Assam: Political history, Jamia Millia Islamia

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=Terrorism=
 
==Bangladesh helped India==
 
[https://www.dhakatribune.com/opinion/op-ed/2020/03/02/how-bangladesh-helped-assam  Saleem Samad, March 2, 2020: ''Dhaka Tribune'']
 
  
  
Early this year, New Delhi decided to withdraw the Indian Army from Assam, the neighbouring state in the northeast of India. The conducting of a conflict assessment in the wake of a reduction in militancy in the region was the primary reason for the withdrawal of troops from Assam.
 
  
The top brasses in Indian defense were in the view that as the situation was improving in Assam, the state police should deal with it with the help of the Central Paramilitary Forces, according to The Assam Tribune. Nearly two decades ago, the Indian army was deployed for counter-insurgency operations in Assam, in November 1990.
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=History=
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==1920-2020: In a nutshell==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2020%2F10%2F29&entity=Ar01317&sk=DA19A354&mode=text  Mohammad Ibrar, October 29, 2020: ''The Times of India'']
  
The dreaded militant groups National Democratic Front of Boroland (NDFB), United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), and other separatist armed groups were at the behest of Pakistan spy agency ISI, with their cohorts in Dhaka.
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[[File: The History of Jamia Millia Islamia in a nutshell- 1920-2020.jpg|The History of Jamia Millia Islamia in a nutshell: 1920-2020 <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2020%2F10%2F29&entity=Ar01317&sk=DA19A354&mode=text  Mohammad Ibrar, October 29, 2020: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
  
Bangladeshi territory was used by the militant leaders of ULFA, NDFB, and other insurgent groups in Tripura, Nagaland, Mizoram, and Manipur for their separatist movement.
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Jamia At 100: From Rebellion Against Raj To Top University
The second-generation separatist leaders got renewed impetus in their illegal activities during the regime of Begum Khaleda Zia from 1991-1996 and again in 2001-2006. Pakistan was literally fighting a proxy war in the northeast through ISI covert operations in Dhaka.
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The so-called headquarters of ULFA, NDFB, and others were dismantled, the leaders were pushed back from Bangladesh, months after Sheikh Hasina took oath in 2009. Since then, the entire gamut of militancy was physically immobilized in Bangladesh.
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How Gandhi’s Speech On Jallianwala Spurred A Movement
  
Thus, the cross-border terror came to a halt. The militant outfit’s bank accounts and other businesses were frozen by Bangladesh authorities. Several rogue elements in the Bangladesh government who were involved with aiding and abetting the militancy were punished and others reprimanded.
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New Delhi:
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What started as a humble beginning under tents in Aligarh in a rebellion against the educational system of the British Raj is completing 100 years as a university on October
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29. Recently ranked top among Indian universities in the education ministry’s assessments, Jamia Millia Islamia is the product of the freedom movement, formed when some students of Mohammedan Anglo-Oriental College rebelled against the administration.
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According to Sabiha Zaidi, director of Jamia’s Munshi Premchand Archives and Literary Centre, Mahatma Gandhi’s non-cooperation movement of 1919 and his cooperation with the Khilafat Movement spurred Jamia’s formation. “Many people increasingly felt that Gandhiji’s call for non-cooperation in education should be taken up,” Zaidi said. “That is when students of MAO College requested Mohammad Ali Jauhar of the Khilafat Movement to invite Gandhiji for a talk.
  
Recently, the NDFB(S) signed suspension of operations -- the ULFA remains the only major militant outfit active and the situation does not warrant deployment of the army all over the state -- the defense brass concludes.
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Accordingly, Gandhi arrived in Aligarh on October 12, 1920, and spoke against the Jallianwala Bagh massacre and the Rowlatt Act. “This spurred the MAO students to demand their college stop accepting British grants,” said Zaidi. “The four founders of Jamia — Mohammad Ali Jauhar, Hakim Ajmal Khan, A M Khwaja and M A Ansari — warned the college administration that if British funds weren’t stopped, they would form a new institution. Future President of India Zakir Hussain also resigned from his post of lecturer in protest.
  
On November 29, the Global Terrorism Index 2019 noted that Bangladesh had been the most successful South Asian country in countering terrorism. S Binodkumar Singh, Research Associate of Institute for Conflict Management in New Delhi wrote: “Bangladesh had the largest improvement of any country in South Asia.”
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Apparently, the college administration rebuffed the demand, and the first session of Jamia was held at the Jama Masjid of Aligarh, beginning with a speech by Maulana Mehmudul Hasan on October 29. “By October 31, the students had begun deserting the hostels at MAO College, settling instead at Aligarh’s Krishna Ashram, where tents were put up to hold classes,informed Zaidi.
  
Most of the militant leaders pushed back are presently active in negotiation for sustainable peace in the region. After being evicted from Bangladesh, the camps of the separatists moved to Myanmar. Myanmar military caused havoc on their camps recently.
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Of course, the journey had only begun. Ahmed Azeem, PRO, Jamia, added that the temporary classes continued for a few more years before the newly found institution shifted to Karol Bagh in Delhi in 1925.
  
The casualty from two decades of conflicts in northeast India has significantly reduced after Bangladesh had been able to neutralize the militancy and keep cross-border terror in check.
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According to the archive notes, “The Jamia community suffered a little setback with the slackening of the Khilafat and the non-cooperation movements. But Gandhiji said that no matter how difficult it was, Jamia should not be stopped at any cost. He said, ‘If I have to beg for Jamia, I will beg.’ With his help, industrialists like Jamnalal Bajaj, Ghanshyam Das Birla and founder of Banaras Hindu University, Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya, helped Jamia financially.”
According to data from the Institute for Conflict Management, in 2000 the civilian casualty was 267, security forces 37, and extremists killed 223; while in 2019 civilian deaths dropped to one, security forces casualty to zero, and only two militants were killed.
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The university also began primary classes in 1936 when it shifted to its present premises in Okhla. “The foundation stone was laid by a student, Abdul Aziz, in 1934,” Zaidi said. Sixty-eight years after its humble start, Jamia became a central university.
  
