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Monday, 18 November 2013

Times of India article on Gujeratis bringing glory to East Africa and comments


Edited on 18th Nov 2013 10:42h

Caution:
I made up a new word, I think:  "residuality".  It denotes the quality and composition of the (human) residue of those left over after society has lived and produced.  (G  M  Jiwa November 17th, 2013);
I produced a new definition of 'rich':  conferred with generosity and humanity for your fellows in a manner committed to their uplift in socio-economic terms;

 


Times of India has regional sections.  In the 'City/Vadodara' section there is an article entitled,

Gujeratis brought glory to E Africa.

Turn to the Times and read it.

The only comment I found therein added to the article's information base with a great punch.  But it was thought-provoking, too.  I attempted to add my comment and tweet the thing but the mechanism failed.


Here is the comment by one Farouk Jamal who shares his ancestral lineage and antecedents with the reader, too, which is fascinating.


Farouk's comment:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/opinions/23106715.cms?ordertype=asc

Farouk S. Jamal (Vancouver, Canada) 1 day ago
The earliest Indian settlers in East Africa were Khojas, Dawoodi Bohoras and Bhatias from Kathiawar and Kutchh, in today's Gujarat State. They built financial Empires in the19th Century. In mid 19th Century, Sir Tharia Topan, a Khoja (the first Indian knighted by the British Crown in Africa) was the right hand man to the Sultan of Zanzibar, before the British Imperial East Africa Company had achieved a stronghold in that part of the world. I myself am the great grand son of Jamal Suleiman Virji, son of the Indian pioneer of 1872, Suleiman Virji, who hailed from the Junagadh region of Saurashtra, Gujarat, the son of one Shivjibhai Haji. Suleiman Virji with Alidina Visram, the latter known as the Uncrowned King of Uganda, along with A M Jivanjee that you mention in your article, were the wealthiest people in East Africa at the time, in the late 1800's and early 1900's. Today's Lord Verjee, my blood relation, in the British upper house of Parliament, is also a descendant of Suleiman Verji. Whilst we made (and often lost) fortunes in the those lands in trade and commerce, the Africans have very little idea and knowledge of the difficulties endured and sacrifices made by our forefathers in developing today's Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, putting East Africa on the map. The British sahebs ("Bwana" in Swahili) meanwhile had occupied the position of rulers and Administrators of those lands under whom we suffered discrimination and the apartheid system, particularly in Colonial Kenya. Farouk Jamal Vancouver, Canada






















Here is how I respond to the above comment (remembering that both Farouk and I are Ismaili Khojas while he is a Canadian and I a Kenyan - with no dual citizenship):

"Accurate and something to feel proud about, indeed. 
Perhaps they brought glory, yes, but not to E Africa which (having been robbed of its unadulterated natural evolution) is, was and promises to remain for some time: poor (if you would be willing to define rich in terms of being conferred with generosity and humanity for your fellows in a manner committed to their uplift in socio-economic terms
Glory was to the empire and still is, for even Lords are bound to be imperialists. 
There were no strong loyalties, as such, to Africa from the late 19th century up till today with exceptions where a few thinking people and groups idealise the notion of Kenya, or Uganda, for example.  But these are countries that are scarred by their artificial geographical national boundaries.   In most cases, life and culture developed on the templates of survival in an exciting and wild environment where there was room for obtaining success mostly because one was protected under the British imperial umbrella.   
The loyalty, on the part of everyone, including the black Africans who claim lordship over the land against a historical backdrop and in an environment which have reduced agents of self-centred growth including Gujus, to corrupt people who are ruthlessly exploiting the situation, today, amounting to loyalty to their own glory and not E Africa's, to their own protection, raj and self-aggrandisement, in face of Western neo-colonialist, imperialist incursions through agencies like Africa Command.   
90% of human beings in Africa are poor and vulnerable and I doubt whether even 99% of the people who have connections to this piece of real estate care enough to search for lasting solutions.   
We as Indians, like all other colonised and once oppressed races, languish in the memory of lost glories and our nostalgia for unrequited imperial ambitions, making up for them with life-styles that compensate for such losses.  We celebrate our gujerati or Englishness by creating and adding to what we perceive as the most important values in life, wealth, power and affluence to dress our dignity.  Therefore, whilst we stumble through the age on chauvinistic crutches and the need for glory (a colonial hangover) the world turns and leaves the marks of our neglect on peoples who have no clue how to rise from the swamp of residuality."

