Wednesday, June 26, 2019

Alas Anaikar Shafeeq bhai is no more


It is learnt with deep sorrow that Janab Anaikar Shafeeque Ahmed sahib S/O late Anaikar Abdul Shukoor sahib, the great philanthropist, founder of many educational institutions and industrialist, has passed away today at Chennai. He was a religious person closely connected with the Tablighi Jamaat and had close relations with different Ulemas of religious institutions including Darul Uloom, Deoband. He was also managing many educational institutions founded by his father. 

His Janaza prayer and burial are to take place in Small Mosque in his native place Ambur. 

Let us pray for his maghfirath. 




ஹபிபியா மேல்நிலைப் பள்ளி,
ஹபிபியா தொடக்கப் பள்ளி,
ஆனைக்கார் அரபிக் ஓரியண்டல் மேல்நிலைப் பள்ளி,
அஷ் ஷுகூர் பள்ளி,
ஷூகூர் மெட்ரிகுலேஷன் பள்ளி, 
மதரஸ-யே-ரபீகுல் உலூம், ஆம்பூர் 
சென்னை ஷூகூர் மெட்ரிகுலேஷன் பள்ளி,
ரபீக் மருத்துவமனை மற்றும் பல அறக்கட்டளைகளை நிர்வாகித்து வந்த

முதுபெரும் கல்வியாளர்
சமூக சேவகர்,

ஆனைக்கார் கல்வி குழுவின் தலைவர்,

ஆம்பூர் 
அல்ஹாஜ்.
ஆனைக்கார்  ஷபீக் சாஹிப் 
இன்று காலை இறைவனடி சேர்ந்தார் என்பதினை தெரிவித்துக் கொள்கிறோம்.. 
இன்னா லில்லாஹி. ..........

Wednesday, June 19, 2019

Riba and Ponzi Schemes

How Many More "Halal" Ponzi Scheme ?
It is important to note that the very idea of Islamic banking and promoting it as a parallel to conventional banking – which is being portrayed as un-Islamic – and which has caught the imagination of a section of god-fearing Muslims, is a clear manifestation of shifts in Muslim politics over the world.
'Halal' Ponzi Schemes
Image for representational use only.Image Courtesy : Business Today

Afzal Pasha, a 55-year-old labourer, is dead. He died of a heart attack a few days back.

The news that the attractive scheme in which he had invested his life's savings worth Rs 8 lakh went bust proved unbearable for him.

While Afzal's tragic death could catch headlines, we will never know the plight of the thousands of investors – all of them belonging to the Muslim community – who had similarly invested their hard-earned savings in the said investment scheme launched by Mohammed Mansoor Khan in 2006 through his firm I Monetary Advisory (IMA).

The scheme was declared 'Shariah-compliant' and worked on '"no interest" policy of Islamic banking. A section of the clergy had even certified this scheme as "halal", which means "lawful" or "permitted" in Arabic, which helped it easily earn the trust of the Muslim community. Small investors from across the state of Karnataka had flocked to it with their investments ranging from a few thousand rupees to a few lakhs.

A few days back, the promoter of IMA just disappeared from Bengaluru and is supposed to have fled to Dubai.

According to rough estimates, the size of the fraud is of more than Rs 2,000 crore and a special investigation team (SIT) has been constituted to look into the scam and punish the fraudsters. Apart from the fact that people invest in such schemes because of the promise of incredible returns, what is so particular about these schemes which lure Muslims from various strata to go for it?

One, as 'Shariat' compliant fund, they formally claim that they do not invest in companies that deal in alcohol, tobacco, weapons, pornography or gambling, among others.

Two, they do not take "deposits" or pay "interest", rather convert the investors into limited liability partners and pay the investors dividends.

What is notable is that it is not for the first time that one witnessed a firm being run on purely 'Islamic principles' has similarly gone bankrupt. 'The Milli Gazette' had time and again reportedactivities of similar fraudsters who had robbed ordinary Muslims of their precious savings under the name of 'Islamic investment'.

