Wednesday, July 30, 2008

ASA IIUI: A Failed Experiment????

Academic Staff Association (ASA) at IIUI is a recent phenomenon and so far, not to mince any words, this experience has been a total failure at IIUI. The hopes and expectations that were instrumental in the formation of ASA have all gone to drain over the last two years. Things have worsened for the faculty since the time ASA came into existence or the new administration at IIUI took charge as both events happened at the same time. This might have been just a coincidence but one must praise the new administration which accepted the formation of ASA with an open heart, administered oath to ASA office bearers and let them work in a free manner, though they (the administration) did not give much weight to the demands of ASA.

Why do the high ups at IIUI take ASA lightly? It is time for the faculty as well as ASA leadership to mull over the reasons of their little value. Is it the IIUI administration that is mistreating them or do they deserve this? Is ASA leadership to be blamed for the whole mess and reign of terror and for not communicating their constituency’s views to the administration? Can the academic community at IIUI be rated as mediocre who could not choose a good leadership for them? Or is it that the faculty members are not and have never been interested in ASA and need to be awakened from khawab-e-taghaful. If the above questions are discussed and some possible answers are suggested, it is hoped that people will find out why IIUI administration takes them lightly.

ASA needs to reset its agenda and should try to achieve its goals. They need to have variety of plans to meet the targets. They should try to convey the higher authorities that policies cannot be implemented unless those who have to implement those fully agree with those policies. The hiring and firing of the faculty need to be regulated. The teaching load of the faculty needs to be realistic. Faculty development programme in the form of scholarships needs to be merit-based and transparent. The agenda to forge a new identity for IIUI also needs to be discussed by the faculty. The foreign faculty should not be appointed as administrative heads in the departments.
If ASA thinks that the university administration is not ready to resolve their issues, they should clearly tell them that they would not hesitate to approach the relevant authorities like HEC, IIUI BoG and even the members of the Board of Trustees in order to get relief.

If ASA devises some tangible goals in its view and succeeds in achieving some of those, the confidence of the faculty is not very difficult to restore in its usefulness and potential.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Dubiously hired and dubiously fired!

If you recently had a chance to come out of your office and walk through the powerless corridors of faculty blocks then you can share the kind of anxiety and worry which is right now prevailing among the faculty members. In response to our earlier post, we have been reminded by a few friends that contractual boom is now well over at IIUI and several “stars” have been conveniently laid down by our bosses without any resistance. Should we call it a good day as our case against dubious contractual appointments is seemingly taking some roots? No, we should not! We are pretty realistic about our blog and its posts and it is never like that our words are ending up into policy formulation (if we can call it a policy at all).

Our case against irregular and non-transparent contractual appointments is totally on different terrain and by no way one can support irrational and sweeping hiring and firing practices. Recent "firing boom" in the university has further strengthened our stance about the lack of any long term policy vision of IIUI administration. Most of these appointments were dubious in the wake of totally undefendable and crazy expansion project of our post Ghazi administration and now in the same haphazard and "hush-rush" manner, people are being laid off. If this is the solution of our financial crunch then do it but first of all share university's balance sheet with the stakeholders so that faculty could get a fair idea about who is who when it comes perks, benefits, entitlements, TA & DA, oversease and domestic trips, lofty packages etc. It is high time to think about adopting an efficient model of administration -student ratio policy to shed off unnecessary and inefficient load. We can contract-out several administrative functions to save cost, time and energies but who has the time to think about serious and sustainable solutions? Perhaps our administration think that they are simple people so they hire when they have money and they fire when they don't. But the rest of the world calls it maladministration!

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

IIUI Financial Crunch: who is responsible?

Are we broken or near to it and how deep our financial crisis at IIUI is? It is quite a genuine and legitimate question which everyone should ask from IIUI top administration which is partly responsible for the financial crunch which we are currently experiencing. No doubt that some external factors (grant cuts, inflation etc.) have aggravated the situation but we could not even see the traces of financial prudence and due diligence on the part of our administration and now everyone is crying about deep fiscal depression and mini-recession. The President of the university is now desperate and the other day he has been trying to build his case before Senate’s Standing Committee members. Not only this, earlier he has categorically said that university employees would not be given the pay rise announced in the Federal Budget unless additional grant is released. We fully appreciate his concerns and perhaps trying to apprehend too!

But one wonders that why is it that university employees are always taken into confidence when there are difficult times and financial crisis? There have been good rather very good times when our bosses were blindly expanding academic programs and administrative cadre. We are surely the victims of crazy and irrational expansion policies whereby several departments and programs were started without considering long term financial implications. And here is the time to face the music! IIUI employees had never been taken into confidence about university’s financial health earlier when resources were readily available. Those resources were largely used in an irresponsible and reckless way for expansive and unnecessary contractual appointments across the university. Millions of rupees are reportedly being spent on contractual appointees every month. Most of these appointments are merely “accommodative” in nature and we don’t have any mechanism to ensure quality control when it comes to contractual appointment process in IIUI.

There is no doubt that certain contractual appointments are inevitable in any institution and so is the case of IIUI. But there is absolutely no justification of having an excessive cohort of contractual appointees who frequently switch their jobs by leaving regrettable gaps in institutional memories. There are numerous examples around but for the sake of brevity we’ll share just one here. The positions of vice president (academics) and vice president (planning & administration) are extremely crucial for IIUI. Unfortunately over the last many years we are having ad-hoc or contractual arrangements against these positions and the result is obvious. There is standard story: someone is appointed on contract; works for a limited time and then leaves along with expertise and understanding of the system which is developed over the time and then another person comes and the same cycle continues. The result is that we don’t have a single regular employee of IIUI who is now trained and capacitated to assume these positions—this is at least what out bosses think!!

So the bottom line is about asking and raising critical question of who is responsible for existing financial crunch. IIUI community should not suffer for the mismanagement and maladministration of a few. Those who have manipulated and abused both powers and resources should be clearly identified and isolated at the juncture of this debate in the IIUI and the rest of us should hold them liable and accountable for this mess.

Senate committee calls for release of funds to IIUI

Courtesy: Daily Times, http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2008\07\22\story_22-7-2008_pg11_9

Philanthropists urged to help university management overcome financial problems

Staff Report ISLAMABAD:

The Senate Standing Committee on Education on Monday urged the government to immediately release more funds to the International Islamic University Islamabad (IIUI), especially its recurrent budget, as it was facing severe economic crunch.

During a visit to the IIUI, the committee members took serious note to delay in the release of third quarter fund to the university and assured to take up the matter with the quarters concerned.

“This university should be a model in the entire Muslim world but this objective could only be achieved when it is provided with adequate funds and complete autonomy,” the standing committee observed.

The committee members asked the IIUI to become a corner of excellence by bringing about qualitative improvement and acquiring services of a highly qualified faculty.

The Senate body lauded the steps taken by the university to spread the light of education and its commitment to quality education, despite the odds it had been facing.

Philanthropists: The committee asked the government to implement four-year undergraduate programme all over the country to ensure uniformity and consistency. It also urged the philanthropists and affluent sections of the society to help management of the university overcome its current difficulties.

Earlier, Dr Anwar Hussain Siddiqui, the IIUI president, informed the visiting legislators that there were more than 14,000 students studying in the university, which had nearly 250 faculty members. Around 1,500 students from 46 countries, including 550 Chinese students, were also studying at the university. The number of students might reach 30,000 within 10 years, he added.

Crisis: Siddiqui said the present resource crunch was so severe that the university had to borrow Rs 70 million from banks on high interest rates to pay salaries to the teachers, as the third quarter fund was yet to be released.

Deans and Heads of different departments of the university told Senators the university was given only Rs 30.978 million out of the total quarterly grant of Rs 97.682 million.

The committee came to know that salaries for the months of April and May were paid after withdrawing Rs 64.5 million from pension funds, students funds and reserve funds on loan basis.

The committee members expressed concerns over the cut to the university’s budgetary allocation and assured they would pursue with the government to restore the grant immediately.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Professors Jenson & Podur: Dr. Mumtaz's response

Dr. Mumtaz Ahmad sent us the following message in response to the comments posted by one reader regarding this post. Dr. Mumtaz writes:

"Greetings: I read the comments by one of your readers on the IIU-I visit by Professor Jenson and Professor Podur and wish to make the following clarifications for your readers:

1. Both gentlemen lectured and taught courses at IIU entirely on voluntary basis on my request and were not paid a single penny as compensation. Both of them either teach some summer courses at their schools (for which they are paid thousands of dollars in addition to their annual salaries) or are engaged in some other paid research projects. They decided to forego these money-making opportunities only to be of some service to the students at IIu-I on my request. It was their committment to service that I appealed to and they responded graciously.

