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June 9, 2010 | 12
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Steel City Project Converts Gasoline Cars to Run on Electricity

ChargeCar aims to create a kit that makes it easy for local auto
shops to convert conventional cars to electric.

By Saqib
Rahim
and Climatewire

CATALYTIC CONVERTER:
Instead of selling pricey new vehicles, the ChargeCar team wants to
create a kit that makes it easy for local auto shops to convert gasoline
cars to run on electricity.
ISTOCKPHOTO/sjlocke

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PITTSBURGH — Chuck Wichrowski remembers the first car he ever worked

on, when he was just a college graduate and knew nothing about cars:
His wife’s 1970 Chevy Nova.

The second? A 1964 Studebaker Wagonaire.

“I just sort of applied the college model, which is: You look the
things up, you get a book, and then you do it,” Wichrowski said.

As the years rolled by, Wichrowski put his wrench to the cars that

drove the Steel City through its industrial heyday. But times have
changed in Pittsburgh, and while he still runs Baum Boulevard
Automotive, his customers have moved on to mostly foreign cars, and
increasingly, hybrids.

Wichrowski used to run two gas stations, and he knows electric-drive

cars need less maintenance than the gas-driven ones. Yet he has loaned a
mechanic to a local university to help it design electric cars for
regular Pittsburghers, and he thinks his shop can cash in if the future
really is electric.

And for the team at Carnegie

Mellon University, which is designing cars to get residents to
work without burning a pint of gas or even wasting an electron, the
future of electric cars is Pittsburgh.

Designers of the ChargeCar

project say that instead of selling pricey new vehicles, they want to
create a kit that makes it easy for local auto shops like Wichrowski’s
to convert a gasoline car to run on electricity.

“There’s a bunch of machine shops running idle in Pittsburgh,” said Illah Nourbakhsh, a robotics

professor at CMU and a co-director of ChargeCar. “There’s a ton of
shops that can do that kind of thing. There’s mechanical know-how in
this town like no other that I’ve seen.”

Electric-car conversions have been available for decades, whether

through small, independent companies or engineers tinkering in their
garages. But ChargeCar is likely the first effort to gut a gasoline car
and redesign it for a single purpose: the perfect commute.

When Nourbakhsh and his colleagues looked at how Pittsburghers

drive, they found that most trips are about half a dozen miles. Some
zoom along the highway, while others plod past stop signs and red
lights. Some drive on flat roads; others climb or coast down the city’s
hilly terrain.

The team reckoned a battery, combined with a gadget called a

supercapacitor and controlled by software, could make most of these
miles electric-powered, at a price Pittsburghers could afford.

Fiddling and fact-finding

ChargeCar’s latest projects sit in a former gas station across the
street from Carnegie Mellon. One is a 2006 Honda Civic: Over the next
month, the team will convert it into a short-range, all-electric car.
Wichrowski’s mechanic will lend a hand and advise on how to make such
conversions as simple as possible for other auto repairers in
Pittsburgh.

The other car in the garage feels more like an airplane. From the

outside, it looks like a common Scion xB; surrounding the cockpit,
though, are scores of dials and gauges.

The car is an experiment.

As Nourbakhsh pulls onto the road, he points to wobbling needles and
flashing numbers on the computer screen. This car is powered by a
battery and a supercapacitor, and these gauges are constantly crunching
numbers: how much juice is left, how much power is flowing, how hot the
battery is.

He switches between using the supercapacitor and the battery. He
tries each one on hills, up and down. When he slows at a red light, he
can choose which device he wants to charge up.

As the professor fiddles, the team is learning important facts about
the most efficient way to power an electric car.

The reason has to do with how batteries work — and a major
technical challenge for automakers.

Custom-designed batteries?

Batteries are good at storing energy, but they degrade if they have to
take on, or release, too much power too quickly. To deal with that
degradation, automakers stuff cars with larger batteries, but that adds
cost and weight.

Unlike batteries, supercapacitors are built for abuse: They can take
a huge charge and discharge, thousands of times, without losing a step.

They’re not so good at holding a charge, Nourbakhsh says, so the
team decided to pair one with a battery.

Those Pittsburgh hills and traffic lights? They become energy
savers.

“When you’re stopping, all the current gets dumped into the
capacitor, therefore saving the energy so that you can reuse it, rather
than going into the battery, because putting it into the battery costs
battery life,” he says.

As the argument goes, if one knows exactly how someone drives, it’s
possible to come up with the perfect-size battery and supercapacitor for
that driver.

At www.chargecar.org, the
group is asking Web surfers to share information on their commutes in
gasoline cars, including every highway ride and stop at Starbucks.

A $10,000 price tag

Nourbakhsh and his team are at work on a computer program that can
predict where a driver speeds up, hits traffic and pauses for doughnuts
— all to make a battery system that’s the perfect size.

Over time, this program could even learn more about the driver,
firing up the capacitor or battery at precisely the right times to get
her to work.

Nourbakhsh says a regular battery may cost $8,000, but adding a
$1,000 capacitor to handle the sudden charges means the battery doesn’t
need to be as big, so the combo may cost only $2,000.

The total price of conversion? ChargeCar is targeting a $10,000 tag.

Paul Scott, vice president of advocacy group Plug-in America,
said such a system could be the “magic bullet” of energy storage in
cars, since it balances capacity and power.

Capacitors have already drawn interest from researchers, engineers
and even some of the automakers. A spokesman for Toyota said, however,
that the company has placed more focus on other electric technologies
because it found capacitors too costly.

Scott panned the idea of designing electric cars mainly geared to
the commute. “Everybody I know drives a car a lot of different ways,”
not just for commuting but also for going to the movies or visiting
friends, he said.

Mechanics say this is the future

“If you optimize a car for just one specific task, it may not work as
well for other tasks,” he said.

Nourbakhsh said the car doesn’t have to spend its last electron at
the office — it’s possible to design “headroom” for a specific commute
while still being efficient and saving on cost.

“But the point is, for the thing you do most frequently — that you
spend the most energy on — let’s have it be super-efficient at that,”
he said in an e-mail.

Some families might choose to have a ChargeCar and reserve a
gasoline car for longer trips, said Leland Thorpe, a master’s student at
Carnegie Mellon who’s on the ChargeCar team.

The project is recruiting local companies to sponsor the first wave
of car conversions. Nourbakhsh says that would be a uniquely Pittsburgh
solution, as companies “green” their reputations and Pittsburghers do
the work in auto shops.

Even if electric cars catch on in Pittsburgh, Wichrowski, the
manager of Baum Boulevard Automotive, isn’t worried about having to lay
off mechanics.

“Every hybrid car that we have also has conventional brakes,
conventional exhaust, other things that you really need to do to have a
regular car,” he said as customers milled in and out of the shop. “They
just have an added layer of the hybrid system bolted into the car
somewhere.”

He said today, some cars have up to a dozen computers
to control their systems: air conditioners, power steering and the
like.

The modern mechanic often has the equipment and know-how to work
with them, so electric cars shouldn’t be too much harder.

“This is something that all the technicians are going to have to
move into,” he says. “If you want to repair cars, you’re going to have
to be able to know how to do this.”

Reprinted from Climatewire with permission from Environment &
Energy Publishing, LLC. www.eenews.net,
202-628-6500

Kerala student joins Geneva experiment

Abdul Latheef Naha

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C.V. Midhun, with the momento awarded by the  Malappuram District Pachayat. Photo: Special Arrangement
C.V. Midhun, with the momento awarded by the Malappuram District Pachayat. Photo: Special Arrangement

A Kerala college student, who had disputed the famous black hole theory of noted scientist Stephen Hawking, has become part of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) experiment. The LHC, a gigantic instrument placed near Geneva, is studying the impact of particle collision.

C.V. Midhun, a second semester B.Sc. Physics student of the Majlis Arts and Science College at Puramannur in Valanchery, is taking part in the LHC experiment online from his home at Naduvattom.

Online access

Midhun was given online access to the experiment by the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN), the world's largest particle physics laboratory, following the “relativity theories” put forth by him. He had claimed that there would be no black hole when protons collide. He made his point by measuring the energy generated by the cosmic rays coming out of particle collision and comparing it with that of the cosmic rays from the sun.

“The energy of the sun's cosmic rays has been found much more than that of the cosmic rays from particle collision,” he says. “As there is no black hole in the sun, it is unlikely that there will be a black hole when subatomic particle beams collide at very high energy inside the circular accelerator.”

Midhun, son of Vallabhan Namboothiri, a temple priest, and Sreedevi, a teacher, first sent his theory to the Indian Institute of Sciences (IISc) in Bangalore. The IISc scientists, realising the significance of his theories, directed him to the CERN.

Impressed by his theories, the CERN authorities inducted him into the LHC experiment. They made him part of the ATLAS collaboration, one of the six particle detector experiments of the LHC.

On Saturday, the Malappuram District Panchayat felicitated Midhun at a function. Union Minister of State for Railways E. Ahamed presented him with a memento and he was congratulated by a host of political leaders and people's representatives.

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Categories of Dates

Categories of Dates

Many Muslim scientists like Ibn Sina (Avicenna), al-Hasan ibn al-Haytham, known in the West as Alhazen, and Muḥammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi (Algorithmi), made great contributions that shaped the modern world. In the 9th century, Muslim inventor Abbas ibn Firnas was the first to design and test a flying machine, hundreds of years before da Vinci drew plans of his own. Hospitals as we know them today believed to have come from 9th century Egypt.


Photo: AFP

A replica of the first person said to have flown with wings is displayed at the science museum in central London on January 21, 2010. The debt owed by European scholars to their Muslim counterparts on everything from water pumps and blood circulation to engineering and map-making was unveiled in a London exhibition on January 21.

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Coffee, computers and piston engines – could we imagine a world without them?  These are intricate parts of every day life for most of us and the knowledge that led to them was either invented by or passed down through the ancient Muslim world.  That is the theme of an exhibit in London’s Science Museum and it’s a far cry from the view held by some that the Muslim and Western World represent a “clash of civilizations.”

A simple cup of coffee has become an intricate part of so many cultures. It’s called “Kawha”- where it was first developed as a drink – in the Arabian Peninsula, in today’s Yemen.

Professor Salim al-Hassani of the University of Manchester explains the coffee beans were actually brought to Yemen from the Horn of Africa, from Ethiopia.

“Well of course, coffee was invented in the very early years of Islam – a guy called Khaled in Ethiopia, a young man looking after his sheep,” al-Hassani said.

The sheep seemed to like the beans.  So the young man took the beans to Yemen – the story goes – and the drink was developed and spread like wildfire.

And there were many other inventions or innovations passed on by the early Muslim world from the 7th Century onward, says Hassani.

“One of them is the invention of the university.  This was done in the year 850 by a young lady called Fatima al-Fihri in the city of Fez in Morocco,” al-Hassani said. “The first university as we know it in the world, giving degrees and so on.”

And that’s the theme of this exhibit at the London Science Museum.  It’s called 1001 inventions: the Muslim Heritage, a bit like “1001 Arabian Nights,” the well known fairy tale.

The exhibit in London focuses on scientific or technological inventions and advances that changed our world – from some of the earliest universities, to innovations in medicine, hygiene, pumps, and water wheels.

Some says these important achievements have been forgotten amid the news often coming out of the Muslim world today that focuses so much on strife and terrorism. But, ask just about anyone on the streets of, say, Cairo or Damascus today and they haven’t forgotten -  they’ll readily tell you about Islam’s glory days – not just its conquests but its cultural, scientific and technological innovations.”

These advances came at the height of the Islamic empire’s glory when it spread from the Middle East, across North Africa to southern Spain and beyond.

A time when Muslim scholars and inventors were at the forefront, says Hassani.     

“During that time, there were enormous contributions in science and technology that we have forgotten about and that comes to us from other civilizations,” al-Hassani said. “And, it came to use over a very important civilization and that is the Muslim civilization.”


London Exhibit

A scale model of Al-Jazari’s 13th-century Scribe Clock

Muslims absorbed knowledge – from India, China, the Greeks, the ancient Egyptians – and passed it on.  One exhibit exemplifies that mixture – a giant clock featuring an Indian elephant and Chinese dragons and using ancient Greek water works.  The one here is a replica of the original designed by the Muslim inventor, mathematician and engineer al-Jazari in the early 13th Century.

Anne Marie Brennan teaches forensic biology at London’s South Bank University and is fascinated by these innovations.  

“Everybody has to love the elephant clock,” Brennan said. “The elephant clock is wonderful because it is like a United Nations clock. It has all the elements of different civilizations and I like it as a scientist because it shows that science doesn’t have to be boring and sterile and plain, but it can be decorative and it can also pay homage to the cultures that bring it forward.”

And then there is mathematics and algebra. In general, our numbers are known as “Arabic numerals” today, but it wasn’t always so, says professor Hassani.

“The numbers that we have today – 1,2,3,4 – they’re called Arabic numerals, but actually the Arabs at the time called them Indian numerals,” al-Hassani said.

And, the number “0″ for example – “zephir” in Arabic – was used first by early Arab scholars as an integral part of mathematical equations.  And that’s part of the all important formula of zeros and ones that was crucial to the development of computers and other new technology.

 
cid:1.1178362026@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
1) Brush twice a day!

 

 
cid:2.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
2) Dress right for the weather.

 

 
cid:3.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
3) Visit the dentist regularly.

 

 
cid:4.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
4) Get plenty of rest.

 

 
cid:5.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
5) Make sure your hair is dry before going outside.

 

 
cid:6.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
6) Eat right.

 

 
cid:7.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
7) Get outside in the sun every once in a while.

 

 
cid:8.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
8) Always wear a seatbelt.

