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Tuesday, March 31, 2009

About me

I am too much sensitive and committed person,having completed alot of things for achieving my target but still worried about it,As someone well said "Khuwab dekhny ka haq us ko hy jo usko haasil kar saky" means the dreams only who sees ,whom has the intention to make the dream true.According to me "Allah can give us whatever we want but should be committed to achieve our desire goal" I have never bad intentions for others ,because i know "Allah knows everything hidden"and it is my thinking that,if i would do something bad with anyone "Allah will do same with me"It is also called,The fear of our lord.
While preparation of "CSS",I am facing too much problems,especially when my relatives,friends and others are saying,you will not get through first Attempt,you would take too much time for passing the exam,I just want to know,Why they are abhorrent,well may "Allah"suggest them.
I know,it is their habbit to do backbiting but,I damn care about them,I just care about my "Allah" I have learnt alot of things in my younger age,and i am thankful to "Allah" for giving me a pure heart.
Since along time,I have been thinking about to show off those pictures which are relavent to me.these are the pictures of the mosque where i offer "salat e fajir and asar"


A couple of days ago,I got a bad news regarding my friend,who was also tutor of my nephew for reciting Quran,well his younger brother came to my house and informed me that,his older brother AZIZ has been died,I was socked because AZIZ is too much younger also,well i asked him what happend with AZIZ,he was crying and didnot say me what happend,i wondered and went to the madrassah where AZIZ became my friend when i sat in the madrassah for AITKAF 10 days prays in the last 10 daysof Ramzan,well i went to the madarssah and asked about the cause of AZIZ's death,I met with some ulemah's of the madarssah they said Aziz's friend drown in the river nearby Aziz's home and His friend was utterly saying him help me friend,he didnot know how to swim but he jumped into the river and unfortunately he died and his friend survived,he was also a hafiz as well as he was doing a course of ulema,when he came to my house last time,told me waqar brother pray for me,i have merely 2 years are left to become a ulema.these are the pictures of the madrassa where aziz got his early islamic education and this is the same mosque where i sat 3 times for Aitkaaf.






this is the same mosque where i often offer namaz-e-isha and maghrib.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Education in Islam - The role of the Mosque