2. They are not "leftists" as your readers describe them. They are radical critics of the US domestic power structure and the US foreign policies; their committment is to social justice, peace, and equal distribution of international economic resources; both of them believe in the mobilization of spiritual resources and religious faith in bringing about a hust social order.

3. Your reader probably is not aware that their courses were open to ALL students and faculty of IIU, regardless of what faculties they belonged to. The deans of all faculties and chairmen of all departments were notifies and requested to encourage their students to enroll (or simply attend) their courses.

4. Your reader is also not aware that both Prof. Jenson's and Prof. Podur's visits and their respective courses and other programs were fully coordinated well in advance of their arrival with the relevant departments. The entire program of Prof. Jenson was chalked out and finalized by the Centre for Media Studies of the IIU and they had the fullest autonomy to use his time at the IIU as they deemed fit.

5. The idea behind inviting them was to provide the IIU community with a perspective (or perspectives) that are not ususally represented at the IIU and to familiarize the students with the current debates on media, ethics, globalization, environmental concerns, international developments, and allow them an opportunity to share their (students') thoughts and critiques on these issues. No indoctination was intended, and the students' participation in the class discussions was indicative of their crtical appreciation of what they heard from the guest speakers.

6. A few words about the speakers who were invited last year: Contrary to what your reader writes, they did not represent a single point of view. The only common thing between them is the quality of their scholarship in their respective fields. Ebrahim Moosa is a scholar of Islamic intellectual history; Farid Essack is a Quran scholar; Salman Seyyed is a political sociologist; As'ad Abu Khalil is a political scientist who specializes in the Middle East politics. And their intellectual approaches are not necessarily alike.

7. On a personal note: Junaid completed his JD degree from William & Mary in May and was scheduled to go to Cape Town on a fellowship. I persuaded him to postpone his trip to South Africa for a month and help me and the IIU to coordinate the guest speakers' programs with the IIU administration as a facilitator on my and the IIU behalf. I paid his air fare from the US to Pakistan from my own pocket; he used my personal car in most cases; and he was not paid a single penny on any account by the IIU. The only IIU compensation for him was that he was invited to join the guest speakers in the farewell dinner that the Rector gave to them on July 16. In fact, he had to spend substantial amount of money from his own resources to be in Pakistan for a month and forego the one-month stipend that he would have received from his sponsors at the University of Cape Town. He worked almost 10-12 hours a day running around from home (45 Km from the IIU) to the old and new campuses. Your reader should have been a little more understanding on this count at least.

Mumtaz Ahmad
Professor of Political Science Hampton University Hampton, VA 23668Phone: 757-727-5619"

Junaid Ahmad's Response

In response to comments of a reader, Mr. Junaid has sent us the following message:

"Salaams: Let me correct a number of fallacies in this posting:

1) Robert Jensen came last summer (2007) to deliver some lectures, and at that time the new Media Studies dept. asked him if he could come and teach an intensive 3-week seminar the following summer. Prof. Jensen and the Media Studies dept. have been in touch since then (i.e., for many months) to organize this course, and the only thing I have really been involved in is organizing Prof. Jensen's (and Prof. Podur's) public talks, both at and outside the university. Also, I in fact tried my best over the few weeks before the course began to advertise it to students (and junior faculty) from all departments.

2) As far as Prof. Podur's class, I went to each and every department to advertise the course. Admittedly, I began a little late on this matter, but no single department was informed before others. It was just by chance we had more female psychology students in this class. But we also had a number of IR, economics, etc. students.

3) The comments forget to mention that I also invited Prof. Shahid Alam (aslama.org) and Prof. Salman Sayyid, both of whom are perhaps the two of the leading Muslim intellectuals defending Muslims' right to self-determination and resistance to the empire. Also, to say that all of the abovementioned scholars are of one single ideological viewpoint, one can just look here to see how that's not really so: http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/esack310707.htmlI have also invited Dr. Anis Ahmad, et al.

4) Prof. Podur nowhere says that I (Junaid) am "one of the most important thinkers of contemporary Islam" nor does he imply that. He certainly praises the work that I'm doing, but that's it. Please don't misquote, esp. since I'm just a simple law graduate/PhD candidate and don't have any pretenses of being some "important thinker."

5) As far as myself, everything I did over the past few weeks for the university was completely voluntary. I am currently continuing work for my PhD. What I do at IIU-I is because I love that institution, with whatever flaws that may exist there, and I love the students, and IIU-I is where I want to devote my efforts (and potentially teach at, inshallah). I am not interested in working at places like LUMS, etc., where all too often many of the best and brightest flock to.

6) As far as Prof. Jensen and Prof. Podur, their remumeration consisted of paying for their airline ticket and providing their local accomodation, but not a penny more. They are two of the most principled persons I know, and one should be really careful before engaging in baseless speculation about how much certain people are being paid, etc.

7) Dr. Shabana Mir did not come last year as a "distinguished scholar," but as part of a younger scholars program in which she conducted several social science research methodology workshops for social science as well as other (IRI, etc.) students. No one ever designated her as a "distinguished scholar."

8) Finally, let me just say that I suspect the writer of these comments to which I'm responding is someone at the university, who probably knows me or knows of me. Perhaps he/she should ask him/herself how much more productive and constructive it would've been to, instead of writing this irritated commentary, to come to me directly and help me make these programs better and more accessible to more and more students. But alas, the world we live in tends to be more about competing egos than of actually getting work, significant and potentially transformative, done.

Wasalaam Junaid
July 21, 2008 4:36 AM"

Friday, July 18, 2008

Comment on Latest Post

We have received following comments on our recent posts from a reader.

"The write ups by Jensen and Podur are important as they show the direction IIUI is taking in becoming an enlightened moderate institution. Last Summer, the university organized many lectures under “Distinguished Lecture Series” and those invited for the lectures were Farid Esack, As’ad Abukhalil, Shabana Mir and Robert Jenson. If we look at the profiles of these scholars, we find that intellectually, they all belong to the same group: the leftist liberals, all settled in America and sharing almost the same views. The person instrumental in their being at IIU is Junaid S Ahmed, son of Dr Mumtaz Ahmed, the Executive Director of Iqbal Institute at IIUI. Junaid, though in his early twenties and law graduate, is presented as one of the important thinkers of contemporary Islam by Podur in the article written at his blog. It is not clear, however, if he is serving IIUI voluntarily or is employed by the Iqbal Institute.

It is appreciable that IIUI invites people from overseas to interact with the faculty and the students. But sometimes, it seems that there is a clear tilt towards a specific intellectual disposition and the other intellectual positions are not represented in the people who are invited by Junaid at IIUI. And perhaps, this owes to Juanid’s own position in this regard. Secondly, the two visitors to IIUI this Summer, Jensen and Podur, were engaged in teaching courses to IIUI students. I am sure their respective departments were not taken on board before inviting them to IIUI. If IIUI pays money to people, and it does, then the teaching faculty from the concerned departments should be asked to deliberate on what are their needs and requirements. Without such consultations, it is not possible to reap the maximum benefit from such initiatives. For example, the course run by Podur on Critical Thinking could have been equally beneficial for students from all the faculties and it would have been advisable to select students from all the faculties. Then why only female students from Psychology department??? Secondly, Podur is an expert in Environmental issues and was it not good, had he been involved in some teaching at Department of Environmental Sciences?? Similarly, Jensen’s teaching of Media Law and Ethics was equally important for the students from Faculty of Shari’a and Law but it seems that people from that faculty were not consulted at all.

In all likelihood, the current initiatives at IIUI are arbitrary and consequently a waste of public money. They are not going to build the capacity of IIUI in engaging globally in dialogue and research. So far as Junaid is there to arrange speakers for the Summer, there would be some activity. And it’s not sure, how long he will be in Islamabad. Perhaps, until he finds some other big job. It is time for IIUI to become an institution in the real sense of the word and prove that it has really grown, not only in years!!!

PS. Shabana Mir mentioned above is the person who is one of the beneficiaries of Muslehuddin Islamic Trust. She went to Cambridge to study something related to English language and never returned to IIUI but only as a “Distinguished Speaker.” I am not sure if her Qarza-e-Hasana has been paid by her, over-written by the Trustees of MIT or still waiting to be paid or for that matter, she considers this expression a Punjabi one which means: laugh when the lender asks for his debt to be returned."

