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Wednesday 22 December 2010

UK Events; THE ISLAMIC HISTORY OF CHINA

Islamic Circles presents:

THE ISLAMIC HISTORY OF CHINA

by Professor Ibrahim Wenjiong Yang (Lanzhou University, China)*

Date: Saturday 15th January 2011Time: 9am - 5pm Venue: Birkbeck College, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HX

DEADLINE FOR BOOKING: MONDAY 10TH JANUARY 2011 after which prices will increase

The Prophet (s) said, Seek knowledge even in China, (al-Bayhaqi)

According to the Muqaddimah of the great Muslim Historian Ibn Khaldun, "All civilisations rise and fall". 

Napoleon Bonaparte once said of China, "Let her sleep, for when she wakes, she will shake the world."

Islamic presence in China is as old as Islam itself. With over 1200 years of Sino-Islamic relations, ranging from the early da'wah 

efforts of the companion, Sa'd ibn Abi Waqqas (ra), to the pioneering journeys of the greatest naval commander in Chinese history, Admiral Zheng He, to the fact that there are some 100 million Muslims living China today. Islam and Muslims have made a significant contribution to China and Chinese Civilisation and vice versa. Muslims have a rich and unique relationship with China.

This short, intensive course aims to cover the following:

- A brief history of Chinese Civilisation and Dynasties
- Arrival of Islam, Golden Age and decline
- Zheng He and his fleets and impact
- Different Muslim Communities and Chinese Islam
- Islamic Scholarship of China and its contribution to Chinese Civilisation
- Islam and relationship with other faiths such as Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism.
- Islamic Art in China
- Current situation and future of Muslims of China

*Professor Ibrahim Wenjiong Yang has been engaged in anthropological research and teaching. He has interests in cultural anthropology, anthropology of religion, ethnic relations, urbanization, tradition and modernity as well as focus on Islam and Muslim ethnic minorities in China with interdisciplinary and comparative perspectives. He completed his academic studies at the Northwest University for Nationalities and Lanzhou University in China, where he nowcurrently teaches. He has undertaken a number of significant research projects and his works have received many important awards. Some of his selected publications include: Interaction Adaptation and Reconstruction: A Study of Northwestern Urban Hui Muslim Community and Its Cultural Transition (2009); The History and Culture of Hui Muslim People in China,(2006).

Inshallah Professor Ibrahim will also be joined by members of the Zheng He Foundation in contributing to the course.

The courses are open to all but spaces are limited. Entry is through prior registration only. Prayer facilities available and coffee/tea provided during break sessions.

Cost (excluding lunch but slide notes provided):

£20 paid online BEFORE Monday 10th January 2011 After deadline date, price will increase to £30 online or cash on the day. Unless the course is cancelled, there are no refunds for non-attendance.


To register please email us the following details:

Full name:
Mobile:
No of tickets:
Town/City:
Email:
Once recieved, details for online payments will be emailed.

For further information please contact:

Tel: 07956 983 609 E-mail: info@islamiccourses.org Website: www.islamiccourses.org

Tuesday 21 December 2010

Middle East Cleric Yusuf al-Qaradawi's silly thoughts & Qatar FIFA 2022 Vision

The FIFA announcement that Qatar is awarded hosting the 2022 World Cup represents the first time a Muslim country defeats the United States, the Doha-based Egyptian Middle East Cleric Yusuf al-Qaradawi (...?) said in his last Friday sermon. Read more

Tuesday 14 December 2010

After Sweden bombing, British media targets ‘radical views’ in an echo of McCarthyism

For understandable reasons, the airwaves have been full of news of the bomb that killed one, and injured two people in Sweden last weekend.

