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US Ambassador visits Jamiat Ulama office, meets its leaders

US Ambassador visits Jamiat Ulama office, meets its leaders

 

By RINA

New Delhi: The New Delhi US Embassy Chargé d’Affaires Peter Burleigh and Cultural Counselor Michael P. Macy yesterday visited the headquarters of the Jamiat Ulama-I-Hind in the National Capital. This is the first high profile visit by the American officials after the change of guards both in United States of America as well as India.

The American officials discussed with the leaders of JUH various issues including the America’s new strategy to reach out to the Muslims and the Islamic world.

The discussions mainly focused on Islam, desecration of the Holy Quran, Prisoners in the Guantanamo Bay, Deoabandi School of Thought, Israel-Palestine conflict, Afghanistan, Iraq, terrorism and targeting of Muslims in the name of terrorism. Maulana Mahmood Madani made a strong case for Deobandi school of thought and stressed that there are some vested interests who are trying to present a wrong image of it by indulging into false propaganda leading to a sort of extremist perception about it although Deoband is a school of peace and moderation. In the present international scenario peace, Islam and Deoband are three hot topics that need to be tackled cautiously and sensitively.

Maulana Mahmood Madani drew the visiting officials’ attention to the volatile political situations in Pakistan and Afghanistan and remarked that the war on terror initiated by the United States of America against a particular group (read Taliban) has now spread to the civilian population of the country. Maulana Mahmood Madani told the US officials that with the inauguration of the office of President Barack Hussain Obama it is hoped that he will reverse the policies of his predecessor and bring about a paradigm shift in the policy towards Muslims and Islam. The visiting officials assured the Jamiat leaders of all possible steps to redress their concerns.

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Autorickshaw Driver of the year!!!

Suvendu Roy of Titan Industries shares his inspirational encounter with a rickshaw driver in Mumbai

“One man CAN make a Difference” 

“Think Global, Act Local”


Last Sunday, my wife, kid, and I had to travel to Andheri from Bandra. When I waved at a passing auto rickshaw, little did I expect that this ride would be any different. As we set off, my eyes fell on a few magazines(kept in an aircraft style pouch) behind the driver’s back rest. I looked in front and there was a small TV. The driver had put on the Doordarshan channel.

My wife and I looked at each other with disbelief and amusement. In front of me was a small first-aid box with cotton, dettol and some medicines. This was enough for me to realise that I was in a special vehicle. Then I looked round again, and discovered more – there was a radio, fire extinguisher, wall clock, calendar, and pictures and symbols of all faiths – from Islam and Christianity to Buddhism, Hinduism and Sikhism. There were also pictures of the heroes of 26/11- Kamte, Salaskar, Karkare and Unnikrishnan. I realised that not only my vehicle, but also my driver was special.

I started chatting with him and the initial sense of ridicule and disbelief gradually diminished. I gathered that he had been driving an auto rickshaw for the past 8-9 years; he had lost his job when his employer’s plastic company was shut down. He had two school-going children, and he drove from 8 in the morning till 10 at night. No break unless he was unwell. “Sahab, ghar mein baith ke TV dekh kar kya faida? Do paisa income karega toh future mein kaam aayega.”

We realised that we had come across a man who represents Mumbai – the spirit of work, the spirit of travel and the spirit of excelling in life. I asked him whether he does anything else as I figured that he did not have too much spare time.. He said that he goes to an old age home for women in Andheri once a week or whenever he has some extra income, where he donates tooth brushes, toothpastes, soap, hair oil, and other items of daily use. He pointed out to a painted message below the meter that read: “25 per cent discount on metered fare for the handicapped. Free rides for blind passengers up to Rs. 50.

My wife and I were struck with awe. The man was a HERO! A hero who deserves all our respect. Our journey came to an end; 45 minutes of a lesson in humility, selflessness, and of a hero-worshipping Mumbai, my temporary home. We disembarked, and all I could do was to pay him a tip that would hardly cover a free ride for a blind man.

I hope, one day, you too have a chance to meet Mr Sandeep Bachhe in his auto rickshaw: MH-02-Z-8508.

