Tag: jammu and kashmir (j&k)

  • Kashmir’s Hikmat and Hakeem

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    Till the early twentieth century, the entire healthcare system was run by the Unani system of medicine with Hakeem’s at the apex of the unique pyramid. Kashmir excelled in making some of the best healthcare givers from the medieval Sultanate era, MJ Aslam writes

    Family Tree of Hakeems
    Family Tree of Hakeems

    Centuries before the arrival of the European allopathic healthcare system, there was a well-established medieval regime of Unani medicine prevalent in Kashmir. Shiv Bhatta [not Shri Bhatta] was Shah i Tabib (chief physician) of Sultan Zainulabidin, the Budshah. He lived in Sultan’s Rajdhani at Nawshehra, Srinagar.

    The Sultan was immensely impressed by Bhatta’s curing skills and honoured him with the title of Afsar ul Tib. Bhatta died without writing anything on Tib for posterity. On record, however, it was during the Mughal era when Ilmi Tib and Unani (Yunani) system of medicine appeared in Kashmir and touched the summit of excellence in successive reigns of Mughal Emperors and their Subedars.

    In Successive Regimes

    The first Kashmiri Hakeem who rose to prominence was Hakeem Abdullah Gazi in the reign of Emperor Akbar (1586-1606). Gazi was educated and trained in Ilmi Tib in Delhi. His pupil Rashid Baba Majnoon Narwadi was also an efficient Hakeem of his time. In Shah Jahan’s reign, Majnoon’s three disciples, Mohammad Sharief Ganayi, Abdul Rashid Ashai and  Abdul Qadir Ganayi were Kashmir’s famous Hakeem’s. The son of Hakeem Abdul Qadir Ganayi was Hakeem Inyatullah who had such an ability, it is said, that he diagnosed the disease from a mere glance at the patient’s face. He lived during Emperor Aurangzeb’s reign.

    Hakeem Mohammad Azam Kashmiri was a well-known physician in Maharaja Ranjit Singh’s court in Lahore.  In Sikh Period, Hakeem Dindar Shah, Hakeem Maqbool Shah and  Hakeem Mustaffa Shah were well-known Unani doctors living in Kashmir.  Hakeem Ali Naqvi, Hakeem Noorudddin, Hakeem Ghulam Rasool, Hakeem Baqaullah and  Hakeem Yousuf were famous Unani physicians in the eighteenth century.  Hakeem Ghulam Rasool died in Delhi. He was a prodigious scholar and an eloquent orator. He spent his life in luxury due to his companionship with Nawab Ghazi al-Din Ferozjang III (1736-1800).

    Missionaries working in Baramulla treating teh people injured in earthquake
    An undated photograph shows Christain missionaries treating people in an open dispensary in Baramulla. The people were injured in an earthquake.

    Hakeem Mohammad Jawad was an eminent doctor in the Afghan period. Hakeem Naqi, Hakeem Noor ud Din, Hakeem Namdar Khan and  Hakeem Kandar Khan were other well-known Hakeems in the Durani era of Kashmir. The last two migrated to Delhi for treatment of the sick. Hakeem Deendar Shah was the personal physician of Nazim Sheikh Ghulam Mohiuddin (1842-1846), the last of the  Sikh rule governor’s in Kashmir.

    Hakeem Mohammad Baqir was another famous Hakeem. In Maharaja Ranbir Singh’s reign (1857-1885), Baqir was conferred the title of Afsar ul Tib by the Maharaja. Towards the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century, there were many Hakeems all over Kashmir. Most prominent were: Hakeem Ahmad Ullah alias Ame Hakeem of Zaina Kadal; Hakeem Ghulam Mohi Ud Din of Naidyar Rainawari; Hakeem Daidar of Baghwanpora Lal Bazar; Maqbool Shah of Rainawari; Hakeem Salam ud Din of Hazratbal (all from Srinagar); Hakeem Habibullah of Baramulla; Hakeem Ahsan Sheikh of Nowgam; and Hakeem Abdul Aziz Kozgar of Budgam.

    One Hakeem of the early twentieth century needs a special mention – Hakeem Aziz Ullah of Muslim Pir Sopore. He had earned the name of the most reputed Unani physician and treated patients at his residence from north Kashmir, Muzaffarabad and Srinagar. Once he was called specially to Srinagar by the family members of a rich man, Qazi Ghulam Mustaffa of Maharajgunj, for treatment. A God-fearing man, Aziz Ullah built Sopore’s Muslim Pir Masjid.  After his death in 1926, his son, Hakeem Sanaullah (b1902), started treating patients for free.

    Hakeem Families

    There were three famous families of Hakeems in Srinagar in the last century. Hakeem Ali Mohammad alias Ali Hakeem (1906-1988) of Zaina Kadal. Later, he shifted to Gojwara where he treated patients at a new clinic cum residence. He was President of the Jammu and Kashmir Tibiyya Conference, a chapter of All India Tibbiya Conference. He died in 1988.

    Another family hailed from Naidyar Rainawari. Their house is still famous as Hakeem Manzil. Hakeem Shyam Lal alias  Shyam e Bhatte (1900-1984), a Kashmiri Pandit, was an Unani physician of great fame who belonged to a family of Kashmir’s hereditary Hakeems. His residence cum clinic at Shalyar Habba Kadal Srinagar was always thronged by patients. Despite the fact that he changed his residence to Karan Nagar, Srinagar, he continued to see and treat patients at Shalyar. He was also President of the Jammu and Kashmir Tibiyya Conference in 1966-67. He was considered an expert in the treatment of kidney stones. The patients were prescribed special sheera by him on daily basis for a few months till kidney stones would pass out with urine.