The Quran urges the faithful to, think, ponder, reflect and acquire knowledge that would bring them closer to God and to His creation.
The Quran uses repetition in order to imbed certain key concepts in the consciousness of its listeners. Allah (God) and Rab (the Sustainer) are repeated 2,800 and 950 times respectively in the sacred text; Ilm (knowledge) comes third with 750 mentions.
The prophet Muhammad commanded knowledge upon all Muslims, and urged them to seek knowledge as far they could reach, and also to seek it at all times.
Following these commands and traditions, Muslim rulers insisted that every Muslim child acquired learning, and they themselves gave considerable support to institutions, and learning in general. This contributed largely with the commands of Islam to make elementary education almost universal amongst Muslims. `It was this great liberality,' says Wilds `which they [the Muslims] displayed in educating their people in the schools which was one of the most potent factors in the brilliant and rapid growth of their civilisation. Education was so universally diffused that it was said to be difficult to find a Muslim who could not read or write.'
In Muslim Spain, according to Scott, there was not a village where `the blessings of education’ could not be enjoyed by the children of the most indigent peasant, and in Cordoba were eight hundred public schools frequented alike by Muslims, Christians, and Jews, and where instruction was imparted by lectures. The Spanish Muslim received knowledge at the same time and under the same conditions as the literary pilgrims from Asia Minor and Egypt, from Germany, France, and Britain. And in the great Muslim university of Cordoba, both Jews and Christians attained to acknowledged distinction as professors. So high was the place of learning that both teachers and pupils were greatly respected by the mass of the population; and the large libraries collected by the wealthy landed and merchants showed that learning—as in the Italian Renaissance (six hundred years later)—was one of the marks of a gentleman.
`In scarcely any other culture,’ Pedersen holds, has the literary life played such a role as in Islam. Learning (ilm), by which is meant the whole world of the intellect, engaged the interest of Muslims more than anything…. The life that evolved in the mosques spread outward to put its mark upon influential circles everywhere.'
Every place, from the mosque to the hospital, the observatory, to the madrassa was a place of learning. Scholars also addressed gatherings of people in their own homes. Al-Ghazali, Al-Farabi, and Ibn Sinna, amongst many more, after teaching in public schools, retired to their private libraries and studies, and continued teaching `those fortunate enough to be invited.'
This universality, not even equalled today, thirst and impetus for education was proper to those days, when Islam was the banner, and like most achievements only proper to those days, and none others. The role and place taken by knowledge in that era will be considered (God willing) in subsequent works. Here, focus will be on the organisation of education, its aims and methods, above all the role of the Mosque. That of the madrassa, another lengthy subject, will be covered subsequently.
The mosque played a very great part in the spread of education in Islam. For Tibawi, the association of the mosque with education remains one of its main characteristics throughout history. For Scott, the school became an indispensable appendage to the mosque. From the start, the mosque, Wardenburg explains, was the centre of the Islamic community, a place for prayer, meditation, religious instruction, political discussion, and a school. And anywhere Islam took hold, mosques were established, and basic instruction began. Once established, such mosques could develop into well known places of learning, often with hundreds, sometimes with thousands of students, and frequently contained important libraries.
The first school connected with a mosque, was set up at Medina in 653, whilst the first one in Damascus dates from 744, and by 900 nearly every mosque had an elementary school for the education of both boys and girls. Children usually started school at five, one of the first lessons in writing was to learn how to write the ninety-nine most beautiful names of God and simple verses from the Quran. After the rudiments of reading and writing were mastered, the Quran was then studied thoroughly and arithmetic was added. For those who wanted to study further, the larger mosques, where education was more advanced, offered instruction in Arabic grammar and poetry, logic, algebra, biology, history, law, and theology. Although advanced teaching often took place in madrassas, hospitals, observatories, and the homes of scholars, in Spain, teaching took place mostly in the mosques, starting with the Cordoba mosque in the 8th century.
The basic format of mosque education was the study circle, better known in Islam as `Halaqat al-ilm' or in brief: Halaqa. Halaqa, spelled Halka in the new edition of the Encyclopaedia of Islam, is defined as `a gathering of people seated in a circle,’ or, `gathering of students around a teacher. Visiting scholars were allowed to sit beside the lecturer as a mark of respect, and in many Halaqat a special section was always reserved for visitors. Al-Bahluli (d.930) a magistrate from a town in Iraq went down to Baghdad, accompanied by his brother, to make a round of such study circles. The two of them came upon one where a scholar `aflame with intelligence,’ was taking on all comers in various fields of knowledge. Ibn Battuta, recorded that more than five hundred students attended the Halaqat of the Ummayad mosque. The Mosque of Amr near Cairo had more than forty halaqat at some point, and in the chief mosque of Cairo, there were one hundred and twenty halaqat. The traveller, geographer Al-Muqaddasi, reports that between the two evening prayers, as he and his friends sat talking, he heard a cry `Turn your faces to the class’ and he realised he was sitting between two classes; altogether there were 110. During the halaqats, whilst teachers exercised authority, students were still allowed, in fact, encouraged to discuss and even challenge and correct the teacher, often in heated exchanges. Disputations, unrestricted, in all fields of knowledge were known to take place on Friday in the study circles held around the mosques, and `no holds were barred.’