Take a look at pic 1 –

which has got a first aid box on the left and a newspaper box on right (which had all hindi-english-marathi-gujrati and economic times)

Take a look at pic 2 – which has got a tv on the top with cable (I was watching colors channel) and below tat is the tissue box. on the left is the mandir types and dont miss the “Only gandhigiri” written there , below tat is the calender and a notepad and pen along with a blue fan (which is blowing towards the customer who sits)

Take a look at pic 3 – 25% discount for handicap!! who on this earth can expect somethin like this from an rickshawala yaar!!

The photographer spoke to tat person and found him so much interesting and creative. he was telling some new stuff he is gonna do more for the customers to be happy.

Its amazing there are ppl still alive like him in this world!


 
 
 


3D Webcam for shooting 3D photos or 3D video


3D Webcam Images Video CaptureIts time you should move from your low quality 2D 
webcam to these 3D webcam which are the first of their kind called a ‘Minoru’ which is a japanese word meaning ‘Reality’ as it brings real things captured and you can even upload these 3D videos to your youtube account and share with your friends.

Not only the features but the looks are also fascinating because they are not like those other dumb looking camera’s but look like a robot or may be are inspired Wall-E robots from the Pixar movie which came recently.


3D WebcamWall e Robot

Another features of this 3D Webcam include :

3D Glasses Web CamThe webcam user has to use 3D glasses to view the video in order to 
experiance the 3D effects, the same way as the viewers have to watch movies in theatures with 3D glasses while watching a 3D movie.
This Webcam is compatible with instant messengers like AIM, Windows Live Messenger & Skype using which you can stay connected with others and share the webcam and broadcast yourself live.
The output videos would be in youtube compatible format making sure that you can directly upload the captured videos easily.
The price of these webcam’s are expected to be around 100$ lets wait and watch when they are officially launched and we can see something which is almost near to human eyes vision.

AMU off campus: Kerala Government to hold meeting on 14th

AMU off campus: Kerala Government to hold meeting on 14th | TwoCircles.net

AMU off campus: Kerala Government to hold meeting on 14th
Submitted by admin4 on 9 July 2009 – 4:34pm.

* Indian Muslim

By Najiya O., TwoCircles.net,

Kochi: The Kerala Government will hold a meeting on 14th July in connection with the setting up of the off-campus centre of the Aligarh Muslim University in Malappuram, said Revenue Minister KP Rajendran in the Assembly. A representative of the AMU too will be invited to the meeting.

The Minister informed that the government had taken measures for time-bound acquisition and transfer of the land for the campus. The survey procedures of the land have been completed. The Higher Education Council has allotted Rs 50 lakh for the survey procedures. The office of the Land Acquisition Unit, which deals with acquisition and survey procedures, has begun functioning at Perinthalmanna. Mr Rajendran also informed that 11 acres of land have been acquired in fast track.

He welcomed the allotment of Rs 25 crores for the AMU off-campus by the centre. The government wishes that Malappuram won’t lose the campus, he added.

Malappuram district in Kerala is one among the four centres that the AMU had selected to set up its regional centres. The state government had earlier planned to acquire 200 acres of land at Panakkad and written to the AMU about it. But later the government changed its plan stating that the Industries Department had already handed over that land to a public-private company. However, later it was known that the land had not yet been transferred to any agency, and that it was still under the state government.

In the meantime, the government decided to acquire 400 acres of land at Perinthalmanna for the purpose, but the land is in some legal disputes. Moreover, the land owners have approached the court against the acquisition.

Though it is clear that there are no problems with the land at Panakkad, the government wants to acquire the land at Perinthalmanna. It is feared that the campus may be lost for Kerala if the procedures are not completed soon.

Taj Mahal builders used Harappan measurement units that British discarded

Taj Mahal builders used Harappan measurement units that British discarded | TwoCircles.net

Taj Mahal builders used Harappan measurement units that British discarded
Submitted by admin4 on 9 July 2009 – 3:16pm.

* Art/Culture
* India News
* Indian Muslim

By K.S. Jayaraman, IANS,

Bangalore : Designers of the 17th century Taj Mahal, the finest piece of Mughal architecture, employed the same unit of measurement used by the Harappan civilization as far back 2000 BC, according to a study by an IIT-Kanpur professor. These units were used by builders in India till the British imposed their own units in the 18th century.

The study by R. Balasubramaniam of the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, and reported in the latest issue of Current Science, has for the first time shown that the unit of length called ‘angulam’ – mentioned in Kautilya’s treatise on statecraft “Arthasastra” dated 300 BC — was used without a break in India for over 3,900 years.