The total deaths in 20 years comes to: 2,208 civilians, 340 security forces, and the number of separatists killed was 2,331 in 2,562 incidents of conflicts. The tripartite agreement was signed between NDFB President B Saoraigwra, the Assam government’s Ashutosh Agnihotri, and Union Home Joint Secretary (northeast) Satyendra Garg in New Delhi on January 17.
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“At present, Jamia has nine faculties, 43 departments and 27 centres of higher studies and research, in which more than 270 courses are taught,” said Azeem. “We are setting up four new departments for design and innovation, hospital management and hospice studies, environmental sciences and foreign languages.
Bangladesh security forces were on high alert, and last June a team from the Bangladesh army and RAB, in a joint operation, recovered 12,000 weapons, including rocket launchers and machine guns, from the Satchari National Park.
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Earlier in the year 2004, in a sensational recovery, 10 truckloads of arms and ammunition -- apparently smuggled in by ULFA’s military commander Paresh Barua from China -- were seized by the Bangladesh Army near Chittagong port.
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In a statement, Jamia claimed to be “only university in the country that provides further education opportunities for personnel and officers of the Indian Army, Air Force and Navy. The Residential Coaching Academy, established in 2010, has played an important role in promoting women, minorities and SC/ST candidates in the UPSC civil services with more than 230 successful candidates.” These successes will be celebrated on October 29.
  
The fugitive Paresh Barua, once a popular Assamese soccer player, was handed the death sentence by a Bangladesh court after he stood convicted in the 10-truck arms smuggling case.
 
  
Last November, a three-member pro-talk ULFA delegation -- Chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa, General Secretary Anup Chetia, and Foreign Secretary Sasadhar Choudhury -- attended a formal discussion with interlocutor AB Mathur, a former special secretary of the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) at an undisclosed location in New Delhi.
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=Chancellors/ Amir-e-Jamia=
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1920-1927 Hakim Ajmal Khan
  
''' Saleem Samad is an independent journalist, media rights defender, and is a recipient of the Ashoka Fellow and Hellman-Hammett Award. He can be followed on Twitter @saleemsamad. '''
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1928-1936 Dr. Mukhtar Ahmad Ansari
  
[[Category:Assam|A ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY
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1936-1962 Abdul Majeed Khwaja
ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY]]
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[[Category:India|A ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY
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ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY]]
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[[Category:Politics|A ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY
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ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY]]
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=2008=
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1963-1969 Dr. Zakir Husain
==NDFB chief, 13 others guilty of blasts that killed 90==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F29&entity=Ar01706&sk=77649ACD&mode=text  Pranjal Baruah, NDFB chief, 13 others guilty of ’08 Assam blasts that killed 90, January 29, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
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1969-1985 Justice Mohd. Hidayatullah
  
A special fast-track court has found the National Democratic Front of Boroland (NDFB) chief and 13 others guilty of carrying out serial blasts in four Assam towns in 2008. More than 90 people were killed and around 400 others were wounded in the attack. The court will pronounce the quantum of punishment.
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1985-1990  Khurshid Alam Khan
  
Two of those convicted are women. Mridul Goyari — one of the 22 accused — was acquitted. NDBF chief Ranjan Daimary, who was out on bail, was re-arrested and sent to jail soon after the verdict was announced.
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1990-1995  S.M.H. Burney
  
CBI had sought capital punishment for the convicts, according to investigator NS Yadav. “We recorded statements of about 650 witnesses and examined 687 exhibits or documentary evidence,” he said. The CBI had taken charge of the investigation from Assam police.
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1995-2001 Khurshid Alam Khan
  
In 2010, Daimary was arrested near Bangladesh and the trial for the case was initiated in 2011. It ended eight years later on January 22. The special court was set up in 2017, after families of the blast casualties demanded a fasttrack trial in the case.
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2002-2011 Fakhruddin T. Khorakiwala
  
George Boro, Ajoy Basumatary, Rajendra Goyari, Onsai Boro, Rahul Brahma, Lakra Basumatary, Baishagi Basumatary, Indra Brahma, Raju Sarkar, Jayanti Brahma, Mathuram Brahma, Nilim Daimary and Prabhat Boro were among those convicted along with Ranjan Daimary.
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2012-2017 Lt Gen (Retd) M.A. Zaki
  
Families and friends of Daimary and other convicts, who had come to the court for the hearing, sought their release. They said they were planning to move the high court against the verdict. “Conviction and peace talks can’t go together,” said Anjali Daimary, the NDFB chief ’s sister, and a social activist.
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Dr. Najma A. Heptullah
  
=The Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2016=
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=Vice-chancellors =
==Speaker protests against Citizenship  Bill, BJP red-faced==
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1920-1923 Maulana Mohammad Ali Johar
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F10&entity=Ar02207&sk=546B7FEE&mode=text  Prabin Kalita, January 10, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
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1923-1925 Abdul Majeed Khwaja
  
In an embarrassment to BJP, Assam assembly speaker Hitendra Nath Goswami on Wednesday said the decision to pass the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2016 in the Lok Sabha was an act “in haste” which was done without “taking the indigenous people of Assam into confidence”. He urged the Centre to ensure protection of the state’s indigenous people on the basis of the 1985 Assam Accord.
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1926-1948: Dr Zakir Husain
  
Goswami, a former Asom Gana Parishad minister who joined BJP in 2016, said in a statement, “The waves of incidents centred around the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill 2016 here in (the) past few days have touched me personally.
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Born on February 8, 1897, Zakir Husain studied at Etawah School, obtained MA from Aligarh Muslim University. He stayed in Germany from September 1922 to February 1926 to do PhD in Economics from the University of Berlin, under the supervision of Professor Werner Sombart, which was approved “summa cum laude” in 1926.
  
The legislator from Jorhat said: “While holding a constitutional post, along with my personal hopes, it is my duty to show respect to my country’s democratic system.
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Along with his colleagues in Germany, Dr. Abid Husain and Mohammad Mujeeb, Zakir Husain came to Jamia in 1926. He was Vice Chancellor of Jamia Millia Islamia for 22 years (1926-48). It was his vision that held Jamia together at a time of great financial and ideological crisis and he took leadership in creating the ‘Life Members of Jamia,’ who pledged 20 years of service to Jamia.
  
Goswami said a Speaker need not opine on the enactment of a law. However, he added, “I think that the central and state governments would give respect to the views and
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He left Jamia in 1948 to help Aligarh Muslim University as its Vice Chancellor. He went on to become the governor of Bihar, Vice President of India and the President of India.
  
opinions expressed by the people of Assam and adopt immediate and appropriate measures to resolve the present unrest in the state which has been created after Lok Sabha passed the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill in haste without taking the people of Assam into confidence.
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1948-1973 Prof. Mohammad Mujeeb
  
The Speaker further said that his “conscience does not allow (him) to support any action, which the indigenous people of Assam do not want to accept because it could destroy the unity and harmony among the people”.
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1973-1978 Prof. Masud Husain Khan
  
Goswami’s is the second voice of dissent from within BJP against the amendment to the Citizenship Act, 1955. On Tuesday, soon after the Lok Sabha passed the bill, former Assam BJP spokesperson Mehdi Alam Bora resigned from the party. In Meghalaya, BJP’s minister in the Conrad Sangma cabinet, AL Hek, said he too supported the state government’s resolution against the Bill.
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1978-1983 Anwar Jamal Kidwai
  