Mohamed Jiwa
@kirimba
habaripoa
18th November, 2013


Sunday, 17 November 2013

My comment to an article on Baroness Warsi's poke at Fox News

Comment in reply to Aidan Taylor7's invitation to explain what I meant by Americans being impoverished because of the Zionist lobby

In response to an article on Baroness Warsi's poke in the eye of Fox News

Edited 1:47 AM 11/17/2013

I have reviewed this comment and tried to reduce the errors just now.  Aidan Taylor7 graciously commented on one of my comments about the Zion connection in the way Americans are kept in the dark about the realities on the planet.  S/he said that she had all night to hear what I had to say about it.  I tried to post a comment at http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/11/15/baroness-warsi-fox-news-religion_n_4282322.html?utm_hp_ref=tw but they did not publish it for must be nearly a day(?).  So I decided to put it here in the hope that s/he finds it.



:-D, Hi Aidan, what a delightful offer!  You may be Jewish but are you pro-Zionist?  There are a lot of Jewish people who are anti and are grieving about the direction of Israel (and you may not be an Israeli).  www.habaripoacoolnews.blogspot.com is where I wish to develop this among other thoughts for my audience, which is mostly African, at an aching pace but it is all over the place if you look a bit. For example, read about Max Blumenthal by Gilad Atzmon here http://t.co/VCxsWhsDCT . http://t.co/7x7efFJQbf is one of the best quick reads that covers all the issues succinctly and clears a lot of confusion.


In a few words, the Americans are generally ignorant (a little less so than when I went to university there decades ago) and are normally driven by what they see and read in the media which is controlled by questionable interests (in my opinion, the subtly Israel/Zionist protective ones).  The effect of this is, for example, how the Palestinians are being mistreated by the Israelis who have a powerful lobby controlling all sorts of things in the USA, including the direction of the military-industrial-media complex (eg Africom).


Taking into account possible false flags (eg see this thesis on Westgate http://buff.ly/18Ew7qF), there is a lot that has happened that cannot directly be logically ascribed to Muslims (see here http://buff.ly/1gQBco9 for a fiery discussion on the definition of Muslim).   True enough, these days it is practically impossible to verify what is really going on without the support of committed agencies who are empowered to get to the bottom of it.  In the Westgate example EVERYTHING has been covered up.  Just today, someone suggested to me that it appears that the figures are far higher than 70 people killed.  The numbers could be as high as 400, she says, according to reports from families.  But there's no facebook page to help truly account for it.  There should be one. 


The reality of the current conditions in the world as they are, right now, largely influenced by powerful lobbies - the Zionist one being probably the most powerful one - is being explored in conversations like this one: http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/nov/15/pussy-riot-nadezhda-tolokonnikova-slavoj-zizek .  There should be more collaborations on Facebook and similar to enable people to report on the true figures of casualties. Hope this serves to open the door a crack?



For Ismaili readers turn to Peace and Tranquillity in Mombasa here and spend time at Tudor Jamat Khana not far from Aga Khan Bamburi Cottages for a marvellous tranquil holiday!

Saturday, 16 November 2013

Reading links for people in search of the truth Hooray for The Guardian - Not perfect but a cut above!

Questions, questions, questions!

Reading links for people in search of the truth
Hooray for The Guardian - Not perfect but a cut above!

All articles of substance should raise more questions about ourselves, our own situation, and prompt us to make comparisons.