The ancient ‘angulam’ has been found to be equal to 1.763 modern centimetres, according to Balasubramaniam, a professor of materials and metallurgical engineering. He has carried out dimensional analysis of some of India’s historical structures, built during different times, to identify the measuring units used in their engineering plans.

He says he was surprised that ‘angulam’ and its multiples ‘vitasti’ (12 angulams) and ‘dhanus’ (108 angulams) have been used as the unit of measurement right from the Harappan times – the highly developed civilization that thrived for a few centuries on the floodplains of the Indus river in what is now northwest India and Pakistan – till the pre-modern era when the Taj was built.

Balasubramaniam, who last year studied the dimensions of the 1,600-year-old Delhi Iron Pillar at the Qutub Minar complex, found that ‘angulam’ and its multiple ‘dhanus’ were used as the basic units of length in its design.

For example, the total height of the pillar is exactly 4 dhanus, Balasubramaniam told IANS.

Now in a paper published in Current Science, Balasubramaniam has shown that the modular plan of the Taj Mahal complex is based on use of grids of sides measuring 60 and 90 vitasti. He says the study has established that the design and architecture of the Taj is based on traditional Indian units codified in “Arthasastra” and that “there is nothing foreign” in its design.

“The fact that the unit of angulam of 1.763 cm could match very well the dimensions of historical monuments establishes the continuity of India’s engineering tradition through the ages for as long as 3,900 years,” says Balasubramaniam in his paper.

“With the new knowledge we can analyse all the important ancient structures in India,” he says, and hopes the findings “will open a new chapter in the study of metrology (science of measurements)”.

But how did the angulam tradition remain unbroken for so long?

As quoted in the website of Nature India, Balasubramaniam believes the workers from the Harappan days were perhaps using some kind of scale “that was handed over through generations”.

Taj Mahal builders used Harappan measurement units that British discarded

Taj Mahal builders used Harappan measurement units that British discarded | TwoCircles.net

Taj Mahal builders used Harappan measurement units that British discarded
Submitted by admin4 on 9 July 2009 – 3:16pm.

* Art/Culture
* India News
* Indian Muslim

By K.S. Jayaraman, IANS,

Bangalore : Designers of the 17th century Taj Mahal, the finest piece of Mughal architecture, employed the same unit of measurement used by the Harappan civilization as far back 2000 BC, according to a study by an IIT-Kanpur professor. These units were used by builders in India till the British imposed their own units in the 18th century.

The study by R. Balasubramaniam of the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, and reported in the latest issue of Current Science, has for the first time shown that the unit of length called ‘angulam’ – mentioned in Kautilya’s treatise on statecraft “Arthasastra” dated 300 BC — was used without a break in India for over 3,900 years.

The ancient ‘angulam’ has been found to be equal to 1.763 modern centimetres, according to Balasubramaniam, a professor of materials and metallurgical engineering. He has carried out dimensional analysis of some of India’s historical structures, built during different times, to identify the measuring units used in their engineering plans.

He says he was surprised that ‘angulam’ and its multiples ‘vitasti’ (12 angulams) and ‘dhanus’ (108 angulams) have been used as the unit of measurement right from the Harappan times – the highly developed civilization that thrived for a few centuries on the floodplains of the Indus river in what is now northwest India and Pakistan – till the pre-modern era when the Taj was built.

Balasubramaniam, who last year studied the dimensions of the 1,600-year-old Delhi Iron Pillar at the Qutub Minar complex, found that ‘angulam’ and its multiple ‘dhanus’ were used as the basic units of length in its design.

For example, the total height of the pillar is exactly 4 dhanus, Balasubramaniam told IANS.

Now in a paper published in Current Science, Balasubramaniam has shown that the modular plan of the Taj Mahal complex is based on use of grids of sides measuring 60 and 90 vitasti. He says the study has established that the design and architecture of the Taj is based on traditional Indian units codified in “Arthasastra” and that “there is nothing foreign” in its design.

“The fact that the unit of angulam of 1.763 cm could match very well the dimensions of historical monuments establishes the continuity of India’s engineering tradition through the ages for as long as 3,900 years,” says Balasubramaniam in his paper.

“With the new knowledge we can analyse all the important ancient structures in India,” he says, and hopes the findings “will open a new chapter in the study of metrology (science of measurements)”.