Meanwhile, two days after the AGP walked out of its alliance with BJP in the Assam government, another ally, Bodoland People’s Front protested against the Bill.
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1983-1989 Prof. Ali Ashraf
  
==Zubeen starts own stir==
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1989-1991 Dr. Syed Zahoor Qasim
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F18&entity=Ar01805&sk=1EAA53B1&mode=text&fbclid=IwAR2MW8Q-7LXRDBJS_QIWUf8iWQDPZV2fw4ZHkttZHhtFk-YtJrlGrmiJSYo  Pranjal Baruah, Bill protesters form a 10-km human chain, January 18, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
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[[File: Singer Zubeen Garg with Nipen Hazarika, brother of late singer Bhupen Hazarika, during a protest against the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill in Assam’s Tezpur.jpg|Singer Zubeen Garg with Nipen Hazarika, brother of late singer Bhupen Hazarika, during a protest against the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill in Assam’s Tezpur <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F18&entity=Ar01802&sk=92A18639&mode=text&fbclid=IwAR3bxO0lIwxflBKagfDTCs5fV_Cfa2nnQnr-XUeB8YofHThOfoN6PN8NbdM Naresh Mitra, January 18, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
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1992-1996 Prof. Bashiruddin Ahmad
  
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1997-2000  Lt Gen (Retd) M.A. Zaki
  
Zubeen Garg, thesinger who sang the official song of BJP’s 2016 poll campaign in Assam, has expressed regret over his association with the party.
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2000-2004 Syed Shahid Mahdi
  
Launching his own protest campaign against the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2016 at Tezpur in Sonitpur district on Thursday, coinciding with ‘Shilpi Divas’, a day observed annually to pay homage to noted Assamese playwright Jyoti Prasad Agarwala, Zubeen said, “I don’t support any political party. I sang for BJP thinking the Sarbananda Sonowalled government would respect and do the needful for the state’s people. But if this government plays foul then I am going to stand against them too.” Several fans, locals and students gathered at the venue to listen to Zubeen on Thursday.
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2004-2009 Prof. Mushirul Hasan
  
In Jorhat’s Selenghat area, locals formed a 10-km human chain to mark their protest. Protests and road blockades were reported
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2009-2013  Najeeb Jung
  
= 2017 =
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2014-2018 Prof. Talat Ahmad
== Identity issues ==
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[https://www.indiatoday.in/magazine/up-front/story/20170320-assam-aasu-dhemaji-assam-accord-illegal-immigration-bjp-985967-2017-03-10 Kaushik Deka , A Hindu headache for the BJP “India Today” 20/3/2017]
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Tensions are running high in Assam after the March 6 ransacking of an All Assam Students Union (AASU) office in Silapathar, a town in the state's Dhemaji district. Three people were reported injured in the attack, perpetrated by an obscure group, the Nikhil Bharat Bangali Udbastu Samanvay Samiti (NBBUS), seeking citizenship for Hindu refugees from Bangladesh. AASU led a six-year movement against illegal immigration into the state, resulting in the 1985 Assam Accord, which, broadly, granted citizenship rights only to those who had moved to the state before 1971.
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Talat Ahmad, VC, left when he was appointed VC of Kashmir University in August 2018.
  
AASU is deeply influential, with key players in the Assam government, including the chief minister, Sarbananda Sonowal, being former members or leaders. But, as a critic of all immigration to Assam from Bangladesh, whether Hindu or Muslim, it found itself in the crosshairs of NBBUS, allegedly associated with the R.S.S and virulently opposed to the idea of citizenship as outlined in the Accord. It is the association with the R.S.S that makes it so uncomfortable for the BJP-led NDA government. The BJP won 60 of the 89 assembly seats it contested last year, a commanding performance in a state in which 35 per cent of the population is Muslim.
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2019: Najma Akhtar
  
Since the Sonowal government took oath on May 24 last year, it has been brazen about its 'Hindu first' agenda. State finance minister Himanta Biswa Sarma argued that the Citizenship Amendment Bill (2016), which seeks to naturalise (non-Muslim) minorities persecuted in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan, was necessary because Assamese people needed the support of their Hindu Bengali brothers to ward off the Muslim threat. In December, R.S.S volunteers sparked anger by shouting "Hindu-Hindu, bhai-bhai" and "Bharat mata ki jai" from the top of the 18th century Kareng Ghar, an Ahom palace and protected monument.
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==2019: Najma Akhtar==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F04%2F12&entity=Ar01111&sk=05CEAC10&mode=text  April 12, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
  
Earlier, Sarma, as education minister, ordered state-recognised madrassas to remain open on Fridays. "Madrassas are closed on Fridays in Pakistan and Bangladesh, not in India," he said. In February, CM Sonowal tweeted the government's decision to make Sanskrit compulsory up to the 8th standard. Even ministers in his own cabinet sided with the Opposition in opposing the decision. Sarma now says "practical difficulties" mean the order will not be implemented. Sonowal, when contacted, insisted that "the decision [had] not yet been discarded".
 
  
The mixed message is typical of a confused government, caught between its commitment to Hindutva and the priorities of the Assamese people.
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The government appointed Najma Akhtar as vice-chancellor of Jamia Millia Islamia, making her the first woman VC in its four-decade-old history.
  
=2019=
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Akhtar is the head of the department of educational administration at National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration (NIEPA). She specialises in institution building, distance education, education of minority and educational decentralisation.
==January: Bandh over ST status to 6 groups==
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[https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/guwahati/st-bill-strike-hits-btc-hojai/articleshow/67493194.cms  Pranjal Baruah, January 12, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
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According to her bio data on NIEPA website, Akhtar is a gold medallist from Aligarh Muslim University and completed her PhD from Kurukshetra University. She has been a Commonwealth Fellow for university administration course at University of Warwick and Nottingham and trained at the International Institute of Educational Planning (IIEP), UNESCO, Paris.
  
The Centre’s move to grant schedule tribe status to six communities — Tai Ahoms, Koch Rajbongshis, Chutiyas, Tea Tribes, Morans and Mataks — has had a ripple effect in Assam with the Coordination Committee of Tribal Organisations of Assam giving a call for a 12-hour statewide bandh. The CCTOA has alleged that the Centre’s move will severely impact the development and reservations currently given to Assam’s existing tribal groups.
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Akhtar has previously served as director, academic programmes at AMU, and its controller of examinations and admissions. She was also founder director, State Institute of Educational Management and Training (SIEMAT), Uttar Pradesh. She has authored two books and contributed several book chapters and research papers.
  