    During the first half of the twentieth century, it is said that fifteen Hakeems of Srinagar were on the payrolls of Maharaja.  In Srinagar, there is Unani Sageer, a Mohalla near Nigeen, which is known as Hakeem Mohalla as most of the famous Hakeems since Emperor Akbar’s time lived in this locality. Their ancestor, it is claimed, was Hakeem Ali Humayun who had attended and treated Emperor Akbar when he fell ill during one of his Kashmir visits. Hakeem Mehdi, Hakeem Masood and  Hakeem Altaf are said to be the descendants of Hakeem Ali Humayun. They all belong to this locality. There are some other city localities or villages with the prefix Hakeem to their names indicating the areas might have had some connection with this class of physicians of yore.

    Unani Medicine

    Unani medicine or Hikmat is an Arabic-Persian term that was introduced by the Mughals in the Indian subcontinent in the thirteenth century. The families of eminent Hakeems of Persia and Arabia came to India and introduced the Unani system during the Mughal rule, considered as the golden age of Greco-Arabic medicine in India.

    Hakeems were mostly Muslims who were learned men, also called tabibs. Many Hindus too were Hakeems of eminence. Hakeems followed the Unani (Greek, Grecian school of medicine) or the Misri (Egyptian school of medicine). While Muslim Hakeems followed the Unani School, generally most of the Hindu physicians, called Vaids, followed the Misri School.

    Fascimile of a manuscript showing some medicine related writtings and drawings fr Kashmir Maharaja from early twentieth century Pic Hakim SameerHamadani
    Fascimile of a manuscript showing some anatomy-related writtings and drawings for Kashmir Maharaja from early twentieth century, drwan by a Hakim. Pic Hakim SameerHamadani

    The most reputed Hakeems in India were in Emperor Akbar’s time. Hakeem Alavi Khan, Hakeem Muhammad Ashraf Kashmiri and Abdul Karim Kashmiri were well-known Kashmiri Hakeems in the Mughal Court. Many Kashmiri families of Hakeem’s moved to Delhi, Deccan, and other places of Mughal India to practice medicine. In history, Kashmiri Hakeems contributed immensely to the development of Unani medicine in the Mughal Era and thereafter in India. Many of the eminent Hakeems of Mughal India had Kashmiri ancestry.

    One of the most important physicians of Jahangir’s Era was Hakeem Sadra Zaman whose father was Akbar’s royal physician. In the early Mughal Era, the famous Hakeems came to Kashmir to treat people. Zaman accompanied Emperor Jahangir in 1620. He treated Emperor Shah Jahan and his daughter, princess Jahan Ara successfully. After resigning from duty, he performed Hajj and died in Kashmir in 1650 and is buried in Srinagar. He was greatly respected by Mughal Emperors. His pupils were among Kashmir’s pioneer Hakeems.

    Then, Hakeem was considered a doctor of philosophy, a doctor of medicine, and a learned man. Though Muslims were associated with Unani Tib, the Brahman Vaid was usually “a physician purist”. Unani system of medical care is based on the established knowledge of thousands of years. Hakeem uses herbal, mineral and animal-based drugs for curing the sick.

    The Eco System

    In Kashmir, Hakeem’s used to treat the sick in Hakeemwan or Hakeemkhana, which were the earlier avatar of clinics and dispensaries. The shops selling herbal medicine were called Bohir-wan. A Bohur (pharmacist of today) is the “vendor of drugs, spices, herbs, groceries; a druggist, spicer, grocer”. There were and are certain well-known localities of Srinagar like Nowhatta, Jamia Masjid, Saraf Kadal, and Maharaji Bazaar, where one would still see flourishing Bohir-wans. Now, they are called Unani or Hamdard medicine shops.

    Hakeem’s were also “compounding medicines” themselves for selling to the patients. The practice or profession of a Hakeem which was as a rule hereditary in character was called Hakeemi in common parlance. The Hakeem’s are and were addressed with an added honorific to their name as Hakeem Saib. This was a practice followed throughout India as today we have Doctor Sahab or had Vaid Ji of the past. Hakeems used only natural herbal plants, their leaves and roots as medicine for the treatment of the sick. It is said that the shepherds during summers collected herbs from mountains and jungles for the Hakeems of Kashmir. The medicinal herbs were made available for patients either at the clinic of the Hakeem or at the Bohir-wans.  Some herbs of medicinal value were imported from outside.

    Bone Setters

    Apart from Hakeems, there were non-invasive surgical practitioners such as bone-setters (watan-gir) and leech-appliers (dirki-gir) in Kashmir.  Watan-gur was one who was setting broken, dislocated limbs or bones or strained muscles by massaging with oil or turmeric powder and by straightening dislocation by pulls or pushes. Some watan-girs set up their shops for the treatment of orthopaedic trauma at famous shrines of Srinagar and Budgam Kashmir on Thursdays and Fridays.

    Some famous bone-setters practised the profession at their homes like Sid e Baing, Wali Baing and their disciples of Teilbal, and Ghulam Mohammad Qalinbaf and Ali Mohammad of Fateh Kadal Srinagar. Bone-setters also practised at Bandipora. It is said that bone-setters were reciting kilmaat (verses) while treating a patient. Dirki (leeches) were much used by Dirkigur of old Kashmir. Leech appliers were prescribed by Hakeems for a patient. They generally believed that the cause of skin diseases including persistent shuh (frostbites) of feet, hands, ear-helix and phephir [boils with abscess] was the blood infection. Thus, the infected or impure blood was drained away through the services of a Dirkigur who applied leeches on a body part to suck the impure blood from the patient’s body.

    Till the twentieth century, leech appliers worked in Kashmir. There were also female leech appliers, Dirkigirin, as well. Generally, it was the Naid or barbers’ families that were associated with the leech-appliers’ profession in Kashmir. The leeches would swell up after draining the blood of the patient and automatically fall down on the floor. The leech-applier squeezed all blood from his leeches before putting them back in his container, Dirki’weir.