 

 
cid:9.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
9) Stay away from alcoholic beverages.

 

 
cid:10.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
10) Smile! It will make you feel better.

 

 
cid:11.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
11) Don’t over indulge yourself.

 

 
cid:12.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
12) Bathe regularly.

 

 
cid:13.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
13) Read to exercise the brain.

 

 
cid:14.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
14) Surround yourself with friends.

 

 
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15) Stay away from too much caffeine.

 

 
cid:16.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
16) Use the bathroom regularly.

 

 
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17) Get plenty of exercise.

 

 
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18) Have your eyes checked regularly.

 

 
cid:19.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
19) Eat plenty of vegetables.

 

 
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20) Believe that people will like you for who you are.

 

 
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21) Forgive and forget.

 

 
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22) Take plenty of vacations.

 

 
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23) Celebrate all special occasions.

 

 
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24) Pick up a hobby.

 

 
cid:25.1178362027@web39603.mail.mud.yahoo.com
25)  Love your neighbor as yourself.

 
Do all these things and you will be a happier, healthier person

IslamOnline.net & Newspapers



Image

“Wives are to submit to their husbands in
everything in recognition of the fact that husbands are head of the
family,” rector MacLeay said. (Google)

CAIRO – A Church of
England priest has urged women to “submit” to their husbands, raising
the ire of women as keeping with “dark ages”, reported the Guardian on
Saturday, February 13.

“Wives are to submit to their husbands in
everything in recognition of the fact that husbands are head of the
family as Christ is head of the church,” reads a leaflet issued by
rector Angus MacLeay.

“This is the way God has ordered their
relationships with each other and Christian marriage cannot function
well without it.”

MacLeay, a member of the General Synod,
also urged women to keep “silent” when asked questions that could be
answered by their husbands.

“It would seem that women should remain
silent … if questions could legitimately be answered by their husbands.”

The comments were backed by MacLeay’s
curate, who blamed the behavior of “modern” women for the high divorce
rate in Britain.

“We know marriage is not working. We only
need to look at figures – one in four children have divorced parents,”
curate Mark Oden told worshippers on Sunday congregation.

“Wives, submit to your own husbands.”

Anger

The comments drew ire of women
parishioners, who described them as keeping with “dark ages”.

“How can they talk that way in the 21st
century?” a female parishioner said.

“No wonder the Church is losing touch if
this is the kind of gobbledegook they want us to believe it.”

The parishioner vowed to shun the Church
until it reconsiders its position.

“I will not be going back to that church
and will have to seriously consider my faith if this is the nonsense
they are spouting now.”

The Church of England preachers were also
accused of having a “medieval” mentality.

“What kind of medieval sermon is that? We
are not in the 15th Century?” said another woman parishioner.

“I have already cancelled my direct debit
to the church.”

But the Church of England preachers
rejected the accusations.

“I am passionate about helping people to
have healthy marriages,” said Oden, a married father of three.

“I did not set out to unnecessarily offend
people, but I stand by what God has said in his word, the Bible.”

MacLeay, the Church Vicar, also defended
his position.

“There are times when the Bible challenges
modern society,” he said.

“It recognizes that women are fully equal
to men, but it also recognizes that in certain areas of life they may
have different roles.”

New Wind Turbine


The Magenn Power Air Rotor System (MARS) is a patented high altitude lighter-than-air tethered device that rotates about a horizontal axis in response to wind, efficiently generating clean renewable electrical energy at a lower cost than all competing systems. This electrical energy is transferred down the tether to a transformer at a ground station and then transferred to the electricity power grid. Helium (an inert non-reactive lighter than air gas) sustains the Air Rotor which ascends to an altitude for best winds and its rotation also causes the Magnus effect. This provides additional lift, keeps the device stabilized, keeps it positioned within a very controlled and restricted location, and causes it to pull up overhead rather than drift downwind on its tether.

All competing conventional wind generators use bladed two-dimensional disk-like structures and rigid towers. The Magenn Power Air Rotor system is a closed three-dimensional structure (cylinder). It offers high torque, low starting speeds, and superior overall efficiency thanks to its ability to deploy higher. The closed structure allows Magenn Power to produce wind rotors from very small to very large sizes at a fraction of the cost of current wind generators.

The distinct advantages of the Magenn Air Rotor System design are as follows:

  • Magenn Air Rotor System is less expensive per unit of actual electrical energy output than competing wind power systems.
  • Magenn Power Air Rotor System will deliver time-averaged output much closer to its rated capacity than the capacity factor typical with conventional designs. Magenn efficiency will be 25 to 60 percent. This is hugely important, since doubling capacity factor cuts the cost of each delivered watt by half.
  • Wind farms can be placed closer to demand centers, reducing transmission line costs and transmission line loses.
  • Magenn Air Rotors are operable between 2 meter/sec and in excess of 28 meters/sec.
  • Magenn Air Rotors can be raised to higher altitudes, thus capitalizing on higher winds aloft. Altitudes from 400-ft to 1,000-ft above ground level are possible, without having to build an expensive tower, or use a crane to perform maintenance.
  • Magenn Air Rotors are mobile and can be easily moved to different locations to correspond to changing wind patterns. Mobility is also useful in emergency deployment and disaster relief situations.

These points are mutually inclusive. The advantages above combine to make Magenn the most cost-effective wind electrical generation system.

Scientific research that is in accordance with Sharia has helped us a lot in understanding some honey issues in much greater depth. A Hadith points out a tradition that says, “If it is used at least thrice in a month at early morning, the one who uses it will remain safe from diseases.” Fresh honey is highly beneficial but should not be used with fish, vinegar, radish or melon. Always store honey in a glass jar that should not have even a single drop of water, as even a few drops of water can destroy honey’s value.

Beneficial for cardiac patients

The heart muscle works continuously and needs glucose to make up energy expended. When a very small quantity of glucose (0.1 percent) is added to physiological saline in which an isolated heart is immersed, the heart will continue working outside the body for four days.

Honey has a beneficial effect on the heart because it contains much easily assimilated glucose. It has been noted that it has an invaluable effect on the weakened heart muscle in various types of cardiac diseases. Even diabetics can take honey, since pure honey improves cardiac activity. Honey causes veins to expand and improves circulation through coronary arteries.

Anti-diarrheal properties

At a concentration of 40 percent, honey has a bactericidal effect on various intestinal bacteria known to cause diarrhea and dysentery such as Salmonella, Shigella and enteric pathogens like E. coli and Vibrio cholera. In one study, honey given with oral dehydration fluid was shown to reduce the duration of bacterial diarrhea in infants and children. (1).

Anti-tussive and expectorant properties

Honey’s anti-cough properties are related to its capacity to dilute bronchial secretions and improve function of the bronchial epithelium. Uncontaminated or pure honey is a natural, healthy, energy-rich and easily-digestible food. Observation of treatment for lung abscesses in professor F. A. Udintsev’s clinic at the Kiev Medical Institute has drawn attention.

Three patients were given 100 to 150 grams of honey a day, resulting in considerable improvement. They began to feel better, their appetites improved and they began putting on weight. Their hemoglobin increased, while the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) decreased. Patients coughed less and the amount of sputum decreased; they began urinating more during the day than at night (the opposite was the case before honey was given); and a beneficial effect also was noted on the gastrointestinal tract.(1).

Anti-bacterial and anti-fungal properties

These are well-established properties of honey. Undiluted honey inhibits bacterial growth such as Staphylococcus aureus, certain intestinal pathogens and fungi such as Candida albicans. At a concentration of 30-50 percent, honey has been shown to be superior to certain conventional antibiotics in treating urinary tract infections. (1).

Diabetic cure

A recent study published in the Journal of Family Practice reports the case of a 79-year-old man with Type 2 diabetes who developed foot ulcers. After 14 months of care costing $390,000, which included five hospitalizations and four surgeries, the ulcers measured 8×5 cm and 3×3 cm and were resistant to effects of the best antibiotics.

During this time, the patient lost two toes but refused below-the-knee amputation, despite being informed by two different surgical teams that without it, he likely would die. The patient eventually was discharged to his home at his request. He lost a third toe before consenting to a trial of topical honey.

Once-daily, thick applications of ordinary honey were smeared on gauze and placed on the wounds, which then were wrapped. Oral antibiotics and saline dressings were discontinued, but otherwise, treatment was unchanged. Dressing changes were painless and the serum glucose remained in excellent control.

New tissue appeared within two weeks, with the ulcers healing completely in six to 12 months. Two years have passed and the ulcers have not reoccurred. The patient moves about with a walker and reports improved quality of life.

Researchers state that as diabetes incidents increase, it’s important to identify effective strategies to reduce amputation rates, both to improve quality of life and decrease costs. They also recommend random controlled trials to determine efficacy and invite physicians to consider topical honey therapy for patients with refractory diabetic foot ulcers. (2).

Medical experts still dispute the topic, with some firmly believing that honey is a cure, while others say it’s injurious to diabetics.

The Prophet Mohammed (pbuh) drank honey in the early morning and in the afternoon. The Sunnat is a blessing if one has no doubt. The user achieves two advantages simultaneously: one is physical, which is a cure, and the other is spiritual blessing.

Sayedna Abdullah bin Abbas provided the Hadith, “You have sources of cure and remedies – Qur’an and honey.” This Hadith is a forceful categorical reply to arguments based on the opinion of medical experts who disallow honey’s use for diabetics. Honey provides the quickest energy boost for longer endurance without a big drop in blood sugar later.

Wound healing and anti-inflammatory properties

Al Shaikh Al-Rais, Abi Ali Ibn Sina, considered honey to have absorbing properties, recommending a waterless ointment of honey and wheat flour to treat wounds. Honey is of value in treating burns, infected surgical wounds and decubitus ulcers in that honey is very viscous, thereby enabling it to absorb water from surrounding inflamed tissue. It also has been suggested that honey may be useful in treating chronic, foul smelling ulcers seen in leprosy. Honey is unique and has an excellent “track record” – more than 4,000 years’ usage as a wound dressing.

Dr. Peter Molan, a leading honey researcher for the past three decades and a biochemistry professor at New Zealand’s Waikato University, says of honey’s anti-microbial properties: “Honey speeds healing of open wounds and also combats infection. Modern science now acknowledges honey as an anti-microbial agent, meaning it deters growth of certain types of bacteria, yeast and molds.

“Honey and beeswax form the basis of many skin creams, lip balms and hand lotions. Thanks to honey’s ability to absorb moisture from the air, it facilitates the healing process and prevents scarring because it stimulates growth of epithelial cells that form the new skin covering a healed wound. In this way, even in the case of large wounds, honey may eliminate the need for tissue transplantation.” (1). (3). (4).

Quick burn treatment

Random trials have shown that honey is more effective in controlling infection in burn wounds than silver sulfadiazine, the antibacterial ointment hospitals use most widely (Honey against infected skin lesions). A 1991 study by Dr. Subrahmanyam compared results of topical honey application on burns with conventional burn treatment using silver sulfadiazine. Results showed that within a week, 91 percent of infected wounds treated with honey were free of infection, compared to less than seven percent of silver sulfadiazine treated burns.

Gastroenteritis and stomach ulcer treatment

Research by Haffejee and Moose (1985) found that honey treatment shortened the duration of diarrhea in patients with bacterial gastroenteritis, in that patients treated with honey had an average recovery of 58 hours compared with 93 hours for control patients.

Additionally, research conducted by Somal, et al (1994) at New Zealand’s Waikato University showed that Manuka honey successfully inhibits Helicobacter pylori, the organism responsible for upper gastro-intestinal dyspepsia in stomach ulcers.

However, it should be noted that research is ongoing in this field, and although initial results are promising, full clinical trials are yet to be completed. As well as its other therapeutic properties, the presence of potassium, sodium, calcium and magnesium means that honey is capable of neutralizing body acid, thus maintaining the acid-alkaline balance. (5) (6)

Allergy relief

At the University of Connecticut Health Center-Farmington, immunologist T.V. Rajan, M.D., Ph.D., is studying simple honey’s healing powers to treat seasonal allergies. The study is based on the theory of oral tolerance, which reasons that humans become accustomed to things they ingest. So if people eat local pollens via pollen-rich honey, allergic pollen reactions in the spring and summer should diminish. Study subjects receive either a tablespoon of local honey, non-local honey as a placebo or their usual allergy medications.

University of Illinois researchers reported in the 1998 Journal of Agricultural Research that antioxidants in 14 honey varieties are highest in the darkest honeys (Manuka honey is very dark). Antioxidants are important to the diet because they slow production of free radicals that cause DNA damage and have been implicated in age-related illnesses like arthritis, stroke and cancer.

Enhance exclusive pleasure

In the East, ginger has lived up to its reputation of being a powerful herb. Indian literature recommends a mixture of ginger juice, honey and half-boiled eggs, taken nightly for a month, as a remedy against impotence. Taking a teaspoon of honey and milk before hitting the fire increases virility and is even said to cure premature ejaculation. According to traditional Indian herbal medicine, it also increases masculine power.

Powdered cardamom seeds boiled with milk and mixed in a glass with a spoon of honey is believed to be an excellent remedy against impotence and premature ejaculation, as well as recommended as an ointment for recovery from impotency (Qaratis Yamaniyah manuscript written Hijra year 871).

Honey and the eyes

Honey long has been considered a most effective remedy for many eye diseases. Only sterile honey from the honeycomb should be used on the eyes and only under doctor or ophthalmologist supervision. Honey applied as a kuhl (eye ointment) strengthens weak eyesight. If used by those under age 40, it improves vision and also removes their need for glasses. An added benefit is that honey has no side effects.