“Goliath: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel”- Max Blumenthal Essential reading Chris Hedges' review my favourite.  Try to see how this affects us in this part of the world.  Find out about Jewish people who are grieving for the loss of the things they dreamed of in their world because of the slaughter and apartheid in their country, Israel.  If people are asking where Israel exists then we should also ask whether Kenya really exists or is it just a figment of a collective imagination and/ or dream... and can it be fulfilled?  Why and why not?


Don't let the media brainwash you.  Think for yourself.



Dan Gilmore
The Guardian
What is the Transpacific Partnership (TPP) and how does it affect us in Kenya and Africa?  Please send your opinions to me.  Clue:  Think about a marriage between the big corporates and the government, where the government plays the feminine and submissive role.

http://t.co/ASQNjD5SO4




Who influences your thinking?  How do you know that the approach you are taking towards the solutions being touted for you by those whom you respect in authority is a suitable one for you and the future?  Do they really know what they are doing?

Pussy Riot's Nadezhda Tolokonnikova
and Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek
meet in an extraordinary exchange of letters

The Guardian

Why is Pussy Riot a very important group?  What actually happened to them?  One of them was sent to prison for singing that the blind are leading are blind.  She got hospitalised because she went on a hunger strike.  She has a child out there whom she is separated from, and is dealing with the challenges of holding to her sanity (because she is being punished simply for following the logic of she is led to by her intellect).  Here she is conversing by letter from the prison with a philosopher.  What are they talking about?  The disaffection of a population forced to live in accordance with a system that doesn't work beyond mediocrity, forced not to think beyond what they are allowed to think?  Does this compare with the way we are in our part of the world? 

http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/nov/15/pussy-riot-nadezhda-tolokonnikova-slavoj-zizek




The Independent
An article on Mahinda Rajapaksa, accused of War Crimes. Is this the level of hate we want to take it to in Africa?

Frances Harrison (Expert on the destruction of the Tamils in Sri Lanka)
Did you know that 40,000 people have been killed or have gone missing in Sri Lanka?  Are aware of the kinds of tortures members of the Tamil Tigers suffered after they lost the war there?  It's gory reading.  There's one story of a man (look up Frances Harrison on Google and find some videos there - there was a recent BBC docu about what has happened to these men) where an object of (sc)raping him was made from a pipe and barbed wire.  What is it about men that they allow themselves to be reduced to a level below animals and resort to torture?  Why is there no proof?  Why is it so silent when questions are asked.  David Cameron was there recently at the Commonwealth Conference and he became quite a hero.  But what sacrifices would he be willing to make in order to find some answers?

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/hero-or-war-criminal-sri-lankan-leader-mahinda-rajapaksa-under-pressure-8940591.html?origin=internalSearch

Matrimonial Bill: Women's rights in marriage and divorce in Kenya and the rest of the world

November 16th, 2013

Matrimonial Bill

Matrimonial Bill: Just who makes greatest contribution in marriage?
10 hours ago -
By LILLIAN ALUANGA-DELVAUX ... Five years into the marriage, Jacob landed a job in an European capital that came with a monthly salary of Sh1 million. ... “It is not only in divorce that issues of how to share matrimonial property come up. ... care', which is a contributor to the country's economic growth.

My opinion

It's not too difficult to calculate the woman's contribution in terms of time and dedication without cutting her off from her right to stay where she lived.  What's the big deal?  You can't kick the woman out.  Man has to leave and ensure she has a home and amenities and the ability to improve her lot.  All women, including prostitutes and Sugar Daddy predators, have rights over their men and men in general.  In being provided those rights women's trust in men will improve.  That is one step in the right direction towards a more enlightened society.  Women go bad only after men have gone rotten.

Okay, now women - you take the lead:  Where are the exceptions to such a rule?

Here are some links from Google:

  • [PDF]

    Women Land and Property Rights in Kenya - FIDA Kenya

    fidakenya.org/wp-content/.../Land-and-Property-Report-May-8-09.pdf
    Women LawyersKenya and the International Women's Human Rights .... Existing Marriage and Divorce Laws Rob Women of Their Matrimonial Property .
  • [PDF]

    Women Property Rights - FIDA Kenya

    fidakenya.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/.../Women-property-rights.pdf
    A. Gaps in Divorce Laws and Wide Judicial Discretion Leave Women with Nothing at Divorce, Violating their Rights to Equality, Housing, and an Adequate ...