    The barbers were also called in by Hakeems to cut and bleed the patient from the vein “marked” by Hakeem for draining out impure blood. As this was the “only knowledge of surgery” Hakeem’s possessed, Maharaja in the epidemic of 1872 had to issue orders that “the Hakeems were not to bleed for cholera as they had been in the habit of doing”.  The native Hakeems regard a pedilavium of the leaves as very efficacious in cholera.

    In 1895, Sir Lawrence recorded there were “300 Hakeems or doctors in Kashmir and as a rule, the profession” was “hereditary. …… and I have known cases in which some of my subordinates have derived great benefit from the skill of the Kashmiri Hakeem…….. Hakeem never attends midwifery cases”. The skilled elderly women midwives, locally known as Warin, were called to assist the delivery cases and perform the gynaecological operation at the patient’s home.

    Parhaiz Culture

    Hakeem’s were very strict about the diet of their patients. They prescribed strict dietary restrictions (Parhaiz) with herbal medicine for the patient. To date, Parhaiz Si’un, which meant the strictly prescribed diet by Hakeems in the past, is a very much relevant phrase being used in Kashmir society to convey that someone is following a doctor’s dietary advice. Hakeem’s sometimes allowed only simple rice water and dandelion leaves (hund in Kashmiri) to a patient suffering fever over weeks.

    Such a strict dietary disciplinarian attitude of Hakeem’s gave birth to certain idioms in the spoken Kashmiri language. For example, Hukm i Hakeem o Hakeem, Chuh Margi Mufajaat (the ruler’s and doctor’s orders are like sudden death as they are to be followed); Hakeemas Te Hakeemas, Nishi Bachavtam Khudayo (O, God, protect me against orders of Ruler and  Doctor)  and  Yi Hakeemas Dizhi Ti Koneh Dizhi Bemaras (why can’t that be given to the sick what is given to the doctor), and  Neem Hakeem, Khatri Jan (a half-baked hakeem can be life-threatening).

    Treatment Regime

    The whole diagnosis of Hakeem centres around the equilibrium of Akhlat (humours, Mizaj) of the body, classified into four kinds: hot, cold, dry and wet. Hakeems used medicines to undo imbalance in any of these situations within the body. Some herbs are thought to be cold and good for hot humour; some are hot and good for cold humour; some are damp and beneficial for a dry state of humour, while some dry herbs are said to be beneficial for a damp and wet state of humour.

    The most common herbal prescriptions included Sheera, Sharbat, liquorice root (shangir in Kashmiri), lasora/lasoda (sebestan), and arnebia benthamii (Kahzaban). One imported herb used as the ultimate drug or medicine for serious cases including protracted fever was Chob-Cheeni, Smilax China. It grows abundantly in China in wild from where it was exported to Punjab, Calcutta, Bombay and Kashmir via Leh. A mere prescription of this would indicate the patient was seriously unwell. Kashmiri saying, Zan Chus Chob-Cheeni Logmut conveys a feeling of seeing a person in a robust state of health after having taken any kind of diet or special food.

    In case of recurring pains, and stomach ailments, Hakeems prescribed the use of powder or malish (massage) of Zahar-Mohr on the troubled part of the body. It is a bezoar and is used as an antidote to poison and a pain reliever for the sick.

    Though fundamentally using herbs, they also used certain stones, gems and specific things taken from animals. Zahar-Mohr was obtained from Ladakh and Tibet and imported to Punjab and Kashmir via Leh. In Punjab, it was applied in snake-bite cases. This costly bezoar was also cut into the making cups, bowls, plates, and so on of a tea set and it was generally believed that cups, bowls, etc, would split if poison was put in them. Genuine Zahr Mohr tea sets fetch good prices. They are still considered items of luxurious choice in household crockery items.

    Hakeem’s believes Zahr Mohr was formed by the spittle of the Markhor goat (Capra megaceros) falling on stones. Markhor is the wild goat of Hazara and the NW Himalaya and exists in Kashmir also. It is called Markhor, owing to the fable that the animal killed snakes by looking at them. Yet another fable was that when Markhor’s foam falls on certain stones it turns them to Zahar-Mohr, precious stones of serpentine. Unlike Bohr-wans, Zahr Mohr would be sold by Moharkans who dealt with precious stones.

    Kashmiris had great confidence in their Hakeems and they mostly consulted them for ordinary ailments. With the emergence of allopathic medical care towards the end of the nineteenth century in Kashmir, the local Hakeems lost much of their influence. Unani medicine lacks a remedy for emergency cases like cardiac arrest, accidental trauma and so on. Despite the progress of modern medical science, Hakeem’s, bone-setters, and leech appliers still exist and they still have a small clientele.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • CS Stresses On Protection Of Forest Lands, Livelihoods From Forests

    CS Stresses On Protection Of Forest Lands, Livelihoods From Forests

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    JAMMU: Chief Secretary, Dr Arun Kumar Mehta on Tuesday chaired the 22nd meeting of the Steering Committee of J&K Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority (CAMPA) to review the implementation of Annual Plan of Operations (APOs) for FY 2022-23 and to consider the APOs for FY 2023-24.

    Administrative Secretaries of Departments of Forests; Rural Development & Panchayati Raj; Revenue; Tribal Affairs; Planning; Secretary in Agriculture Production and Farmers Welfare participated besides many senior officers and HoDs from the Forest Department.

    Some of the officers participated in the meeting through video conferencing.

    The Chief Secretary directed the Forest Department to complete digitalization of boundaries of all forests of Jammu & Kashmir within a year. He directed constitution of joint teams comprising officers from Revenue, Forest, Tourism, RDD, PRI representatives and other stakeholders concerned to facilitate this process.

    He enjoined upon them to utilize the latest technology like CORS and GIS in culminating the process scientifically in a time-bound manner. He also underscored the need of fixing boundary pillars demarcating the forest land in the shortest possible time to ensure protection of forest land from encroachment.