Al-Fahad goes Al-Falah way

... Another fraud in the name of 'Islamic investment.' Delhi-based Al-Fahad investment group downed its shutters in the densely Muslim populated area of Okhla and left investors high and dry. It is not the first instance when a non-banking investment company collecting millions of rupees in the name of Islamic and halal investment schemes has bolted with no trace. (...) According to a brochure of the company, Al-Fahad worked on the principle of participation in profits. The amount invested by people, a group or trust in different schemes was to be utilized to finance various profitable ventures. The profit so earned was to be shared among investors and the company (in the ratio of 80:20). 

Four years later, it had reported about another such scam by 'Al-Barr Finance House' –headquartered in Mumbai with branches in different parts of India – which had adopted a little different method to defraud the gullible Muslims:

"Islamic" fraud is back, New "al-Falah" on the prowl

While a sizable number of Muslim investors are still recuperating from the scars inflicted by Al-Falah brand of "Islamic" financial sharks, we now have another "al-" brand of companies claiming to be an associate of a multinational Islamic finance group. Unlike Al-Falah, this group has adopted another route for harassing poor Muslims.

Coming back to the busting of the IMA Ponzi scheme, one can also witness a palpable sense of anger among a section of Muslims who are venting against the Maulanas exemplified by what a young Asif told a reporter:

"Hunt down the maulanas and ulemas who went about asking people to invest only in halal schemes. What makes anyone think this kind of scheme is halal?"

This techie had also a word of advice for Muslims:

"Your earnings are halal only when you work hard for it. Otherwise it is haram (forbidden under Islamic law). At least now Muslims should realise this." (-do-)

It is different matter that this advice is going to fall on deaf ears.

It is important to note that the very idea of Islamic banking and promoting it as a parallel to conventional banking – which is being portrayed as un-Islamic – and which has caught the imagination of a section of god-fearing Muslims, is a clear manifestation of shifts in Muslim politics over the world.

Growing acceptability of halal investment groups among large sections of Muslims is also a reflection of a significant sections remaining aloof from conventional banking systems for various reasons. Sachar Commission had rightly noted:

"The access of Muslims to bank credit, including priority sector advances, is low and inadequate. The average size of credit is also meagre and low compared with other socio-religious communities both in public sector and private sector banks. The position is similar with respect to finances from specialised institutions like the SIDBI and NABARD. Census 2001 data show that the percentage of households availing themselves of banking facilities is much lower in villages where the share of Muslim population is high…. The financial exclusion of Muslims has far-reaching implications for their socio-economic and educational uplift."

This financial exclusion could be a considered a culmination of various factors. It has also to do with the fact that majority of the population is poor and engaged in informal sector; it is also because of a certain mindset prevailing in the banking sector, which has categorised Muslims and Muslim-dominated areas as "negative zones" (which is documented in the Sachar report), and also for reasons of faith. (Purnima S. Tripathi, "Inclusive Banking", Frontline, vol. 26, no. 21, October 10-23, 2009)

Any neutral observer can see that these twin factors – shifts in Muslim politics over the world and financial exclusion of Muslims here in India – has led us to a situation where one witnesses proliferation of such schemes when "[o]ne can find these banks in almost every locality where a substantive Muslim population exists".

As a caveat, one needs to admit that all such ventures cannot be painted with the same brush and there could be quite a few genuine people among them who, as pious Muslims, could be running these ventures with utmost transparency.

Question arises what needs to be done so that separating the genuine efforts one is able to curb proliferation of such schemes among minorities which have effectively turned into ventures where "[u]nscrupulous Muslim shylocks, supported by a section of the Muslim clergy, continue to operate in India and are able to hoodwink Muslims in the name of Islamic or non-interest banking".