It has being alleged that a Muslim from Sweden who lived and studied in the UK was responsible, and that he cited Sweden’s role in the insulting cartoons of the Prophet (saw) episode and its role in occupying Afghanistan as reasons for his actions. We know it is forbidden for Muslims to undertake such actions.
However, the British media has once again focused on the issue of ‘radicalisation’, again ignoring the issues that are said to cause the grievances.
It has been proposed that the alleged bomber expressed ‘radical’ views – though it has not been said violent views – in a mosque in the UK, and that the mosque officials should have reported him to the police.
Once again, what constitutes ‘radical views’ conveniently remains undefined. The media has been unashamed in calling for Muslims to report other Muslims to police whose political or religious views they have decided are unacceptable – calling for the policing of thoughts amongst this community alone. Media organisations have even added that advocating a Caliphate in the Muslim world was ‘extreme’. Others presented arguments that the alleged bomber wanted a second wife, who was a ‘good believer’ and who sought ‘Jannah’, implying that these were somehow stepping stones towards violent action. The effect of the media reporting is to encourage mosques to report people’s personal religious and political views to the police, regardless of their links to violence, never mind incitement to violence.
Questions have even been put to mosques suggesting they have done something wrong by failing to report these issues to the police. The same has been said of University lecturers who fail to report people with ‘radical views’.
There is no difference between this and the climate of the 1950′s in the USA under Senator McCarthy and his House Committee for ‘Un-American’ activities.
The media’s response is utter hypocrisy. They will defend leaks, and insults of religion and the sacred as ‘free expression’, but clamp down on legitimate Islamic views, labelling them ‘extreme’ or ‘radical’.
Muslims should know what their agenda is. It is imporatant that we do not allow ourselves to be fooled into accepting terms such as moderate or extreme following the whims of the British media.
While we clearly know that these violent actions are prohibited in Islam we must never allow ourselves to be bullied into denouncing any political opposition to violent western occupation of Muslim lands, the right to resistance in those countries or condemnation of insults to the Holy Prophet (saw). (HTB)

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Wednesday 1 December 2010

A free workshop for aspiring writers; Writing your First Novel

Saturday 18th  December 2010

Women’s Library, London Metropolitan University

Workshop facilitators:
me 2.jpgDavid Grant, author of Elephant and Managing Director of Infinite Ideas.

Prior to Infinite Ideas, David held senior roles in sales and marketing at McGraw-Hill, John Wiley and Kogan Page before setting up his own business in the mid nineties. He ran a sales and marketing agency working with some of the most creative and fiercely independent publishing companies in the UK spanning most subject areas. He has also published a bestselling range of self-help books in the 60 Minute Success Skills series. David is currently working on his difficult second novel and suspects he will still be doing so in twenty years time.



leila_judge.jpg
Leila Aboulela, award-winning author of The Translator
Sudanese-born author of, The Translator, a New York Times Notable Book of the Year and Minaret– both novels were long listed for the Orange Prize and IMPAC Dublin Award. Leila was the first winner of the Caine Prize for African writing for her short story The Museum included in her collection of short stories Coloured Lights. BBC Radio has adapted her work extensively and broadcast a number of her plays including The Mystic Life and the historical drama The Lion of Chechnya. Leila’s work has been translated into 12 languages.
  
This workshop is aimed at aspiring writers who want to write their  first novel and learn more about getting published.

Leila Aboulela will also be doing a short reading from her latest novel, Lyrics Alley.
This workshop is free but spaces are very  limited, so participants are required to register beforehand by emailing:asma.khanom@muslimhands.org

Programme
1030       1100                       Doors open, arrival, registration, tea/ coffee
1100       1115                       Welcome and introduction  
1115       1245                      Writing your First Novel - David Grant, author of Elephant and Managing 
Director of Infinite Ideas.                                              
1245       1330                       Break for lunch & Dhuhr prayers.
1330       1430                       Getting published, and how I became a writer, Leila Aboulela, award-winning author of The Translator
1430       1445                       Break for Asr prayers, tea break.
1415       1500                       Reading by Leila Aboulela, Lyrics Alley
1500       1545                       Networking, speaking to CEO of Infinite ideas regarding consultations, book signing.
1545                                       Close