Teaching and learning in most large mosques became according to Mackensen, `a fully fledged profession,’ and the mosque school took on the semblance of an academy or even a university later on. So important centres of higher learning, indeed, that many of them still exist today as the oldest universities in the world. Amongst these, Al-Qayrawwan and Al-Zaytuna in Tunisia, Al-Azhar in Egypt, and Al-Qarawiyyin in Fez, Morocco. As places of renown, they attracted great names of Muslim scholarship, either as students, or teachers, or both. Many among the graduates of the mosques of Muslim Spain were Ibn Roshd, Ibn Al-Sayigh, and Ibn Bajja. In Basra (Iraq) Al-Khallil Ibn Ahmad gave lectures on philosophy at a mosque, and one of his students was Sibawaih who later became one of the most renowned Arabic grammarians of all times. From the beginning of the 9th century until our time, `the glory’ of the Qarawiyyin, it is held, was its body of scholars (ulamas).'
Among the scholars who studied and taught there were Ibn Khaldoun, Ibn Al-Khatib, Al-Bitruji, Ibn Harazim, Ibn Maymoun, and Ibn Wazzan, and possibly even the future pope Gerbert (d.1003), who later became Pope Sylvester II, and who introduced the Arabic numerals into Europe. Al-Azhar attracted Ibn Al-Haytham who lived in its quarters for a long period, whilst Ibn Khaldoun taught there towards the end of the fourteenth century, and Al-Baghdadi taught medicine at the end of the 12th century.
The renown of such places attracted large numbers of students. In large numbers they flocked to the Mosque of Medina, which had one of the earliest and most advanced school. Al Qarawiyyin attracted scores of students from all over Morocco, the rest of North Africa, Andalusia and even the Sahara. Generally they were housed by the successive Moroccan dynasties and the people of Fes. The universities of Granada, Seville and Cordoba were held in the highest estimation by the scholars of Asia, Africa and Europe, and in the ninth century, in the department of theology at Cordoba, alone, four thousand students were enrolled, and the total number in attendance at the University reached almost eleven thousand. And on the eve of the British occupation, in Al-Azhar, were already 7600 students and 230 professors.
In the early Islamic era, the mosque was used for the teaching of one or more of the Islamic sciences and literary arts, but after the mid ninth century, more and more came to be devoted to the legal sciences. Scientific subjects were also delivered, and included astronomy and engineering at Al-Azhar, medicine also at Al-Azhar and the mosque of Ibn Tulun in Egypt. At the Qarawiyyin, there were courses on grammar, rhetoric, logic, elements of mathematics and astronomy, and possibly history, geography and elements of chemistry. At Qayrawwan and Zaytuna in Tunisia, alongside the Quran and jurisprudence were taught grammar, mathematics, astronomy and medicine. At Qayrawwan, in particular, classes in medicine were delivered by Ziad ibn Khalfun, Ishak ibn Imran and Ishak ibn Sulayman, whose works were subsequently translated by Constantine The African in the 11th century. They were taught in the first faculty of medicine in Europe: Salerno, in the South of Italy, which became the first institution of high learning in Latin Europe. At the Mosque of Amr, the Muslim traveller-geographer Al-Muqaddasi from Jerusalem reports that between the two evening prayers, the mosque was crowded with classes in law, the Quran, literature and wisdom (philosophy or ethics). Whilst in Iraq, pharmacology, engineering, astronomy and other subjects were taught in the mosques of Baghdad, and students came from Syria, Persia and India to learn these sciences.
The mosques gradually took on wider functions on top of learning. Tracing this evolution, George Makdisi states that in the tenth century there was a flourishing of a new type of college, combining the masjid with a khan or inn to lodge law students from out of town. The great patron of this second stage in the development of the college was Badr ibn Hasanawaih (d. 1014/1015), governor of several provinces under the Buyids, and to whose name 3,000 masjid-khan complexes were credited over the thirty-year period of his governorship. The reason for the masjid-khan complex, Georges Makdisi explains, was that the student of law had to pursue over a long period, usually four years for undergraduate studies alone, and an indeterminate period for graduate studies, often as many as twenty years, during which the graduate disciple assisted the master in teaching. The masjid could not be used for lodging, except under special circumstances, the inn or khan thus became the lodging place of the staff and students and was founded in proximity to the masjid. The madrasa, which will be considered at a further stage, was, according to Makdisi, the final stage in the development of the Muslim college, combining the teaching function of the masjid with the lodging function of the khan. This follows a tradition long established by prophet Muhammad whose mosque was connected to a building which served as a school and as a hostel for poor students and out-of-towners.