Thursday, July 17, 2008

So, what am I doing in Islamabad?

by Justin Podur on Tue, 07/15/2008 - 11:57
http://www.killingtrain.com/node/633

I am currently sitting in my very reasonable apartment in the Iqbal International Institute for Research and Dialogue guest house, typing at a laptop that is sitting on a dresser and using a wireless connection set up for me by my host, Junaid Ahmad, who borrowed an unused router from an office here at the Islamic University and set it up in the apartment next door. I'm trying to type quickly because the "load-shedding" is going to happen soon and I'll lose my internet connection in the blackout (there are several of these each day, and it is far better here in Islamabad than most other places). These guest houses are fairly new. Situated next to the "old campus" of the International Islamic University-Islamabad (IIU-I), which is itself attached to the Faisal Mosque, one of the biggest mosques in the country and one of Islamabad's tourist attractions, the guest houses are equipped with air conditioners, fans, indoor plumbing, a mini-kitchen with a gas stove, and a separate dining room. There are patches of grass in front and behind and gondolas where one could sit and do work if the weather were cool enough. People don't, because it's been so hot, which is why people also seem to keep much later hours here than I'm used to, getting up late and going to bed late. Overall the idea of these guest houses is for people to be able to contemplate. There is a gate between these apartments (lined up in a row, like townhouses, and all ground-floor) and the road to the mosque. The gate is always attended by a uniformed security guard, usually the same friendly middle-aged fellow. Most of the staff of the guest house that I've seen are men of similar age - they actually bring us guests our meals. I've actually spent most of my time here, at the computer, with Ahmed Rashid's or David Macdonald's book or local newspapers or magazines. Or, if not here, in the campus buildings.

The IIU-I is a public university and known to be not in the same league as universities like Quaid-e-Azam or LUMS (Lahore University of Management Sciences). It has an old campus and a new campus. The new campus, which I've been to once, is on the other side of town. It is itself divided into men's and women's campuses, which as far as I could tell were architecturally identical, mirror images of each other. The old campus is used mainly for administration - the offices of the President, Rector, and institutes (Iqbal Institute, Islamic Research Institute, and others) - are located here. There are a few classrooms and auditoria, and students for our classes take buses from the new campus to this one. The class I'm teaching here, I teach in a small auditorium on this old campus, a 3-minute walk from the guest house.

The teaching is unpaid but the Iqbal Institute is covering part of my travel expenses. My class is called "Critical Thinking" but in retrospect it might have been called "Critical Thinking for the Modern Muslim Woman Psychology Student." For some reason, even though this university has students in Islamic Studies, Economics, Political Science, International Relations, Environmental Science, Bioinformatics, Media - the vast majority of my 40-some students are psychology students from the women's campus. I have a smattering of male students form other disciplines (mostly economics and politics). Robert Jensen, who is teaching Media Law and Ethics here, has a slightly bigger group of about 60, all from the Media and Communications program. Males and females are together in our classes, which is not normal practice and which caused a few tensions (see Robert Jensen's article on an incident that happened the other day). Most of the women in my class wear the hijab, many wear the niqab, and a plurality just wear the traditional shalwar kameez. A couple of the men wear western clothes, most wear the shalwar kameez, and a few alternate on alternating days.

In addition to the class, Jensen and I have been doing some public lectures and interviews. This morning I was on Geo TV's "Nadia Khan show", which is usually about entertainment and cultural matters, in which the host, Nadia Khan, takes calls from an adoring audience (like a daily, breakfast version of Oprah, maybe?). I talked about environmental problems and how they impact developing countries, and participated in the ritual of "Happy to You", in which Nadia exhorted me to dance (seated) while she gave birthday and other greetings to viewers. On perhaps a more serious note, we've also done some talks on media and cultural issues, and will be doing a couple more on globalization and democracy in the coming days.

The way that I am teaching "critical thinking" also has some of its own embedded assumptions: my implicit goal is to encourage students to think carefully about their assumptions, question and discard them if necessary, be open to alternative views, and to be able to think free of ideology, or at least to be able to explicitly choose their ideological affiliations from what they know to be a set of alternatives. So I taught some logic and statistics concepts, and then I taught different economic, psychological, and political frameworks (liberalism, conservatism, keynesianism, marxism, freudianism, behaviorism, cognitive). For a writing assignment, I gave them an excellent piece by Chinese Revolutionary Lu Xun on women's rights, given in 1923. A bonus question was to get them to guess whether the writer was male or female, what country, and what decade - most guessed a Western woman in the 1960s or later.

There is, you may recognize, a certain randomness to my being here, doing this. How would someone who works on environmental problems and tries to write in service of social movements end up teaching at an Islamic University in Pakistan? I obviously seized the opportunity partly for the chance to be close to these events for a journalistic trip, but how did the opportunity come up? The answer is my host, Junaid Ahmad.

Junaid is a mid-twenties recent graduate of law school in the United States, an American of Pakistani origin who seems, from what I can tell, almost as fluent in Urdu (especially the English-loaded Urdu you hear here) as he is in his first language English. He has a booming voice, a sense of humor, and a complete earnestness about leftist politics. I met him at the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre five years ago, where I found him to be a very sincere and knowledgeable activist. Over the years since then, I've known him mainly through his writing, some of which we published at ZNet and which provided an excellent and nuanced view of politics in Muslim societies, which is his main interest. At times very polemical, Junaid's writing style sometimes hides the fact that he is humble, open to new thoughts and ideas, deeply committed to social justice. Here in Islamabad, he is the 'fixer': the behind-the-scenes person who organized our classes, our public talks, and our meetings with activist and other groups. He's been an excellent host, and I am here to try to help him with his agenda.

What is that agenda, exactly? You may have noticed that many Muslim countries are currently under the boot of the empire, or under a lot of pressure from it. I don't dislike the empire because it's the US, but because it deprives people of their rights and their lives. It also provokes reactions, some of which are healthy and others of which are unhealthy, and conflicts that cause a lot of suffering and have the potential to cause more. Among these is a certain reading of religion and a certain kind of nationalism, which can be sexist, homophobic, authoritarian, hierarchical, anti-democratic. To Junaid, these are not the only readings for either the religion or the community - they are incorrect readings that become hegemonic in society when they serve the interests of the powerful.

On the contrary, social justice and gender equality are all fully compatible with Islam, in his view. If I say that the religious doctrines are a big part of the problem, Junaid argues that my view lacks nuance. But above all his argument seems to me to be strategic, which he himself is reluctant to concede since, according to him, "it makes one’s engagement with his/her faith rather utilitarian". His question: "Are you interested in criticizing the entire society, or are you trying to transform it?" Because if it's the latter, you have to meet people where they are. Rather than maligning their faith, Junaid wants to contest those who would use it to argue for hierarchical interpretations, or even those who would use religion for a resistance bereft of social justice content, what Tariq Ali called "the anti-imperialism of fools" in his "Letter to a Young Muslim".

It has led him into controversy with other activists he respects, but who he feels are too dismissive of religion and unwilling to try to understand why people might be driven to problematic interpretations of Islam. Last year he suggested that the militants at the Lal Mosque were drawn to that ideology because, in addition to being used by the state, they had been abandoned by it, and by those who could have led young people in more constructive directions.

Junaid is working through IIU-I, then, partly because of family connections that go a long way here (his father is the respected political scientist Mumtaz Ahmad, who taught at Hampton University in the US and is now running the Iqbal Institute here at IIU-I), and partly because it is where he thinks his efforts to introduce different readings and interpretations of Islam and politics can make a difference. He brings activists from outside to try to spark a broader intellectual culture on these problems, and he's brought Farid Esack, As'ad Abukhalil, Shabana Mir, and Robert Jensen through so far. Some of the university's officials are backing the effort and one was so optimistic that he said that "hopefully, probably, in a few years, it might have a marginal effect," which of course fit well with my own tendencies toward self-deprecation.

What Junaid is trying to do in Islam is similar (though not exactly the same) to what Robert Jensen is trying to do with Christianity. Some of Jensen's talks here have touched on these themes and I have had a preview of his upcoming book on it, a book which will expand on his essay "Why I am a Christian (Sort Of)". Jensen sees religion as spiritual and ethical striving, not as supernatural claims and moralistic rules. Jensen's argument is clearly also strategic: The US is a deeply religious society, and it makes more sense to try to understand why, to recognize that most or all of what is bad are cultural and political practices that are associated with religion rather than religion itself, and deal with it, rather than to spit on it.