    Dr Mehta also came up with a concept for utilization of biomass from forests, like lantana and pine needles with the involvement of Self Help Groups. While creating sustainable livelihood for communities living around forests, it will also be helpful in removal of potential fire hazards like pine needles and other inflammatory materials.

    The Chief Secretary stressed on involvement of Panchayats in all afforestation works. Meeting the demands of the forest dependent communities for water, fodder and non-timber forest produce should be main objective of all afforestation works. This will ensure that they become willing partner in protection and conservation of forests, he added.

    While reviewing the work proposals relating to Gharana Wetland reserve, the Chief Secretary directed the Wildlife Protection Department to make it one of the most important tourist attractions of Jammu. He directed that a comprehensive study should be carried out about the habitat and avifauna of Gharana Wetland for its better protection and development. He also emphasized on making arrangements for dissemination of information with visitors and nature lovers so that the visits happen to be a source of infotainment. He told them to look into the potential of developing as a cluster with Border village of Schetgarh so that both are offered as package to the visitors.

    PCCF (HoFF), Dr. Mohit Gera apprised the Committee about the main activities of the Department. Under “Green Jammu and Kashmir Drive”, a record number of plants are being planted with the people’s participation under the campaign “Har Gaon Hariyali”. In the current year, against the target of 1.35 crore, department is making all efforts to plant 1.50 crore, of which about 0.90 crore plants have already been planted. He also informed about the initiatives taken to protect the forest areas through digitalization of boundaries involving Forest (Territorial) and Settlement and Demarcation Divisions and preparation of digital maps.

    CEO, J&K CAMPA, Sarvesh Rai made a detailed presentation covering actions taken on the decisions of the Committee in its last meeting, progress of implementation of the approved APO of 2022-23 and proposed APOs for the financial year 2023-24. He informed that against the current year’s target of rehabilitation of degraded forests of 15000 ha area, 8108 ha with planting of 59.70 Lakh plants have already been covered. Winter planting in temperate zone is in progress and targets for the year are likely to be achieved in full.

    The meeting was informed that the APOs of FY 2023-24 envisage afforestation of 13,719 ha area through assisted natural and artificial regeneration with planting of about 90.00 lakh plants. APOs also include proposals for eco-restoration of ecologically sensitive areas like Patnitop-Nathatop and areas with southern slopes etc.

    Later on the Chief Secretary released publications titled “Har Gaon Hariyali under Green Jammu & Kashmir Drive” and “Digitization of Forests: Strengthening of Forest Protection and Management” by Forest Department, “Pollinators: Nature’s Miracle Workers” by J&K Biodiversity Council, and “Key Wildlife Species: Kishtwar High Altitude National Park” by Wildlife Protection Department.

    After detailed deliberations on all aspects of the proposals, the Committee approved APOs for next financial year 2023-24 with an outlay of Rs274.00 Cr for its submission to the National Authority, (MoEF&CC), Government of India for their final approval.

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    #Stresses #Protection #Forest #Lands #Livelihoods #Forests

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Why Muskan Sawhny’s JKAS Is Not an Ordinary Feat?

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    by Maleeha Sofi

    SRINAGAR: Beating all the odds, Muskan Sawhny cracked Jammu and Kashmir Administrative Service (JKAS) examination in her first attempt. The daughter of an auto-rickshaw driver, Sawhny Jr managed to crack the examination without any coaching and with the help of the internet. She secured 1016.50 marks.

    Muskan is from Jammu proper and has completed her initial studies at Activity Public Higher Secondary School. She pursued her higher education in Science at Government Higher Secondary, Mubarak Mandi. She graduated in non-medical with Geology and Geography as optional subjects. She has been the district topper in National Youth Parliament- 2019. She gives tuition and works as a presenter at All India Radio to generate extra income for her and her family.

    “I have not prepared for a long time. I started preparation after my graduation,” Muskan said. She focused more on learning from people. “When JKPSC advertised these posts in 2021, I knew I had to do it, but I had not started preparations yet.”

    With self-study, she appeared for the examination with the belief that the civil services exams do not need you to know everything, but to understand the basics. Given the first attempt, she was not sure about the success.

    “I studied religiously during exams as I had very less time,” she said. She did the smart study and hard work.

    The major factor that helped her to stay focused was the financial conditions of her family. This was the key factor that prevented her from getting into any coaching centre. She said she chose to study with the help of a few books and the internet only. “I had no proper guidance about books, so I selected a few compact ones and the internet helped me a lot,” she asserted.

    Muskan
    Muskan Sawhny JKAS

    Muskan said she studied usually during the night hours to stay focused without distractions. Being a debater, she is well aware of the current affairs that helped her achieve this feat. One of the major tricks that have helped her to qualify for the exam is ‘managing time’.

    “I did not share with anyone that I am planning for JKAS except my family and some close friends and teachers,” she said. She has been supported emotionally by her family and her friends even in her studies. The struggle to make a living with her father and uncle has inspired her to achieve success. She considers her parents as her role model.

    Her life motto is ‘this too shall pass,’ and she believes this helps her face every hardship. While suggesting aspirants she said, “optimism and faith can help you find God, let alone pass an examination.” She aims to go for the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) in the future.

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    #Muskan #Sawhnys #JKAS #Ordinary #Feat

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • AC Gives Nod To LG’s Rolling Cultural And Sports Trophies For Employees

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    JAMMU: The Administrative Council (AC) which met here under the chairmanship of the Lieutenant Governor, Manoj Sinha gave its approval to Lieutenant Governor’s Rolling Cultural and Sports Trophies for government employees.

    Rajeev Rai Bhatnagar, Advisor to the Lieutenant Governor and Dr Arun Kumar Mehta, Chief Secretary, J&K attended the meeting.

    This initiative is part of the overall policy of Government to promote sporting activities, on one hand, and HR welfare policy of the Government, on the other hand. The sports events are expected to inculcate values like competition, discipline, teamwork and will lead to overall personality development of the employees. As part of the initiative, exclusive teams shall be formed for female employees to encourage them also. It will also act as an vent to the employees who work in taxing environment besides improving skills to tackle challenging jobs in hand.