But how did the angulam tradition remain unbroken for so long?

As quoted in the website of Nature India, Balasubramaniam believes the workers from the Harappan days were perhaps using some kind of scale “that was handed over through generations”.

Egyptian Protesters Accuse Germany Of Racism

Free Internet Press :: Egyptian Protesters Accuse Germany Of Racism :: Uncensored News For Real People

EGYPTIAN FURY AT DRESDEN MURDER

Protestors Accuse Germany of Racism

Fury
and sorrow in Egypt: the murder of a pregnant Egyptian woman in a
German courtroom last week has sparked protests in Egypt with mourners
chanting “Down With Germany.” The woman was stabbed to death in a
racist attack.

A brutal murder in Germany last week has caused shockwaves in
far-off Egypt. Thousands of mourners took to the streets of Alexandria
on Monday to protest at the funeral of a pregnant Egyptian woman who
was stabbed to death inside a German court in a crime that has provoked
fury in her home country.

PHOTO GALLERY:
EGYPT’S ANGER OVER DRESDEN MURDER

Click on a picture to launch the image gallery

(6 Photos)

Egyptian newspapers have given strong coverage to the death of Marwa
al-Sherbini (32), describing the veiled woman as a “martyr in a
headscarf” and suggesting the killer was motivated by a hatred of
Islam.

Mourners chanted “Down with Germany” and scuffled with police after
prayers in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria for al-Sherbini, who
was murdered on July 1 in a courtroom in Dresden, eastern Germany, by a
German man of Russian origin.

“We will revenge her death,” al-Sherbini’s brother, Tarek
al-Sherbini,” told the Associated Press. He said Muslims faced racism
and discrimination in the West.

Al-Sherbini, mother to a three-year-old child and three months
pregnant, was stabbed 18 times by the man she was testifying against
during an appeal hearing, German prosecutors said.

‘He Wasn’t Blond, so They Shot Him’

Her killer also stabbed her husband, who German police then mistook
for the attacker and shot in the leg, prosecutors added. The husband is
in hospital and has awoken from a coma. “They thought that he had to be
the attacker because he isn’t blond and then they shot him,” Tarek told
Egyptian TV.

The killer, named only as Alex W., was appealing against a
conviction for insulting Sherbini by calling her an “Islamist,”
“terrorist” and a “slut” when she asked him to make space for her son
to go on the swings on a playground in Dresden, prosecutors said.

He had been fined €780 and last Wednesday’s court session had been called to hear his appeal against the ruling.

State prosecutor Christian Avenarius described him as a man driven
by hatred of Muslims. “It was clearly a racist attack by a fanatical
lone wolf,” he said. W. had moved to Germany from Russia in 2003 and
had already expressed his contempt for all Muslims at the start of his
court case, the prosecutor said.

Al-Sherbini’s body was flown to Cairo on Sunday, and met by her
family and the German ambassador. Her funeral was attended by members
of parliament, a minister, a representative of Egypt’s Coptic
Christians and others.

Al-Sherbini moved to Germany in 2005 with her husband Elwi Okaz, a
genetic research scientist. They lived in Berlin at first and moved to
Dresden in 2008 where Elwi had a research position at the
Max-Planck-Institute.

Members of the Muslim Brotherhood parliamentary bloc, Egypt’s most
powerful opposition group, have called for MPs to discuss the killing,
the group’s Web site said.

German Consulate Under Police Protection

More protests are planned in front of the German consulate in
Alexandria on Thursday. Egyptian newspapers reported that police had
been put on alert and would deploy to protect the consulate. The city
council plans to name a street after al-Sherbini, Daily News Egypt reported on Tuesday.

Hundreds of Arabs and Muslims demonstrated in Berlin on Saturday.
The Egyptian Pharmaceutical Association has called for a boycott of
German-made drugs — al-Sherbiny was a pharmacologist and a member of
Egypt’s national handball team from 1992 to 1999.

The General Secretaries of Germany’s Muslim and Jewish Councils, Aiman
Mayzek and Stephan Kramer, visited al-Sherbini’s husband in hospital on
Monday. “You don’t have to be Muslim to oppose anti-Muslim behavior,
and you don’t have to be Jewish to oppose anti-Semitism,” said Kramer.
“We must stand together against such inhumanity.”