Date:     Saturday 18th December 2010
Time:     Doors open at 10.30 for 11am start
Venue: Clore Seminar Room at London Met’s  Women’s Library
London Metropolitan University25 Old Castle StreetLondon E1 7NT

To register for the event please visit http://groupspaces.com/mhuk-events/item/99937

The Muslim Writers Awards will be hosting a series of free workshops over 2011 throughout the UK.  These will be facilitated by professionals and experts from within the publishing industry.  The workshops will cover a range of relevant topics designed to help aspiring writers to progress.  You can register your interest to receive email updates about these from our team. Or if you prefer, just follow us on Facebook.
February 26th - London
April 2nd - Birmingham
May 7th - Manchester
July 2nd - Bradford
August 13th - Leicester
September 17th - Birmingham
October 22nd - Manchester
17th December - London


Asma Khanom  |  Fundraising Assistant
asma.khanom@muslimwritersawards.org.uk
+44 (0)203 246 0015 x106
Unit 1.02, E1 Business Centre, 7 Whitechapel Road, London. E1 1DU. UK
Muslim Hands - United for the Needy
Charity Registration No. 1105056
Registered Office: 148 Gregory Boulevard, Nottingham. NG7 5JE. UK

Further information can be found on our website muslimhands.org

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WORKSHOP - PREPARE FOR MARRIAGE - INVEST IN YOURSELF







Ajmal Masroor and Henrietta Szovati
(Barefoot Institute - Authors of "10 Things You Should Know About Marriage")*

Date: Saturday 18th December 2010
Time: 10am – 5pm
Venue: Birkbeck College, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HX

BOOKING DEADLINE: MONDAY 13TH DECEMBER 2010 after which prices increase

Marriage preparation programme that is:
• Practical and based on real life experiences
• Guided by core Islamic principles
• Centred around modern counselling and coaching techniques

Marriage should be a simple process. Yet, many struggle to navigate through the initial stages of finding a suitable partner and the relationship. Experts say 
that if you can survive the first three years, you are likely to stay together as a couple.

Topics included
Discover Yourself: barriers to finding a suitable partner
Expectations: better understanding of what you are looking for and what you are offering, roles and responsibilities
Communication: learning practical skills for effective ways to listen and articulate your thoughts and feelings
Intimacy: exploring and challenging issues related emotional intelligence and a physical relationship
Developing shared vision: you and your spouse, in-laws, extended family and children

What will you gain by attending?
• Deeper understanding of the spiritual, physical and emotional aspects of marriage
• Hands on and practical skills to navigate through various challenges in marriage
• Handout with theory and exercises
• A signed copy of the latest marriage handbook
• 20% off Barefoot’s next couple’s training full weekend programme
• After the training a free taster session with the counsellor or the coach

The courses are open to all but spaces are limited.
Entry is through prior registration only.
Prayer facilities available and coffee/tea provided during break sessions

The Trainers
Ajmal and Henrietta have been married for over eight years. They bring a fresh approach to the field of marriage counselling by combining both
practical and theoretical knowledge. The couple live in London with their two children.

To book or for more information please contact:
Tel: 0560 244 7022 / 07983 066 246 
Email: info@barefootinstitute.com 
Web: www.barefootinstitute.com 
 
Read more>>>

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Friday 26 November 2010

Police attack students involved in nationwide protests in UK

Tens of thousands of university and college students, as well as school-aged youth demonstrated across the UK on Wednesday, in opposition to higher tuition fees and cuts in further and higher education.