    Under the initiative, the Culture Department, in association with the General Administration Department, shall also organize cultural activities viz. debates, poetry, quiz and painting competitions etc. spanning across a calendar year to promote creativity among the employees, on the one hand, and local culture, on the other hand.

    The AC approved the proposal of participation of employees in scores of sporting disciplines viz. cricket, football, volleyball, table tennis, hockey etc. which shall be organised in close association of the General Administration Department and the Youth Services and Sports Department (J&K Sports Council).

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    #Nod #LGs #Rolling #Cultural #Sports #Trophies #Employees

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • BJY Largely Succeeded In Fighting Narrative Of Hatred In Country: Rahul Gandhi

    BJY Largely Succeeded In Fighting Narrative Of Hatred In Country: Rahul Gandhi

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    SRINAGAR:  Congress leader and Member Parliament Rahul Gandhi Tuesday said that Bharat Jodo Yatra (BJY) has largely succeeded to fight against the narrative of hatred spread across the country and bring the folks together yet again.

    “Let me tell you that we have been able to bring the people across the country together yet again through BJY. There were a lot of lessons for us in the Yatra and we have learnt a lot after meeting people of various shades during our journey,” news agency KNO quoted Rahul as having said.

    He said that there is no scope for hatred in the country as Congress believes in spreading the message of love. “Our endeavour is to open the shops of love across J&K that has been made a scapegoat of politics,” Rahul said. “Through BJY we have largely been able to fight the disastrous narrative of hatred spread by the BJP in the country.”

    He said that primary focus of Congress is to get Statehood and Assembly restored in J&K. Asked if BJY was apolitical, why he was continuously targeting BJP, Rahul said that since Congress is the grand old political party, there will surely be a bit of politics in his speeches during the Yatra. “When KPs, farmers and unemployed youth would meet me during the Yatra and hope that I will definitely rake up their issues, there would obviously be a problem for me if I don’t talk about them,” the Congress leader said. He said there was not even a tinge of hatred for anybody including PM Narendera Modi. “I am not afraid of anybody so why should I have hatred for anyone,” he asid.

    He said J&K youth are suffering from depression and discomfort. “We are here to listen to them and understand their issue,” he said, adding that media too has been suppressed to an extent as if Yatra is not happening at all.

    To a query about Lal Singh, Rahul said that Singh supported Yatra and Congress appreciates that. “As far as Ghulam Nabi Azad, 90 per cent of his supporters and party men were on our stage. I would like to tender my apology if we have hurt Azad or Lal Singh,” Rahul said. On there are reports that crores are being spent for his BJY, Rahul said that to tarnish his image, BJP and RSS spent thousands of crores and yet didn’t succeed. “I want to tell BJP that money can’t burry the truth which has a nasty habit of come out. BJP has started to understand this reality gradually,” he said. Pertinently, Rahul led BJY will enter Srinagar on January 30.

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    #BJY #Largely #Succeeded #Fighting #Narrative #Hatred #Country #Rahul #Gandhi

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Urmila Matondkar Joins Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jodo Yatra In Jammu

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    SRINAGAR: Actor-politician Urmila Matondkar on Tuesday joined the Congress’s Bharat Jodo Yatra in Jammu and Kashmir. Rahul Gandhi is leading the foot march, which is now in its last phase.

    “When stars join, the journey becomes brighter,” the grand old party tweeted in Hindi.

    Ever since the party’s march started in September, many prominent faces – outside of the Congress – have been a part of the grand old party’s foot march. Actors, including Pooja Bhatt, former RBI governor Raghuram Rajan, veteran army officers have walked alongside Rahul Gandhi. In Delhi, Kamal Haasan joined the foot march last month.

    Urmila Matondar also posted a video on social media that showed her walking with Gandhi. “Walk for Unity, Affinity, Equality and Fraternity (sic),” she tweeted.

    Before the march, she posted a video message, where she can be heard saying: “In this winter chill, I am addressing you from Jammu. In a short while from now, I will be joining the Yatra. Indian unity is the spirit that has been carried along during this Yatra. All of us have created this India and we have to help it grow. For me, this Yatra is more for the society than politics. The world is functional with love, not hate,” she can be heard saying in the clip.

    Throughout the Kanyakumari to Kashmir Yatra, Rahul Gandhi has been saying that his party aims to counter the hatred spread by the ruling party in an attack on the BJP and the RSS. Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, however, on Sunday had said that “India is not broken that it needs Congress to unite it”.

    On Monday, Rahul Gandhi met Kashmiri Pandits and also raised the issue of statehood during one of the addresses.



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    #Urmila #Matondkar #Joins #Rahul #Gandhis #Bharat #Jodo #Yatra #Jammu

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • ICP’s Free Coaching Helped A Dozen Students Qualify JKAS

    ICP’s Free Coaching Helped A Dozen Students Qualify JKAS

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    by Fahd Khan

    SRINAGAR: In last year’s Jammu and Kashmir Administrative Services examination, the result of which was declared last week, a dozen students enrolled with the Initiative for Competition Promotion (ICP) cracked the coveted examination.

    An ICP event in which teh civil services aspirants are being made aware of the syllabus and methodology
    An ICP event in which the civil services aspirants are being made aware of the syllabus and methodology

    The ICP, a registered trust, was home to 35 students for a year when they were being trained by a few bureaucrats who run the centre for free. The centre provides mentoring and coaching to civil services aspirants.

    “I enrolled in the interview programme of ICP and it helped me to qualify for the exams. It is a good initiative in Kashmir as people lack guidance and environment which is available in Delhi and even in Jammu,” Saqib Rashid, a professional engineer, who secured 10th rank in the recent examination said. “The Institution provides hostel and library facilities for students from far-flung areas. These students get an environment to study which they lack at their homes.”