There is a certain kind of liberation theologist (and I know a few of these), regardless of religion, that is at once fun and incredibly frustrating to argue with. They reject all the same ugly practices and the religious justifications for them. They just argue that they are perversions of the religion and not consequences of it, and that religion like any system of thought or ideology is contested terrain. They argue that if one can't reject socialism and its values of equality and solidarity on the basis of the lack of democracy in the USSR or Cuba, then one also can't reject Islam because of the practices of the Saudi regime or the Taliban. Junaid can nuance you to death, but in the end he is trying to take an original approach to do something very important. I continue to think I'd rather have the liberation without the theology, but the times are a little too desperate to dismiss projects and ideas that are a little different from my own. And that, I suppose, is why I came here.

Justin Podur was in Islamabad from June 24-July 17. He can be reached at justin@killingtrain.com.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Why we are losing the war against terror

Courtesy: The News, http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=124124

Tuesday, July 15, 2008 Mosharraf Zaidi

Pakistan's immense military power, the stunning intellect of its bureaucrats and the long tradition of accommodation and pragmatism among its politicians have all got together, but still can't put humpty dumpty back together again. This humpty dumpty of sporadic, but increasingly fortified violence from a global gang of cavemen has fallen off the Durand 'Wall' into Pakistan and all over the NWFP. Yet Pakistan seems unable to resist and control its influence.

Let's remember what Pakistan we're talking about, because it is too easy, and too convenient to get caught up in the collective rage against Gen. Zia's twisted abuse of this country and its resources (so brilliantly tapped by Mohammed Hanif in his debut novel, A Case of Exploding Mangoes). It is important then to remember however that this is Hanif's Pakistan, not Zia's. Important to remember that its 2008, not 1978.

This is the Pakistan that Wonderbanker and Superminister Shaukat Aziz promised was on the verge of middle-income status. The Pakistan whose soft image was the pride of expats watching You Tube clips of our Philosopher-Warrior-King having tea with Jon Stewart. The post-mullah Pakistan shaped by Tariq Amin and Frieha Altaf. The post-mullet home of South Asian musical ingenuity. This is not Mehtab Rashdi's Pakistan, its Meera's. This is not Justice Anwar-ul-Haq's Pakistan. It is Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry's.

How could THIS Pakistan be so singularly incompetent in dealing with the virus of cavemen whose mantra is neither Islamic, nor tribal? Beheading journalists, blowing up in the middle of markets, and inciting young children to a black-hole life? This appetite for mayhem and destruction would be unrecognizable to Maudoodi, to Hassan Al Banna, even, dare I say, to Sayyid Qutub – whose own rage was tremendous, but whose mastery over Quranic text would have made it impossible for him to endorse the barbarianism and insanity of a terror that is now well into its second year – with only a four month period around the elections as a respite.

The reason Pakistan is finding it difficult to counter the terror is because whereas the terrorists have money, and leadership and ideology, Pakistanis have none of the above. Shaukat Aziz's Pakistan has no money, Musharraf's Pakistan has no leadership and Meera's Pakistan has no ideology.

Pakistan has no money because all its money gets spent paying rich people to get richer. This money comes in many forms, including tax breaks, farm subsidies, utility subsidies, jobs in government, and umra trips (where the rich get richer by asking God and the Saudi government for more subsidies). The wealthy capitalists then take these divine, Saudi and Islamabadi subsidies and put the fruits of these subsidies in baskets far from the reach of investigative journalists, and the State Bank of Pakistan. The money Shaukat Aziz kept talking about was real only for those who were making it. For the rest of Pakistan, that phantom money is sitting in Dubai, making a pittance of a return – but safe from the evil eye that is such a common Pakistani affliction.

Pakistan has no leadership because Shaheed Benazir Bhutto was murdered, because Nawaz Sharif's comeback is predicated on principles, and because the cult of personality and the power of money continue to be the primary variables that define political association. The all corrupting influence of minions and section officers from foreign governments on the political equilibrium is overstated – but it mustn't be ignored. Pakistan's politicians are a unique bunch, unlike any other on the planet. They have to provide jobs, freedom and justice to their village or city constituents, and then to top that off they have to provide existential comforts to voters across Europe and North America about the shared values they cherish with politicians half a world away. No other country's politicians are asked to do as much. If there is frequent failure on both fronts, perhaps this is less a failing of the politicians and more of the combined force of their local and global constituency.

Pakistan has no ideology because after 9/11 the one it had adopted became unfashionable. What burning ideals are Pakistani soldiers and bureaucrats being asked to defend? Not Islam, because the terrorists, the friendly tribals, the troops and the political agents and bureaucrats all share the same faith. Not freedom, because everybody's fighting to defend freedom. The terrorists, the troops, NATO, ISAF, the Northern Alliance Afghans, the Pakhtun Afghans, the Frontier Constabulary – EVERYONE is fighting for SOMEONE'S freedom.

The tragedy of this ideological black hole that Pakistan finds itself in, is that those that bark loudest, are heard most frequently. Distancing the average Pakistani from terrorism is a project that should never have been undertaken to begin with. The idea that Muslims are terrorists, or that Pakistanis are terrorists, is so awful, and so far from any notion of reality, that it never deserved to have been validated by countering it. It's like stooping to the level of the name-caller. Automatically, you lend some credibility to otherwise completely outrageous fallacies.

Instead, not only did Pakistan undertake a formal programme of activities to counter it, but it made the suicidal mistake of doing so without being fully equipped for the journey. If Tariq Ramadan challenges Yusuf Al-Qardawi and the Maudoodi-dominated global Islamic orthodoxy today, he does so with an arsenal of credibility and knowledge that makes it difficult to demonize him. When a Pakistani soldier (even one with substantial intellectual gifts) takes on the mantle of religious scholarship, and begins to write op-eds for the Washington Post about what needs fixing in Islam--even his most passionate supporters cringe. Enlightened moderation has become a national and international punch line. In the West and in the Islamic World, Pakistanis are taken less seriously as members of either side of the divide because of this poorly conceived and half-baked idea. It is an embarrassment to intelligent and modern Muslim Pakistanis, and a severe setback for progressive Pakistanis who want religion to be a less obvious and vocal element of public life in the country.

The anti-mullah rage felt by those who grew up during Zia's era is now being reciprocated and remanufactured among confused children – angry about not knowing who they are, and easily lured by the twisted messages coming from the loudspeakers. LUMS and IBA are churning out future Shaukat Aziz's – every successful Pakistani banker at Citi thinks he or she has a shot at becoming a minister. But where are the religious scholars coming from? They are coming from madressahs where malnutrition and tunnel vision are the two staple items on the menu. The one place where some modicum of quality discourse about Islam did exist, the International Islamic University of Islamabad, has been handed to bureaucrats, to appease ill-informed phobias of beards and hijabs.

Not having money, leadership or ideology should be a matter of grave concern for Pakistanis. No matter how well intentioned and principled some of Pakistan's politicians and bureaucrats may be, fixing the economy, healing the constitution, judiciary and political system, and renewing a functional, and postmodern ideology for Pakistan is an intergenerational effort. It has taken sixty years to dismantle the cancerous (but highly effective) apparatus bequeathed to this country by the British Raj. It will take several years to build it anew. FATA and NWFP do not have sixty years to spare. But they cannot afford a restoration of that cancerous apparatus, either.

The trouble with not having money, leadership or ideology is that it is disabling not only for fighting the war on terror – but really anything a country wants to do. The state cannot be whole without these three ingredients. Pakistan is losing the war on terror because it is not a war of equals. It is a war between organized, well-financed and motivated cavemen, and a disorganized, broke, and confused state. In short, a state lacking competence. Only a competent and effective state can fight this war successfully.