==AGP quits govt., BJP still has 61 MLAs in House of 126==
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=The Dastarkhwan canteen =
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F08&entity=Ar01217&sk=6A9DC72A&mode=text  Prabin Kalita, January 8, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
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[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Jamias-popular-spread-helps-keep-heads-high-11052016004063 ''The Times of India''], May 11 2016
  
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[[File: Dastarkhwan (canteen run by women), Jamia Millia Islamia University.jpg|Dastarkhwan (canteen run by women), Jamia Millia Islamia University; Picture courtesy: [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=Jamias-popular-spread-helps-keep-heads-high-11052016004063 ''The Times of India''], May 11 2016|frame|500px]]
  
While BJP argues that India is the natural saviour for minorities, especially Hindus, subject to discriminatory laws and violence in neighbouring countries, in the case of “economic migrants”, mainly Muslims, it points to the “threat” of demographic invasion that changes the religious and social balance and says such persons are illegals who must not enjoy state benefits.
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'''Jamia's popular spread helps keep heads high'''
  
While BJP is under fire in Assam for “violating” the Assam Accord, its leaders like Himanta Biswa Sarma have warned that rejecting the citizenship bill will mean making Assamese Hindus a minority in the next five years. BJP is hoping to drive home the argument that giving Bengali-speaking Hindus’ citizenship will be worth it as it will help counter unwelcome demographic change, hoping its support to the national register of citizens embellishes its credentials.
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Manash Gohain
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For Simran Parveen, a Class XII student, it's a way to sustain her fatherless brood of seven sisters and to keep alive her hopes of becoming a lawyer. For unlettered Shabana Khan, it's a means to proper education for her children, and for Saba, whose failed businessman of a husband left her in Delhi when returning to his village, it offers a dignified livelihood. Welcome to Dastarkhwan, a canteen run exclusively by women at Jamia Millia Islamia.
  
Like most Assam and northeast-based organisations, AGP has been opposing the proposed amendment to the Citizenship Act tooth and nail. On many occasions in the past, it issued warnings to BJP. AGP’s exit will not pose any threat to BJP, which has 61 MLAs of its own in the 126-member assembly and still has the support of the Bodoland People’s Front (12 seats) and one Independent.
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But the canteen is not just run by any women. The 40 or so women involved with the canteen all have had a bad deal in life. Some are divorced, others are single-handedly bringing up families, yet others are trapped in debt.The idea behind this social initiative started in January 2015 by Ekta self-help group in collaboration with Zakir Hussain Society of Jamia was to empower such women.
  
AGP, born out of almost a decade of anti-foreigners agitation in the 1970s and ’80s, quit the ruling alliance immediately after its representatives led by its president, Atul Bora, met Union home minister Rajnath Singh in New Delhi.
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That it has. Dastarkhwan is now giving the university's popular Central Canteen a run for its money . Though it is not open to the public, it attracts students in droves, including those from Delhi University , JNU and other institutions visiting friends or working on some project on the campus. “We started with the investment of eight women from the nearby localities of Zakir Nagar, Batla House, Abul Fazal Enclave, Shaheen Bagh and Jasola. Others joined later. Those who could not contribute in cash joined as workers,“ says Shabana Tawhid, the canteen manager.“Now, we have nearly 40 women.
  
Two AGP ministers, Phani Bhushan Choudhury and Keshab Mahanta, are likely to resign from the ministry along with Bora soon. Many AGP leaders serving as chairpersons and managing directors of state-run PSUs are likely to quit their posts
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And they have not done badly . The first day sales of around Rs 5,000 have gone up a year later to a daily average of Rs 55,000. The cooperative has not yet paid out dividends to the investors and much of the funds are used to meet the salary bill, but it is fulfilling its objective in a special way: even when a women worker fails to turn up for work, usually due to domestic pressures, she is not docked a day's wages to ensure she remains motivated.
  
===Assam erupts in protest, BJP office attacked in Meghalaya===
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“They serve a very nice biryani,“ says Rupal Chandra, a Miranda House student, who visits the canteen whenever she is in Jamia. Nafisa Ahmed, a master's student in human rights at Jamia, testifies to the other popular wares at Dastarkhwan: “The kebabs and paranthas served in the evening are the best.“
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F08&entity=Ar01217&sk=6A9DC72A&mode=text  Rajib Dutta, Anup Dutta & Kangkan Kalita , January 8, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
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Though most items are priced a bit higher than at the Central Canteen, Dastarkhwan draws a lot of customers for its home-made flavour. As Rachit Malik, an MCA student, says, “Who wouldn't pay Rs 5 extra when you get such good food!“ It may mean little to the diners, but it is this extra Rs 5 that is helping some hapless woman dream of life again.
  
Assam erupted in protest on Monday against the Centre’s decision to approve the JPC report on the contentious Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2016, with some of the demonstrators even stripping naked. In Dibrugarh, members of All Assam Students’ Union (Aasu) staged a protest in front of CM Sarbananda Sonowal’s house, raising slogans against BJP. Aasu activists also burned copies of the bill in Jorhat, Golaghat, Sonitpur, Lakhimpur, Dibrugarh and Dhemaji districts. In Guwahati, Aasu activists burned copies of the bill at 70 locations. Keeping political rivalry aside, former CMs Prafulla Kumar Mahanta and Tarun Gogoi joined ‘Dhikkar Divas’ (condemnation day) against the Bill in Guwahati.
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=Faculty of Law, Jamia Millia Islamia=
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[http://indiatoday.intoday.in/bestcolleges/2015/ranks.jsp?ST=Law&LMT=10&Y=2015 ''India Today'']
  
In neighbouring Meghalaya, BJP’s Shillong office was attacked by unidentified miscreants. The attack is believed to be a fallout of resentment over the Bill. Police sources said three Molotov cocktails were found around the office and two to three miscreants are believed to have been involved. No arrest has been made yet.
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The Faculty of Law, Jamia Millia Islamia, was established in 1989. In addition to the five-year integrated BA LLB course, the faculty runs an LLM four-semester course in three streams - Personal Law, Corporate Law and Criminal Law - and a Ph.D. programme.
  
==Assam students’ body ‘bans’ BJP leaders in colleges==
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==Number 11 in Law: 2015==
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F14&entity=Ar00913&sk=9BE050D0&mode=text  Naresh Mitra, January 14, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
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[http://indiatoday.intoday.in/bestcolleges/2015/ranks.jsp?ST=Law&LMT=10&Y=2015 ''India Today'']
  
 +
The Faculty of Law, Jamia Millia Islamia, was established in 1989. In addition to the five-year integrated BA LLB course, the faculty runs an LLM four-semester course in three streams - Personal Law, Corporate Law and Criminal Law - and a Ph.D. programme. And it was ranked 11 in rankings of India Today for 2015.
  