Cure for dental problems

Dentists have no doubt about the harmful effect of sweets on teeth. It has been established that the remains of sugar in the mouth increase bacteria’s effect, leading to slow but considerable teeth decalcification and cavities. Honey, on the other hand, has active antibiotic properties and in fact disinfects the mouth.

Pure honey may refine with age, but its food value remains unchanged. Various honey varieties taste differently, depending on its source: clover honey tastes like clover, while citrus honey has a citrus scent.

Honey is Allah’s gift to humans. No medicine can ever equal its cure and benefits. If you’ve not tasted honey yet, now is the perfect time to benefit from it. Firm faith is indispensable in the commandments of the Qur’an and “Sahib al Qur’an.” It is highly beneficial to recite prayers before and after taking honey to cure any disease. If we judge with full justice, the divine commandments are sweet to the taste, sweeter even than honey.

Dr. Qazi Shaikh Abbas Borhany is an attorney at law in Karachi, Pakistan and a member of Pakistan’s Ulama Council.

(1) Bees & the Hidden Miracles of Honey, Dr. Monzur Ahmed, MRCP (UK), M.D. Muslim Technologist, November 1990.

(2)Topical honey for diabetic foot ulcers, Jennifer J. Eddy, M.D., Assistant Professor of Family Medicine, University of Wisconsin Medical School, 617 W. Claremont Ave., Eau Claire, Wis. 54703.

(3)Effects of topical honey on post-operative wound infections due to gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria following Caesarean sections and hysterectomies, N.S. Al-Waili, K.Y. Sallom. European Journal of Medical Research, 1999, Vol. 26, pp. 126-30.

(4)Using honey as a dressing for infected skin lesions, C. Dunford, et al. Nursing Times, 2000, Vol. 96, pp. 7-9.

(5)The Curative Properties of Honey and Bee Venom, N. Yoirish. New Glide Publications (US), 1977, pp. 46-54.

(6)The Antibacterial Effects of Honey: Medical Fact or Fiction? J. McCarthy. American Bee Journal, May 1995.

Urban Forest

If you are tired of looking at rigid building designs, this post is surely going to blow you away!

Designing is an art and one rarely envisions such path breaking ideas. This building, modeled by MAD architects will be located in Chonquing, China. Connected by a core cylindrical structure, each floor has been placed a little off the centre, giving the building a unique feel. Abstract floors with full length glass windows make the building look surreal and the balcony gardens only add to its beauty.

The floors are designed to create an illusion of each floating upon another. The model is such that it brings together nature and the urban metropolis thereby creating a masterpiece that would please all!

Take a look.

urban forest - from far away

urban forest - image

urban forest - in the day

urban forest building

urban forest building amongst others

urban forest - similarities

urban forest - building magnificance

urban forest - images from the floors

urban forest - partially

urban forest - inside

urban forest- levels of the building

urban forest- partial view

These were the two proposals for the building before the design above was finalized.

urban forest proposal 1

urban forest proposal 2

[Via] & [Via]

By Andrew Nusca | Nov 25, 2009 | 7 Comments

In a speech at TEDIndia, statistician Hans Rosling predicted the exact date that India and China’s economies will catch up with the U.S. and the U.K.

Background about Rosling: He’s a doctor and professor of global health at Sweden’s Karolinska Institute who previously identified a new paralytic disease induced by hunger in rural Africa. His current work focuses on dispelling common myths about the so-called “developing world.”

A few quoted takeaways from Rosling’s presentation:

“Asia will regain its dominant position as the leading part of the world, as it used to be, over thousands of years…I will [predict] that by trying to predict precisely at what year the average income per person in India, in China, will reach that of the West. And I don’t mean the whole economy, because to grow an economy of India to the size of U.K., that’s a piece of cake, with one billion people. But I want to see when will the average pay, the money for each person, per month, in India and China, when will that have reached that of U.K. and the United States?”

“People interested in growth are turning their eyes towards Asia.”

“Inequalities in China and India I consider really the big obstacle because to bring the entire population into growth and prosperity is what will create a domestic market, what will avoid social instability, and which will make use of the entire capacity of the population. So, social investments in health, education and infrastructure, and electricity is really what is needed in India and China.”

“What I’m really worried about is war. Will the former rich countries really accept a completely changed world economy, and a shift of power away from where it has been the last 50 to 100 to 150 years, back to Asia? And will Asia be able to handle that new position of being in charge of being the most mighty, and the governors of the world? So, always avoid war, because that always pushes human beings backward. Now if these inequalities, climate and war can be avoided, get ready for a world in equity. Because this is what seems to be happening.”

Rosling’s date on which India and China will economically catch up to the U.S.? July 27, 2048.

Listen to his justifications and see his statistical slides in the full video.

The Cyber Sea

December 8, 2009 | 1 comments

World’s First Internet Undersea Science Station Boots Up [Slide Show]

NEPTUNE Canada, the world’s first regional cabled undersea network, promises to usher in a new era of ocean sciences when it goes online December 8.

By Anne Casselman   

 

wally-benthic-crawler

BENTHIC CRAWLER: Meet Wally the Benthic Crawler, the world’s first Internet-operated deep-sea crawler (here astride a gas hydrate outcrop in Barkley Canyon). Wally was designed by ocean scientists at Jacobs University Bremen in Germany to measure conditions such as temperature, salinity, methane content and sediment characteristics at seafloor depth.
Photo taken by ROPOS[[http://ropos.com]], which is operated by the Canadian Scientific Submersible Facility.

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Thanks to a new, wired undersea observatory, when it comes to exploring the deep blue sea, there will be no more of this tethered buoy business or taking ships out to upload data from brief time snapshots taken by instruments. The NEPTUNE network set to go online Tuesday will stream data from hundreds of undersea instruments and sensors direct from the Pacific Ocean floor to the Internet 24/7, year-round.

The network is expected to produce 50 terabytes of data annually, all of which will inform scientists about everything from earthquake dynamics to the effects of climate change on the water column, and from deep-sea ecosystems to salmon migration.

“It’s revolutionary in that it brings two new components into the ocean environment, which are power and high-bandwidth Internet,” says Project Director Chris Barnes, from the project’s offices at the University of Victoria in British Columbia. “We’re really on the verge of wiring the oceans.”

After the Hubble Space Telescope was lofted into orbit, astronomers gained their clearest view of space yet, one freed from the murky atmosphere. “That has transformed how astronomers do their science in the same way that we believe the cabled networks will be changing the way ocean scientists do their science,” Barnes explains.

“We happen to have on our coast here just a wealth of processes that characterize many many parts of the world’s oceans,” Barnes says. NEPTUNE has several larger scientific themes. Its sensors will monitor earthquake dynamics in greater detail, including tsunamis and crustal processes. (Recently NEPTUNE’s deep-sea instrument array detected a tsunami generated from the magnitude 8.0 Samoan earthquake on September 29.)

NEPTUNE will also study the extensive gas hydrate deposits that lie along the continental margin. No one knows yet whether these gas hydrates represent either a potential energy source or a source of greenhouse gas emissions that could exacerbate global warming, Barnes says. “There’s a real need to understand those processes.”

NEPTUNE’s network will also examine the effect of deep-sea fishing on benthic communities. Humans fish down to about 1,200 meters but the tendency has been to keep fishing deeper and deeper, Barnes says. “We know so little about how life exists down there.”

The “fire hose of information,” as Barnes calls it, will be tailored for public and academic consumption, and its initiation marks the culmination of an $8-million, eight-year undertaking.

Slide Show: The Cyber Sea: World’s First Internet Undersea Science Station Boots Up

Russia’s Air Force 1 Interiors

Mar 9th 2009,   

Vladimir Putin flies an Ilyushin 96. A firm named Damonite did the re-design of the interiors and by the looks of it, maybe Midas had a hand? It is hard to find a thing that does not have a touch of gold on it.

russian plane

russian air force 1

russian royalty

putin's plane

vladimir putin plane

golden plane interior

golden faucet

imperial

plane

112

122


132

141

Interiors of the Air Force 1

Dec 8th 2009,  

Air Force 1 has always brought with it a certain degree of curiosity and amazement for the laymen. Unless you are a member of the inner circle of the President of the United States, chances are that you would be unable to visit the air-borne office. However, Pete Souza, who is the Chief White House photographer for Barack Obama, has managed to click and display a few of the pictures with the president of the United States of America and his team inside, which is what this post is about.

A post on the Russian Air Force 1 will be released. Covered with gold, the Russian office is a treat for the eyes.

air force one

Air Force 1 interiors

Meeting in Air Force 1

Michelle in Air Force 1

Obama in Air Force 1

at the desk - air force 1

airforce-1-interiors

Air force 1 workspace

Enjoying the view outside

On the plane

Interiors

Board room Air Force 1

in the plane

Michelle and Barack

We run a steady stream of cool posts like this at Home Designing and if you like to be notified when we have more such inspiring posts

Rainfall in Coimbatore clicked from Ooty



 

 

 

 

 

Storeowner: A little compassion changed would-be robber’s life – CNN.com

New York (CNN) — Six months ago, a Long Island convenience store owner turned a would-be robbery into an act of compassion. On Wednesday, the shoplifter made amends with a $50 bill and a thank you letter for saving him from a life of crime.

The story began in May 2009, when Mohammad Sohail of Shirley, New York, was closing his Shirley Express convenience store one night. Security camera footage from that evening shows a man wielding a baseball bat barging into the store and demanding money.

Sohail had a rifle ready and quickly aimed it directly in the robber’s face, forcing the man to drop the bat and lay on the ground. Unbeknownst to the man, Sohail never loads his gun.

According to Sohail, the man immediately started to plead with him, tearfully saying, “I’m sorry, I have no food. I have no money. My whole family is hungry. Don’t call the police. Don’t shoot me.”

“When I see him starting crying [those] things, I really feel bad for him,” said Sohail. “I say, oh man, this is something different.”

Sohail made the man pledge never to rob anybody ever again, then gave the man $40 and a loaf bread. Sohail, who is from Pakistan, said the man then wanted to be a Muslim like him, so he recited an Islamic oath and gave the would-be robber the name Nawaz Sharif Zardari.

Sohail went to get some milk, but when he returned the man had fled with the money and food.
Video: Robber returns a favor
RELATED TOPICS

* Robbery
* Suffolk County Police Department
* Islam

Both Mohammad Sohail and Suffolk County Police have no idea who the man is. After the May incident, Sohail explained that he will “absolutely not” be pressing charges, though police are still investigating the case.

Over the past six months, Sohail’s story of sympathy and kindness has inspired many across the country.

The Shirley Express store has received numerous letters of admiration.

“No person has ever moved my spirit the way you did. From your biggest admirer,” one letter says. “Great men are capable of great acts. You are a great American,” another reads.

He has also received several checks with such messages for “a couple hundred dollars” in total, says Sohail. He has made a point to give this money “to the people” by offering free bagels, rolls and coffee in his store every night after 9 o’clock.

But the envelope that arrived on Wednesday came as a surprise. Postmarked November 11 without a return address, it enclosed a $50 bill and a note apparently from the would-be robber.

The typed letter begins, “You change My Life (sic),” and goes on to say that the man is sorry for his actions six months ago.

“At the time I had No money No food on my table No Job, and nothing for my family. I know that it was wrong, but I had know (sic) choice. I needed to feed My family. When You had That gun to my head I was 100% that I was going to die,” reads the letter.

The letter says Sohail’s acts inspired him to become a “True Muslim” and that his life has changed dramatically.

“I’m very happy that somebody got to change his life,” Sohail said. “If he is a maybe criminal, maybe is not anymore. So now he is a good person in this community and I’m very glad for that. He’s staying out of trouble, he’s not in a jail, he’s taking care of his family.”

By TwoCircles.net Staff Correspondent,

Malappuram: The central government is reportedly considering the scopes of Islamic banking in the country in order to invite big investments in the time of economic crisis. Investments including those from Arab countries could be used for infrastructural development and other purposes if the central government begins Islamic banking.

The Intelligence Bureau is reportedly studying the working methods of several private Islamic finance institutions in different states. The IB is reportedly directed to submit a detailed report on the matter.

Investments from the Arab countries have been flowing to countries like the USA due to the power of the dollar. Several American banks had reportedly even started ‘interest-free Islamic windows’ aiming Arab investments. Islamic banks began operation in the UK and other countries too. Islamic banks have been established in countries like Singapore, Thailand, Germany and Japan. But, Arab investors are now hesitant to invest in western countries due to the economic crisis in the US and inconsistency in the value of the dollar. Full-fledged Islamic bank could not be opened in India due to the rules and directives of the Reserve Bank.

It is analysed that India could draw investments from NRIs who don’t expect interest as well Arab investments now in the western countries. Presently, several NRIs have invested in banks on condition that they would not receive any interest. Detailed study on the matter has come in such a circumstance. It is expected that common people too could borrow interest-free loans for education, agriculture, etc if full-fledged Islamic banking comes into effect. However, amendments would have to be made in the rules of the reserve Bank for the purpose.


A deli owner gives a $40 and a loaf of bread to a man who attempted to rob him.

By ERIC LUU
Updated 1:30 PM EST, Thu, Dec 3, 2009

Buzz up! TWITTER

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NBC New York

What can $40 and a loaf of bread do for a man?

Apparently it can turn a crook’s life around and help him get on track.

An ex-thug sent a thank-you note and a $50 bill to the Long Island deli owner who spared his life and saved him from a life of crime.

Back in May, the letter-writer attempted to rob the deli when the owner, Mohammed Sohail, 47, pulled out a rifle. But after the ex-crook pleaded for his life, explaining he was only doing this because his family was down on luck. Sohail spared the thief’s life and gave him $40 and a loaf of bread.