German government spokesman Thomas Steg said Chancellor Angela
Merkel had reacted “very emotionally” to the incident. “If there’s a
xenophobic, racist background to this case, the government of course
condemns it in the strongest terms,” he said.

Sheikh Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi, Egypt’s most senior cleric, called
the attacker a murderer and said al-Sherbiny was a martyr. But he
appealed for calm and said he hoped the murder wouldn’t harm the
dialogue between the West and Islam. “It was an isolated case,” he
said.

cro — with wire reports

Fury and sorrow in Egypt: the murder of a pregnant Egyptian woman in a German courtroom last week has sparked protests in Egypt with mourners chanting “Down With Germany”. The woman was stabbed to death in a racist attack.

A brutal murder in Germany last week has caused shockwaves in far-off Egypt. Thousands of mourners took to the streets of Alexandria on Monday to protest at the funeral of a pregnant Egyptian woman who was stabbed to death inside a German court in a crime that has provoked fury in her home country.

Egyptian newspapers have given strong coverage to the death of Marwa al-Sherbini (32), describing the veiled woman as a “martyr in a headscarf” and suggesting the killer was motivated by a hatred of Islam.

Mourners chanted “Down with Germany” and scuffled with police after prayers in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria for al-Sherbini, who was murdered on July 1 in a courtroom in Dresden, eastern Germany, by a German man of Russian origin.

“We will revenge her death,” al-Sherbini’s brother, Tarek al-Sherbini,” told the Associated Press. He said Muslims faced racism and discrimination in the West.

Al-Sherbini, mother to a three-year-old child and three months pregnant, was stabbed 18 times by the man she was testifying against during an appeal hearing, said German prosecutors.
(story continues below)

Make a donation today to remove the advertisments!

‘He Wasn’t Blond, so They Shot Him’

Her killer also stabbed her husband, who German police then mistook for the attacker and shot in the leg, prosecutors added. The husband is in a hospital and has awoken from a coma. “They thought that he had to be the attacker because he isn’t blond and then they shot him,” Tarek told Egyptian TV.

The killer, named only as Alex W., was appealing against a conviction for insulting Sherbini by calling her an “Islamist,” “terrorist” and a “slut” when she asked him to make space for her son to go on the swings on a playground in Dresden, said prosecutors.

He had been fined €780 and last Wednesday’s court session had been called to hear his appeal against the ruling.

State prosecutor Christian Avenarius described him as a man driven by hatred of Muslims. “It was clearly a racist attack by a fanatical lone wolf,” he said. W. had moved to Germany from Russia in 2003 and had already expressed his contempt for all Muslims at the start of his court case, said the prosecutor.

Al-Sherbini’s body was flown to Cairo on Sunday, and met by her family and the German ambassador. Her funeral was attended by members of parliament, a minister, a representative of Egypt’s Coptic Christians and others.

Al-Sherbini moved to Germany in 2005 with her husband Elwi Okaz, a genetic research scientist. They lived in Berlin at first and moved to Dresden in 2008 where Elwi had a research position at the Max-Planck-Institute.

Members of the Muslim Brotherhood parliamentary bloc, Egypt’s most powerful opposition group, have called for Parliament Members to discuss the killing, said the group’s Web site.

German Consulate Under Police Protection

More protests are planned in front of the German consulate in Alexandria on Thursday. Egyptian newspapers reported that police had been put on alert and would deploy to protect the consulate. The city council plans to name a street after al-Sherbini, Daily News Egypt reported on Tuesday.

Hundreds of Arabs and Muslims demonstrated in Berlin on Saturday. The Egyptian Pharmaceutical Association has called for a boycott of German-made drugs – al-Sherbiny was a pharmacologist and a member of Egypt’s national handball team from 1992 to 1999.

The General Secretaries of Germany’s Muslim and Jewish Councils, Aiman Mayzek and Stephan Kramer, visited al-Sherbini’s husband in hospital on Monday. “You don’t have to be Muslim to oppose anti-Muslim behavior, and you don’t have to be Jewish to oppose anti-Semitism,” said Kramer. “We must stand together against such inhumanity.”

German government spokesman Thomas Steg said Chancellor Angela Merkel had reacted “very emotionally” to the incident. “If there’s a xenophobic, racist background to this case, the government of course condemns it in the strongest terms,” he said.