  • Divorce in Kenya: What the law says | The Star

    www.the-star.co.ke/news/article-23756/divorce-kenya-what-law-says
    Apr 4, 2012 - People have woken up to their family rights and unlike in the olden days, ... Kenyan law prohibits the presentation of a divorce petition to a court of law ... WITH Kituo Cha Sheria, The federation of women lawyers Kenya (FIDA).
  • [PDF]

    Law and the Status of Women in Kenya - International ...

    www.ielrc.org/content/a9501.pdf
    by J Kabeberi-Macharia - ‎Cited by 3 - ‎Related articles
    Civil Law. 4. Legal Capacity. 4. Rights Relating to Marriage. 5. Rights of Inheritance. 8 ... In this chapter, we look at the legal status of women in Kenya. II.

  • Kenyan women to fight bill denying them property rights in divorce

    www.trust.org/item/20131113164113-e6i3l/
    3 days ago - the small number of Kenyan female MPs is handicapping efforts to push through legislation promoting women's rights, in a country where men ...

  • Marriage Bill, 2013 - Kenya Law Reform Commission (KLRC)

    www.klrc.go.ke › Bills
    Kenya Law Reforms Commission KLRC Bills Laws. ... Defines marriage as the voluntary union of a man and a woman whether monogamous or ... Parties to a marriage have equal rights at the time of the marriage, during the marriage and at ...

  • Legal/Statutory Marriage in Kenya - Infotrack East Africa Ltd.

    www.infotrackea.co.ke/.../index.php?...legal-marriage...kenya...
    The general position of the Law in Kenya is that Kenya is governed by various ... Divorce, Annulments, Judicial Separations, Restitution of Conjugal rights, ... man keeps one or more other women as his wives without declaring marriage.

  • Marriage in Kenya | Kenya Law - Kenya by Kenyans

    softkenya.com/law/marriage-in-kenya/
    Marriage in Kenya: Bring original and copies of the Identity Cards or ... After 21 days, the couple completes the affidavit under S 11 of the Marriage Act, gets it commissioned by the Registrar and completes ... This is not a right and can be denied. ... Female Celebrities in Kenya · Top Ten Male and Female Musicians in Kenya ...
  • [DOC]

    Gender Considerations in Constitution-Making- Engendering ...

    ir.library.strathmore.edu/researcherFileDownload.action?researcherFileId...
    WOMEN'S RIGHTS AND THE LAW IN KENYA ..... Other than this, the Marriage Bill (1985) gives equal rights to spouses in a marriage in matters concerning ...

  • Friday, 15 November 2013

    What are our rights as disenfranchised citizens of the world producing most of its resources?

    This is an article that reads and that contains links that explain why and how the corporations are married to any government on the planet and for what reason.  TRAWL through it or PLOUGH through it but GET through it anyhow you can, please:
    www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/13/tr
    ans-pacific-partnership-intellectual-property
    Figure out how it affects us and write to me.  I'll throw light on the relevant questions if you engage me.

    @kirimba (on twitter)

    The persona of government is being abused and has become a reluctant malaya but the corporations are very patriarchaic, if you'll forgive the corruption of that word and they are banging away.



    From The Guardian direct - Why doesn't the link open?  Trying to redirect here.