Clerk Thwarts Robbery, Then Gives Thief $40

Clerk Thwarts Robbery, Then Gives Thief $40

WATCH

Clerk Thwarts Robbery, Then Gives Thief $40

“When you do good things for somebody, it comes back to you. I gave him $40 and he sent me back $50. It was a good investment,” Sohail said, laughing.

The anonymous writer apologized to Sohail, his intended target. “First of all I would like to say I am sorry at the time I had [no] money no food on the table no job and nothing for my family,” the ex-crook wrote.

The letter went on to say he “was wrong but I had [no] choice. I needed to feed my family,” comments similar to those he made during the attempted robbery.

“When you had that gun to my head I was 100% that I was going to die,” he wrote.

“Now I have a new child and good job make good money staying out of trouble and taking care of my family. You gave me forty dollars thank you for sparing my life. Because of that you change my life.”

The letter-writer wrote that he initially said he would convert to Islam only because he feared for his life, but he has since followed through, according to the letter.

The Islam convert signed the letter: “Your Muslim Brother.”

“That’s the same guy I gave $40 to,” Sohail told the New York Post. He showcased the letter at his Shirley Express deli yesterday. The typewritten letter had no return address and was mailed on Long Island the week before Thanksgiving.

“I’m really thrilled,” said Sohail. “I’m very happy for that guy, because he is now doing good for the community He has a job and he is a good person. I really feel great. Thank God he’s doing good. He’s got a new baby and he’s not in jail.”

Suffolk County police turned down the Post’s requests for comment until they have reviewed the letter. Detectives investigating the attempted robbery in were unable to track down the suspect after reviewing surveillance camera footage.

First Published: Dec 3, 2009 12:24 PM EST

Buzz up!

By TwoCircles.net News Desk,

New Delhi: Aligarh Muslim University has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the INHolland University of Amsterdam for the exchange of students and academic staff between the two Universities along with joint activities in the area of course development, student internships and higher research.

The MoU was signed when a high power delegation of INHolland University visited AMU to explore the prospects of joint activities in the field of educational and cultural research and training. The visiting delegation comprised of Mr. Cor de Raadt, Dean Faculty of Education, Mrs. Rimke van der Veer, Assistant of Dean, Faculty of Theology, Mr. Rasit Bal, Head of the Department of Islamic Studies, Maulana Mohammed Taheer Wagid Hosain, Imam and Lecturer (Representative of Indian native Muslims) and Aehmed Nazir Khan Joemnan, Member of the Supervisory Road Mosques, Representative of Indian Mosques in Netherlands.



Prof. Saud Alam Qasmi interacting with a delegation of Nederland

“The memorandum of understanding aimed at providing opportunity to the students of both the universities to learn each other’s language, culture, religion and the sociology of home and host countries and to encourage exchange programme between the two universities,” said Dr Rahat Abrar, PRO, AMU.

Prof. Saud Alam Qasmi, Dean, Faculty of Theology interacted with the delegation and signed the Memorandum of Understanding on behalf of the AMU. Prof. Abul Kalam Qasmi, Department of Urdu, Dr. Shakeel Samdani, Coordinator, General Education Centre and Dr. Tauqueer Alam Falahi also remained present in the interactive session. Dr. Shakeel Samdani discussed various aspects of cultural exchange between the two universities.



AMU Vice Chancellor Prof. P. K. Abdul Azis with the members of delegation of Nederland

Later the delegation met with the AMU Vice Chancellor Prof. P. K. Abdul Azis and discussed with him the areas of interest that the two universities may jointly explore for higher learning and research.


By    siliconindia news bureau
Wednesday,28 October 2009, 15:14 hrs

New Delhi: A retired Indian engineer, Chewang Norphel, 76, has built 12 new glaciers already and is racing to create five more before he dies, and by then he hopes to train enough new ‘icemen’ to continue the work he is doing to save the world’s ‘third icecap’ from being transformed into rivers, reports Telegraph.

His race against time is shared by Manmohan Singh, the Indian Prime Minister, who called on the region’s Himalayan nations, including China, Pakistan, Nepal and Bhutan, to constitute a united front to tackle glacial melting.


The Himalayan glaciers, including Kashmir’s Siachen glacier, feed the region’s most important rivers, as they irrigate farm lands in Tibet, Nepal and Bangladesh and throughout the Indian subcontinent. The acceleration in glacial melting has been blamed as the reason for the increase in floods that have destroyed homes and crops.

But Chewang Norphel, the “Iceman of Ladakh”, believes that he has an answer.

By diverting melt water through a network of pipes into artificial lakes in the shaded side of mountain valleys, Norphel states that he has created new glaciers.

A dam or embankment is built to keep the water in, which freezes at night and remains frozen in the absence of direct sunlight. This water remains frozen until March, when the start of summer melts the new glacier and releases the water into the rivers downside.

His glaciers have been able to each store up to one million cubic feet of ice, which in turn can irrigate 200 hectares of farm land. This can make the difference between crop failure and a bumper crop of more than 1,000 tons of wheat for the farmers.

Norphel says that he has seen the effects of global warming on farmland as snows have become thinner on the ground and ice rivers have melted away.

His work has now been recognized by the Indian government, which has given him 16,000 pounds to build five new glaciers. But time is his enemy, he told The Hindustan Times. “I’m planning to train villagers with instruction CDs that I have made, so that I can pass on the knowledge before I die,” he said.

The 87-year-old Raja Valiyathampuran of  Kodungallur in Central Kerala is a descendant of King Cheraman Perumal, the first Indian to embrace Islam in the early 7th century. Talking to him is like talking with history. In the following interview taken by A U Asif  in Ernakulam, he dwells in detail upon his great early ancestor and the oldest mosque (above) of the sub-continent. He also asks North Indians to come to Kerala and see how people of different religions are living here for centuries in an atmosphere of harmony, fraternity and peace.

How do you take your great great grandfather Cheraman Perumal?

Cheraman Perumal was not only a king and my ancestor, but the first Indian to come into the fold of Islam. He was actually the person who gifted Islam and the first ever mosque to the Indian sub-continent. This happened much before the advents of Muhammad bin Qasim and Mahmood Ghaznavi. This shows that Islam didn’t come to India with the sword. 

Is it a fact?

As is well known in Kerala, on a moon-lit night the king while walking on the rooftop of his palace along with the queen saw the moon suddenly splitting into two halves. Later he came to know through the Arab traders that that a prophet called Muhammad had wrought a miracle on that fateful night and sundered the moon before a crowd of dazed spectators. Impressed by this new messenger of God in Arabia, the king set out for the holy land after dividing his kingdom and assigning various territories to local chieftains to ensure smooth governance. In Arabia he met the Prophet and embraced Islam in the presence of Abu Bakr Siddique, who later became the first caliph. Cheraman, who took a Muslim name, Tajuddin, died on his way back to India and was buried on the shore of the Arabian Sea at Salala in the Sultanate of Oman. It is said that he had earlier written letters to the local rulers of Malabar and sent it through his ministers along with Malik bin Dinar, a companion of the Prophet. In the letters he had asked them to “receive the bearers of the letters and treat them well and help them to construct mosques at Kodungallur and elsewhere”. The rulers of Kerala honoured the letters and permitted Malik Bin Dinar and his fellow Arab traders to build mosques in Kerala. The mosque built in the early 7th century at Kodungallur, known as Cheraman Malik Masjid, still exists with its original structure and is said to be the oldest mosque in the sub-continent. It is named after both Cheraman Perumal and Malik bin Dinar. 

Is the mosque intact with its original structure?

Yes, the original structure, including the sanctum sanctorum, remains intact. However, there have been a few extensions in the past. Its front portion is new while the back portion with its sanctum sanctorum, mehrab, mimbar  (pulpit), wooden work on the roof of mimbar  and traditional lamp as well as the ancient ceremonial pond, is still untouched.     

Anything more about Malik bin Dinar?

After the construction of the mosque at Kodungallur, Malik bin Dinar moved towards Mangalore and died at Kasaragod, now in Karnataka, where rests in peace. Interestingly, Cheraman Perumal and Malik bin Dinar are buried on two sides of the Arabian Sea, one at Salala in the Sultanate of Oman and the other at Kasaragod in India. In other words, their graves are interlinked by the waters of the sea. There exist 14 mosques of the same pattern and design from Kodungallur to Mangalore. 

How do you see all this?

We see all this with pride. There is no question of any ill-feeling about Cheraman Perumal. We have high regard for him. He was our patriarch. He embraced Islam but could not come back from Arabia as he fell ill and died on way. I hail from his lineage and have faith in Hinduism. 

How do the general people, particularly Hindus consider Cheraman and his gift in form of the first ever mosque in the Indian sub-continent? 

People belonging to different religions, including Hindus, hold him in high esteem and the mosque built as per his wish as a historical monument. The historic mosque has been visited by numerous dignitaries over the centuries and decades.

President Dr A P J Abdul Kalam was recently here. He was given a warm reception in the mosque. I was also among those present on the occasion.

Unlike north India, there is no communal strife over places of worship in South India?

No, not at all. In this part of land exist India’s oldest places of worship. The first synagogue, the first church, the first mosque and the ancient Bhagwathi and Mahadeva temples are located in this region. We have maintained a record of exemplary communal harmony here. I often wonder about the sudden eruption of controversy over places of worship. Unlike north, people of all faiths have high regard for all places of worship. My suggestion is: People in the north should come to Kerala and see and learn how we belonging to different religions live here for centuries without any communal hatred, animosity and strife. g

[The interviewer is a Delhi-based senior journalist. He can be contacted at au_asif@yahoo.co.in]

Islam In China 2

Uthman,
the 3rd Caliph(the leader of the Islamic nation/s) dispatched a
delegation to China in 29 AH inviting the Emperor to embrace Islam.
Prior to this Islam reached China by way of the Silk Route (land and
sea trading route)

Muslims virtually dominated the import/export business in China during
Sung Dynasty (960 – 1279 CE). The office of Director General of
Shipping was consistently held by a Muslims during this period. During
the Ming Dynasty

(1368 – 1644 CE), a period considered to be the golden age of Islam in
China, Muslims fully integrated into Han society by adopting their name
and some customs while retaining their Islamic mode of dress and
dietary restrictions.

Currently there are 22 million Chinese Muslims according to the 2009 Pew Forum Report.

Click the image to open in full size.

Click the image to open in full size.

Click the image to open in full size.

Xinign Masjid in China

Miracle or hoax? Russians puzzled as phrases from the Koran start appearing ’spontaneously’ on baby’s skin

By
Mail Foreign Service

Last updated at 10:17 PM on 19th October 2009

A baby is sparking a wave of speculation in Russia after phrases from the Koran allegedly began appearing on his skin.

Sayings
from the Muslim holy book are said to appear on nine-month-old Ali
Yakubov’s back, arms, legs and stomach – before apparently fading away
and being replaced with new sayings.

Russian medics claimed they are puzzled over the cause of the marks
on a baby’s skin, which started when the word Allah apparently appeared
on his chin within weeks of his birth.

Human Koran: Sacred sayings from the Muslim holy book apparently appear spontaneously on nine-month-old Ali Yakubov's body

Human Koran: Sacred sayings from the Muslim holy book apparently appear spontaneously on nine-month-old Ali Yakubov’s body

One of the markings on the child's skin, which medics and his family say are genuine apparitions

One of the markings on the child’s skin, which medics and his family say are genuine apparitions

Medics deny that the marks are from someone writing on the child’s skin.

His mother, Madina, said that she and her husband were not religious until the writings started appearing on his skin.

Initially
they did not show anyone the unexplained writings, she said, until
revealing them to their doctor and the imam in their village of Red
October which is in a strongly Muslim region.

Now the boy has
become a focus of Muslim homage in his troubled home province of
Dagestan, close to war-ravaged Chechnya in the south of Russia.

Local
MP Akhmedpasha Amiralaev said: ‘This boy is a pure sign of God. Allah
sent him to Dagestan in order to stop revolts and tension in our
republic.’

The boy’s mother claimed: ‘Normally those signs
appear twice a week – on Mondays and on the nights between Thursdays
and Fridays.

‘Ali always feels bad when it is happening. He cries
and his temperature goes up. It’s impossible to hold him when it’s
happening, his body is actively moving, so we put him into his cradle.
It’s so hard to watch him suffering.’

The phrases regularly replace each other on the baby’s skin, she said.

Local
imam Abdulla has told locals that the Koran forecasts that before the
end of the world, there may be people with its sayings on their bodies.

He said that one sign read: ‘Don’t hide these signs from the people.’

The story has attracted considerable attention from the Russian media and online.

Russian video report:


 

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1221481/Russians-left-puzzled-Koran-phrases-start-appearing-spontaneously-babys-skin.html#ixzz0UhDP1jUM

by Mohamed Khodr

“I, strongly, believe that we as Muslims must blame ourselves for our
state of affairs and avoid the usual scapegoating that “powerful
forces” such as Israel, the E.U., and America hinder our progress or
our justified right to reclaim our lands and resources. Our
“intellectuals” have adopted and imitated the Western mantra that
progress can only come if one abandons religion. Rather than Islam
being the problem, Muslims are the problem and Islam is the solution.”