The writer is an independent political economist. Email: mosharraf @gmail.com

Another Response to the post: “IIUI Welfare Fund: Bane and Boon”

Here is another response from a reader to the subject post:

"I agree with the post. I'd like to add that the very spirit of this Fund is to tax the faculty...it was simply imposed by the administration with the help of some "faculty stars"...it is neither Islamic nor Moral...It'd be much more better, had it been consulted with the stakeholders...all Hajs and Umras performed by this "taxed income" are questionable...there is clear cut saying of Prophet (SAW) that suggests that the income (maal) of your muslim brothers is HARRAAM on you until unless they give you happily... now look at the happiness of faculty...they are crying for the elimination of this tax and some gentlemen are arguing to improve it...if we are sincere to our souls...the solution is very simple. For example, I suggest the following:

1-Chalkout its objectives clearly
2-Circulate these objectives among the faculty and seek their consent
3-Contribution to the Fund should be voluntary rather compulsory
4-Use of funds and other details should be available to each stakeholder every year in the printed form.
5-The members of the Committee should follow the same proportion as the contributors of the Fund.
6-Every effort should be made to make it transparent (TRUE ISLAMIC)

Last thing...we should always remember the lessons of Surah Baqrah...instead of quibling, we should look for simple and Islam-friendly solutions."

Saturday, July 12, 2008

A Response to the post: “IIUI Welfare Fund: Bane and Boon”

In response to our post about IIUI Welfare Fund, we have received following comments from one reader.

A Response to the post: “IIUI Welfare Fund: Bane or Boon”

Dear Blogers

As a graduate and junior faculty member of the University, I appreciate your initiative and the candid discussions which you have floated about the IIUI related issues. Supposing that the IIUI Blog is a democratic and open for all forum, I would like to contribute to it as something occurs to my mind. For the time being, I want to comment frankly on one of your recent posts, namely: “IIUI Welfare Fund: Bane and Boon”.

In fact, you can consider me one of those “chosen people” which you have referred to in this post as I have been the member of Welfare Fund committee for a year or so. Now, one may agree with several points raised in the post, for instance why the visiting faculty should be charged with the Welfare Fund deduction if they are not its beneficiary? And that it would be more transparent to make public the annual reports of the fund through webpage or any other media.

However, at occasions the contributor of the post seems to be guided by mere speculations. For instance, at one point the post reads: “it seems that the accounts of welfare fund are kept secret from the auditors, and especially external auditors”. Now, “It seems” clearly indicates that the writer does not have exact information on the issue. I feel that floating a suspicion in this way is not in accordance with the Islamic teachings which the writer also refers to. Without loosing its thrust, the point could have been put something like this: “We are not sure if the matters related to the welfare fund are regularly scrutinized by the auditors, if not, they must be”.

In my humble view, the fund money is utilized honestly. Alhamdulillah, there never has been any concrete allegation of deliberate misuse. The point about the Umra scheme makes sense but you would agree that it is a matter of interpretation and not a case of fraudulent use of money.

At the end, it is not to deny that like every human effort there is a possibility of improvement in the functioning of IIUI Welfare Fund, for which some suggestions given in the post can be helpful.

Friday, July 11, 2008

Certain forces ‘using Islamophobia as a tool’

Courtesy: The News, http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=123442

Friday, July 11, 2008 Noor Aftab Islamabad

Speakers on Thursday said that Islamophobia is being used as a tool by certain forces especially in the West to secure personal political gains at the cost of fundamental rights of the Muslims.They expressed these views at a panel discussion on ‘Religion, Culture and Politics: Critical Reflections on the Contemporary World’ organized by the Iqbal International Institute for Research and Dialogue (IRD) of the International Islamic University here.

Justin Podur, lecturer at the University of Texas, said multi-culturalism stressed the need for provision of fundamental rights to all the communities living together in a society.“Community means a set of people who have something in common and identity stands for membership of any such community. But people usually do not have only single identity as they are members of various communities at the same time,” he said. He underlined various factors related to religion and culture including role of choice, universal values, cultural differences and clash of civilizations. Elaborating his point of view he said clash of civilization has nothing to do with any culture and this concept or phenomenon has no authentic reasons acceptable to the common people.Justin said boundaries of groups or communities undergo a series of changes as these are no permanent features and entirely depend on the fast changing situation.

Robert Jensen, lecturer at the York University, Canada, said centrality of love and core values of justice have so much importance when any one talks about religion and culture. He said, “Love in action is harsh and dreadful thing than live in dreams. When it comes to ground reality then certain elements hinder a person from doing such things which he generally thinks to do.” Jensen said every person has a capacity to speak truth but “we observe that most of the people avoid speaking truth in the society that clearly shows that only having capacity to speak truth is not enough, people must have courage to do so.”

Dr Anees Ahmad, a well-known scholar, said culture in Islam can be looked at from different angles but any narrow interpretation of Islam and culture does not serve any purpose.He said teachings of ‘Tauheed’ have significantly contributed towards development of the Islamic culture as a universal phenomenon. “There has to be unity in thought, feelings and behaviour of persons that are considered hallmark of their personalities.” Dr Anees said Islamic culture has a tendency that is dynamic and not static and its basic philosophy is same everywhere in the Muslim countries across the world.“Water is always water because you can pour it in any kind of utensil but its features remain the same and this is the case with Islam,” he said. He said if faith has flexibility and offers solution to increasing problems then we could say that it has the potential to cope with the growing needs of modern day era.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

IIUI Welfare Fund: Bane or Boon

Welfare Fund is a certain amount of money deducted from the salaries of IIUI employees every month. In addition to that, it is the 5% deduction from the extra income of IIUI full time as well as part time faculty. The proclaimed purpose of the fund is to help the contributors in case of hardship and difficulty. Conceptually, it’s a great idea and there can’t be two opinions about the existence of such a fund. But there are a number of things in the world that sound so good conceptually but when it comes to their administration, all the goodness of the idea evaporates. More or less, same is the case with IIUI Welfare Fund.

Origin: First of all, the origin of the fund is shrouded in mystery. We don’t have the exact information on how the fund started. From what we have been able to glean from different sources, it seems that a few faculty members along with some other employees went with this proposal to the then president without proper consultation with all the stakeholders who were to become the contributors to the fund. We are sure that the majority of the faculty and employees were kept ignorant about the fund proposal and the possible uses of the fund.

Double Jeopardy: Earlier, there was only one deduction for the fund from the monthly salary but later on, the extra income of the faculty also came under scrutiny and a 5% deduction started from there as well. Worst of all, the visiting faculty that is not even nominally the beneficiary of the fund started getting deductions from their bills. Some of our readers may argue that the contract that the part time teachers, from among the regular as well as visiting faculty, are required to sign before they start teaching at IIUI includes one clause regarding the deduction from their income. This is utterly an unfair term of contract and needs thorough revision.

Who administers the fund and the issues of transparency? There is a committee that administers the fund and the committee is not fairly represented. Some of the stakeholders are represented more than the others. The faculty that is the major contributor to the fund is represented by the few “handpicked” “chosen” people who do not speak for the wishes of their constituency and play the role of a rubber stamp. Secondly, since its inception, those who administer the fund have not published a single report regarding the fund as to how much income did the fund generate in, say, one single year, how was it distributed, how much money is/isn’t there in the account at the end of that financial year?? This is the basic condition of transparency for any financial matter and we know how meticulous the bodies are that generate income in this manner. Thirdly, it seems that the accounts of welfare fund are kept secret from the auditors, and especially external auditors, and this is the reason no annual report of the fund has ever been published. Finally, comes the issue of the reflection of welfare fund deduction in the annual tax returns of the employees. We are of the view that as a result of this deduction, the employees of IIUI can get an equal rebate from the Government of Pakistan.

The Uses of the Fund: For some years, the “real decision makers” have been funding some employees to perform Umra with the welfare fund money. International Islamic University that hosts a faculty called Shari’a and Law should issue a fatwa regarding such Umras and Hajjs. Had this been done by the so-called secular people, this would have been a great sin and corruption: misusing taxpayer’s money. But since, the champions of Islam have total monopoly on how to interpret Islam for their vested interests; no one raises the questions on why someone should be sent for Umra or Hajj when he or she can’t afford it?

The Way Out: We believe the fund can do a lot good to IIUI community provided it is administered in a transparent manner. To ensure the transparency, those at the helm of affairs should develop a dedicated page on IIUI website about the fund which should have all the details of the annual reports, audit reports and administrative details regarding the fund.
And last but not the least; the Welfare Fund committee should be reconstituted in terms of representing those in equal proportion who contribute more to the fund. In other words, if the faculty contributes 70% of the money to the fund, the faculty should be 70% of that committee giving equal share to lecturers and assistant professors as well as the senior faculty. The emphasis on lecturers and APs is because they form the 90% of the faculty at IIUI and there is no one to represent them in various committees and statutory bodies.