    Besides, nearly two dozen other lateral candidates from different regions of the UT, who were trained for the interview programme through offline and online orientation classes, expert lectures and mock interviews, have also made it to the service.

    Riyaz Ahmad Rather, who secured 104th rank in the JKAS exam recently said, “Honestly saying, I was groomed at ICP, I was a full-time resident from the last three years. They provide services at minimal charges; it has a suitable environment for doubt clearance. One gets admission to the resident programme only after qualifying entrance exam. Students qualifying mains exam are then admitted to the interview programme.”

    ICP
    ICP conducts screening test for free coaching program for Civil Services Exam-2020

    Yasir Farooq, who secured 120th rank in the examination said, “I owe my selection to ICP. I appeared in KAS 2018 but failed to go through. ICP played the most important role in my selection. I enrolled in 2018 till I qualified. They provide accommodation, test series and guidance. The teachers treat us like their own children. I had an issue with answer writing but the teachers used to evaluate my answers which helped me a lot. I have also twice appeared in the mains examination of the Indian Administrative Services.”

    This year a fair number of female candidates from the ICP made it to the final list of JKAS. Saima Ahad from Gandebal secured 26th rank; Rakshan Peerzada and Hafsa Mohidin placed 31st and 130th in rank respectively this year. Zarqa Naquib, who has secured 74th rank also took regular guidance from ICP.

    Even though ICP doesn’t have a centre in Jammu, many aspirants from the Jammu division had also enrolled at the centre in Srinagar.

    In 2022, nearly 30 outstation students from Jammu and Delhi also availed the benefit of ICP’s Interview Mentorship Programme, an initiative aimed at preparing for the crucial personality test stage of the examination.

    Every year 35 aspirants from across the length and breadth of Jammu and Kashmir enrol with the centre at Raj Bagh. The ICP trust has two small guest houses where all the services including lodging, teaching and library facilities are provided free of cost.

    The aspirants are guided by the officers to help them to achieve their civil service dream. Besides the residential coaching programme, the academy also conducts classroom coaching, Test series and regular awareness campaigns about a career in the civil services are conducted at Centre.

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    #ICPs #Free #Coaching #Helped #Dozen #Students #QualifyJKAS

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Briefing January 22-28, 2023

    Briefing January 22-28, 2023

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    RAJOURI

    Investigations into the twin attacks in Rajouri’s Upper Dangri village in which seven persons were killed have been taken over by the federal investigator, NIA. A day after Home Minister Amit Shah visited the region. Owing to bad weather, however, he could not fly to the distant mountainous area and spoke to the families of the victims on phone. Shah presided over a high-level security review meeting in which various decisions were taken. He announced having a 360-degree security net to wipe out militancy from the Jammu region and strengthen Security Grid within three months. The 360-degree security circle, he said will completely eliminate the support and information system of terrorists.

    In two years, Kashmir lost 35 persons (18 in 2021 and 17 in 2022) to electrocution. These included 19 temporary KPDCL employees.

    DODA

    Two daughters and a son of an erstwhile mechanic at Baglihar power project created history by cracking the coveted JKAS examination together. What is interesting is that they lacked access to personal phones and never went to coaching. They basically belong to a Doda village and have shifted to Jammu. The siblings include sisters – Ifra Anjum, Huma Anjum and their younger brother Suhail Ahmad Wani. It was the first attempt for Ifra and Suhail, but elder sister Huma qualified it in her second attempt. They said they studied together and learned a lot from the mistake that their elder sister committed in her first attempt.

    The JKAS results declared by JK Public Service Commission in record time filled 187 positions in the Jammu and Kashmir administration – 56 JKAS, 71 JKPS and 60 will go to the Jammu and Kashmir Accounts Service. Of the 187 candidates, 90 candidates were selected in Open Merit. Rest are from reserved categories – 22 candidates belong to Scheduled Caste (SC) – six of them have secured their seats in Open Merit as well – 19 candidates belong to Scheduled Tribe (ST), 24 candidates belong to Residents of Backward Area (RBA) – eight of them also fall in Open Merit, 18 candidates belonged to Economically Weaker Section (EWS), three candidates belong to Physically Handicapped Category (PHC), eight candidates belong to Pahari Speaking People (PSP) – two of them secured their seats among Open Merit also, eleven candidates belong to Actual Line of Control/ International Border (ALC/IB) and four of them secured their seat among Open Merit, six candidates belong to Social Caste (SLC) and one of them secured the seat among Open Merit. As many as 31 candidates from Kashmir were declared successful.

    Nearly 24 per cent of the population in Jammu and Kashmir own a car

    WEST BENGAL

    A probe is underway to investigate why a West Bengal textbook used the word “Azad Kashmir” in an exercise book meant for the tenth-class examination. The book belonged to Ramakrishna Mission Vivekananda Vidyamadir, a government-aided school in Malda district. It asked the students to identify several places on the map including Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. It read: On the map of India locate the following places, with the options being “Azad Kashmir”, Moplah (Malabar) rebellion area, the place where Gandhiji had first undertaken the Satyagraha movement and Chittagong battleground. It became an issue after some BJP leaders put the photograph on social media. In reaction, Jr Education Minister in Delhi, Subhas Sarkar alleged that the question setter was inspiring terrorism. “The paper setter is anti-national. He is inspiring terrorism. This is shameful,” Sarkar said. “The West Bengal Education Minister should write to him and this test paper cell should be shut immediately.”

    In four years, Jammu and Kashmir reported 51577 cancer cases. There were 6824 deaths in 2018, 7003 in 2019, 7189 cancer deaths in 2020, 7211 in 2021 and 7396 in 2022.