Sheikh Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi, Egypt’s most senior cleric, called the attacker a murderer and said al-Sherbiny was a martyr. But he appealed for calm and said he hoped the murder wouldn’t harm the dialogue between the West and Islam. “It was an isolated case,” he said.

Egyptian Protesters Accuse Germany Of Racism

Free Internet Press :: Egyptian Protesters Accuse Germany Of Racism :: Uncensored News For Real People

Fury and sorrow in Egypt: the murder of a pregnant Egyptian woman in a German courtroom last week has sparked protests in Egypt with mourners chanting “Down With Germany”. The woman was stabbed to death in a racist attack.

A brutal murder in Germany last week has caused shockwaves in far-off Egypt. Thousands of mourners took to the streets of Alexandria on Monday to protest at the funeral of a pregnant Egyptian woman who was stabbed to death inside a German court in a crime that has provoked fury in her home country.

Egyptian newspapers have given strong coverage to the death of Marwa al-Sherbini (32), describing the veiled woman as a “martyr in a headscarf” and suggesting the killer was motivated by a hatred of Islam.

Mourners chanted “Down with Germany” and scuffled with police after prayers in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria for al-Sherbini, who was murdered on July 1 in a courtroom in Dresden, eastern Germany, by a German man of Russian origin.

“We will revenge her death,” al-Sherbini’s brother, Tarek al-Sherbini,” told the Associated Press. He said Muslims faced racism and discrimination in the West.

Al-Sherbini, mother to a three-year-old child and three months pregnant, was stabbed 18 times by the man she was testifying against during an appeal hearing, said German prosecutors.
(story continues below)

Make a donation today to remove the advertisments!

‘He Wasn’t Blond, so They Shot Him’

Her killer also stabbed her husband, who German police then mistook for the attacker and shot in the leg, prosecutors added. The husband is in a hospital and has awoken from a coma. “They thought that he had to be the attacker because he isn’t blond and then they shot him,” Tarek told Egyptian TV.

The killer, named only as Alex W., was appealing against a conviction for insulting Sherbini by calling her an “Islamist,” “terrorist” and a “slut” when she asked him to make space for her son to go on the swings on a playground in Dresden, said prosecutors.

He had been fined €780 and last Wednesday’s court session had been called to hear his appeal against the ruling.

State prosecutor Christian Avenarius described him as a man driven by hatred of Muslims. “It was clearly a racist attack by a fanatical lone wolf,” he said. W. had moved to Germany from Russia in 2003 and had already expressed his contempt for all Muslims at the start of his court case, said the prosecutor.

Al-Sherbini’s body was flown to Cairo on Sunday, and met by her family and the German ambassador. Her funeral was attended by members of parliament, a minister, a representative of Egypt’s Coptic Christians and others.

Al-Sherbini moved to Germany in 2005 with her husband Elwi Okaz, a genetic research scientist. They lived in Berlin at first and moved to Dresden in 2008 where Elwi had a research position at the Max-Planck-Institute.

Members of the Muslim Brotherhood parliamentary bloc, Egypt’s most powerful opposition group, have called for Parliament Members to discuss the killing, said the group’s Web site.

German Consulate Under Police Protection

More protests are planned in front of the German consulate in Alexandria on Thursday. Egyptian newspapers reported that police had been put on alert and would deploy to protect the consulate. The city council plans to name a street after al-Sherbini, Daily News Egypt reported on Tuesday.

Hundreds of Arabs and Muslims demonstrated in Berlin on Saturday. The Egyptian Pharmaceutical Association has called for a boycott of German-made drugs – al-Sherbiny was a pharmacologist and a member of Egypt’s national handball team from 1992 to 1999.

The General Secretaries of Germany’s Muslim and Jewish Councils, Aiman Mayzek and Stephan Kramer, visited al-Sherbini’s husband in hospital on Monday. “You don’t have to be Muslim to oppose anti-Muslim behavior, and you don’t have to be Jewish to oppose anti-Semitism,” said Kramer. “We must stand together against such inhumanity.”

German government spokesman Thomas Steg said Chancellor Angela Merkel had reacted “very emotionally” to the incident. “If there’s a xenophobic, racist background to this case, the government of course condemns it in the strongest terms,” he said.

Sheikh Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi, Egypt’s most senior cleric, called the attacker a murderer and said al-Sherbiny was a martyr. But he appealed for calm and said he hoped the murder wouldn’t harm the dialogue between the West and Islam. “It was an isolated case,” he said.