    3:43 PM 11/15/2013

    Taken from The Guardian because their link does not open for some reason for some of us:

    Dan Gillmor: On digital being

    Thanks to WikiLeaks, we see just how bad TPP trade deal is for regular people
    The more you know about the odious Trans-Pacific Partnership, the less you'll like it. It's made for corporate intellectual property and profits
    SOPA protest
    A protester demonstrates against the proposed Stop Online Piracy Act (Sopa) in New York. It might be time to do the same against the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images
    Among the many betrayals of the Obama administration is its overall treatment of what many people refer to as "intellectual property" – the idea that ideas themselves and digital goods and services are exactly like physical property, and that therefore the law should treat them the same way. This corporatist stance defies both reality and the American Constitution, which expressly called for creators to have rights for limited periods, the goal of which was to promote inventive progress and the arts.
    In the years 2007 and 2008, candidate Obama indicated that he'd take a more nuanced view than the absolutist one from Hollywood and other interests that work relentlessly for total control over this increasingly vital part of our economy and lives. But no clearer demonstration of the real White House view is offered than a just-leaked draft of an international treaty that would, as many had feared, create draconian new rights for corporate "owners" and mean vastly fewer rights for the rest of us.
    I'm talking about the appalling Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement, a partial draft of which WikiLeaks has just released. This treaty has been negotiated in secret meetings dominated by governments and corporations. You and I have been systematically excluded, and once you learn what they're doing, you can see why.
    The outsiders who understand TPP best aren't surprised. That is, the draft "confirms fears that the negotiating parties are prepared to expand the reach of intellectual property rights, and shrink consumer rights and safeguards," writes James Love a longtime watcher of this process.
    Needless to say, copyright is a key part of this draft. And the negotiators would further stiffen copyright holders' control while upping the ante on civil and criminal penalties for infringers. The Electronic Frontier Foundation says TPP has "extensive negative ramifications for users' freedom of speech, right to privacy and due process, and hinder peoples' abilities to innovate". It's Hollywood's wish list.
    Canadian intellectual property expert Michael Geist examined the latest draft of the intellectual property chapter. He writes that the document, which includes various nations' proposals, shows the US government, in particular, taking a vastly different stance than the other nations. Geist notes:
        [Other nations have argued for] balance, promotion of the public domain, protection of public health, and measures to ensure that IP rights themselves do not become barriers to trade. The opposition to these objective[s] by the US and Japan (Australia has not taken a position) speaks volumes about their goals for the TPP.
    The medical industry has a stake in the outcome, too, with credible critics saying it would raise drug prices and, according to Love's analysis, give surgeons patent protection for their procedures.
    Congress has shown little appetite for restraining the overweening power of the corporate interests promoting this expansion. With few exceptions, lawmakers have repeatedly given copyright, patent and trademark interests more control over the years. So we shouldn't be too optimistic about the mini-flurry of Capitol Hill opposition to the treaty that emerged this week. It's based much more on Congress protecting its prerogatives – worries about the treaty's so-called "fast track" authorities, giving the president power to act without congressional approval – than on substantive objections to the document's contents.
    That said, some members of Congress have become more aware of the deeper issues. The public revolt against the repugnant "Stop Online Piracy Act" two years ago was a taste of what happens when people become more widely aware of what they can lose when governments and corporate interests collude.
    If they become aware – that's the key. One of TPP's most abhorrent elements has been the secrecy under which it's been negotiated. The Obama administration's fondness for secret laws, policies and methods has a lot to do with a basic reality: the public would say no to much of which is done in our names and with our money if we knew what was going on. As Senator Elizabeth Warren pointed out, in a letter to the White House:
        I have heard the argument that transparency would undermine the administration's policy to complete the trade agreement because public opposition would be significant. If transparency would lead to widespread public opposition to a trade agreement, then that trade agreement should not be the policy of the United States. I believe in transparency and democracy and I think the US Trade Representative should too.
    Thanks to WikiLeaks, we have at least partial transparency today. The more you know about the odious TPP, the less you'll like it – and that's why the administration and its corporate allies don't want you to know.
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    Dan Gillmor is director of the Knight centre for digital media entrepreneurship at Arizona State University's Walter Cronkite school of journalism and mass communication. His most recent book is Mediactive (2010), also a blog of the same name, about how people can be empowered as new media users. This series focuses on technological developments, especially as they affect media, and aims to show how people can move from being passive consumers of media to active users. Follow Dan on Twitter @dangillmor
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