    DELHI

    Hindal H Tyabji 2
    Hindal Haider Taybji

    One of the petitioners against Article 370 abrogation, Hindal Haidar Tyabji, former Jammu and Kashmir former Chief Secretary, died in Delhi. He was 82. Scion of the rich Taybji family – he was the son of Badruddin Taybji, HH Taybji was married in Srinagar, when he was a young officer, but the union ended up in divorce soon. It was much later that he married Nalini Misra and adopted her family. He served Jammu and Kashmir for 37 years and was the only officer who worked as ACS after being removed as Chief Secretary. His death was widely condoled in Kashmir, especially by people who worked with him. He is being seen as a “friend of Kashmir” who was hugely rich but lived a modest life and would spend most of his earnings on charity. The cigar-smoking bureaucrat was faith-neutral but very well-read, dignified and a positive human being. He was briefly the law secretary of the Government of India as well. He was created in Delhi.

    J&K Waqf Board says of around 31000 properties in Jammu and Kashmir, they only control only 10 per cent directly.

    ANANTNAG

    With most of the services that the Jammu and Kashmir government is offering are online. Almost 400 services have gone completely online. Now cell phone is the key player in governance. However, in the quantum jump, a lot of people are caught in the digital divide. One faction of people is the women from weaker sections who had applied offline for marriage assistance. They married and claim they had raised debts in the hope the assistance will come and they will payback. Now they are caught in the mess. Officials, they claim tell them the off-line mode is over. They have been protesting over the crisis they are in. How will the online system manage the off-line backlog, it is something that needs to be watched in ‘smart-governed’ Jammu and Kashmir.

    In order to make butchers sell mutton at Rs 535 a kg fixed in 2021, authorities have sealed more than 117 mutton shops.

    JAMMU

    Administratively, Jammu and Kashmir might be separate from Ladakh but technically it is not. The leaders from the twin districts of Kargil and Leh – now a division and a UT, have been seeking rights and have protested many times in the desert region since 2019. Not seeing it effective, they moved to Jammu where they led a huge slogan-shouting march. Chering Dorjay Lakrook and KDA co-chairman Asgar Ali Karbalaie led a march in Jammu for full-fledged Statehood for Ladakh, constitutional safeguards under the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution of India, recruitment and job reservation for the youth of the region and two separate Parliamentary constituencies for Leh and Kargil. They are now moving to Delhi with their demands to Jantar Mantar. Ladakh leaders have stayed away from the high-powered committee constituted recently by the MHA.

    Almost 97 per cent of the Jammu Kashmir population has Golden Card that guarantees cashless health cover.

    SAHARANPUR

    Moulana Abdul Gani Azhari
    Mufti Abdul Gani Azhari

    Kashmir’s veteran Islamic scholar Mufti Abdul Gani Azhari died at Saharanpur where he was teaching at a respected seminary. He was 100 plus years and was not keeping a good health for a long time. Azhari was head of the Arabic department at the University of Kashmir. Popularly known as Gani Azhari, the respected Gujjar scholar was an authority on Naqishbandiya Silsila and a veteran Arabic scholar. He was a polymath sufi, who was born in Poonch in 1922 and finally migrated to Sagam in Kokernag. He studied at Darul Uloom Deoband and Mazahir al Uloom Saharanpur. He did his PhD from Jamia al-Azhari. He retired as head of the Arabic department of the University of Kashmir in 1997.

    LAKHANPUR

    Bharat Jodo Yatra
    Leaders at a stage in Lakhanpur after Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jodo Yatra enters JK

    A day ahead of Rahul Gandhi-led Bharat Jodo Yatra’s entry into Jammu and Kashmir, Congress’s spokesperson in Jammu enforced some morality by resigning against the party’s invitation to Choudhary Lal Singh. Deepika Pushkar Nath said she was “left with no option but to resign” from the Congress over the decision taken by the party’s state unit to “allow” Singh to join the Yatra. She said the Yatra was “ideologically opposite” to the actions of Singh as he “divided the entire region of Jammu and Kashmir to protect the rapists.” A two-time MP and three-time MLA who has been with Congress and BJP before floating his own party – Dogra Swabhiman Sangathan Party (DSSP), Singh had extended his support to the Yatra. He had played a key role in supporting the accused in the rape and murder of an eight-year-old girl in Kathua in 2018. Nath had stood up for the victim and her family in the Kathua rape case, and had taken the parents of the victim to the High Court at Jammu for monitoring of the investigation. She had also guided them to approach the Supreme Court for seeking a transfer of the trial to Pathankot in Punjab. After Nath took the stand, Omar also questioned Singh’s decision to be part of Yatra. Eventually, Congress said it would stand by the victim’s family. Though Singh was part of the welcome function, he was not invited to share the stage. “Let me tell you, Kashmir-based parties will never allow Jammu to develop, prosper or form its own identity,” a sulking Singh told reporters.

    Rahul Gandhi said he is revisiting his routes, His yatra will conclude on January 31 with a grand function in Srinagar.

    SHALIMAR

    Cash Counting 1 e1648743725159
    A man shows new Rs 2000 currency after exchanging old Rs 500 and 1000 denominations at Srinagar on Thursday 11 November 2016. KL Image Bilal Bahadur

    Under the Ministry of Science and Technology Promotion of University Research and Scientific Excellence (DST-PURSE) scheme, two universities in Kashmir – SKUAST-K, and Islamic University of Science and Technology (IUST) got substantial funding of Rs 10 crore each. The universities have to formally apply and justify the grant on basis of the scientific work they had done and the publications they have made. These funds go into the creation of adequate infrastructure for high-end scientific research. The grant comes on basis of high-impact scientific publications. In 2021, the University of Kashmir also got a Rs 10 crore DST-PURSE grant. Jammu University got a Rs 16.75 crore grant in 2016. The grant is once in a five or 10-year affair.

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    #Briefing #January

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Assisting Disables Our Moral, Social Responsibility: Chief Secretary

    Assisting Disables Our Moral, Social Responsibility: Chief Secretary

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    JAMMU: Chief Secretary, Dr Arun Kumar Mehta today emphasised upon the need for having public infrastructure amenable to specially-abled people for their easy access to them, especially schools and health institutions of the UT.