Universal patterns within cultural diversity: Patriarchy makes men crazy and stupid

Courtesy: Atlantic Free Press: http://www.atlanticfreepress.com/content/view/4235/81/

Written By: Robert Jensen, Wednesday, 9 July 2008

Islamabad, Pakistan – Some lessons learned while spending time in a different culture come from paying attention to the wide diversity in how we humans arrange ourselves socially. Equally crucial lessons come from seeing patterns in how people behave similarly in similar situations, even in very different cultural contexts.

This week in Pakistan, as I have been learning more about a very different culture than my own, I was reminded of one of those patterns: Patriarchy makes men crazy.

The setting for this lesson is the International Islamic University in Islamabad, where I am teaching a three-week course on media law and ethics as a visiting fellow of the university’s Iqbal International Institute for Research and Dialogue. Institute Director Mumtaz Ahmad brought in me and my Canadian colleague Justin Podur, who is teaching a course on critical thinking, to bring new perspectives to the students at what is a fairly orthodox university, and the dialogue has indeed been rewarding.

As is the case in my courses at the University of Texas at Austin, no matter what the specific subject of the course -- freedom of expression, democracy, and mass media, in this case -- I often raise questions about how our identities -- race, gender, class, nation -- structure our position in a society and understanding of the world. Given the gender segregation at IIU -- I have male and female students in my class, but they are housed on different campuses and much of the regular instruction is in single-sex settings -- it’s difficult not to circle back frequently to gender.

One day while I was talking about race, I pointed out that while white people in a white-supremacist have distinct advantages, there is one downside: It makes white people crazy. The students’ expressions suggested they weren’t sure how to take that, so I explained: White supremacy leads white people to believe they are superior based on their skin color. That idea is … crazy. Therefore, lots of white people -- those who explicitly support white supremacy or unconsciously accept such a notion -- are crazy.

My students are mostly Pakistani, with a few from other Islamic countries in Asia and Africa; all are brown or black. They tried to be polite but couldn’t help laughing at the obvious truth in the statement, as well as the odd fact that a white guy was saying it.

I then moved to an obvious comparison: We men know about this problem, I said, because of the same problem in patriarchy. In male-supremacist societies, men have distinct advantages, but we often believe that we are superior based on our sex. That idea is ….

This time the women laughed, but the men were silent. They weren’t so sure they agreed with the analysis in this case.

The next week a power outage at the university helped me drive home my point.

When we arrived that morning and found our classroom dark, we looked for a space with natural light that could accommodate the entire class. The most easily accessible place was the carpeted prayer area off the building lobby, and one of the female faculty members helping me with the class led us there. I sat down with the women, and one of the most inquisitive students raised a critical question about one of my assertions from our previous class. We launched into a lively discussion for several minutes, until we were informed that the male students had a problem with the class meeting there. I looked around and, sure enough, the men had yet to join us. They were standing off to the side, refusing to come into the prayer space, which they thought should not be used for a classroom with men and women.

Our host Junaid Ahmad, who puts his considerable organizing skills to good use in the United States and Pakistan, was starting to sort out the issue when the power came back on, and we all headed back to our regular classroom. I put my scheduled lecture on hold to allow for discussion about what had just happened. Could a prayer space be used for other purposes, such as a class? If so, given such that space is used exclusively by men here, is it appropriate to use it for a coeducational classroom?

It’s hardly surprising that students held a variety of opinions about how to resolve those questions consistent with their interpretation of Islamic principles, and a gendered pattern emerged immediately. The women overwhelmingly asserted that there was nothing wrong with us all being in the prayer space, and the men overwhelmingly rejected that conclusion. I made it clear that as an outsider I wasn’t going to weigh in on the theological question, but that I wanted to use our experience to examine how a society could create a system of freedom of expression to explore such issues democratically.

The lesson for me came in how the discussion went forward. The women were not shy in expressing themselves, eager to engage in debate with the men, who were considerably more reserved. After a contentious half hour of discussion, we moved forward to my lecture. During the break, the men huddled to discuss the question of the prayer space. When we reconvened, one of them asked if a representative of the men could speak again on issue. He began by saying that he had hesitated to speak in the previous discussion because he felt it was obvious that the women were wrong and he had not wanted to hurt their feelings or impede their willingness to speak up by pointing out their error immediately.

I suggested we resolve that question first. I turned to the women and asked, “Will your feelings be hurt or will you be you afraid to speak if he is critical of your arguments?” Their response was a resounding no.

I turned back to the man and made the obvious point: We now have clear evidence that that your assumption was wrong. The women are telling you directly that they are not shy about debating, and so you can make your points. When he did -- and when the women disagreed -- they let him know without hesitation. From what I could tell, his argument did not persuade many, if any, of the women that their judgments had been wrong.

What struck me about the exchange was how ill-prepared the men were to defend their position in the face of a challenge from the women. It was clear that the men were not used to facing such challenges, and as they scrambled to formulate rebuttals they did little more than restate claims with which they were comfortable and familiar. That strategy (or lack of a strategy) is hardly unique to Pakistani men.

To modify my previous statement about the negative effects of privilege on the privileged: Patriarchy makes us men not just crazy but stupid. The more our intellectual activity takes place in male-dominant spaces, and the more intensely male-dominant those spaces are, the less likely we are to develop our ability to think critically about gender and power. Sometimes when faced with an incisive challenge, men become aggressive, even violent; sometimes men retreat with an illusory sense of victory; sometimes men sulk until women give up the debate. Individual men will react differently in different times and places; it’s the patterns that are important.

Cultural diversity exists alongside universal patterns. The United States and Pakistan are very different societies, but they are both patriarchal. Patriarchy takes different forms in each society, and the harms to women can be quite different, but my observation holds in both. It doesn’t mean patriarchy doesn’t sometimes also constrain women’s thinking, nor does it mean women are always right in debates with men. To identify patterns is not to make ridiculous totalizing claims.

There’s one more valuable lesson I took away from this episode: I have to be vigilant in challenging my stereotypes about women in Islamic societies. I can be quick to assume that Islamic women always capitulate to the patriarchal ideas and norms that dominate their societies. While I can’t know what each woman in the room was thinking, there was a consensus that they would not accept the conclusion of the men without challenge. In front of me were women with their heads covered (the hijab) and some with the full face veil (the niqab). Others had scarves draped around their shoulders, their heads uncovered. One of the two most forceful women in the debate wore the hijab and the other was uncovered; I couldn’t predict the content or tone of a woman’s response from her dress. No matter how much I know that intellectually, I still catch myself making assumptions about these women based on their choice of head covering. The class discussion reminds me to remember to challenge my own assumptions.

These conclusions are hardly original or revolutionary, but they bear regular restatement:

It is crucial that we remember the reality of cultural diversity and encourage respect of that diversity, while not shying away from critical engagement. That’s especially important for those of us from privileged classes in affluent imperial nations, who often are quick to assume we are superior.

It’s just as crucial to look for patterns across cultures, to help us understand how systems of power shape us in ways that are remarkably consistent and to help us develop better strategies to resist illegitimate authority and transform our diverse societies. That is important for us all who care about justice.

[Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin and board member of the Third Coast Activist Resource Center. His latest book is Getting Off: Pornography and the End of Masculinity (South End Press, 2007). Jensen is also the author of The Heart of Whiteness: Race, Racism, and White Privilege and Citizens of the Empire: The Struggle to Claim Our Humanity (both from City Lights Books); and Writing Dissent: Taking Radical Ideas from the Margins to the Mainstream (Peter Lang). He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu and his articles can be found online at http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~rjensen/index.html.]

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Dr. Mohammad Muslehuddin: we are sorry!

In response to our earlier post about the IIUI PhD scholarships (Muslehuddin Trust Fund, the Rector Scholarship and now IIUI Scholarships: A continuation of same sorry tale?) we have received following comment from a reader:

"Well said!! By the way, I was wondering who was Professor Muslehuddin? No one knows, I presume. This is how people like him are remembered!!! Professor Dr Hamidullah has been honoured by IIUI by naming Islamic Research Institute (IRI) library after him and one of the reasons for this was that he donated his award of 1 million rupees to IRI. I am not sure how much Professor Muslehuddin donated for the Trust. I remember one of the faculty members at IIU saying that the amount donated by Professor Muslehuddin was five times the amount donated by Dr Hamidullah. This is by no way to measure the calibre of two great scholars in terms of money. This is rather to propose that IIUI should honour Professor Muslehuddin by naming one of the buildings at the new campus after his name. That would be a belated tribute to one of great scholars who donated all he had to IIUI towards the end of his life. May he live in eternal peace in his heavenly abode!! Amen"

Isn’t it quite pertinent? We have been unsuccessfully trying to search about Dr. Muslehuddin, his life, work & achievements and more specifically some details about the Trust Fund which he has created and which was shamefully robbed and badly mismanaged at IIUI. We could only find few references about his work on different topics of Islamic law and economics and there is a reference of his book published by IIUI based Dr. Muslehuddin Islamic Trust. (Muslehuddin, Mohammad, Judicial System of Islam, Its Origin and Development, Dr. Muslehuddin Islamic Trust, International Islamic University, Islamabad, Pakistan, 1988.)