A protest of around 10,000 was held in London and marches and demonstrations were held in many other towns and cities including Birmingham, Manchester, Oxford, Cambridge, Leeds, Sheffield, Newcastle, Bournemouth, Glasgow and Cardiff.
Many attending the demonstrations were further education students and sixth-formers between 16 and 18 years old. School pupils, many still in uniform, also walked out of lessons in support of demonstrations in London, Manchester, Sheffield, Winchester, Cambridge and Leeds. Among the issues this age group were protesting are government plans to remove the Education Maintenance Allowance, which provides low-income students with up to £30 a week to help with the costs of staying in full-time education after leaving school at 16.
Wednesday’s protest events were organised largely on an ad hoc basis by local organisations that have sprung up in opposition to the government’s attacks on education. This was evidenced by the proliferation of homemade banners and placards. The protests were a clear manifestation of the indignation felt by young people and students to the National Union of Students, the University and College Union as well as the opposition Labour Party, who had openly sided with the government in condemning student protesters in London two weeks ago and have organised nothing since then.
In London protesters gathered in Trafalgar Square at midday, before setting off for Whitehall, the administrative centre of the British government. The march should have been a fairly straight-forward event that would have passed without incident. However, the police wanted to make an example of protesters against austerity and cuts in line with the state-orchestrated witch-hunt following the protests by university students in London two weeks ago.
To this end, the Metropolitan Police utilised Wednesday’s demo in order to carry out a massive operation against mainly school-aged young people and to make a show of strength. During the last decade the police have dealt with many larger marches and events, particularly those against the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Ahead of the London demonstration, former Met commissioner Brian Paddick said the police would “throw the kitchen sink” at the protest. The Met mobilised 1,500 officers to control the London protest--seven times as many as were present two weeks ago. These included the Territorial Support Group, the Met’s riot police.
Wednesday marked the return to the now notorious strategy of “kettling” that was heavily criticised last year at the anti-G20 demonstrations. Kettling is when police surround and pen in thousands of protesters in small areas for hours on end without access to food, drink or toilet facilities. It amounts to the forced imprisonment of demonstrators without due legal process. As a result of these actions during the G20 protests, Ian Tomlinson, a newspaper vendor making his way home from work, was killed by police brutality.
The demonstration was halted by police on Whitehall, before it was able to reach Parliament Square. The road leading to the headquarters of the Liberal Democrats was also sealed off. Marchers had planned to protest there as Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg had promised prior to the general election that the Lib-Dems would vote against any rise in tuition fees. Even before taking office in partnership with the Conservatives, this policy had been abandoned in private--with the Liberals agreeing to support a hike that could see fees triple to £9,000 a year.
Demonstrators attempting to move out of the locked-down areas that had been cordoned off in Whitehall were then attacked with truncheons. After 6pm the police finally allowed about 1,000 demonstrators to leave the kettled area. Further violence then took place, as mounted police charged protesters who had gathered near Trafalgar Square. Some protestors, including schoolchildren were reportedly still being detained under what amounts to street arrest at midnight.