Assistance for students in the various mosques was substantial. At the Qarawiyyin, for instance, students were not only exempt from paying fees but were also given monetary allowances periodically. Bayard Dodge states that, there, the students lived in residential quadrangles, which contained two and three story buildings of varying sizes, accommodating between sixty and a hundred and fifty students, who all received a minimal assistance for food and accommodation. The number of students at Al-Azhar was always high, Al-Maqrizi mentioning 750 foreign students from as distant lands as the Maghreb and Persia at one time residing in the mosque, in addition to students from all parts of Egypt. Bayard Dodge states that those students who did not have homes in Cairo, each was assigned to a residential unit, which was endowed to care for him. Generally, the unit gave the resident students free bread, which supplemented food given to them by their families, whilst better off students could afford to live in lodgings near the mosque. Every large unit also included a library, kitchen and lavatory, and some space for furniture. On his visit to Damascus, the traveller, Ibn Jubair reported the high number and varied facilities for foreign students and visitors at the Umayyad Mosque, prompting him to declare that `Anyone in the West who seeks success, let him come to this city (Damascus) to study, because assistance here is abundant. The chief thing is that the student here is relieved of all worry about food and lodging, which is a great help.'
The rulers played a major part in the endowment of mosques for education purposes. At the Qarawiyyin were three separate libraries, the most prestigious of which being the Abu Inan Library, founded by the Merinid Sultan, Al-Mutawakkil Abu Inan. An avid reader and collector, the Sultan deposited in his newly founded library books on various subjects that included religion, science, intellect and language, and he also appointed a librarian to take charge of the affairs of the library. In Tunisia, when the Spaniards occupied Tunis between 1534 and 1574, they ransacked its mosques and libraries, and removed many of the precious books and manuscripts. The Ottomans subsequently expelled the Spaniards, and restored and expanded the Zaytuna mosque, its libraries and madrassa, and made it again a high centre of Islamic culture. In Cairo, in 1365, the Mamluke prince, Yalbagha Al-Umari, ordered that each student at the mosque of Ibn Tulun be given forty dirhams and one irdab of wheat every month. The Mamlukes also paid the salaries and stipends to large numbers of teachers and students. This trend was particularly encouraged by Sultan Husam Al-Din Lajin, who restored the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in the Qatayi district of Cairo, paying salaries for professors and stipends for students, and having the royal physician Sharaf Al-Din Muhammad Ibn Al-Hawafir deliver in it lectures on medicine.
The following tale enlightens us greatly on education and Muslim life of then.. When Ibn Tulun ruled Egypt, some students attended the class of a professor who dictated daily such a small portion of tradition that their money ran out before the course was finished. To buy food they had to sell everything they had. After starving for three days, they resorted to begging. None of them wanted to face such disgrace, though. So they cast the lot, and the one who lost went into a corner of the mosque where they lived and asked God to be released from this shame. Just then a messenger came from Ibn Tulun with money for he had been warned in a dream to help them; there was also a message that he would visit them in person the next day. To avoid this honour, which might have been thought as a desire for personal glory, the students fled from Cairo that night. Ibn Tulun bought the whole of that ward and endowed the mosque with it for the benefit of students and strangers residing in it.
In more than one respect Islam influenced Europe and subsequently the rest of the world with its system of education, including universality and its methods of teaching and granting diplomas. Georges Makdisi shows this adequately, and raises some crucial points in this respect. Amongst others, Islam influenced the West and the course of university scholarship in terms of academic freedom of professors and students, in the doctoral thesis and its defence, and in the peer review of scholarly work based on the consensus of peers. The open scholarly discussions in the mosques surely accounted for much of that in times when scientific intolerance ruled elsewhere, and any free scholarly thought was punished with burning at the stake. The influence also came in the form of the many translated books of Islamic scholars which formed the core of European education in their first universities (Montpellier, Bologna, Paris, Oxford…), which all were founded in the twelfth-thirteenth centuries.
Islam and knowledge went together, closely, and from the very early stages. Other than the urge of the Quran and the sayings of the prophet Muhammad which prompted people to learn, the concrete symbol of Islam, the Mosque, was the centre of learning. And, indeed, until now, in most parts of the Islamic world, the word Jamia means at once both mosque and school, even when they are separate buildings, most often distant from each other. Finally, `Jamia’, the word for university in Arabic derives from Jami, mosque. No similar derivation exists in any other language or culture; no better association between Islam and higher learning than this.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