We don’t get any information about the nature of trust which he has created, the amount of trust fund, its beneficiaries, disbursement of money & allocations etc. There is complete mystery about the management of the trust. Who were its trustees and what changes has occurred over the years? Are there any annual reports of the trust and if so, how the same can be accessed? Whether the trust is still functional or it is dead and if so what happened precisely which lead towards such a dismal state of the affairs? All these and many more questions are yet to be answered and we don’t know who has to face them. It would be great if anyone from our readers can indicate and suggest some names that can help us with this. And a last word with the beneficiaries of Dr. Muslehuddin Islamic Trust as all of them should be doing very well that Dr. Muslehuddin at least deserves a decent biography detailing his life sketch and work! Please consider it though some of you are quite busy now! To IIUI we have already suggested that all those who are responsible for this mismanagement and unjust enrichment must be categorically named and shamed.

Globalization a challenge, says Dr Tariq Ramadan

Courtesy: The Frontier Post, http://www.thefrontierpost.com/News.aspx?ncat=hn&nid=1191&ad=06-07-2008

ISLAMABAD (APP): Dr. Tariq Ramadan, Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Oxford, UK said that Globalization is a challenge which can be turned into opportunities for the benefit of Islamic revival. It was stated while delivering a lecture on "Globalization and the Redefinition of Muslim Identity: Challenges and Opportunities" arranged by the Iqbal International institute for Research and Dialogue (IRD) an offshoot of the International Islamic University. Dr Manzoor Ahmed, Rector of the University chaired this session which was also addressed by Senator Khurshid Ahmed, Dr Zafar Ishaq Ansari, the acting President of the University and Dr. Mumtaz Ahmed, Executive Director of the IRD. Dr. Tariq Ramadan said that Globalization is an accepted international reality. It has its merits and demerits. He said it has created opportunities for close relationship between cultures and civilizations. It has also created opportunities for better interaction between followers of various religions. "Now it is up to religious people especially Muslims to use Globalization and its Opportunities for dissemination of their messages for better future of humanity at large", he said. Dr. Ramadan added that Muslim all over the world are facing tremendous challenges to their common and collective identity rather their individual existence. He said Living in an international environment is an art and it should be wisely utilized. Dr. Ramadan said that Muslims should not compromise over their religious principles. However, they should adopt policy of coexistence with other religions as confrontation harms spreading message of Islamic. It is very sad that anti-Islamic propagandists have forced Muslims to take refuge in defending their religions whereas Islam itself enjoys prove its truthfulness, he added. Dr. Tariq asked intelligence to build confidence, consistency, communication, contribution, creativity and contest to live in changed world situation. He made it clear that there should be no effort to change texts of the Holy Quran in changing scenarios. He also stressed upon the need of justice and equality in the Muslim societies to face the challenge of Globalization. Prof. Khurshid Ahmed said that Muslims should spread message of "Tauheed" and "Taqwa" to ensure a better living and bright future. He added that we must learn advantages and threats." Dr. Manzoor Ahmed, Rector IIUI in his speech said that we should use opportunities provided by globalization very cleverly for our interests and should not compromise on our principles.

Sunday, July 6, 2008

Beyond career and character?

The official web portal of the IIUI carries a caption: “Beyond career and character, its [sic] life building at IIUI”, which supposedly reveals the vision of the institution. For quite sometime we used to reproach our self for being unable to understand the semiotics of this caption. Okay, one can assume that word ‘its’ is a typographical mistake and should be read as ‘it’s’ (contraction of ‘it is’) but that is not the main problem with this apparently unique dictum. If it were “Beyond career, it’s character building”, it could have made sense. However, in its present form one wonders what the hidden wisdom is contained in this phrase. To make sure that our bewilderment is not simply because of ignorance, we searched through Google putting the phrase “Beyond career and character” in quotes and it yielded not even a single hit (not even the one under discussion because the phrase appears at the webpage as an image not text). This means that the construction is really strange. Perhaps those concerned could explain what the worth ‘life’ is which is beyond ‘character’ and how this caption communicates the vision of the university?

Thursday, July 3, 2008

A New Post on IIUI Welfare Fund

A New Post on IIUI Welfare Fund

Dear All

Assalam-o-Alaikum!! Thanks very much for visiting our blog. We are currently in the process of writing a post on the Welfare Fund. We were just wondering if some of you wanted to share their views about how the fund originated, who manages this fund, who are the beneficiaries of the fund and who contribute to it. Responses addressing these and other questions of same sort will help us to delineate an accurate and honest picture of the situation. We would be happy to include the views of all shades in our post.

Waiting for your response,

I I U I Blog Team

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Dr. Tariq Ramadan to address at IIUI

Dr. Tariq Ramadan, Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Oxford, United Kingdom will deliver a lecture on "Globalization and the Redefinition of Muslim Identity: Challenges and Opportunities" on Friday, the 4th of July, 2008 at 6:15 P.M. at the Faisal Mosque Campus of International Islamic University, Islamabad (IIUI). It is being organized by the Iqbal International Institute for Research and Dialogue, IIUI. And here is a profile of the visiting scholar.

The leading Islamic thinker among Europe's Muslim immigrants, the Geneva-based author and university lecturer Tariq Said Ramadan, with a measured delivery of an academic, purports his ingenuous interpretation of Islam in a bid to bridge Islamic values and Western culture.

Born on September 26, 1962, Tariq Said Ramadan is an academician, theologian, teacher and scholar. Included in time Magazine's top 100 thinkers and innovators of the 21st century, he belongs to a new generation of Islamic reformers and thinkers engaged in the application of Islamic values within a modern pluralistic context. As one of the most noted intellectuals in the West, Ramadan advocates the studying and reinterpretation of Islamic texts and emphasizes the heterogeneous nature of Islamic society. He evokes both respect and criticism on account of the intensity and scope of his thoughts.

Ramadan holds MA in Philosophy and French literature and PhD in Arabic and Islamic Studies from the University of Geneva. He is a Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of Oxford (UK) and a Visiting Professor, holding the chair "Identity and Citizenship" at Erasmus University (the Netherlands). He is also a Senior Research Fellow at St Antony's College (Oxford), Dosisha University (Kyoto, Japan) and at the Lokahi Foundation (London).

Ramadan is currently President of the European think tank "European Muslim Network" (EMN) in Brussels. Through his writings and lectures he has contributed substantially to the debate on the issues of Muslims in the West and Islamic revival in the Muslim world. He is active both at the academic and grassroots levels lecturing extensively throughout the world on social justice and dialogue between civilizations.

His major works include: In the Footsteps of the Prophet: Lessons from the Life of Muhammad, 2007; Western Muslims and the Future of Islam, 2004; Jihad, Violence, War and Peace in Islam, 2002; Islam, the West, and the Challenge of Modernity, 2001; and To Be a European Muslim, 1999. He has authored more than 20 books and has also contributed 700 articles in edited books, academic reviews, and magazines. Ramadan's famous book, To Be a European Muslim, written in English is being translated in German, Italian and Dutch languages. And Ramadan's message isn't intended for Muslims alone. "The real question is about spirituality," he says, "If the presence of Muslims leads Europeans to think about who they are and what they believe in, that has to be positive." Ramadan's contribution is critical in highlighting Islam as an integral part of Europe's religious landscape. He may be contacted through Mr. Zakir Muhammad Jauhar, Director (A&F), IRD, IIUI. Phone Number 051-2253285, 9262048

Developing IIUI Research Profile

Dear IIUI Faculty members

Assalam-o-Alaikum!! Hope you are well and busy in your work. If you have recently published a book/research paper or you have recently been to a conference to present your research findings, please share with us and we will be very happy to present it to the world through our blog. Please include the title, the publisher, year of publication and if possible, link to the on-line version of the paper. Please send your mails to iiuiblog@gmail.com

We hope that through this we will be able to develop a virtual database of all the research being produced at IIUI. We regret that this should have been done before by the IIUI administration and should have reflected at the IIUI official portal. But it’s never too late. Please respond promptly and we hope that in a short span of time we will be able to gather a lot of data and possibly write a report on the research output of IIUI.