‘s Death Gives 5 Israelis The Gift Of Life

A Palestinian Boy’s Death Gives 5 Israelis The Gift Of Life (VIDEO)

A Palestinian Boy’s Death Gives 5 Israelis The Gift Of Life (VIDEO)
digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost – A Palestinian Boy’s Death Gives 5 Israelis The Gift Of Life (VIDEO)

By Wide Angle

When a 12-year-old Palestinian boy was killed in the West Bank city of Jenin by Israeli soldiers who mistook his toy gun for the real thing, it could have been just one more blip on the news: one more war, one more child, one more human tragedy that ripped the heart out of a family and a community, but rippled no further into the world’s consciousness.

But something extraordinary happened that turned Ahmed Khatib’s tragic 2005 death into a gift of hope for six Israelis whose lives were on the line: while overwhelmed with grief, Ahmed’s parents consented to donating their son’s organs. Suddenly, amid the violence and entrenched hatred surrounding an intractable conflict, a simple act of humanity rose above the clamor and captured worldwide attention.

Heart of Jenin tells the story of Ahmed’s tragic death and his father Ismael Khatib’s journey to visit three of the organ recipients two years later. One of Ahmed’s kidneys went to an Orthodox Jewish girl and his other kidney went to a Bedouin boy. While his parents hesitated to donate Ahmed’s heart, it now beats in the chest of a Druze girl.

“I see my son in these children,” Khatib says.

Crossing from northern Israel to the Negev desert and ending up in Jerusalem, Khatib encounters every complexity of the conflict: deep-seated animosity, hardened judgments, and heartfelt generosity. While laying bare the deep divisions between Israelis and Palestinians, Heart of Jenin offers a rare vision of common humanity and hope.

Unrest in China Forces Many Minorities to Leave Restive Western City –

Unrest in China Forces Many Minorities to Leave Restive Western City – washingtonpost.com
In Wake of Turmoil In China, Minorities Face Painful Options
Many Abandoning Lives They Loved
   

By Ariana Eunjung Cha
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, July 9, 2009

URUMQI, China, July 9 — A few steps past the shattered glass, warped metal and other remains of a Muslim Uighur restaurant, Ye Erkeng and his family are in hiding.

Ye, his wife, younger brother, sister-in-law, niece and mother have not ventured outside their apartment complex for three days. They have been getting by on stale bread and boiled water.

After bloody clashes between Uighur demonstrators and government security forces began Sunday in Urumqi, capital of the far western region of Xinjiang, Ye said he did not want to risk having his family members on the streets. But around 11 p.m. Tuesday, a mob of several hundred Han Chinese carrying sticks, hammers and bricks ransacked the restaurant in front of Ye’s apartment as he and his family huddled inside, praying.

“I thought, ‘If they rush into the house, we will all die,’ ” Ye said.

Letting Go of Dreams

Ye’s family is among the many in Urumqi that find themselves at an unexpected crossroads in the aftermath of this week’s violence, which has claimed at least 156 lives. Terrified of their Han neighbors, but accustomed to the comforts of the city they have made their home, they must weigh the benefits of staying in a place where they no longer feel welcome or returning to a countryside where their salaries will probably be reduced by half. On Wednesday, Ye and his wife, Mu Heti, made the painful decision to go back to the countryside of Ili in northern Xinjiang, joining an exodus of ethnic minorities out of Urumqi that has overwhelmed bus and train stations in recent days.
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Before Tuesday night, Ye said, he thought that the violence would pass quickly and that life in Urumqi would return to normal. Ye, 40, who is Kazakh, and Mu, 36, who is Uighur, and their extended families have been in the city for eight years while he worked as a Chinese-Russian translator. The family members had settled into a life they loved.

In a good month, Ye could make as much as 3,000 yuan, or about $450, a small fortune considering that his whole family had been barely able to eke out $75 a month farming sunflowers and cotton in his home town. But their enchantment with Urumqi went further than money.

Ye had picked up the Han Chinese love of mah-jongg, a traditional game involving tiles that is similar to rummy, and had a regular competition going with friends. Mu loved to sit on the street with friends, drinking tea and watching the city’s bustle.