“On the morrow of a persecution in Europe in which they had been the
victims of the worst atrocities ever known… the Jews’ immediate
reaction to their own experience was to become persecutors in their
turn… In 1948, the Jews knew, from personal experience, what they were
doing; and it was their supreme tragedy that the lessons learnt by them
from their encounter with the Nazi German Gentiles should have been not
to eschew but to initiate some of the evil deeds that the Nazis had
committed against the Jews”

– Famed British Historian Professor Arnold Toynbee

*~*~*~*~*

I wholeheartedly agree with Professor Vasillopulos’s
assessment[1] on the hypocrisy, double standard, and marked subjugation of U.S.
foreign policy vis a vis Palestine to Israel’s interests and its
powerful American lobbies who have unprecedented influence on Congress.
Israel’s very creation arose out of western colonialism, first the
British who had the audacity to gift a land they did not own, a land
under Ottoman rule, to European Jews out of domestic political
expediency, followed by America, a government ruled by corporations and
special interests, in this case the powerful Jewish lobby. Israel’s
ethnic cleansing of 750,000 Palestinians from their land in 1948 -
1949, its total destruction of 450 Palestinian villages, including
mosques and churches, was simply accepted by western colonial powers as
a necessary consequence of an Arab military onslaught on the small
Jewish state, a blatant proven lie as documented by Israel’s own
documents. Tragically Israel’s brilliant propaganda, media campaigns
and effective political public relations to indoctrinate western
population were successful. The Arabs were too incompetent to even
understand the use and power of such instruments. Israel’s prowess to
influence and determine western public opinion has allowed it to defy
all international agreements, laws, U.N. Resolutions, world opinion,
even U.S. policy as evidenced by Obama’s forced backtracking on his
initial call for Israel’s freezing illegal settlements. Obama’s silence
on the Goldstone Report once again shows who runs U.S. foreign policy
in the Middle East.

While Israel can tell the world “No”, the Arabs sadly don’t even know the word exists.

In 1949, President Truman was so outraged (the man responsible for
Israel’s creation) by the mass expulsion of Palestinian refugees he
convened the Lausanne Conference in Switzerland to pressure Israel to
stop its ethnic cleansing and accept UN Resolutions 181 (Partition of
Palestine) and 194 (right of return of Palestinian refugees).

Israel rejected Truman’s proposal while the Arabs accepted it prompting
his envoy Ambassador Mark Etheridge to write Truman: ” Since we gave
Israel birth we are blamed for her belligerence and her arrogance and
for the cold-bloodedness of her attitude toward refugees…Israel must
accept responsibility….her attitude toward refugees is morally
reprehensible….Her position as conqueror demanding more does not make
for peace.”

Since then many U.S. politicians have quietly expressed their anger and
frustration at Israel’s continued Zionist expansionism in the Holy
Land, but none have ever had the courage to stand up to this little
nation while in office that manipulates the most powerful nation on
earth to pay and die for Israel’s wars from Lebanon, to Iraq, Saudi
Arabia, Yemen, the Gulf, Afghanistan, and now the deja vu campaign to
“bomb, bomb, bomb” Iran.

Yet, while we as Arabs and Muslims can reiterate the historical
facts regarding the rogue nation of Israel and its chosen method of
existence that wholly depends on wars, assassinations, terrorism, mass
imprisonment and the wholesale starving siege of Gaza, we should be
honest with ourselves and proclaim that Arab political and economic
incompetence, paralysis, hypocrisy, backbiting, and self sabotage
regarding Palestine is the other side of the coin to decades of
Palestinian suffering. Fifty seven Muslim nations, 1.6 Billion Muslims,
50% of the world’s oil wealth, 60% of its gas wealth, trillions of
dollars of investment in western governments and institutions, are
shamefully paralyzed to face one small nation of 6 million Jews.
Western politics revolves around money, media manipulation, myths,
lies, and propaganda, something Arabs are well accustomed to in their
own nations.

There is no true political, economic, social or media presence for
Arabs and Muslims in America. They are silent, fearful, uneducated and
inexperienced in living and dealing with America’s culture, tend to
herd themselves by ethnic group and fight whether there should be a
barrier between men and women in the mosques, or whether Muslim men and
women can gather for a lecture, yet allow such women to mingle, work,
and go to school with Non-Muslims.

I, strongly, believe that we as Muslims must blame ourselves for our
state of affairs and avoid the usual scapegoating that “powerful
forces” such as Israel, the E.U., and America hinder our progress or
our justified right to reclaim our lands and resources. Our
“intellectuals” have adopted and imitated the Western mantra that
progress can only come if one abandons religion. Rather than Islam
being the problem, Muslims are the problem and Islam is the solution.

That is why as a Muslim I am deeply proud of the Turkish government
and the Turkish people for being the sole Muslim nation to publicly
repudiate Israel on its slaughter in Gaza. While Arab leaders convene
“summits” on Palestine their private agenda is to attack Hamas and
Hezbollah, the only two resistance parties in the entire MidEast
against Israel. The shame and betrayal of Mahmoud Abbas to withdraw
consideration of the Goldstone Report is another hallmark that even
Arabs don’t value Arab blood as long as their chairs are protected.

Muslim wealth is bailing out western economies and not benefiting the
current confused Muslim generation lost between little faith and
overwhelming American cultural influence. Why is our wealth not
building schools, hospitals, roads, better roads, working on finding
precious water, creating manufacturing jobs, building sewage plants,
collecting garbage and using the media to improve our knowledge of
Islam, its morals, and goodly behavior. We build towers, buy luxurious
toys such as planes, cars, and camels, while neglecting the betterment
of human lives. Arab Satellite channels open their programs with
readings from the Quran only to follow up with a music video of barely
dressed women gyrating their bodies to the most obnoxious simplistic
drum beat.

Each of us as Muslims is responsible for learning, implementing, and
protecting our faith. Each of us is responsible for ourselves, our
families, our neighbors, community, nation, and Ummah. Our silent
acceptance of our corrupt till death do we part rulers has led to our
failed societies.

We need a renaissance of intellect, of education, scientific and
analytical and skills, in fact, a rebirth of a highly motivated Ummah
that rejects the status quo and begins the journey to a faith based
enlightenment that can only result in our victory against our own
demoralizing failures and the ultimate victory of salvation in the
hereafter.

I share the pessimism of Muslims around the world that we’re not ripe
for a personal and nationalistic revolution, but what’s the
alternative? Should Muslim blood saturate the earth to replace our
stolen oil before we awaken to our demise?

Either we change, die, or die trying.

Note:

[1]. Obama and Palestine: Predictable disappointment

by Christopher Vasillopulos, October 12, 2009, Today’s Zaman
http://tinyurl.com/ygy8zvt

Source:by courtesy & © 2009 Mohamed Khodr


By Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

 Listen to the Article Powered by

Only a few months into office, President Obama has won the Nobel Peace
Prize. Even the White House was stunned by the announcement. Two other
sitting presidents have won the prize. But Theodore Roosevelt had to
broker a peace agreement to end a war between Russia and Japan to get
his, and Woodrow Wilson had to create the League of Nations. 
Obama got his for a vision of world peace. But it is a vision that has
captivated the world, even if it has not yet produced the desired
results. 
In bestowing the award, the Nobel committee is saying the United States
again is the leader of the world and Obama holds the bully pulpit. The
award should be a catalyst that motivates other world leaders to help
him. 
The committee also is endorsing the American people, who overcame centuries
of slavery and racism to fulfill the ideals of the Declaration of
Independence to elect the first African-American president. Martin
Luther King won a Nobel Peace Prize for his vision of an end to racial
discrimination. Obama almost sounded like Martin Luther King in his
speeches outlining his foreign agenda. He, too, talked about a dream –
to end terrorism, eliminate nuclear weapons, bring peace to the Middle
East, promote democracy and encourage economic development. He said:
Here’s my dream, I will do my part, but I need your help. The world –
and the Nobel committee – responded to that dream. 
From his first day in office, Obama established an ambitious agenda to bring
affordable health care to all Americans while salvaging the nation’s
financial systems and stimulating the economy. 
But he did not ignore international issues. He has transformed US foreign
policy. He committed the United States to end the proliferation of
nuclear weapons and even to ban them altogether. He pushed from Day One
for a Middle East peace agreement. He reached out to America’s
traditional enemies – to jaw-jaw rather war-war, as Winston Churchill
famously said. 
This has caught the attention of people around the world who had come to
fear unilateral US military action. Obama’s speeches to the Muslim
world in Ankara and Cairo were truly historic. Never before had a US
president spoken directly to the Muslim people in the capital of an
Islamic country. 
He displayed a sensitivity to Islam and its central role in Muslim
countries that no other president had acknowledged. And he shattered
the paradigm of a “Clash of Civilizations” – that Islamic countries and
the West were destined to constant warfare. 
People have asked, where are the results? The Middle East is no closer to
peace. Iran continues to defy the US. The war in Afghanistan is
deteriorating. 
It’s way too early yet. I can tell you from my travels around the Muslim
world in the last few months, even in Iran, I have been told that every
Muslim leader wants to work with President Obama. While they must be
constant to their own policies, they need to show their people that
they want to improve relations with the United States. That’s a major
change. 
Even Iran sent its foreign minister to Washington. Anything that can be done to
resolve the conflict between Iran and the United States would have huge
repercussions in resolving the conflicts from Palestine, through Iraq
and Afghanistan to Pakistan. 
The announcement comes just as Obama must decide what to do about
Afghanistan. The president is not rushing to add more troops. He
recognizes that a large part of General Stanley A. McChrystal’s
strategy calls for engaging the Afghans within their own culture and
religion to win their hearts and minds. Peace in Afghanistan can only
come this way. 
The US government recognizes that even with the combined power of NATO it
cannot resolve all of these conflicts. My hopeful expectation is that
the United States will invite other Muslim leaders, who understand the
underlying cultural issues, to help in resolving these conflicts. 
In choosing Obama for the Nobel Prize, the committee chose hope over
despair. They chose the ideals of the United States over cynicism. And
they chose to support a young, visionary leader at a crucial moment in
world history when so much can be gained or so much can be lost. 
 
Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf is
chairman of the Cordoba Initiative, an independent, non-partisan and
multi-national project that seeks to use religion to improve
Muslim-West relations. (www.cordobainitiative.org) He is the author of
“What’s Right with Islam is What’s Right With America.”He wrote this
commentary for
THE DAILY STAR.

Imagine Mecca

 
 
Jamarat Project in Mina / Mecca after Completion
الجمرات في منى بعد ماتكتمل



مكة المكرمة بعد 12 سنة
Mecca after 12 Years


Electric Trains will be started Next Year from Haram to Mina, Mina to Muzdalifa, Muzdalifa to Arafat.
قطار المشاعر

Holy kaaba’a Mataaf Covered with 4 umbrellas


صورة مقترحة لمضلات الصحن






After Three Years   Haram Mosque will Look Like This


A big housing project started near the Holy Haram

World 2 nd Tallest building starting in Jeddah K.S.A

Madena Haram Masque After four Years
حرم المدينة بعد 4 سنوات

 


 
 

 
 
  لا إلـــــه إلا الله محمد رسول الله  
  Al-haram Imams

 
مالا تعرفه عن مشايخ الحرم المكي بالصور
 
يشد
انتباه أي مسلم الحرم الشريف و من ثم أئمة الحرم فلهم شهرة و مكانة عند
قلوب الملايين و لأن الكثير يتسآل عنهم متى يصلي الإمام فلان ؟

  فأردت أن أعرض جدول الأئمة الشبه دائم و نبذه مختصرة عن كل إمام
 

عدد الأئمة الدائمين 6 و هم مقسمون على هذا الفروض الخمسة و لهم واحد احتياط

 
1- صلاة الفجر
الشيخ الدكتور : سعود بن ابراهيم بن محمد آل شريم القحطاني

 
العمر : 40

مكان الميـــلاد: الرياض – شقراء
الوظيفة : قاضي سابقاً + مدرس في الحرم المكي + قسم الدراسات العليا بكلية الشريعة جامعة أم القرى

تاريخ التعيين في الحرم : 1414هـ
يمتلك قطيعاً كبيراً من الإبل يقضي بعض من وقته فيه

 و يهتم بشرح كتب التوحيد و رسائل الإمام محمد بن عبد الوهاب في الحرم المكي
و معروف بالشعر و الكلمة الرقيقة

عدا فجر واحد في الشهر و هو فجر الجمعة يصليه
 
الشيخ الدكتور : صالح بن عبدالله بن محمد آل حميد الخالدي

 
 
العمر : 57

مكان المــيلاد : بريدة
الوظيفة : رئيس مجلس الشورى سابقاً + رئيس مجلس القضاء الأعلى + عضو هيئة كبار العلماء

تاريخ التعيين في الحرم : 1404هـ
و يهتم بتفسير القرآن الكريم .

 
 
2- صلاة الظهر
الشيخ الدكتور : صالح بن محمد آل طالب

 
 
العمر : 33

تاريخ التعيين في الحرم : 1423هـ
 

 
3- صلاة العصر
  الشيخ الدكتور : أسامة بن عبد الله بن عبد الغني خياط

 
العمر: 51

مكان الميـــلاد: مكة المكرمة
الوظيفة : مدرس في الحرم + عضو في مجلس الشورى سابقاً
تاريخ التعيين في الحرم : 1418هـ
معروف بأسلوبه الخطابي القوي الذي يزلزل القلوب

 
 
 
4- صلاة المغرب

  الشيخ الدكتور : عبد الرحمن بن عبد العزيز بن عبد الله آل سديس العنزي
 

 
العمر : 44

مكان الميــــلاد: البكيرية في القصيم
الوظيفة : استاذ مساعد بكلية الشريعة في جامعة ام القرى

تاريخ التعيين في الحرم : 1404هـ اي قبل 22 سنه وعمر الشيخ حينذاك 22 سنه..

 
 
 
5-   صلاة العشاء

  الشيخ : محمد بن عبدالله آل عثمان السبيّل من قضاعة من قحطان
 

 
العمر : 81

مكان الميلاد : البكيرية في القصيم
الوظيفة : الرئيس العام لشئون الحرم المكي والحرم المدني سابقاً  + عضو هيئة كبار العلماء

تاريخ التعيين في الحرم : 1385هـ اي قبل 41 سنه..