First of all, it is important that government and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) come forward to take stern action against this kind of scandalous banking. A necessary first step in this direction could be guidelines issued by the RBI are strictly enforced in all such cases which pursue financial activities of the banking/non-banking kind under the banner of 'Islamic Banking' or Sharia Compliant Funds etc.

Secondly, it is equally important that special attempts are made to end the financial exclusion of Muslims – evident at very many levels – by adopting special measures to accomplish it.

Thirdly, it is also important to raise broadly two categories of questions:

– How did Ulemas or Islamic scholars of yore looked at introduction of modern banking?

– How countries which call themselves Islamic look at this proposition; are they ready to convert their modern banking system into Islamic Banking or have kept their efforts at a symbolic level only?

It is instructive to look at the debates in colonial India between Muslim scholars when modern banking was being introduced and a section of the Ulemas who objected to it on the basis of their understanding of Islamic principles. In his important intervention on the subject, Ather Farouqui tells us:

According to eminent Muslim thinkers of the twentieth century including Maulana Shibli Nomani and Allama Iqbal, bank 'interest' is a profit on investment or charge on capital and when it is not exploitative, it is not riba.

(Islamic Banking in India at the Service of Pan-Islamists, MAINSTREAM, VOL L, NO 11, MARCH 3, 2012)

He also quotes a

…a letter dated January 17, 1932 to Khwaja Abdur Raheem, Allama Iqbal writes, "Interest in every form is prohibited. But this is so in an ideal society. Fatwa of Shah Abdul Azeez is that to draw bank interest is permissible." [B.A. Dar (ed.), Anwaare-Iqbal (Karachi: 1967), p. 245 (publication house not known)]

What does the experience of Islamic countries tells us on this matter. One can refer to Farouqui's observations once again:

In Saudi Arabia, banks, are involved in charging and paying interest. The only difference from other modern/conventional banking is that they 'employ semantics' and instead of using the term interest use the terms profit-loss sharing. Looking at the fact that it is an oil-rich economy, banks there rarely face losses and the depositors 'share the profits' which is not considered 'riba' (usury)

The most interesting case vis-a-vis Islamic banking pertains to Pakistan. Here few years back Islamists demanded to overhaul the conventional/modern banking system for an end to the interest paying system. The Federal Shariat Court also ruled in their favour but the government did not take it up in the legislature. When the matter went to Supreme Court, it has set aside the judgement and the matter is still pending.

He adds:

Even in an Islamic state such as Pakistan, therefore, interest-free banking has till date been unsuccessful largely due to the lacunae in the existing system but also as a result of the dichotomy between overemphasis on religious principles while trying to find one's place in a globalised market economy.

(Islamic Banking in India at the Service of Pan-Islamists, MAINSTREAM, VOL L, NO 11, MARCH 3, 2012)

Last but not the least, one also needs to brood over the fact that in a polarised ambience whether such a move would prove really beneficial for those Muslims who are financially excluded or would it pave the way for their further pauperisation?

Courtesy: Newsclick 

Also read: Picking Humanity Over Religion: A Small but Critical Step



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Sunday, June 9, 2019

ALAS NATTAMKAR FAROOQUE BHAI IS NO MORE


Alas Nattamkar Farooque bhai is no more.

It is learnt with deep sorrow that Janab N. Farooque Ahmed sahib, owner of Messrs. N.M. Hashim & Co. breathed his last due to sudden and severe cardiac arrest at about 10.30 am today, Sunday, 9/6/2019 at his native place Ambur. May his soul rest in peace.

Farooque sahib was a leading exporter of leather and leather shoes. He was a well-known philanthropist helping the poor and needy. Though rich he was very simple in his life style and behaviour. He mixed with all without any discrimination. He was the nephew of Janab N.M. Zackeria sahib, an industrialist of Ambur. He was also a Hafiz. He leaves behind his wife, a son, two daughters and grandchildren. His son was with him in business.