The student body of Gauhati University, one of the most prominent universities of the northeast, on Sunday decided to stop BJP legislators and members from entering the campuses of the university and colleges affiliated to it until the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill is withdrawn. The decision comes as the protests against the Bill grew stronger.
+
=Minority status=
 +
==2016: 'Not a minority educational institution,' Govt==
 +
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=HRD-opposed-minority-tag-for-Jamia-16012016009001 ''The Times of India''], Jan 16 2016
  
==BJP suspends Bengali leader for anti-Assamese talk==
+
'''HRD opposed minority tag for Jamia'''
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F01%2F14&entity=Ar00913&sk=9BE050D0&mode=text  Naresh Mitra, January 14, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
+
  
 +
The attorney general's opinion that Jamia Millia Islamia is not a minority educational institution is in sync with the position taken by successive HRD ministers like Arjun Singh and Kapil Sibal.
 +
Clamour for granting `minority status' to Jamia began after UPA-I gave OBC reservation in admission to centrally-funded educational institutions.
  
'' ‘His Remark Over Bill Could Fuel Tension’ ''
+
Minority status' granted to it by quasi-judicial body National Commission for Minority Educational Institutions (NCMEI) helped Jamia avoid reserving seats for OBCs. UPA-II did not contest the decision of NCMEI.
  
Assam BJP suspended its leader from the Bengali-majority Barak Valley, Pradip Dutta Roy, for making “communal” remarks at a time when the state is in the grip of protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill.
+
Otherwise, HRD ministers and the ministry itself have been opposed to giving it minority status. In fact, in March 2010 Singh, who was no longer the minister, had written to then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh expressing fear that the prestigious central university might fall into the hands of fundamentalist forces if it is given minority status. But as demand or change in Jamia's status rom “secular“ to “minority sta us“ grew, Sibal asked minority affairs minister Salman Khurshid to provide ``data and historical facts as to why the position so far taken is inconsistent with reality“.
  
“Pradip Dutta Roy has been suspended from the party with immediate effect ... for going against party discipline and taking a stand that goes against the party’s principles,” Assam BJP president Ranjeet Kumar Dass said.
+
Sibal's letter to Khurshid included a comprehensive note on he historical character of Jamia as well as ``substance of the ssues that arose at the time of enacting the Jamia Millia Act n 1988''. While admitting that he SC decision on the status of AMU would have some bearing on Jamia, Sibal had said ``that tself will not determine the fa e of Jamia.'' Sibal had not agreed with minority affairs ministry under Khurshid that the stand of the HRD ministry requires alteration. ``The charac er of the institution of Jamia Millia Islamia is to be adjudica ed upon by a court of law,'' Si bal had said. He had argued that ``each institution has a unique history and its character must be culled from the context in which it was set up.'' While the two ministers were exchanging notes, National Commission for Minority Edu cational Institutions in February 2011 granted minority status to Jamia Millia Islamia. The order changed the secular character of the central university and also gave it freedom not to give reservation to OBCs, Dalits, tribals and reserve up to 50% seats for Muslims.
  
On Wednesday, a section of students at the Assam University in Silchar had staged a protest rally against the bill. A day later, another section staged a rally in support of the bill. The same day, Dutta had said, “I will write to the vice-chancellor to take action against students who are indulging in politics by staging protests against the bill ... Otherwise, Assamese students will be stopped from studying at the university.
+
The 51-page judgment, given by Justice M S A Siddiqui, Mohinder Singh and Cyriac Thomas, said, “We have no hesitation in holding that Jamia was founded by Muslims for the benefit of Muslims and it never lost its identity as a Muslim minority educational institution.
  
The Cotton University Students’ Union and the Asom Jatiyatabadi Yuva Chhatra Parishad lodged FIRs against him while the All Assam Students’ Union demanded arrest.
+
“We find and hold that Jamia Millia Islamia is a minority educational institution covered under Article 30(1) of the Constitution with Section 2 (G) of the NCMEI Act,“ the order said.The institute was founded even before the Constitution was in place, it said.
  
“Dutta’s remarks could fuel tension between the people of the Barak Valley and the Brahmaputra Valley,” a BJP leader said. Coming under fire, Dutta retracted his statement.
+
NCMEI said Jamia's case as different from that of Aligarh Muslim University and Supreme Court's 1967 order in the Aziz Basha case--denying minority status to AMU --had no bearing on the Jamia case. In its judgment, SC had refused to recognise that AMU was established by the Muslim community .
  
=2020=
+
The NCMEI order said, “Jamia did not owe its very existen ce to a statute. Since its founding in 1920 till the enactment of the Jamia Millia Islamia Act in 1988, Jamia never lost its identity. Even prior to the enactment of the Act, Jamia had legal existence of its own.“
==Museum for ‘Char-Chapori’ areas==
+
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2020%2F10%2F29&entity=Ar01704&sk=5F780A26&mode=text  October 29, 2020: ''The Times of India'']
+
  
‘Muslim museum’ proposal triggers slugfest in election-bound Assam
+
The fight to do away with Jamia's secular status goes back to its inception. Perusal of the file on setting up of Jamia reveals that in 1987, when the university became a central university, the Cabinet Committee on Political Affairs and the HRD ministry refused to bow to pressure from the then chancellor Khurshid Alam Khan that a specific mention be made that Jamia would “promote especially the educational and cultural advancement of Muslims in India“.
  
Guwahati:
+
Similarly , there were five other suggestions by Khurshid Alam Khan that the ministry refused to entertain on the ground that none of the other central universities had these features.
  
A controversy over an Assam assembly proposal to set up a museum for ‘Char-Chapori’ areas has become the latest political flashpoint in the state with the opposition calling it the polarisation tactics of the ruling BJP before the state polls due early next year. The Char-Chapori area denotes the riverine area and the museum was slated be set up inside the Srimanta Shankardeva Kalakshetra complex.
+
==2017: 'Not a minority educational institution,' Govt==
 +
[http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31808&articlexml=MINORITY-TAG-Centres-U-turn-on-Jamias-status-08082017002047  Centre's U-turn on Jamia's status, August 8, 2017: The Times of India]
  
The controversy broke out when Congress MLA Sherman Ali Ahmed used the word ‘Miya Museum’ in a Facebook post while referring to the museum.
 
  
The word ‘Miya’ in Assam is a slang which usually refers to the Bengali speaking Muslim population. The non- Bengali population in the state generally identify them as Bangladeshi immigrants.
+
Contrary to its earlier stand regarding minority status of Jamia Milia Islamia, the Centre is likely to tell the Delhi high court that the university was never intended to be a minority institution as it was set up by an Act of Parliament and is funded by the central government.
  