معروف بعلمه و فتواه التي تركن إلى الدليل من الكتاب و السنه  أطال الله عمره …آمين
 
يتناوب على صلاة العشاء مع الشيخ السبيل أحيانا الشيخ / صالح بن محمد آل طالب

 
يعد
الشيخ صالح بن حميد هو إمام الإحتياط و ذلك لإنتقاله إلى الرياض إذ يقضي
أغلب الشهر فيها لمسئولية مجلس الشورى و يأتي إلى مكة مره واحده بالشهر
لخطبة الجمعة

 
المؤذنين عددهم 17 مؤذن ، خصص لكل مؤذن فرضين في الأسبوع ، وشيخ المؤذنين هو

 
 الشيخ المؤذن علي أحمد ملا

 
ويبلغ من العمر حوالي 65 سنه
 
القرآن كاملا بمختلف الأصوات

 
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم
 


لا تدعها تقف عندك أنشرها ستنفعك
 
يوم لا ينفع مال ولا بنون فخير ما نشرت جزاك الله خيراً
 
ولا تنسونا ومن ساهم ومن نشرها من صالح دعائكم

 
إنشرها ….. وقل لخلق الله
 
حي على حب وحفظ ونشر
 
قرآن الله
 
أحمد العجمي << http://www.mp3quran.net/ajm.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
 
خالد القحطاني << http://www.mp3quran.net/qht.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
 
سعد الغامدي << http://www.mp3quran.net/s_gmd.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
 
سعود الشريم << http://www.mp3quran.net/shur.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
تحديث
 
صلاح البدير << http://www.mp3quran.net/s_bud.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
تحديث
 
عبدالباسط عبدالصمد << http://www.mp3quran.net/basit.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
 
عبدالرحمن السديس << http://www.mp3quran.net/sds.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
 
عبدالرشيد صوفي << http://www.mp3quran.net/soufi...html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
 
عبدالله عواد الجهني << http://www.mp3quran.net/jhn.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
 
علي الحذيفي << http://www.mp3quran.net/hthfi.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
 
محمد أيوب << http://www.mp3quran.net/ayyub.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
جديد
 
محمد جبريل << http://www.mp3quran.net/jbrl.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
 
محمد صديق المنشاوي << http://www.mp3quran.net/minsh.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
 
محمود خليل الحصري << http://www.mp3quran…net/husr.html >>
 
(المصحف كاملاً)
 
ناصر القطامي << http://www.mp3quran.net/qtm.html >>
 
24 سورة
   

 
اللهم صلي وسلم وبارك وأنعم على سيدنا محمد وآله
 
عدد خلقك ورضا نفسك وزنة عرشك ومداد كلماتك
 

 
 
اللهم صلي على محمد وعلى آل محمد
كما صليت على ابراهيم وعلى آل ابراهيم
وبارك على محمد وعلى آل محمد
كما باركت على ابراهيم وعلى آل ابراهيم
في العالمين إنك حميد مجيد

 

 

[Read Quran for Progressive thinking, protective & peaceful Mind, Polite Behaviour.]
 

 

  Regards,
 Shahab Akhter

Lisbon Treaty Referendum: Is the European Union an example for the Islamic World?

By Yamin Zakaria

Lisbon Treaty established on 13th of December 2007,
is another step towards cementing European unity. Almost all the member
states of the European Union have ratified the treaty through the
parliamentary process. Ireland is the only country to have done this
through a referendum. Once the treaty comes into effect, Europe will
have its first President, Tony Blair looks set to occupy that position.

It all started back in 1957 with the treaty of Rome;
six European countries formed the EEC (European Economic Unity). The
small economic club has now increased to 27 member states, which is
increasingly asserting itself beyond an economic entity. It is only a
matter of time that we may see a call for the creation of a European
army, controlled by the European Parliament, headed by the new
President of Europe. To a spectator, it seems they are moving
inexorably towards a Federal Europe or some kind of super state. Is the
new Roman Empire on the rise again? Many would view this power as a
positive force to counterbalance the negative situation of having a
lone super power.

Only 70 years ago, Europe was at war, and despite
their historical animosity, diversity of language, culture and race,
they are gradually moving forward with greater unification. One can
argue the formation of European unity has been one of the main factors
that have prevented wars breaking out in the continent. This period of
stability is slightly tainted by the limited air raids carried out over
Serbia by the NATO forces. However, this is seen in the fringes of
Europe, and hardly constituted a full-scale war.

Rational justification for unity is self-evident. It
gives more strength by pooling the resources of various nations. A
unified European economy is one of the largest economies in the world
that is competing with the US and the Japanese economy. The Euro looks
set to replace the US Dollar as the dominant currency.

The tide of European unity is opposed by those who
are concerned about sovereignty of their nation. The counter argument
is the old notion of sovereignty of territorial or national integrity
is outdated, has to be modified to conform to the globalised world.
Increasingly the nation’s ability to determine its own economic or
political policy is being limited by the rising tide of globalisation.
Sovereignty is redefined as the ability of a nation to determine the
welfare of its own citizen.

As an example, the European powers have collectively
relinquished some level of political and economical sovereignty for the
increasing collective benefit. Hence, if the UK were to pull out from
the EU it would be more sovereign to determine its economic and
political policies internally, but its influence would be reduced
significantly in the international arena. Consequently, this would harm
the welfare of its own citizen significantly. If it loses power and
influence, in effect it is losing real sovereignty.

Nation states are supposed to be inherently divisive
as each nation seeks to promote its interests. Yet, these European
states have overcome these barriers and forge unity, propelled largely
by the mutual economic benefit, which is reinforced by cultural and
political cohesion brought through education, open debates and
legislation.

Unity does not mean uniformity in every aspect.
Different nations within Europe maintain their cultural identity,
language and religion. In this age, mass participation is a feature of
most society; this implies unity should come from within through mutual
consultation, rather than the imposition of force, like the good old
days of Napoleon. European Union reflects that ethos, and it seems to
be working well.

Many of the Muslim countries and the respective
minorities can learn from European countries like the UK, which has
different nations (Scotland, Wales, Irish) flourishing within. The
minorities retain their cultural identity, there is no ban imposed on
the Celtic or Cornish language or the Scottish Kilt. In fact, the
central government encourages all minorities, including the recent
migrant populations to express their cultural identity; it adds
character to the nation and enriches the culture.

The case for unification of the Islamic world is
even greater. Apart from the rational justification of increasing
material benefit, there is a religious obligation to be unified. Our
values are identical, from Morocco to Indonesia. The cultural
similarities are stronger than our regional differences.

However, the Islamic world is more divided than ever
before, and to blame this entirely on the west is simply being in
denial of our failure. We were colonised argument has passed its sell
by date. Other countries have made considerable progress since
independence, whereas the Muslims countries are constantly falling
behind.

Take the example of India and Pakistan (and
Bangladesh), both countries have gained independence in 1947, yet India
has made far more progression, despite having far greater levels of
disparity in terms of language, race, religion and culture. To blame
the British for the stagnation and corruption that exists within
Pakistan and Bangladesh is ludicrous. Whenever, I have travelled
through these parts of the world, just the experience with the airport
officials seeking bribes tells the story. When you peek under their
cover, you see nepotism and bribery is a way of life. There is no
evidence to suggest the west is dictating or influencing the Muslim
countries to behave in this manner. Why should they?

Those who argue the absence of Caliphate is the
reason for our failure are missing the point. The progression does not
start with the Caliphate but rather Caliphate would embody the result
of our progression, which should begin before that. The existence of
the Caliphate should not be a prerequisite to have the basic level of
civility and some level of progression even within secular
dictatorships or monarchs.

The stable European model and the volatile Islamic
world shows, unity in the modern age has to be achieved gradually
through mutual consultation, rather than the imposition of force. It
has to be cultivated in the minds of people. The various organisations
have failed to create any form of unification, even in terms of close
cooperation between the various Islamic nations. There is deep-seated
racism amongst various racial groups; the Turks see themselves as
superior to Arabs, and the Arabs in turn looks towards the Pakistanis
with disdain, and so on. The example of Iraq clearly illustrates this
fracture, each group based on racial and sectarian motive pursued its
interests, and thus the war was lost even before the US invaded Iraq.

Even the smaller experiment of Arab nationalism has
failed at every level because the same prejudice is replicated amongst
the various Arab states. It is no secret, many of the Arab states are
eager to delete the Palestine issue, rather than collectively confront
Israel. All they can offer is some token economic aid to the
Palestinians after watching the routine Israeli massacres.

The world is moving on, but the Muslims seem to be
stuck in the past literally. You see the endless lectures of what the
Muslims achieved in the 12th century, failing to see the scientific
advances made by the west in the last 500 years have left us behind in
another galaxy!

‘Allah will never change the situation of a people unless they change what is within themselves’ (Quran – 13:11)

Paul Vallely 

From
coffee to cheques and the three-course meal, the Muslim world has given
us many innovations that we take for granted in daily life. As a new
exhibition opens, Paul Vallely nominates 20 of the most influential-
and identifies the men of genius behind them

taken from: http://www.independ ent.co.uk/ news/science/ how-islamic- inventors- changed-the- world-469452. html

1
The story goes that an Arab named Khalid was tending his goats in the
Kaffa region of southern Ethiopia , when he noticed his animals became
livelier after eating a certain berry. He boiled the berries to make
the first coffee. Certainly the first record of the drink is of beans
exported from Ethiopia to Yemen where Sufis drank it to stay awake all
night to pray on special occasions. By the late 15th century it had
arrived in Mecca and Turkey from where it made its way to Venice in
1645. It was brought to England in 1650 by a Turk named Pasqua Rosee
who opened the first coffee house in Lombard Street in the City of
London . The Arabic qahwa became the Turkish kahve then the Italian
caffé and then English coffee.

2
The ancient Greeks thought our eyes emitted rays, like a laser, which
enabled us to see. The first person to realise that light enters the
eye, rather than leaving it, was the 10th-century Muslim mathematician,
astronomer and physicist Ibn al-Haitham. He invented the first pin-hole
camera after noticing the way light came through a hole in window
shutters. The smaller the hole, the better the picture, he worked out,
and set up the first Camera Obscura (from the Arab word qamara for a
dark or private room). He is also credited with being the first man to
shift physics from a philosophical activity to an experimental one.

3
A form of chess was played in ancient India but the game was developed
into the form we know it today in Persia . From there it spread
westward to Europe – where it was introduced by the Moors in Spain in
the 10th century – and eastward as far as Japan . The word rook comes
from the Persian rukh, which means chariot.

4
A thousand years before the Wright brothers a Muslim poet, astronomer,
musician and engineer named Abbas ibn Firnas made several attempts to
construct a flying machine. In 852 he jumped from the minaret of the
Grand Mosque in Cordoba using a loose cloak stiffened with wooden
struts. He hoped to glide like a bird. He didn’t. But the cloak slowed
his fall, creating what is thought to be the first parachute, and
leaving him with only minor injuries. In 875, aged 70, having perfected
a machine of silk and eagles’ feathers he tried again, jumping from a
mountain. He flew to a significant height and stayed aloft for ten
minutes but crashed on landing – concluding, correctly, that it was
because he had not given his device a tail so it would stall on
landing. Baghdad international airport and a crater on the Moon are
named after him.

5 Washing
and bathing are religious requirements for Muslims, which is perhaps
why they perfected the recipe for soap which we still use today. The
ancient Egyptians had soap of a kind, as did the Romans who used it
more as a pomade. But it was the Arabs who combined vegetable oils with
sodium hydroxide and aromatics such as thyme oil. One of the Crusaders’
most striking characteristics, to Arab nostrils, was that they did not
wash. Shampoo was introduced to England by a Muslim who opened
Mahomed’s Indian Vapour Baths on Brighton seafront in 1759 and was
appointed Shampooing Surgeon to Kings George IV and William IV.

6 Distillation,
the means of separating liquids through differences in their boiling
points, was invented around the year 800 by Islam’s foremost scientist,
Jabir ibn Hayyan, who transformed alchemy into chemistry, inventing
many of the basic processes and apparatus still in use today –
liquefaction, crystallisation, distillation, purification, oxidisation,
evaporation and filtration. As well as discovering sulphuric and nitric
acid, he invented the alembic still, giving the world intense rosewater
and other perfumes and alcoholic spirits (although drinking them is
haram, or forbidden, in Islam). Ibn Hayyan emphasised systematic
experimentation and was the founder of modern chemistry.

7
The crank-shaft is a device which translates rotary into linear motion
and is central to much of the machinery in the modern world, not least
the internal combustion engine. One of the most important mechanical
inventions in the history of humankind, it was created by an ingenious
Muslim engineer called al-Jazari to raise water for irrigation. His
1206 Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices shows he also
invented or refined the use of valves and pistons, devised some of the
first mechanical clocks driven by water and weights, and was the father
of robotics. Among his 50 other inventions was the combination lock.

8
Quilting is a method of sewing or tying two layers of cloth with a
layer of insulating material in between. It is not clear whether it was
invented in the Muslim world or whether it was imported there from
India or China . But it certainly came to the West via the Crusaders.
They saw it used by Saracen warriors, who wore straw-filled quilted
canvas shirts instead of armour. As well as a form of protection, it
proved an effective guard against the chafing of the Crusaders’ metal
armour and was an effective form of insulation – so much so that it
became a cottage industry back home in colder climates such as Britain
and Holland .

