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Home Opinion Ideas

Glimpse the Poor, Moons can be sighted

Prof M. Ashraf. Shah by Prof M. Ashraf. Shah
May 2, 2022
in Ideas
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With patience and a tripod-mounted smart phone, one can capture star trails using apps with very long exposure option. This moon can be sighted even by naked eyes, as we used to do during our school days. On sighting moon many religious scholars including in Kashmir announce the day of Eid, the first major Islamic festival celebrated by Muslims after month long fasting. This holy month of Ramzan gives us many things including the sense to sight the poor. The Coronavirus (Covid-19), which is our common sarrow and pain, has adversely affected economies, business and destroyed our poor farmers (who give us food) across the globe. They can’t pay even the school fee, buy food and clothes of their beloved children, though governments made many arrangements during these medical emergencies. In addition, many capable educated youths are unemployed and are in search of jobs from years together. This job insecurity has disturbed their families and the families are involved psychologically, as they have spent everything on their education. This whole process (disruptions of business, no source, unemployment) causes depression and pushes youths towards drug addiction and drug trafficking. I am of belief that this could be one of the causes behind the rising trend of drug addiction. Zakat, one of the five pillars of Islam is mandatory for all eligible Muslims and must donate at least 2.5% of their accumulated wealth (total wealth including of lands/plots/villas) for the the poor, destitute and others, abolishing all cleaver tricks of spending their wealth in estates/ earths, escaping from donations, contributions and obligations. Islam, like other religions, enjoins its followers to give for individual and societal well-being. The main institutionalized instruments of Islamic philanthropy and redistribution of wealth are Sadaqa (charity) and Zakat (poor tax). Please calculate it today as we used to calculate the income tax of our income by any CA. Many organizations including NLCO are doing good and more should come forward to do this social and civilized work. Fasting is a way to understand what it feels like to be hungry. It teaches lessons of sympathies. It is a view that can only come out of a certain perspective. The Hanafi school says that if a person misses a day of fasting unnecessarily, he or she should either fast for 60 consecutive days or feed 60 poor people. Thus, the concept of feeding the poor and understanding the suffering of those who go to bed without food is the lesson and a matter of introspection. _______________________________________________________________

Every day we see a number of poor people sitting by the roadside, begging for money and food around us. Including them are little poor kids. They don’t get food to satisfy their hunger. However, by a simple act of kindness and generosity, we at Physics, NIT Srinagar can make an noble initiative of arranging some deep refrigerators near the gate, which could act as a Free Food Bank (FFB). The leftover food/ excess food from homes, hotels and nearby hostels can deposit the food in FFB, which needy people could take. It will create a world (though small) where no one goes to bed without food in our area, which is blessed by many ways, including we are in the surroundings of Dargah-Hazratbal. We teachers should not be the mute spectators, not relinquish responsibilities and should not be blind to these issues. We need more responsible, more sharing and more caring society, which is required at the time of troubles and turbulences. We are reminded severally that giving to food to poor is a great deed and should feel blessed. Peers in general and teachers in particular need to teach philosophical features of fasting.
The bottom line is: We need to sight the poor on land instead of moons in sky.
(The author is teaching nanotechnology at NIT Srinagar . Views are his own)
[email protected]

Prof M. Ashraf. Shah

Prof M. Ashraf. Shah

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