BJP was quick to jump into the controversy with a number of its leaders saying no ‘Miya Museum’ will ever be allowed in Assam as the people living in such places are “illegal immigrants from Bangladesh”.
+
The ministry of human resource development (MHRD) is likely to file a fresh affidavit in the Delhi high court where a writ petition is pending.
  
NEDA convenor and Assam minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said, “In my understanding, there is no separate identity and culture in Char Anchal of Assam as most of the people had migrated from Bangladesh.” “Obviously, in Srimanta Sankardeva Kalakhetra, which is the epitome of Assamese culture, we will not allow any distortion. Sorry MLA Sahab,” he tweeted.
+
In 2011, the National Commission for Minority Educational Institutions (NCMEI) had held that “Jamia was founded by the Muslims for the benefit of Muslims and it never lost its identity as a Muslim minority educational institution“ and was, therefore, “covered under Article 30(1)... read with Section 2(g) of the National Commission for Minority Educational Institutions Act“.
  
Congress MP Prayut Bordoloi alleged on Wednesday that BJP has been trying to polarise the voters on the issue as it is afraid that it will taste defeat in the hands of the Congress-led Grand Alliance in the Assam assembly polls due early next year. “The museum is a recommendation by a standing committee of the assembly and majority of its members are from the BJP-led alliance. They unanimously suggested it,” he told.
+
When the order was legally challenged, the HRD ministry , under then minister Kapil Sibal, had submitted an affidavit in the Delhi HC stating that the government “respects the declaration made by NCMEI“.
  
RS MP Ajit Kumar Bhuyan, who heads the regional party Anchalik Gana Morcha(AGM) said the Char-Chapori museum was recommended by the DRSC, whose majority members are from the BJP and its ruling coalition. AGENCIES
+
According to government sources, the ministry is now planning to file a fresh affidavit in the high court, stating that its support to the February 22, 2011 order of NCMEI declaring JMI a religious minority institution was an error in the government's understanding about its legal position. On January 15, 2016, the At torney General had advised the HRD ministry that it is entitled to change its view in court and revert to the stand that Jamia is not a minority institution and the order of NCMEI was not in accordance with law.
  
[[Category:Assam|A ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY
+
The NDA government had also taken a stand contrary to its predecessor UPA on the minority status of Aligarh Muslim University before the Supreme Court in January 2016.
ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY]]
+
[[Category:India|A ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY
+
ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY]]
+
[[Category:Politics|A ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY
+
ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY]]
+
  
=See also=
+
=Night curfew for women students=
[[Assam: The citizenship/ foreigners/ illegal migration issue]]
+
==2018: Girls oppose, parents support earlier curfew==
 +
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL/2018/07/05&entity=Ar00910&sk=E106A736&mode=text  Students pen open letter to Jamia VC over hostel timings, July 5, 2018: ''The Times of India'']
  
[[Assam: Political history]]
 
  
[[Category:Assam|A
+
Opposing the change in the timing of the girls’ hostel at Jamia Millia Islamia, a group of students has written an open letter to the Jamia vice-chancellor demanding a rollback of the university’s new prospectus.
ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY]]
+
 
[[Category:India|A
+
In the letter sent to the VC by post, the protesters, who had a few months ago agitated in the campus and managed to get an extension of the curfew timings from 8pm to 10.30pm, said “the prospectus has multiple arbitrary and discriminatory rules which seek to restrict the mobility and freedom of women students of Jamia residing in the university’s hostel”. These rules have been added “regardless of the demands... accepted by the administration in March earlier this year”, it added. The new timings have been set at 9pm.
ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY]]
+
 
[[Category:Politics|A
+
The students demanded a “newer” prospectus in “conformity with our demands as listed and enumerated in the earlier memorandum”.
ASSAM: POLITICAL HISTORY]]
+
 
 +
According to the Jamia media coordinator, Saima Saeed, the VC will respond after seeing the letter. Saeed said the change was made considering the security concerns in the area as well as in the city. The parents of around 90% of the students told the authority that they were sending their children to Jamia due to the safety assured by the hostel, she added.
 +
 
 +
[[Category:Education|J
 +
JAMIA MILLIA ISLAMIA]]
 +
[[Category:India|J
 +
JAMIA MILLIA ISLAMIA]]

Revision as of 06:00, 4 November 2020

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Contents

History

1920-2020: In a nutshell

Mohammad Ibrar, October 29, 2020: The Times of India

The History of Jamia Millia Islamia in a nutshell: 1920-2020
From: Mohammad Ibrar, October 29, 2020: The Times of India

Jamia At 100: From Rebellion Against Raj To Top University

How Gandhi’s Speech On Jallianwala Spurred A Movement

New Delhi: What started as a humble beginning under tents in Aligarh in a rebellion against the educational system of the British Raj is completing 100 years as a university on October 29. Recently ranked top among Indian universities in the education ministry’s assessments, Jamia Millia Islamia is the product of the freedom movement, formed when some students of Mohammedan Anglo-Oriental College rebelled against the administration. According to Sabiha Zaidi, director of Jamia’s Munshi Premchand Archives and Literary Centre, Mahatma Gandhi’s non-cooperation movement of 1919 and his cooperation with the Khilafat Movement spurred Jamia’s formation. “Many people increasingly felt that Gandhiji’s call for non-cooperation in education should be taken up,” Zaidi said. “That is when students of MAO College requested Mohammad Ali Jauhar of the Khilafat Movement to invite Gandhiji for a talk.”

Accordingly, Gandhi arrived in Aligarh on October 12, 1920, and spoke against the Jallianwala Bagh massacre and the Rowlatt Act. “This spurred the MAO students to demand their college stop accepting British grants,” said Zaidi. “The four founders of Jamia — Mohammad Ali Jauhar, Hakim Ajmal Khan, A M Khwaja and M A Ansari — warned the college administration that if British funds weren’t stopped, they would form a new institution. Future President of India Zakir Hussain also resigned from his post of lecturer in protest.”

Apparently, the college administration rebuffed the demand, and the first session of Jamia was held at the Jama Masjid of Aligarh, beginning with a speech by Maulana Mehmudul Hasan on October 29. “By October 31, the students had begun deserting the hostels at MAO College, settling instead at Aligarh’s Krishna Ashram, where tents were put up to hold classes,” informed Zaidi.

Of course, the journey had only begun. Ahmed Azeem, PRO, Jamia, added that the temporary classes continued for a few more years before the newly found institution shifted to Karol Bagh in Delhi in 1925.