9
The pointed arch so characteristic of Europe ’s Gothic cathedrals was
an invention borrowed from Islamic architecture. It was much stronger
than the rounded arch used by the Romans and Normans , thus allowing
the building of bigger, higher, more complex and grander buildings.
Other borrowings from Muslim genius included ribbed vaulting, rose
windows and dome-building techniques. Europe ’s castles were also
adapted to copy the Islamic world’s – with arrow slits, battlements, a
barbican and parapets. Square towers and keeps gave way to more easily
defended round ones. Henry V’s castle architect was a Muslim.

10
Many modern surgical instruments are of exactly the same design as
those devised in the 10th century by a Muslim surgeon called
al-Zahrawi. His scalpels, bone saws, forceps, fine scissors for eye
surgery and many of the 200 instruments he devised are recognisable to
a modern surgeon. It was he who discovered that catgut used for
internal stitches dissolves away naturally (a discovery he made when
his monkey ate his lute strings) and that it can be also used to make
medicine capsules. In the 13th century, another Muslim medic named Ibn
Nafis described the circulation of the blood, 300 years before William
Harvey discovered it. Muslims doctors also invented anaesthetics of
opium and alcohol mixes and developed hollow needles to suck cataracts
from eyes in a technique still used today.

11 The
windmill was invented in 634 for a Persian caliph and was used to grind
corn and draw up water for irrigation. In the vast deserts of Arabia ,
when the seasonal streams ran dry, the only source of power was the
wind which blew steadily from one direction for months. Mills had six
or 12 sails covered in fabric or palm leaves. It was 500 years before
the first windmill was seen in Europe .

12 The
technique of inoculation was not invented by Jenner and Pasteur but was
devised in the Muslim world and brought to Europe from Turkey by the
wife of the English ambassador to Istanbul in 1724. Children in Turkey
were vaccinated with cowpox to fight the deadly smallpox at least 50
years before the West discovered it.

13 The
fountain pen was invented for the Sultan of Egypt in 953 after he
demanded a pen which would not stain his hands or clothes. It held ink
in a reservoir and, as with modern pens, fed ink to the nib by a
combination of gravity and capillary action.

14
The system of numbering in use all round the world is probably Indian
in origin but the style of the numerals is Arabic and first appears in
print in the work of the Muslim mathematicians al-Khwarizmi and
al-Kindi around 825. Algebra was named after al-Khwarizmi’s book,
Al-Jabr wa-al-Muqabilah, much of whose contents are still in use. The
work of Muslim maths scholars was imported into Europe 300 years later
by the Italian mathematician Fibonacci. Algorithms and much of the
theory of trigonometry came from the Muslim world. And Al-Kindi’s
discovery of frequency analysis rendered all the codes of the ancient
world soluble and created the basis of modern cryptology.

15 Ali
ibn Nafi, known by his nickname of Ziryab (Blackbird) came from Iraq to
Cordoba in the 9th century and brought with him the concept of the
three-course meal – soup, followed by fish or meat, then fruit and
nuts. He also introduced crystal glasses (which had been invented after
experiments with rock crystal by Abbas ibn Firnas – see No 4).

16 Carpets
were regarded as part of Paradise by medieval Muslims, thanks to their
advanced weaving techniques, new tinctures from Islamic chemistry and
highly developed sense of pattern and arabesque which were the basis of
Islam’s non-representationa l art. In contrast, Europe ’s floors were
distinctly earthly, not to say earthy, until Arabian and Persian
carpets were introduced. In England, as Erasmus recorded, floors were
“covered in rushes, occasionally renewed, but so imperfectly that the
bottom layer is left undisturbed, sometimes for 20 years, harbouring
expectoration, vomiting, the leakage of dogs and men, ale droppings,
scraps of fish, and other abominations not fit to be mentioned”.
Carpets, unsurprisingly, caught on quickly.

17
The modern cheque comes from the Arabic saqq, a written vow to pay for
goods when they were delivered, to avoid money having to be transported
across dangerous terrain. In the 9th century, a Muslim businessman
could cash a cheque in China drawn on his bank in Baghdad .

18
By the 9th century, many Muslim scholars took it for granted that the
Earth was a sphere. The proof, said astronomer Ibn Hazm, “is that the
Sun is always vertical to a particular spot on Earth”. It was 500 years
before that realisation dawned on Galileo. The calculations of Muslim
astronomers were so accurate that in the 9th century they reckoned the
Earth’s circumference to be 40,253.4km – less than 200km out. The
scholar al-Idrisi took a globe depicting the world to the court of King
Roger of Sicily in 1139.

19 Though
the Chinese invented saltpetre gunpowder, and used it in their
fireworks, it was the Arabs who worked out that it could be purified
using potassium nitrate for military use. Muslim incendiary devices
terrified the Crusaders. By the 15th century they had invented both a
rocket, which they called a “self-moving and combusting egg”, and a
torpedo – a self-propelled pear-shaped bomb with a spear at the front
which impaled itself in enemy ships and then blew up.

20 Medieval
Europe had kitchen and herb gardens, but it was the Arabs who developed
the idea of the garden as a place of beauty and meditation. The first
royal pleasure gardens in Europe were opened in 11th-century Muslim
Spain. Flowers which originated in Muslim gardens include the carnation
and the tulip.

www.1001inventions. com.

October 4, 2009 | 11 comments

Mars,
Europa, interstellar nebulae, and now even the moon all seem to be
getting wetter with every observation. But what is it about this simple
hydrogen-oxygen combo that makes it the sine qua non of finding
extraterrestrial life?

By Bruce Lieberman   

 

ELIXIR OF LIFE:
Finding evidence of water in the solar system and beyond is an
important signpost for the presence of life. Liquid water is a solvent,
a medium and a catalyst for certain types of proteins, and essential to
biological processes.
© ISTOCKPHOTO.COM

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When NASA announced last month the finding of water ice in several impact craters on Mars, and either water or hydroxyl widely dispersed on the moon’s
surface, the solar system became a little more familiar because it
seemed a tad more hospitable to life as we know it on Earth.

But is that because the rest of the cosmos has much in common with Earth or vice versa? Water,
the unique molecule that cradles and nurtures life here, is apparently
common and perhaps abundant in the solar system. Observational evidence
suggests that water as a solid, liquid or gas is present at the poles
of Mercury, within the thick clouds of Venus, on Mars, inside asteroids and comets, and on Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. Scientists also have speculated that Jupiter’s moons Europa,
Ganymede and Callisto have vast subsurface oceans of liquid water. They
have also detected through spectroscopy water frost on Pluto’s moon,
Charon. Of course, scientists have known that H2O also seems
to be ubiquitous beyond the solar system. They’ve detected it in one
form or another in interstellar gas and even in such unlikely places as
the atmospheres of stars. Perhaps it shouldn’t be such a revelation.
After all, hydrogen is the most common element in the universe,
followed by helium and oxygen.

“It’s not a surprise that the simple (molecules)
would show up again and again,” says Pamela Conrad, a planetary
scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena and
part of the science team for the next-generation Mars Science
Laboratory headed to the Red Planet in late 2011. “But I think its
discovery on specific planets or other bodies in the solar system has a
significance beyond whether or not we’re surprised that it’s there. It
gives us permission to speculate on whether or not there is other
chemistry that would be relevant to the origin or the sustenance of
life.”

As scientists continue their search for
extraterrestrial water, it’s good to be reminded why they’re actually
looking for it. Just what is it about water, specifically liquid water,
that makes it essential for life? The short answer is that life on
Earth requires it. Photosynthetic life snatches the hydrogen from water
molecules to make sugars. Organisms use water to add rigidity to cells
and transport nutrients. If we don’t drink it, we die.

But it’s the handful of intrinsic—and collectively
unique—properties that explains why water is the elixir of life. Sushil
Atreya, who studies the formation of planets and the evolution of their
atmospheres at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor’s Planetary Science
Laboratory, breaks it down this way: “Liquid water acts as a solvent,
as a medium and as a catalyst for certain types of proteins, and those
are three main things that allow life to flourish,” he says.

Liquid water’s property as a solvent, in which
salts and organic compounds such as amino acids and sugars readily
dissolve, is due to its dipole molecular structure. The oxygen atoms in
water hold their electrons much more strongly than the hydrogen atoms
do, so they accumulate a negative electrical charge. Water’s hydrogen
atoms, bent on the same side of the water molecule, are positively
charged. The resulting structure is the reason why water molecules can
break down such a wide variety of chemical species.

“[Water] is just amazing at being able to make
friends with some piece of a molecule, or some piece of an ion,” JPL’s
Conrad says. “And that property of water is special, because more
things dissolve in it than in other kinds of solvents.” As a result,
water is a great arbiter of chemistry that allows tremendous diversity.
“When you’re trying to make life, you want conditions where you can try
many things…in the hopes that something will take shape,” he says.

Although it’s a superior solvent, water also
provides an ideal medium in which chemical reactions can occur and
nutrients can be easily transported, Atreya says. That includes
enzymes, essential to life processes, which need water in order to do
their job. “They have to be in a certain shape in order for them to act
as catalysts for biochemical reactions…and water allows them to be in a
certain shape,” he says.

A few other properties make water the ideal medium
for life: Water can remain a liquid over a wide range of temperatures,
from zero degree Celsius to 100 degrees C—and even wider if dissolved
salts and gases, such as ammonia, are added. (The range also varies
with pressure.) Also, ice floats. Frozen water is less dense than its
liquid form because “when you make a crystal, arranging atoms in an
ordered repeating pattern, you just can’t stack them very tightly,”
Conrad says. The difference in density between the solid and liquid
states of water means that ice sheets can cover oceans, protecting life
below. If ice sank, water would freeze from the bottom up and we’d live
in a very different world. (Only a handful of other substances other
than water become less dense when frozen. They include silicon, acetic
acid and germanium, among others.)

This particular property of water may make life
viable in places like Europa, Jupiter’s ice-covered moon that
scientists suspect holds a liquid water ocean below. Scientists suspect
that subsurface liquid water may exist on Mars, and water ice has been
seen gushing from beneath the surface of Saturn’s moon, Enceladus. Some scientists, meanwhile, suspect that there may be liquid water beneath the surface of Saturn’s moon Titan.

Another property that shouldn’t be neglected:
water absorbs infrared radiation, so it can store heat and help
organisms maintain temperature. Beneath Europa’s icy shell, a key heat
source may be the moon’s rocky mantle energized by tidal forces exerted
by Jupiter, which could be warming the bottom of an ocean possibly 100
kilometers deep, says Bob Pappalardo, the principal scientist at JPL
for the extended Cassini mission at Saturn who is also preparing for
the next robotic exploration of Europa in the mid- to late-2020s.

It is at those places of chemical disequilibrium,
where water is in contact with Europa’s hot rocky mantle, where life
may thrive. Thermal vents at the bottom of Earth’s oceans, where
strange life forms congregate around “black smokers” that vent
nutrient-rich chemicals, may be analogues for what’s happening on the
Europan ocean floor. Observations of the satellite’s fractured sheath
of ice and magnetometer readings from the Galileo spacecraft both suggest a salty water ocean hidden from view.

“We’re pretty sure that the interior of Europa is
warm and wet today,” Pappalardo says. “I certainly think, when you look
at those ingredients for life, that Europa rises right to the top of
the places to explore.”



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Sep 22, 2009 04:00 PM in Energy & Sustainability |
21 comments

By Mark Fischetti
 

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tesla-roadster“Are you ready?” the young driver beside me asked, as we sat in the two-seat Tesla Roadster
convertible, facing a straight, steep, quarter-mile road that rises
from the water of San Francisco Bay up the headland to the Golden Gate
Bridge. Then he floored the accelerator. I was driven into the
seat-back behind me—and I mean driven, like I was strapped into some
insane amusement park ride—for several full seconds as the car
accelerated and accelerated like a rocket up the climb. Only there was
no screaming flame blasting behind us. There was no engine roaring
either. I was being shot up this road so fast my emergency senses were
on full alert, yet all was eerily quiet.

The Tesla Motors roadster is an all-electric vehicle. Which means zero
emissions. There’s no engine, no fuel tank, just a deep bank of lithium-ion batteries
and a single-gear, direct-drive motor that hits maximum torque
instantly (that’s the beauty of electric propulsion). The car is
blistering fast; the sport edition goes from zero to 60 miles per hour
in 3.7 seconds. Not up on car specs? The Chevy Corvette, with a monster
6.2 liter, eight cylinder, 430 horsepower engine takes 4.6 seconds. The
Tesla accelerates faster than the Porsche 911. Faster than the Ferrari
Spider. The typical sedan takes a good 6.0 seconds or more to reach the
same speed.

The Tesla is not a one-trick pony, however. It has a range of 244 miles on a full charge,
which it has proven in real-world driving tests. It meets all the
standard safety requirements and looks and handles like any other
exotic roadster, particularly the Lotus: it is a low-slung, two-door,
hard-top convertible with tight cockpit seats and little room for much
else. The price tag is $128,500, which sounds like a lot until you
start looking up exotic roadsters, which can cost even more. If you
want to save some money for sushi lunches on the pier, you can buy the
regular Tesla Roadster for $101,500, but you’ll have to wait a full 3.9
seconds to hit 60 miles per hour.

Few people can afford this car, of course, but the pin-drop quiet
Tesla makes a loud statement: an all-electric car can compete with
gasoline roadhogs. And if they can do that, they can certainly make it
as mainstream vehicles. The Roadster is much more than a proof of
technology; it proves to the world that all-electric automobiles are
for real. The company has begun offering a four-door sedan for $49,900
that will be delivered in 2011.