Ye’s niece, 12-year-old Ye Ziyang, was the only minority student at one of the top elementary schools in the city and had made friends with Han children whose ambitions went far beyond those of her peers in the countryside. Ziyang was learning English, and she often spoke of going to college and becoming a doctor.

But all that now seemed distant, Ye and Mu said, in light of the violence. Tensions between China’s dominant Han population and people native to Xinjiang — mostly Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking group, and Kazakhs, who are concentrated on the border with Kazakhstan, are mostly Muslim and speak their own Turkic language — have existed since Chinese troops rolled into Xinjiang 60 years ago.

China has repeatedly said that it “liberated” the population, but many Uighurs and Kazakhs complain of government policies that they say are meant to wipe out their language, culture and religion in the name of assimilation.

The complaints are similar to those of Tibetans, another of China’s 56 officially recognized ethnic minorities. In March 2008, Tibet erupted into protests against Chinese rule that spilled into violence. Like the Tibetans last year, Uighurs have complained that the government has practiced a double standard in how it deals with the perpetrators of violence — detaining Uighurs in large numbers, while allowing Han Chinese to go free.

The Xinjiang region in recent years has experienced a large influx of Han Chinese lured by the government’s ambitious Develop the West program, which seeks to duplicate the success of the wealthier coastal areas. As a result, the region’s Han population has jumped from 6 percent in 1949 to more than 40 percent in 2000, according to the last census. The initiative has boosted incomes all around, but it has also set up an uncomfortable hierarchy. Many of the new bosses are Han, while the workers are from minority groups.

The bloody riots on Sunday show just how deep the mistrust between Han Chinese and other ethnic groups runs, and how quickly a seemingly minor disagreement can escalate. The violence began with a false Internet rumor about the rape of two Han women by Uighur workers. That led to a fight in a toy factory in the southern Chinese city of Shaoguan that left two Uighurs dead.

The investigation into the workers’ deaths, which some Uighurs felt was inadequate, sparked a demonstration in Urumqi on Sunday. The protest spun out of control as paramilitary troops fired on protesters and rioters torched cars and businesses. A number of Han bystanders said they were attacked without provocation. Two days later, violence broke out as vigilante Han groups launched retaliatory attacks on Uighurs.

The Chinese government has said that the situation in Urumqi is now under control. But it will take much longer to repair the psychological damage that the ethnically charged violence has wrought on local residents.
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Fear on Both Sides

The five-story complex where Ye and Mu live — complete with its leaks, cracked cement and creaky doors — earlier housed 100 Uighur and Kazakh residents, who had come to Urumqi in search of a better life. Now all but 25 are gone. They have fled to parts of Xinjiang where Hans are fewer in number. Still, Ye has compassion for his Han neighbors.

“It isn’t just us who are scared of what’s going on. Hans are also scared,” Ye said. On Tuesday night, he said, he welcomed several Han women who needed refuge from the mob-fueled violence. As it turned out, everyone inside got lucky. The attackers moved on.

Some Uighur neighbors were not as fortunate. A 25-year-old who gave his name as Abu Budu said he was taking a walk with his older brother when he was suddenly surrounded by a Han Chinese mob.

He said he heard one man in the crowd tell the others not to beat the Uighurs, but then felt a blow to his head and lost consciousness. He woke up at the hospital with gashes across his back, a concussion and so many bruises on his face that it had turned black. He said he is being kept in a different ward from his brother and has been given no information about his condition. “They beat me without any reason,” he said.

At dawn Wednesday, people began packing to leave. Most took only small shopping bags, leaving furniture and other expensive but bulky items behind. But Ye and Mu’s family was stuck. They could not walk because Ye’s mother is nearly blind, and they could not find a taxi driver willing to take minorities across the city to the Uighur area.

Mu said she is angry not only at the Han Chinese who turned violent, but also at the Uighurs who did the same, leaving families like hers with few options.

Ye tried to reassure his family members about their future in the countryside.

“Life there will be all right,” he said. “It’s a small place and more peaceful. We will just do labor work and farm.”

Outside, the destruction of the one-room Uighur restaurant was drawing curious Han passersby. Several men armed with sticks stood on the sidewalk across the street from the restaurant, a few meters from the door to the apartment complex. They gazed at the entrance as an
other group of Uighurs — mostly women and children — trickled out, heads bowed so as not to make eye contact with the onlookers.

Researcher Zhang Jie contributed to this report.