Wishing you all the best!!

I I U I Blog Team

IIUI Website: Some Responses

As a follow up to our post on IIUI website (http://iiuiblog.blogspot.com/2008/07/iiui-website-great-hodgepodge.html), we have recieved a couple of e-mails from our readers. First of all, we regret one mis-information regarding Dr Abdul Khaliq Kazi. We have been told that since he is on leave, he is still the dean of the faculty. We are sorry for that. There, however, arises another question which we want to discuss in another post in the future. This is about the appointment of foreign faculty as well as contract faculty on important administrative positions such as deans, deputy deans and the problems that come with it.

We must appreciate the web team of IIUI for their prompt response to our post. We had alluded in our post that all the resposibility for the problems in the website does not fall on the web team. There are many other players to it. We consider that generation of accurate and quality content is a department level responsibility and all heads/incharges should be asked to provide and update the data on regular basis. Any content related errors (such as typographical errors and incorrect information) should be attributed to the concerned departments. The members of IIUI web team have assured us that they are ready to amend the website as per suggestions given in the post. We are sure they are capable enough to perform their technical duty but the faculties and departments in the university should realize their duty as well and provide them correct well-edited information to the web team so that the public face of International Islamic University becomes attractive and the visitors to the website should think that this is the place where they wanted to go for their higher studies.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

IIUI Website: A Great Hodgepodge

Recently I have been observing IIUI website (http://www.iiu.edu.pk/ and I can assure you that this has not been a keen observation) and to my dismay, despite attempts to bring about change recently by the web team, it has not shown much improvement. From design and format to equitable representation of faculties, and from content editing to updating the website, everything seems to be below the mark. This is really a sorry state of affairs for an institution having ambitions to excel not only in the Muslim world but in the world at large. And especially when you see that it is called “International” Islamic University.

One of the most important issues regarding the website is its belated correction of changes. For example, a couple of months back, I noticed that the part of the website about Faculty of Shari’ah and Law presented Dr Yusuf Faruqi as the Dean of the faculty. The reality was that, a long time ago his services were transferred to Islamic Research Institute (IRI) and Dr Tahir Mansoori from IRI was moved to the faculty as its dean. Now a number of months elapsed before Dr Mansoori replaced Dr Faruqi on the website. This means that the webmaster does not keep abreast of the changes that are taking place around him or if he does, he does not promptly react to the change and waits for the visitors to the website to spot the mistake and report it to the relevant authorities. But there is another angle to the issue. Let us suppose that the webmaster is too busy and does not find time to be aware of the changes. It should be the responsibility of the agents of change to get the website amended when a change has taken place. As the website’s update is no one’s responsibility in most of the faculties and departments and it has been solely left upon web team so the reason behind such omissions is not beyond comprehension.

Another current example of the above issue is the webpage of Faculty of Islamic Studies (Usuluddin). The picture of Dr Abdul Khaliq Kazi still adorns the page as the Dean of the faculty, while he has moved back to Australia after completing his tenure as HEC foreign faculty. I don’t know when this will be changed. I am sure it does not fall into the category of deliberate attempt at misrepresentation of facts.

Yet another example of the same is the webpage of Faculty of Languages, Literature and Humanities. One of the pages mentions Dr Siddiq Shibli as the dean of the faculty while another page says that the dean is Professor Farhat Mujtaba.
There might be other instances where people have either left the university or joined it as new faculty and there is nothing about them on the website. I invite the readers to look into the respective pages of their faculties and point out the areas requiring change on this blog.
Another important issue is the diversified format of the website. There is no uniformity in the designing of the web pages and one faculty’s web page does not match with the other. One of the glaring examples of this bad designing of the website is the Faculty and Staff pages and if you bear with me for a while, I would invite you to visit the following links one by one and tell me if I am wrong:

Faculty of Arabic and Islamic Civilization
http://my.iiu.edu.pk/Faculties/ArabicLanguageandIslamicCivilization/FacultyStaff/tabid/93/Default.aspx
Faculty of Basic and Applied Sciences
http://my.iiu.edu.pk/Faculties/BasicAppliedSciences/FacultyStaff/tabid/153/Default.aspx
Faculty of Engineering and Technology
http://my.iiu.edu.pk/Faculties/EngineeringTechnology/FacultyStaff/tabid/79/Default.aspx
Faculty of Management Sciences
http://my.iiu.edu.pk/Faculties/ManagementSciences/FacultyStaff/tabid/126/Default.aspx
Faculty of Islamic Studies (Usuluddin)
http://my.iiu.edu.pk/Faculties/IslamicStudiesUsuluddin/FacultyStaff/tabid/164/Default.aspx
Faculty of Languages, Literature and Humanities
http://my.iiu.edu.pk/Faculties/LanguageLiteratureHumanities/FacultyStaff/tabid/231/Default.aspx
Faculty of Shari’ah and Law
http://my.iiu.edu.pk/Faculties/Shariaandlaw/FacultyStaff/tabid/190/Default.aspx
Faculty of Social Sciences
http://my.iiu.edu.pk/Faculties/SocialSciences/FacultyStaff/tabid/85/Default.aspx

I am sorry to bother you with the links but I can bet that if you have checked all the links, you must have found each of these pages different from the others in various respects. Check the ways, the names of the faculty members are ordered, and the ways they have been assigned the university e-mail addresses, or the ways their qualifications have been mentioned and not mentioned and sometimes their departments in the faculty mentioned or not mentioned, you will find a whole lot of variety in it. The superfluous information and availability of the pictures of some faculty members while not of others is also curious. Perhaps those not pictured consider it haram in Shari’a’s eyes!! Or this is just the mismanagement of the web team and those who oversee them!!! Another issue concerning the Faculty and Staff pages is the inclusion of the female faculty in the lists but one sees that all the time the female faculty is resorted to the bottom of the page. Why is it so? If the names are ordered in terms of seniority which seems to be the methodology in some departments (though with some violations of the rule for some exceptions), then a senior female faculty member should be assigned a senior virtual space. But in my view, arranging faculty member’s names in terms of seniority is utterly wrong as it always provides the room to seniors to always show off their seniority and expect from their juniors to behave in a subdued manner. The best practice in this regard is to order names alphabetically with the last name as the standard. Those in need of example are requested to have a look at the Editorial Committee of Islamic Studies; a journal published by our own Dr Zafar Ishaq Ansari, Director, Islamic Research Institute, IIUI:

http://my.iiu.edu.pk/Institutes/IslamicResearchInstitute/IslamicStudies/EditorialCommittee/tabid/279/Default.aspx

Check Ayaz Afsar’s name before Dr Anis Ahmad and Dr Safir Akhtar and Muhammad Modassir Ali’s name way before Dr Muhammad Al-Ghazali and Dr Mahmood Ahmad Ghazi. It’s not that Dr Ansari likes Ayaz Afsar more than Dr Anis or Dr Safir or for that matter considers Modassir Ali to be more scholarly than Dr Ghazali or Dr Ghazi. This is just upholding a best practice where the names are ordered alphabetically considering the last name as standard.

Now we come to the issue of equitable representation of the faculties. The other day, I was pleased to see an icon of Time Table on the main page of the website. I clicked on the time table with the hope that the university is really making great strides towards becoming a paper free university by displaying time table on the web. I was disappointed to see that the website only hosted the time table of two faculties, FBAS and FMS. I was just wondering if the other faculties have not offered summer classes or they are running without a time table. If there are summer classes this year (and there are in fact in some faculties!) in other faculties and they have prepared some time tables, they should also be the part of the icon “Summer Time Table” which does not state “Summer Time Table for FBAS & FMS.” If our readers go back and compare the web pages, they will find many other instances of tilted policy.

And finally, if you bother to read the text of the news on IIUI website, you must have noted “the great exports” from all over the world that enlightened the audience at IIUI’s Islam and Modernity conference in early June. Isn’t that politically incorrect on the part of the scribe and the editor (if there is any!!!)?

Now I am reminded of a line from one Sh’ir which reads:

Kahan tak suno gay kahan tak sunaian

I hope this is enough for today and let’s hope for the best.