He respected Islamic scholars (ulema) and patronized them to a great extent. He used to arrange spiritual lecturers by inviting leading Maulanas. Three Masjids including Masjid-e-Hashim were built by him. He has also published many books in Urdu containing lectures of late Hazrath Hafiz Mohammed Usman sahib and Maulana Ihthishamul Haque sahib at his own cost and distributed them to schools, colleges and interested people at free of cost. In short he contributed a lot for the welfare of the community and country.

May Allah give him the highest place in the Jannah and patience to his near and dear ones to bear this great loss. 

كُلُّ نَفْسٍ ذَائِقَةُ الْمَوْتِ ۗ وَإِنَّمَا تُوَفَّوْنَ أُجُورَكُمْ يَوْمَ الْقِيَامَةِ ۖ فَمَن زُحْزِحَ عَنِ النَّارِ وَأُدْخِلَ الْجَنَّةَ فَقَدْ فَازَ ۗ وَمَا الْحَيَاةُ الدُّنْيَا
إِلَّا مَتَاعُ الْغُرُورِ - 3:185

Sahih International

Every soul will taste death, and you will only be given your [full] compensation on the Day of Resurrection. So he who is drawn away from the Fire and admitted to Paradise has attained [his desire]. And what is the life of this world except the enjoyment of delusion.

Monday, June 3, 2019

Real Happiness of Eid كل عام و انتم بخير


كل عام و انتم بخير 


REAL HAPPINESS OF EID

BY V. M. Khaleelur Rahman

Eid-ul-Fitr or Ramadan Eid is celebrated as a day of thanksgiving to God after successful completion of the month-long fasting from dawn to dusk during Ramadan, the ninth month of the Islamic lunar calendar and on sighting the crescent moon of the 10th month called Shawwal. Ramadan is meant for fasting, worship and charity, and also for self-introspection for the purpose of purification of one's soul and body by giving up bad and attaining good things. The Holy Quran says, "Fasting is prescribed to you as it was to those before you so that you may learn self-restraint." Fasting brings people together and creates a sense of camaraderie among them. It inculcates in them righteous conduct, to be good people and brotherhood of man by eradicating evils such as anger, greed and malice.

Prophet Mohammed (Sal-am) has said, "Do not belittle even the smallest act of kindness even if it is no more than meeting your neighbour with a smiling and cheerful face. We should not consider any charity small or not worth doing. Charity, big or small, should be given in a pleasant manner without hurting the feeling of its receivers and with the thought that we are only discharging a religious duty from the wealth God has given us." According to Islam even our day-to-day acts, like being kind to others at home and outside, are charity and it makes a big difference in our relations with them.

Once when Prophet Mohammed (Sal-am) was on his way to Idgah for Id prayers, he saw a poor boy about five-years-old sitting on the pavement sadly. He went near him and asked, "Why are you alone here, my dear boy?" The boy started weeping and said, "I am an orphan with nobody to care for me." The Prophet could not bear the pathetic words of the poor boy and consoled him saying, "From now on you can look to me as your father and Ayesha as your mother," and returned home with him. When his wife Ayesha fed him and dressed him well for Id prayers the Prophet lifted him on his shoulders and said, "Ayesha, this is the happiest Id for me. I experience true happiness at the happiness of this little orphan boy." He was a great benefactor of humanity and his mission right from the beginning to end was to see that every individual maintained his self-respect free from any sort of slavery



Congratulations to Modiji & team


CONGRATULATIONS TO MODIJI & TEAM

Hearty Congratulations to Narendra Modiji and his team of ministers who have assumed office after a grand swearing in ceremony on May 30. 

It is hoped that they will work for development of the country solving farmers' problems, creating jobs for youngsters, ending Tamil Nadu's water crisis and safeguarding the interest of the people without any discrimination in accordance with the letter and spirit of the Constitution of India. 
Justice should not be denied to any section of the people.

The slogan "sab ka sath sab ka vikas" should be implemented strictly so that our country become stronger and more and more united. 

V. M. Khaleelur Rahman