The Met said they made 29 arrests in the capital. The BBC reported that 11 “members of the public” were injured.
The demonstration took place on a day when temperatures plummeted to near freezing. The right-wing Daily Mail reported how, “Some schoolchildren were seen ripping pages from their schoolbooks to burn while others did their homework, complaining that they were cold, tired and hungry.”
The kettling of protesters for hours under these conditions endangered the safety and wellbeing of those involved, a fact the police were well aware of when they commenced the operation on Whitehall. Speaking to Sky News, Graham Wettone, a former Met Police public order intelligence officer, said, “It’s been a successful operation. It’s very warm when you are jumping up and down, but when you are standing still it gets cold very quickly.”
The Met’s Forward Intelligence Teams also took photos of students before and while they had been kettled in Whitehall.
Incidents of police brutality also took place in other cities including Manchester, where a large police presence attacked protesters, including charges by mounted officers. A sit-in on Oxford Road led to protesters being forcibly removed. One student told the Guardian, “Clashes were frequent. I saw several girls have their hair pulled by police, and an ITV journalist was pushed around by police after taking pictures.
“After this, we had a spontaneous march down Oxford Road. The police then blocked off the road near Rusholme, charged the protesters and threatened to arrest anyone who went on the roads.
“A lot of people seemed to be arrested over the course of this evening protest, and traffic on Oxford Road must have been stopped for hours.”
Over the past weeks, the media has largely been in lock-step with the government in condemning the relatively minor instances of vandalism and trespass that occurred in London two weeks ago. This continued unabated throughout the day on Wednesday, with the state broadcaster, the British Broadcasting Corporation, virtually assuming the role of the Ministry for Propaganda. The BBC covered the London protest with a live feed and took every opportunity to praise the police operation and vilify those demonstrating.
During a report given by “Look East’s” Anna Todd, commenting on students jumping over railings in an attempt to join a sit-down protest taking place at the University of Cambridge’s Senate House, she referred to “the rabble” that were involved.
The portrayal of student protesters as violent hooligans and extremists is being routinely employed in order to criminalise any serious manifestation of dissent and opposition to the government’s brutal austerity measures. Even as the protests were taking place Wednesday, education secretary Michael Gove demanded the “full force of the criminal law” be applied against protesters in London.
Gove declared that “It would send completely the wrong message if the government ... if we abandoned that policy because of violence. I respond to arguments, I do not respond to violence.”
He said protesters should be denied the “oxygen of publicity” by the media. This was a phrase used by Conservative prime minister Margaret Thatcher in 1985, referring to the IRA who she denounced as “terrorists and hijackers”.
The protests by students and school pupils are continuing, with at least 10 universities and colleges occupied overnight Wednesday. These include Oxford University’s Bodleian Library, the University of Leeds Student Union, and the Aston Webb building at the University of Birmingham. Royal Holloway, Plymouth, Warwick, London South Bank, UCL, Essex and UWE Bristol, Glasgow, Strathclyde and Dundee Universities. These followed occupations at the School of Oriental and African Studies, Manchester Metropolitan University and University of the West of England that began in the days leading up to Wednesday’s demonstrations. (WSWS)