According to the archive notes, “The Jamia community suffered a little setback with the slackening of the Khilafat and the non-cooperation movements. But Gandhiji said that no matter how difficult it was, Jamia should not be stopped at any cost. He said, ‘If I have to beg for Jamia, I will beg.’ With his help, industrialists like Jamnalal Bajaj, Ghanshyam Das Birla and founder of Banaras Hindu University, Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya, helped Jamia financially.” The university also began primary classes in 1936 when it shifted to its present premises in Okhla. “The foundation stone was laid by a student, Abdul Aziz, in 1934,” Zaidi said. Sixty-eight years after its humble start, Jamia became a central university.

“At present, Jamia has nine faculties, 43 departments and 27 centres of higher studies and research, in which more than 270 courses are taught,” said Azeem. “We are setting up four new departments for design and innovation, hospital management and hospice studies, environmental sciences and foreign languages.”

In a statement, Jamia claimed to be “only university in the country that provides further education opportunities for personnel and officers of the Indian Army, Air Force and Navy. The Residential Coaching Academy, established in 2010, has played an important role in promoting women, minorities and SC/ST candidates in the UPSC civil services with more than 230 successful candidates.” These successes will be celebrated on October 29.


Chancellors/ Amir-e-Jamia

1920-1927 Hakim Ajmal Khan

1928-1936 Dr. Mukhtar Ahmad Ansari

1936-1962 Abdul Majeed Khwaja

1963-1969 Dr. Zakir Husain

1969-1985 Justice Mohd. Hidayatullah

1985-1990 Khurshid Alam Khan

1990-1995 S.M.H. Burney

1995-2001 Khurshid Alam Khan

2002-2011 Fakhruddin T. Khorakiwala

2012-2017 Lt Gen (Retd) M.A. Zaki

Dr. Najma A. Heptullah

Vice-chancellors

1920-1923 Maulana Mohammad Ali Johar

1923-1925 Abdul Majeed Khwaja

1926-1948: Dr Zakir Husain

Born on February 8, 1897, Zakir Husain studied at Etawah School, obtained MA from Aligarh Muslim University. He stayed in Germany from September 1922 to February 1926 to do PhD in Economics from the University of Berlin, under the supervision of Professor Werner Sombart, which was approved “summa cum laude” in 1926.

Along with his colleagues in Germany, Dr. Abid Husain and Mohammad Mujeeb, Zakir Husain came to Jamia in 1926. He was Vice Chancellor of Jamia Millia Islamia for 22 years (1926-48). It was his vision that held Jamia together at a time of great financial and ideological crisis and he took leadership in creating the ‘Life Members of Jamia,’ who pledged 20 years of service to Jamia.

He left Jamia in 1948 to help Aligarh Muslim University as its Vice Chancellor. He went on to become the governor of Bihar, Vice President of India and the President of India.

1948-1973 Prof. Mohammad Mujeeb

1973-1978 Prof. Masud Husain Khan

1978-1983 Anwar Jamal Kidwai

1983-1989 Prof. Ali Ashraf

1989-1991 Dr. Syed Zahoor Qasim

1992-1996 Prof. Bashiruddin Ahmad

1997-2000 Lt Gen (Retd) M.A. Zaki

2000-2004 Syed Shahid Mahdi

2004-2009 Prof. Mushirul Hasan

2009-2013 Najeeb Jung

2014-2018 Prof. Talat Ahmad

Talat Ahmad, VC, left when he was appointed VC of Kashmir University in August 2018.

2019: Najma Akhtar

2019: Najma Akhtar

April 12, 2019: The Times of India


The government appointed Najma Akhtar as vice-chancellor of Jamia Millia Islamia, making her the first woman VC in its four-decade-old history.

Akhtar is the head of the department of educational administration at National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration (NIEPA). She specialises in institution building, distance education, education of minority and educational decentralisation.

According to her bio data on NIEPA website, Akhtar is a gold medallist from Aligarh Muslim University and completed her PhD from Kurukshetra University. She has been a Commonwealth Fellow for university administration course at University of Warwick and Nottingham and trained at the International Institute of Educational Planning (IIEP), UNESCO, Paris.

Akhtar has previously served as director, academic programmes at AMU, and its controller of examinations and admissions. She was also founder director, State Institute of Educational Management and Training (SIEMAT), Uttar Pradesh. She has authored two books and contributed several book chapters and research papers.

The Dastarkhwan canteen

The Times of India, May 11 2016

Dastarkhwan (canteen run by women), Jamia Millia Islamia University; Picture courtesy: The Times of India, May 11 2016

Jamia's popular spread helps keep heads high

Manash Gohain  For Simran Parveen, a Class XII student, it's a way to sustain her fatherless brood of seven sisters and to keep alive her hopes of becoming a lawyer. For unlettered Shabana Khan, it's a means to proper education for her children, and for Saba, whose failed businessman of a husband left her in Delhi when returning to his village, it offers a dignified livelihood. Welcome to Dastarkhwan, a canteen run exclusively by women at Jamia Millia Islamia.

But the canteen is not just run by any women. The 40 or so women involved with the canteen all have had a bad deal in life. Some are divorced, others are single-handedly bringing up families, yet others are trapped in debt.The idea behind this social initiative started in January 2015 by Ekta self-help group in collaboration with Zakir Hussain Society of Jamia was to empower such women.

That it has. Dastarkhwan is now giving the university's popular Central Canteen a run for its money . Though it is not open to the public, it attracts students in droves, including those from Delhi University , JNU and other institutions visiting friends or working on some project on the campus. “We started with the investment of eight women from the nearby localities of Zakir Nagar, Batla House, Abul Fazal Enclave, Shaheen Bagh and Jasola. Others joined later. Those who could not contribute in cash joined as workers,“ says Shabana Tawhid, the canteen manager.“Now, we have nearly 40 women.“

And they have not done badly . The first day sales of around Rs 5,000 have gone up a year later to a daily average of Rs 55,000. The cooperative has not yet paid out dividends to the investors and much of the funds are used to meet the salary bill, but it is fulfilling its objective in a special way: even when a women worker fails to turn up for work, usually due to domestic pressures, she is not docked a day's wages to ensure she remains motivated.

“They serve a very nice biryani,“ says Rupal Chandra, a Miranda House student, who visits the canteen whenever she is in Jamia. Nafisa Ahmed, a master's student in human rights at Jamia, testifies to the other popular wares at Dastarkhwan: “The kebabs and paranthas served in the evening are the best.“

Though most items are priced a bit higher than at the Central Canteen, Dastarkhwan draws a lot of customers for its home-made flavour. As Rachit Malik, an MCA student, says, “Who wouldn't pay Rs 5 extra when you get such good food!“ It may mean little to the diners, but it is this extra Rs 5 that is helping some hapless woman dream of life again.