    Dr Mehta made these remarks while chairing the 22nd Steering Committee meeting of Scheme for Implementation of Rights for Persons with Disabilities (SIPDA) here.

    The meeting was attended by Principal Secretary, H&UDD; Principal Secretary, PWD; Principal Secretary, Education; Commissioner Secretary, Social Welfare; Commissioner Secretary, IT and Information Departments; Secretary, Transport; Deputy Commissioner, Jammu; DG, I&C, Jammu; Directors of Social Welfare Department and other concerned officers.

    The Chief Secretary stressed on taking all the measures possible for making public offices and infrastructure accessible to such persons. He advised them to have ramps and rails in every office especially those visited often by such persons. He told them to have disable-friendly washrooms in such buildings besides signages and other facilities for assistance to such persons. He advised them to take both short term and long term measures to tackle this issue.

    In terms of adopting the innovative approaches, the Chief Secretary underscored the need for establishment a helpline with a nodal officer who could facilitate them in getting appointments with senior officers or offices in administration. He told them to create waiting halls for these persons in the ground floor of these offices for meeting the officers to apprise them about their issues. He also directed for giving suitable accommodation to specially-abled employees in the ground floor of the office they are working at.

    He enjoined upon them that it is the social obligation of all of us, besides our moral responsibility, to assist them in every manner. He asked them to have wheel chairs available in the main offices for their ease, besides providing them help in reaching the particular place in the office complexes.

    The Commissioner Secretary, SWD, Sheetal Nanda apprised the meeting that the SIPDA Scheme has been formulated by Government of India to provide barrier free environment for the persons with disabilities which include access to built environment in schools, colleges, academic and training institutions, offices and public buildings, recreational areas, health centres/hospitals etc.

    This also includes provision for ramps, rails, lifts, adaptation of toilets for wheelchair users, brail signages and auditory signals, tactile flooring, causing curb cuts and slopes to be made in pavement for the easy access of wheelchair users, she adds.

    It also enlists engraving on the surface of zebra crossing for the blind or for persons with low vision, engraving on the edges of railway platforms for the blind or for low vision and devising appropriate symbols of disability, etc, as was discussed in the meeting.

    It was made out that government websites should also be accessible to PwDs as per guidelines issued by NIC and Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances (D/o AR&PG), Government of India.

    The concept behind this scheme is to achieve universal accessibility that will enable persons with disabilities to gain access for equal opportunity and live independently and participate fully in all aspects of life in an inclusive society.

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    #Assisting #Disables #Moral #Social #Responsibility #Chief #Secretary

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • JK Bank Mets Rs 312 Cr In Q3

    JK Bank Mets Rs 312 Cr In Q3

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    SRINAGAR: Jammu and Kashmir Bank’s net profit witnessed a 79 per cent rise on a year-on-year (YoY) basis to Rs 311.59 crore for the December quarter of fiscal 2022-23. In the same quarter, last year, the profits were at Rs 173.95 crore.

    Cash Counting 1 e1648743725159
    A man shows new Rs 2000 currency after exchanging old Rs 500 and 1000 denominations at Srinagar on Thursday 11 November 2016. KL Image Bilal Bahadur

    The bank announced the results after its Board of Directors reviewed and approved the numbers for the third quarter and nine months ended December 31, 2022, in a meeting held today at Bank’s Gurugram Office in Delhi.

    Bank officials said they are on the anticipated trajectory to meet annual profit targets. The bank’s profit for nine months is up 85 per cent to Rs 721.05 crore from Rs 389.36 crore recorded during nine months of the last fiscal.

    The Bank’s Net Interest Income (NII) surged by 27 per cent YoY to Rs 1257.38 crore for the December quarter when compared to Rs 993.30  crore recorded last year, while growing 19 per cent YoY for nine months to Rs 3495.73 crore. The Bank’s Operating Profit grew by 65 per cent YoY to Rs 544.11 crore for the December quarter, of 2022.

    The Bank’s NIM has also improved by 54 basis points (bps) YoY to 4.10 per cent – the highest in the last seven years – while as the Return on Assets rose to 0.92 per cent for the December quarter from 0.57 per cent recorded last year. With Yield on Advances improving by 90 bps to 9.34 per cent, the Bank’s steadily moderating cost-to-income ratio has come down further to 63.71 per cent for the third quarter.

    The Gross NPA Ratio of the Bank has further come down 168 bps YoY and 42 bps QoQ to 7.25 per cent for the quarter, while as the Net NPA ratio has moderated YoY by 94 bps to 2.08 per cent. The provision coverage ratio (PCR) of the Bank stood at 84.83 per cent for the quarter that ended in December 2022.

    The top bank executive said they have brought down our Net NPAs to 2.08 per cent, which is the lowest in the last eight years.

    Meanwhile, the Bank’s net advances are up 14 per cent YoY and 4 per cent QoQ to Rs 77639 crore during the quarter reviewed while as the deposits have grown 8 per cent from Rs 109298 crore to Rs 117935 crore. However, the Bank witnessed 21 per cent YoY growth in advances in its operational geographies across Rest-of-India (RoI).

    The Bank’s overall business increased by 10 per cent to Rs 195574 crore from Rs 177664 crore recorded last year while as the Bank’s CASA Ratio continues to remain one of the industry’s best at about 54 per cent.

    With the tier-II capital augmentation of over Rs 1000 crore, the bank’s Capital Adequacy Ratio rose up to 13.82 per cent as against 12.38 per cent recorded as on December 31, 2021.

    The capital augmentation through the raising of tier-II bonds worth Rs 1021 crore during the December quarter has cushioned the bank to comfortably execute its envisaged growth plan, especially in the rest of India. Bank’s CRAR has improved to 13.82 per cent.

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    #Bank #Mets

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )