and the courage to protest - never - never
My veins suddenly began  to shout
When I broke all the limits spontaneously
Then I realized this is exactly what she wanted
I went around hiding my pain from the world
But my tossing and turning left its mark on the bed
 

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

English translation of ghazal (jab bhi jazbon ke liye) by Muslim Saleem by Dr. Shahzad Rizvi

English translation of ghazal (jab bhi jazbon ke liye) by Muslim Saleem

by  Dr. Shahzad Rizvi

When expressing emotions words turned into daggers 

The delicate hands were transformed into murder weapons

When the high and mighty were brought down by the raging storm of time

The lowly ones rose to the occasion and took their place

Slowly but assuredly we learned the art of living
While living among Romans we turned into Romans

Since we plunged into the ocean of struggles of life
we faced such challenges that we became expert swimmers

Leaving poverty and starvation behind when we launched ourselves
our determination became steely like Alexander's to conquer the world

From afar everything was titillating and tempting and beautiful
And when we touched them up close they turned into meaningless nothings

Muslim - who happened to pass through the universe of my imagination
That many a past moments of my memory became eternally fragrant 


Monday, April 18, 2011

Stop commercialisation of education


Ataullah Faizan
Bhopal : April 18, 2011
  
Commercialisation of education is playing havoc with both education and student’s career. It is on boom in India these days and its starting was from the days of boom in IT Sector when many private companies opened their computer training centre giving diplomas and degrees in various town & cities of every state. Most of which failed and ran away with hard earned money of people. Similarly, the concept of Distance Education launched by the Union government is purely business model behind it because whenever a students miss any deadline he have to pay the fines but if university misses all deadlines no measures will be taken in that case. It is alleged that students never receive the study material on time. Private universities are making money but are not providing services to the students. Dispatch of syllabus, study material is not done. No deadlines are mentioned for the staff to provide books and other required things to students on time. Last year one student doing M.Com from a private university through Distance Programme and gone to collect study material at the study centre in December , he received only three books out of six subject and told that university had printed only 3 books and rest of the books are not printed and given by university. What the university is charging for, when they do not give study material to the students it means they are just selling degrees, it’s shameful that no body is there to take care of these things. No one is raising a voice against them..
It is in the light of above facts that the Madhya Pradesh government is ensuring that more and more private colleges and universities are opened but they should not take undue benefits by commercializing education.
Recently, Higher education, culture and public relations minister Laxmikant Sharma underlined the needs for private investment and public participation for the development of education but warned of commercialization of education. To stop commercialization of education is also a top priority of the State Government, he said. Sharma was addressing an annual function of Uttamchand Israni Sindhu higher secondary middle school at Sindhi colony in Bhopal
Shri Sharma said that efforts are being made to reach a required standard of education. Eight universities have been set up in this government.

RAGE - a short story byDr. Shahzad Rizvi

RAGE - a short story byDr. Shahzad Rizvi


The actor pulled out the number nine club from the golf bag that he always kept on the passenger seat next to him, and swung it at the young man who had cut him off. With his car’s top down, the young man had no protection and the club hit him hard on the head. Blood oozing from his temple, he slumped over the steering wheel, setting his car horn blaring. Traffic stopped and everyone craned his neck to see what had happened. A paparazzo, who had been trailing the actor, jumped out of his car and began clicking photos from different angles. A local station’s news crew quickly materialized and began filming the scene.
The shriek of a siren grew closer and closer. A police car came into view, weaving its way through the crowd that had gathered. The policeman came out, took stock of the situation and shifted the body just enough to stop the horn. It now slumped to the side. He put his fingers on the wrist of the young man and shook his head. A few minutes later, the emergency squad arrived. After a preliminary examination, a medic announced, “He’s dead,” and took the body off to the Alexandria Hospital morgue where a pathologist would give an official report.
“I killed him! I killed him! Arrest me,” the actor shouted. The policeman did not need much coaxing. He read him his rights and took him away, with the paparazzi, the news crew and a mob of thrill-seekers in hot pursuit.
The police’s biggest challenge was not to find the killer, but to track down the next-of-kin of the young man who was cooling in the morgue. What they discovered was that he was 19, enrolled in the School of Foreign Service of Georgetown University and lived with his mother. But where was the mother?
Barbara was visiting Scotland. She had had an exciting day of watching the Edinburgh Festival and an evening at the Tattoo. Now, she had returned to her hotel room and was feeling a little tired and lonely. She and her son had planned this trip for a long time, but at the last minute he had changed his mind. She wondered what he was doing at this time. It must be early evening in the Virginia suburbs. I’ll talk to him a little later after I settle down, she said to herself. She called room service and turned on the TV.
The first item on CNN News was about the film star Bob Nichols killing a young man in a road rage incident. This time, he’s really done it, Barbara thought, sadly. It’s really too bad. Ever since she was a young girl, she’d had a crush on the actor. Her son would often tease her, “What’s this with you and Bob Nichols? You worship him and he doesn’t even know you.” She’d laugh it off.
She was in the middle of putting on her nightgown when an image came on the television. She was stunned. She began to choke and couldn’t breathe. Then she screamed and couldn’t stop. There was an insistent knock on the door and the telephone rang steadily.
At that hour, there wasn’t a single flight from anywhere in Scotland to the United States. She took an overnight train to London and took the first morning flight to the U.S. Seeing her cry and refusing to take any food or drinks, the stewardesses grew concerned and kept coming around to ask if they could do anything. Even the captain came over to ask after her. Through her sobs, she said, “My son has been killed.”  There was nothing anyone could do. There was nothing that could be done.
All through the flight, she saw images of her son’s life. He was such a cute, adorable little boy. There had been happy times, and there had been difficult times. It was not easy to be a single parent. And then there was the issue of having him out of wedlock. Even in this day and age, there were some people who had prejudices against it. She couldn’t care less about them, but she couldn’t bear her parents’ subtle and disapproving looks and comments. They did love her son, though.
The plane landed and people began to leave, but she sat in her seat lost in her thoughts. When finally she came out in the terminal, she was startled by a crowd of reporters. The flashing cameras were too much for her tired and sleepless eyes. Right and left, questions were being thrown at her, which she had no desire or energy to answer. When a reporter asked, “Barbara, will you be asking for compensation from Bob Nichols?” she felt like hitting him. She finally found refuge among her parents and friends who had been pushed to the side.
Leaving the airport, her mother said, “Forgive me, my dear, if I ever made you feel bad about having Bobby.”
“We just wanted to know who his father was. Poor child, he needed his father as he was growing up. He had me, of course, but it wasn’t the same,” added her father.
“But now, as they say, it’s water under the dam. It takes a long time to heal from the death of a child. We know; we suffered a lot when your brother died in the car accident. My only hope is that we can find some way to comfort you,” said her mother.
At the morgue, the body was unmistakably that of her son. She couldn’t bear to see it, this battered shell all that was left of her beloved boy. She told the doctor, “His body will, of course, be sent to a medical school. That’s what he wanted. That’s what he used to say, but I couldn’t imagine then that I’d be doing it.” She broke down and was taken away, supported by her parents.
The trial of Bob Nichols was a media circus. Hundreds of reporters and television crews descended on the courthouse in Alexandria, across the river from Washington. Nichols’ movie studio put together a strong defense team—even though the actor strongly objected. It lined up many Hollywood legends to come down to testify. The studio didn’t want to take any chances. As it was, it was losing a million dollars a day, with shooting on his new movie halted.
The date came and the trial of the year began. During the court proceedings, Bob Nichols stole the prosecution’s thunder by doing their work for them. As the defense team helplessly watched and the movie executives seethed, the actor told a hushed court that he was guilty as charged. As if that was not enough, he proceeded to smash his own character by cataloging the anguish that his anger had caused to other people. This time it had gone too far, extinguishing a promising young life. Something had to be done, and done soon, to stop it. The jurors listened intently to the self-directed tirade and went into their sequestered deliberations in great bafflement.
The media passed its own verdict: Guilty of first degree murder. There was premeditation and intent. There was no element of accident in the act. There was a pattern. And by the admission of the accused himself, the deed had been done by him, and by none other than him. He was even warning the judge and jury that if he were not stopped, he might do it again. For hours, the reporters churned the case in their brains and all came to the same conclusion.
The jury, on the other hand, had a tough time reaching a verdict. First of all, each juror had seen Nichols on the screen at some time or other—and the kind, gentle characters he portrayed had left an indelible impression. Second, his self-condemnation in the courtroom, his remorse, and the repentance he felt, had won them over. He needed help more than punishment, they thought. Locking him up for a long time would take him away from the wonderful work he was doing in films. Besides, he was involved in so many causes—most of them benefiting children. Furthermore, he’d done years of patriotic service, raising the morale of American troops by entertaining them in war zones.
The verdict finally came down as second-degree murder. Nichols was sentenced to ten years of imprisonment, five of them suspended. He was to spend six months in a psychiatric hospital under intensive supervision. In passing sentence, the judge lectured him to control the rages which had dogged him all his life, marring a brilliant career. If the loss of this young life would not open his eyes, then she didn’t know what would. 
****
Barbara was finally coming out of a deep depression. After agonizing through several sleepless nights, she decided to visit Bob Nichols at the Mental Health Institute. Several times, she thought of changing her mind, but she stuck with her decision.
Nichols thought she’d be yet another fan coming to see him, but when they came face to face, neither spoke for a moment. Then Nichols said, “It’s been a long time.”
“Yes, Bob, a very long time.”
“You’ve changed.”
“So have you.”
“Oh, Lord. For the better, I hope. I feel I’m a different man after that horrible experience.”
“I read the statement you gave in court.”
“When I woke up in the morning, after that night we’d spent together, you were gone. You left behind no name, no phone number, nothing. I looked for you everywhere, but I couldn’t find you. In the end, I assumed that you must be a married woman and didn’t want to be found.”
“Being a movie star, I was sure you wouldn’t care about me. Girls like me must throw themselves at you all the time.”
“Oh, no. In fact, all these years, I’ve thought of you and wondered about you.”
“So you remember how we met?”
“Like it happened yesterday. You cut me off on the road and in a rage I came at you with my golf club. But you didn’t realize your peril. You were shrieking with joy and said ‘Bob Nichols! I’ve had a crush on you since you were a child star and I was a little girl,’ and you stuck a pen and paper in front of me and asked for my autograph. I forgot all about my anger and found myself giving you the autograph and asking you out.”
“But my son—I mean, our son—was not so lucky.”
“What are you saying?”
She broke down and couldn’t answer him. He grabbed hold of her shoulders and shook them. “Answer me! You said, ‘Our son.’ Did I have a son? Answer me.”
“Yes, yes, you did…we did…from the night we spent together. The young man you killed—that was our son.”
“Oh my God, oh my God, this is not happening. Why didn’t you tell me? You knew how to find me. It’s not fair. It’s not fair!”
“Because you’re movie royalty. I couldn’t see my poor boy fitting in with your Hollywood life.”
“You owed it to me to tell me that you were carrying my child!”
“I thought you’d think that I was trying to trap you. Don’t some women try to trap the rich and famous that way?”
“You couldn’t be more wrong. I always wanted to get married and have a family. But no woman wanted me because of my temper. Most Hollywood people go through multiple marriages. I’m one of the few actors who’s never married. You were wrong about me…you were dead wrong. I fell in love with you that night. I wanted you…God knows, I wanted to marry you.”
“I’m sorry, I’m so sorry. I had no idea.” Tears were rolling down their cheeks.
“Our son cannot come back, but we can make a life together. Wherever he is, he would like us to do that. He would like his parents to come together. For his sake, for our sakes…would you have me? Would you marry me? Would you give me a second chance?”
“Everyone deserves a second chance. Why should we be an exception?”

Nashtar Khairabadi – ghazal – jaan sambhali na gayee

غزل

 نشتر خیرابادی

جِس کے دِل  پر یہ لگی جان سنبھالی نہ گئی

چشِم جاناں  کبھی گولی تِری خالی  نہ گئی

نام دُنیا   میں  مُحبّت کا   نِکا لا  میں نے

آپ سے ایک تمنّا بھی نِکالی    نہ گئی

 خونِ نا حق کا  اثر اِس سے سِوا کیا ہوگا

قتل  کرکے  بھی تِری آنکھ کی لالی نہ گئی

 بِجلیاں   سُوے   قفس آیئں گیئں سو سو بار

بننے  کو   شاخِ قفس پھو لوں کی ڈالی  نہ گئی

 رات دِن زُلفِ پر یشاں کا تصوّر ہے  تجھے

ہائے نشتر  تِری آ شفتہ خیالی نہ گئی