Faculty of Law, Jamia Millia Islamia

India Today

The Faculty of Law, Jamia Millia Islamia, was established in 1989. In addition to the five-year integrated BA LLB course, the faculty runs an LLM four-semester course in three streams - Personal Law, Corporate Law and Criminal Law - and a Ph.D. programme.

Number 11 in Law: 2015

India Today

The Faculty of Law, Jamia Millia Islamia, was established in 1989. In addition to the five-year integrated BA LLB course, the faculty runs an LLM four-semester course in three streams - Personal Law, Corporate Law and Criminal Law - and a Ph.D. programme. And it was ranked 11 in rankings of India Today for 2015.

Minority status

2016: 'Not a minority educational institution,' Govt

The Times of India, Jan 16 2016

HRD opposed minority tag for Jamia

The attorney general's opinion that Jamia Millia Islamia is not a minority educational institution is in sync with the position taken by successive HRD ministers like Arjun Singh and Kapil Sibal. Clamour for granting `minority status' to Jamia began after UPA-I gave OBC reservation in admission to centrally-funded educational institutions.

Minority status' granted to it by quasi-judicial body National Commission for Minority Educational Institutions (NCMEI) helped Jamia avoid reserving seats for OBCs. UPA-II did not contest the decision of NCMEI.

Otherwise, HRD ministers and the ministry itself have been opposed to giving it minority status. In fact, in March 2010 Singh, who was no longer the minister, had written to then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh expressing fear that the prestigious central university might fall into the hands of fundamentalist forces if it is given minority status. But as demand or change in Jamia's status rom “secular“ to “minority sta us“ grew, Sibal asked minority affairs minister Salman Khurshid to provide ``data and historical facts as to why the position so far taken is inconsistent with reality“.

Sibal's letter to Khurshid included a comprehensive note on he historical character of Jamia as well as ``substance of the ssues that arose at the time of enacting the Jamia Millia Act n 1988. While admitting that he SC decision on the status of AMU would have some bearing on Jamia, Sibal had said ``that tself will not determine the fa e of Jamia. Sibal had not agreed with minority affairs ministry under Khurshid that the stand of the HRD ministry requires alteration. ``The charac er of the institution of Jamia Millia Islamia is to be adjudica ed upon by a court of law, Si bal had said. He had argued that ``each institution has a unique history and its character must be culled from the context in which it was set up. While the two ministers were exchanging notes, National Commission for Minority Edu cational Institutions in February 2011 granted minority status to Jamia Millia Islamia. The order changed the secular character of the central university and also gave it freedom not to give reservation to OBCs, Dalits, tribals and reserve up to 50% seats for Muslims.

The 51-page judgment, given by Justice M S A Siddiqui, Mohinder Singh and Cyriac Thomas, said, “We have no hesitation in holding that Jamia was founded by Muslims for the benefit of Muslims and it never lost its identity as a Muslim minority educational institution.“

“We find and hold that Jamia Millia Islamia is a minority educational institution covered under Article 30(1) of the Constitution with Section 2 (G) of the NCMEI Act,“ the order said.The institute was founded even before the Constitution was in place, it said.

NCMEI said Jamia's case as different from that of Aligarh Muslim University and Supreme Court's 1967 order in the Aziz Basha case--denying minority status to AMU --had no bearing on the Jamia case. In its judgment, SC had refused to recognise that AMU was established by the Muslim community .

The NCMEI order said, “Jamia did not owe its very existen ce to a statute. Since its founding in 1920 till the enactment of the Jamia Millia Islamia Act in 1988, Jamia never lost its identity. Even prior to the enactment of the Act, Jamia had legal existence of its own.“

The fight to do away with Jamia's secular status goes back to its inception. Perusal of the file on setting up of Jamia reveals that in 1987, when the university became a central university, the Cabinet Committee on Political Affairs and the HRD ministry refused to bow to pressure from the then chancellor Khurshid Alam Khan that a specific mention be made that Jamia would “promote especially the educational and cultural advancement of Muslims in India“.

Similarly , there were five other suggestions by Khurshid Alam Khan that the ministry refused to entertain on the ground that none of the other central universities had these features.

2017: 'Not a minority educational institution,' Govt

Centre's U-turn on Jamia's status, August 8, 2017: The Times of India


Contrary to its earlier stand regarding minority status of Jamia Milia Islamia, the Centre is likely to tell the Delhi high court that the university was never intended to be a minority institution as it was set up by an Act of Parliament and is funded by the central government.

The ministry of human resource development (MHRD) is likely to file a fresh affidavit in the Delhi high court where a writ petition is pending.

In 2011, the National Commission for Minority Educational Institutions (NCMEI) had held that “Jamia was founded by the Muslims for the benefit of Muslims and it never lost its identity as a Muslim minority educational institution“ and was, therefore, “covered under Article 30(1)... read with Section 2(g) of the National Commission for Minority Educational Institutions Act“.

When the order was legally challenged, the HRD ministry , under then minister Kapil Sibal, had submitted an affidavit in the Delhi HC stating that the government “respects the declaration made by NCMEI“.

According to government sources, the ministry is now planning to file a fresh affidavit in the high court, stating that its support to the February 22, 2011 order of NCMEI declaring JMI a religious minority institution was an error in the government's understanding about its legal position. On January 15, 2016, the At torney General had advised the HRD ministry that it is entitled to change its view in court and revert to the stand that Jamia is not a minority institution and the order of NCMEI was not in accordance with law.

The NDA government had also taken a stand contrary to its predecessor UPA on the minority status of Aligarh Muslim University before the Supreme Court in January 2016.

Night curfew for women students

2018: Girls oppose, parents support earlier curfew

Students pen open letter to Jamia VC over hostel timings, July 5, 2018: The Times of India


Opposing the change in the timing of the girls’ hostel at Jamia Millia Islamia, a group of students has written an open letter to the Jamia vice-chancellor demanding a rollback of the university’s new prospectus.

In the letter sent to the VC by post, the protesters, who had a few months ago agitated in the campus and managed to get an extension of the curfew timings from 8pm to 10.30pm, said “the prospectus has multiple arbitrary and discriminatory rules which seek to restrict the mobility and freedom of women students of Jamia residing in the university’s hostel”. These rules have been added “regardless of the demands... accepted by the administration in March earlier this year”, it added. The new timings have been set at 9pm.

The students demanded a “newer” prospectus in “conformity with our demands as listed and enumerated in the earlier memorandum”.

According to the Jamia media coordinator, Saima Saeed, the VC will respond after seeing the letter. Saeed said the change was made considering the security concerns in the area as well as in the city. The parents of around 90% of the students told the authority that they were sending their children to Jamia due to the safety assured by the hostel, she added.

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