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Students demonstrate in UK against increased fees and education cuts

On Wednesday (24/11/10) thousands of students, sixth formers and school pupils demonstrated throughout the UK to protest the governments’ education cuts. Teams from the International Students for Social Equality and the Socialist Equality Party spoke to some of those taking part.

More than 4,000 students from the University of Leeds and Leeds Metropolitan University marched into Leeds city centre. There was a very strong police presence all along the route, with eight video filming vans, other police video teams on roof tops, at least 10 police dogs and six mounted police as well as hundreds of police on foot.
As they marched through the city, office workers gathered round the windows and cheered them as they passed.
Demonstrators protest outside Leeds Town HallDemonstrators protest outside Leeds Town Hall
The demonstrators were met on the steps of the Leeds Art Gallery by up to 1,000 school and further education college students, who had walked out of classes in support of the campaign.
School students from Allerton Grange Comprehensive School had marched five miles into the city centre to attend the rally. On their way they had picked up fellow students from Roundhay Comprehensive. As they passed the Leeds College of Building and Thomas Danby College, students came out to greet them.
AlexAlex
Alex from Allerton Grange School toldWorld Socialist Web Site reporters, “These cuts affect school students, not just in the future but right now. The loss of the Education Maintenance Grant (EMA) of £30-a-week for school students is outrageous. The increase of university fees to £9,000 means that the dream of higher education is being taken away from millions of youth, especially from poor families. My mum is very worried about the situation. We are fighting for our future.”
Seyamak, also from Allerton Grange, said, “I think that education is a right. We are the students of the future. I don’t see that you can set a price on education in a civilised society. Education is a class issue. Bailing out the banks should not come at the top of the agenda. If you take away the right to education, what are you left with?”
Students from Ilkley Grammar SchoolStudents from Ilkley Grammar School
Students attended from Ilkley Grammar School, travelling 15 miles to get there. They had not known anything about the day of action until their parents received letters through the post from their headmaster warning them of the event and saying they could not take responsibility for what happened to the students if they walked out of school.
One of the pupils explained that in their school staff members had been posted at all the exits. They simply waited until the teachers had gone to their classes and then walked out.
Chris, a guitar student from Leeds Music College, said, “These attacks are international. They are happening everywhere. Cultural activities will be one of the hardest hit areas. According to the government, society cannot afford culture. But everybody has the right to cultural expression, in music and every other form. People need culture.”
Dave, a master’s student at Edge Hill University in Ormskirk, said, “This is not so much about my future because my education has been paid for. I’m here because it’s a fundamental right that you have free education. My parents could maybe have afforded these rises, but a lot or ordinary people can’t. That is why I’m here. It’s the next generation. It’s my kids and everyone else’s kids that are going to feel it.”
Gayle, an unemployed worker who supported the students, had been a domestic worker at Boddington student hall of residence and had been made redundant on September 30. She said, “Loads of other cleaners at the university were sacked in July. I have since tried to get another job but can’t get one anywhere.”
Her daughter is a 20-year-old student who is presently in further education. She is not living at home and is sleeping at various friends or relations. Gayle said, “She is suffering badly. She is entitled to nothing except the £30-a-week EMA and when the government stops that she will literally be penniless. She has to provide for food, clothing, and all the necessaries and yet despite everything she is still managing to go to college. She wants to study Law and Criminology and has a place at Leeds Metropolitan University. But who knows what is going to happen? All governments now are not helping anyone. Even if Labour was in she would get nothing.”
Another protester at the rally said, “University education should be free for all who want to seek it. Putting up the fees even further will discourage millions from poorer backgrounds. I qualified in 2008. I had to pay £1,200 a year fees, plus a £3,000 repayable loan and now I am burdened with debt. In future students will have to pay almost the same amount towards one year’s fees.”
D Natasha (right) and her friends Natasha (right) and her friends
Natasha from Lawnswood High School said, “If they cut EMA and raise the entrance fees we won’t be able to afford university. And even if we go to university, we will come out with bills of £80,000 and more. The future will be McDonalds if we don’t get into university.”
One of her friends said, “We have to think about when our generation is the working generation, who is going to pay the taxes for the people that are retiring?”
Another said, “They are cutting EMA and they are cutting arts and sports programmes, but they are not cutting the Ministry of Defence and nuclear weapons which is ridiculous. They need to get their priorities sorted out.”
Before the march into the centre of Leeds began, Barbara Slaughter, a veteran Trotskyist who spent most of her working life as a teacher in Leeds, addressed the students. When she introduced herself as a representative of the World Socialist Web Site, the organisers of the demonstration switched off the microphone, saying “This is a non-political march. We don’t want anything to do with politics. You are not allowed to raise left-wing ideas on this march.”
They were forced to allow Slaughter to speak, with one student hearing the altercation leaning over and switching the microphone back on. In her remarks she drew attention to the leaflet being distributed by supporters of the International Students for Social Equality, warning that the police were using the events at Millbank Towers last week to whip up an atmosphere of hysteria to justify the use of brutal police tactics against future demonstrations of both students and the working class.
She said, “Under conditions where nowhere in the world do working people have a political party that represents their class interests, what is required is the building of an independent party of the working class.”
In Manchester around 5,000 protesters, including students from the University of Manchester, Manchester Metropolitan University, as well as hundreds of pupils from schools in the city and the wider region, marched from the main university area into the city centre. A group of sixth form students came to Manchester from Kendal in Cumbria, 76 miles away.
The ISSE statement was the only leaflet being given out on the demonstration and one student volunteered to take leaflets to distribute.
The march was met by a heavy police presence, which attempted to divert it away from the Town Hall.
Owen, a sixth form college student, said he felt none of the main parties would oppose the cuts, “which are denying education to the poorest in society”. He agreed with uniting the struggles by all sections of workers, “as they are all connected.”
Another student in a group from Trafford College said, “I have worked hard all through school and at college and I don't think I will ever go to university. I think it will all be for nothing.”
She pointed out the growing unemployment among these who were well qualified and experienced and asked, “What chance have we got?” (WSWS)

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