legal news

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Thursday, March 12, 2009

FUTURE OF A POOR

For a few hours ago,I went airport hotel for taking a cup of tea with my best friend jawad in the meanwhile there was an 11 years old boy who was cleaning some parked cars for a bit of money,who came to me and requested me sir may i clean your car,i replied no then i gave him 8 rupees then he said: sir i am not a beggar,I will get the money if you allow me to clean your car otherwise put the money off in your pocket,I cant say it was his arrogance or attitude but he impressed me then an impatient desire rose into my heart that why not i took his interveiw and publish the interveiw on my blog.Therefore,I asked his name,what is your name : he replied umer,what do u do umer besides cleaning cars: he replied nothing sir,what is your father umer: he replied sir my father passed away when i was 5 years old,so sorry then i asked him,how many brothers are you: he replied i have only one brother,oh then i asked who is your representator who manage your family: he replied sir my mother but now adays i am alone because she is hospitalised and my little brother is with her then i said him why you are here you should be with your mother: he replied sir i am cleaning the car for the sake of my mother's health afterwards I asked him ,What is your dream? he replied : sir i will buy my own buss and do my own transport business ,then I said Inshallah u will get all things of the world.then my friend came and asked me what are you doing waqar i replied him,jawad i am talking with this boy then again jawad asked him what is your name : he replied OSAMA inthemeantime i replied umer then jawad asked him what is your real name: Either Umer or Osama then sadly he replied sir my name is Osama but i dont want to tell anyone my real name because a couple months ago someone asked my name,I told him sir my name is Osama then the person replied Bastard your name is so much notorious in the whole world as people know OSAMA BIN LADEN ,and for your kind of information Osama was the person who attacked on america in 9/11 on WTC tower that is why i proclaim often to people that my name is umer,Well suddenly i thought i must take some pictures of this boy.
these all pictures had been taken by my cellfone while his interveiw was taken.

Eventually he will never get education ever becuase he can't afford even though he cleans cars just for the sake of his mother and his family.more than thousands of stories are in pakistan like this story,but no one takes care of them besides Rich people are behaving with them abominably when they say them, please for the sake of Allah give us only 1 rupees.Now you say me by your comments that what is the future of a poor.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Dreamt a Dream

Having completed Islamiat notes for css-2010 exam, I went to sleep. I found myself sitting in a coach bound from Karachi to Lahore. I started to pen down every interesting moment that came to my attention during my journey. After passing along the forest area, the coach pulled the couch to the sidewalk at the signal of a policeman for routine check up. All of a sudden, a beggar got on the coach and occupied a seat near me. At first his behavior with me was cordial and I found him a quiet person. But then I noticed that he was gazing at me for no particular reason. I found his behavior quite weird. It was creepy. It made me wonder as to what is so strange about me that had caught his eyes. Another peculiar thing about him was that his dress was made of rags of different worn out colors. Finding m scared, he started the conversation. He said, " Hello Waqar, why do u look so afraid? I am your friend and there is nothing to be scared of. I m the same person u have been calling for. I sensed that he knew what was going in my mind when he said," Waqar, i find you like a man who is fighting his destiny. I can see that you will ultimately be successful in the end. Learn to fight your fears." I was completely surprised to know that he could read my mind so well. At that particular moment, he vanished away into nothingness. It looked like an illusion. But I thought he was " light " of my vision. I got up and found myself in my room. It was dreaming!! I was out of my wits. But I sensed that that dream carried many portents. The conversation of that beggar pointed to my future life. Well guys, I have never dreamed like this before. Indeed, the longing for him is still in my heart. I want to meet him again and ask him to tell me the secrets of life. Perhaps he wanted me to believe in my fate and strive to achieve it, never giving up like a loser.