Sales manager Dan Myggen gave me my ride outside the GoingGreen conference
in Sausalito, Calif. All day he took passengers for a spin around the
half-mile circle in front of the Cavallo Point hotel, then up the steep
road to the bridge. Every person who returned climbed out of the car
with a big smile on his or her face. It was impossible not to grin. The
car looks hot and rides hot. It’s a smile machine. Whether Tesla will
succeed commercially remains to be seen, but other startups are making
their own all-electric models, and the major car companies are diving
in too. Whether the standard claim that volume production will bring
down cost proves true also remains to be seen, but I can say with
certainty, now, that if anyone doubts whether all-electric cars can
compete: they can. 

Credit: Courtesey of Tesla Motors

Read More About:

alternative fuels,
electric cars,
Tesla Motors

AGE WELL

Quest for a Long Life Gains Scientific Respect

Published: September 28, 2009

BOSTON — Who would have thought it? The quest for eternal life, or at least prolonged youthfulness, has now migrated from the outer fringes of alternative medicine to the halls of Harvard Medical School.

Robert Spencer for The New York Times

AGE WELL David Sinclair, left, and Christoph Westphal, co-founders of Sitris Pharmaceuticals, in Dr. Sinclair’s laboratory in Cambrdge, Mass. The company develops drugs that mimic resveratrol, a chemical found in some red wines.


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At a conference on aging held here last week, the medical school’s dean, Jeffrey Flier, was to be seen greeting participants who ranged from members of the 120 club (they intend to live at least that long) to devotees of very low calorie diets.

The heavyweight at the conference was Sirtris Pharmaceuticals. The company is developing drugs that mimic resveratrol, a chemical found in some red wines. Resveratrol has been found to activate proteins called sirtuins, from which the company derives its name. Activation of sirtuins is thought to help the body ride out famines.

Mice and rats put on a diet with 30 percent fewer calories can live up to 40 percent longer. They seem to do so by avoiding the usual degenerative diseases of aging and so gain not just longer life but more time in good health.

Sirtris’s researchers think that drugs that activate sirtuins mimic this process, strengthening the body’s resistance to the diseases of aging. The company has developed thousands of small chemical compounds that are far more potent than resveratrol and so can be given in smaller doses.

In mice, sirtuin activators are effective against lung and colon cancer, melanoma, lymphoma, Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and Alzheimer’s disease, said David Sinclair, a Harvard Medical School researcher and co-founder of Sirtris. The drugs reduce inflammation, and if they have the same effects in people, could help combat many diseases that have an inflammatory component, like irritable bowel syndrome and glaucoma.

Any sirtuin activator that averted all these diseases in people would be a rather remarkable drug. So there is considerable interest in how well Sirtris’s drug trials are going.

Sirtris’s senior director of corporate development, Brian Gallagher, said at the conference that four active clinical trials were under way.

SRT-501, the company’s special formulation of resveratrol, is being tested against two cancers, multiple myeloma and colon cancer that has spread to the liver. A chemical mimic of resveratrol, known as SRT-2104, is in a Phase 2 trial for Type 2 diabetes, and in a Phase 1 trial in elderly patients. (Phase 1 trials test for safety, Phase 2 for efficacy.)

Dr. Gallagher said that unpublished tests in mice showed that another chemical mimic, SRT-1720, increased both health and lifespan; after two years, twice as many mice taking the drug were alive compared with the undosed animals. Resveratrol itself has not been shown to increase lifespan in normal mice, although it does so in obese mice, laboratory roundworms and flies.

Sirtris has so far been doubly fortunate. No severe side effects have yet emerged from the clinical trials. The company has also been lucky in having apparently picked the right horse, or at least a good one, in a fast-developing field.

Besides the sirtuins, several other proteins are now known to influence longevity, energy use and the response to caloric restriction. These include the receptors for insulin and for another hormone called IGF-1, and a protein of increasing interest called TOR (“target of rapamycin”). Rapamycin is an antimicrobial that was recently found to extend lifespan significantly, even when given to mice at an advanced age. Since TOR is involved in the response to caloric restriction, rapamycin may extend life through this pathway.

Sirtuins may not be the most important genes for longevity, Dr. Sinclair conceded at the conference, because the pathways controlled by the sirtuins, TOR and the others “all talk to each other, often by feedback loops.”

Many theories of aging attribute senescence to the inexorable buildup of mutations in a person’s DNA. Dr. Sinclair said that in his view “aging can be reversed” because the DNA mutations did not directly cause aging. Rather, they induce the sirtuin molecules that help control the genome to divert to the site of damage. With the sirtuins absent from their usual post, genes are not regulated efficiently, and the cells’ performance degrades. Diversion of the sirtuins should be a reversible process, in Dr. Sinclair’s view, unlike DNA damage, which is not.

“In five or six or seven years,” said Christoph Westphal, Sirtris’s other co-founder, “there will be drugs that prolong longevity.”

But neither Dr. Sinclair nor Dr. Westphal was the most optimistic person at the conference. That status belonged to the English gerontologist Aubrey de Grey, who sports a beard so luxuriant that it is hard to see if he is wearing a tie. His goal is “negligible senescence.”

Some attendees were so convinced of the virtues of less food that they have begun severe diets of various kinds. Cynthia Kenyon, of the University of California, San Francisco, said she had gone on a low-carb diet in 2002 after finding that food with even 2 percent sugar reduced the lifespan of the laboratory roundworms she studies. “Basically I try to steer clear of desserts and starches, though I do eat chocolate,” she said.

Her willowy figure makes her look at least a decade younger than her age. But a practitioner of more severe caloric restriction who was at the conference looked gaunt and a little frail.

Sirtris’s quest for longevity drugs is founded on solid and promising research. But most drugs fail at some stage during trials. So there is no guarantee that any of Sirtris’s candidate compounds will work in people. The first result from a Phase 2 clinical trial is not expected until the end of next year at the earliest.

Meanwhile, it is a pleasant and not wholly unfounded thought that, just possibly, a single drug might combat every degenerative disease of Western civilization.

By
  
IANS

Thursday,24 September 2009, 14:48 hrs

Bangalore: In a
sensational scientific discovery, India’s maiden lunar mission
Chandrayaan-1 has found evidence of water on the moon.

“The moon has distinct signatures of water,” top American scientist Carle Pieters confirmed Thursday.

“The evidence of water molecules on the surface of the moon was found
by the moon mineralogy mapper (M3) of the US-based National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA) on board Chandrayaan-1,” M3 principal
investigator Carle Pieters said in a paper published in the journal
Science.

M3 was one of the 11 scientific instruments on board the lunar
spacecraft that was launched Oct 22, 2008 by the Indian Space Research
Organisation (ISRO). The mission was aborted Aug 30 after Chandrayaan-1
lost radio contact with Earth.

Crediting ISRO for its role in the findings, Pieters said: “If it were
not for them (ISRO), we would not have been able to make this
discovery.”

ISRO chairman G. Madhavan Nair had told the media Wednesday that he
could not yet confirm the presence of water on the moon, but “before
the end of this week, we will let you know”.

However, confirming the finding and terming it a major discovery,
Pieters said the discovery of water on the lunar surface would
reinvigorate studies of the moon and potentially change thinking on how
it originated.

“Hydroxyl, a molecule consisting of one oxygen atom and one hydrogen
atom, were discovered across the entire surface of the Earth’s nearest
celestial neighbour,” claimed Pieters, a planetary geologist at Brown
University in Rhode Island.

Though the abundance of the hydroxyl molecules are not precisely known,
about 1,000 parts per million could be in the lunar soil, the paper
noted.

“Harvesting one ton of the top layer of the moon’s surface will yield
as much as 32 ounces (907 grams) of water,” scientists involved in the
discovery said.

As lead author of the M3 findings, Pieters said more evidence of water was found in the moon’s high latitudes.

“It greatly expands current thinking about where water in any form was presumed to be located,” she pointed out.

The findings give rise to interesting new questions about where the water molecules come from and where they may be going.

Scientists have speculated that water molecules may migrate from
non-polar regions of the moon to the poles, where they are stored as
ice in ultra-frigid pockets of craters that never receive sunlight.

“If the water molecules are as mobile as we think they are — even a
fraction of them — they provide a mechanism for getting water to those
permanently shadowed craters. This opens a whole new avenue (of lunar
research), but we have to understand the physics of it to utilise it,”
Pieters noted.

The NASA payload found water molecules and hydroxyl at diverse areas of
the sunlit region of the moon’s surface, but the water signature
appeared stronger at the moon’s higher latitudes.
Two NASA spacecrafts — the
Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) on the Cassini
spacecraft and the High-Resolution Infrared Imaging Spectrometer on the
EPOXI spacecraft also confirmed the data on the discovery of water by
M3.

“This is a very, very important finding… If somehow water was found
on the moon, you could use that water right out there. You could
extract it,” said Amitabha Ghosh, space scientist at NASA.

“Right now, we don’t know what temperature it is, and whether there is a cost effective way of extracting it,” he added.

Water on Moon

24/09/2009

Chandrayaan-1 spotted water on moon : Report

Bangalore/Chennai:
In a sensational scientific discovery, India’s maiden lunar mission
Chandrayaan-1 has found evidence of water on the moon.

Chandrayaan-1 spotted water on moon: Report

“The moon has distinct signatures of water,” top American scientist Carle Pieters confirmed Thursday.

“The
evidence of water molecules on the surface of the moon was found by the
moon mineralogy mapper (M3) of the US-based National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA) on board Chandrayaan-1,” M3 principal
investigator Carle Pieters said in a paper published in the journal
Science.

M3 was one of the 11 scientific instruments on board the
lunar spacecraft that was launched Oct 22, 2008 by the Indian Space
Research Organisation (ISRO). The mission was aborted Aug 30 after
Chandrayaan-1 lost radio contact with Earth.

Crediting ISRO for
its role in the findings, Pieters said: “If it were not for them
(ISRO), we would not have been able to make this discovery.”

ISRO
chairman G. Madhavan Nair had told the media Wednesday that he could
not yet confirm the presence of water on the moon, but “before the end
of this week, we will let you know”.

However, confirming the
finding and terming it a major discovery, Pieters said the discovery of
water on the lunar surface would reinvigorate studies of the moon and
potentially change thinking on how it originated.

Chandrayaan-1 spotted water on moon: Report

“Hydroxyl,
a molecule consisting of one oxygen atom and one hydrogen atom, were
discovered across the entire surface of the Earth’s nearest celestial
neighbour,” claimed Pieters, a planetary geologist at Brown University
in Rhode Island.

Though the abundance of the hydroxyl molecules
are not precisely known, about 1,000 parts per million could be in the
lunar soil, the paper noted.

“Harvesting one ton of the top layer
of the moon’s surface will yield as much as 32 ounces (907 grams) of
water,” scientists involved in the discovery said.

As lead author of the M3 findings, Pieters said more evidence of water was found in the moon’s high latitudes.

“It greatly expands current thinking about where water in any form was presumed to be located,” she pointed out.

The findings give rise to interesting new questions about where the water molecules come from and where they may be going.

Scientists
have speculated that water molecules may migrate from non-polar regions
of the moon to the poles, where they are stored as ice in ultra-frigid
pockets of craters that never receive sunlight.

Chandrayaan-1 spotted water on moon: Report

“If
the water molecules are as mobile as we think they are — even a
fraction of them — they provide a mechanism for getting water to those
permanently shadowed craters. This opens a whole new avenue (of lunar
research), but we have to understand the physics of it to utilise it,”
Pieters noted.

The NASA payload found water molecules and
hydroxyl at diverse areas of the sunlit region of the moon’s surface,
but the water signature appeared stronger at the moon’s higher
latitudes.

Two NASA spacecrafts — the Visual and Infrared
Mapping Spectrometer (VIMS) on the Cassini spacecraft and the
High-Resolution Infrared Imaging Spectrometer on the EPOXI spacecraft
also confirmed the data on the discovery of water by M3.

“This
is a very, very important finding… If somehow water was found on the
moon, you could use that water right out there. You could extract it,”
said Amitabha Ghosh, space scientist at NASA.

“Right now, we don’t know what temperature it is, and whether there is a cost effective way of extracting it,” he added.

Source: IANS

Islam and Education

Tuesday, September 15, 2009


Islam and Education

Islam is the religion of peace, and it is one of the most sacred and trustworthy religions and in Islam to seek knowledge is a sacred duty, it is obligatory on every Muslim, male and female. The first word revealed of the Qur’an was “Iqra” READ! Seek knowledge! Educate yourselves! Be educated.

This importance of education is basically for two reasons. Education makes man a right thinker. Without education, no one can think properly in an appropriate context you. It tells man how to think and how to make decision. The second reason for the importance of education is that only through the attainment of education, man is enabled to receive information from the external world. It is well said that

“Without education, man is as though in a closed room and with education he finds himself in a room with all its windows open towards outside world.”

The reflective book of Holy Quran is so rich in content and meaning that if the history of human thought continues forever, this book is not likely to be read to its end. Every day it conveys a new message to the humanity. Every morning, Quran Recitation gives us new thoughtful ideas and bound us in the boundaries of ethics.

Islamic Education is one of the best systems of education, which makes an ethical groomed person with all the qualities, which he/she should have as a human being. The Western world has created the wrong image of Islam in the world. They don’t know that our teachings are directly given to us from Allah, who is the creator of this world, through our Prophets. The students of an islamic school are well groomed, ethical, educated and best citizens than that of other schools.

The Muslims all over the world are thirsty of acquiring quality education. They know their boundaries and never try to cross it. It is the West, which has created a hype that the Muslim are not in a path of getting proper education. They think that our education teaches us fighting, about weapons, etc., which is so false. This is true that there are certain elements, which force an individual to be on the wrong path, because as we will mould a child, they will be like that, but it doesn’t mean that our religion teaches improperly to us.


1 comments:

IftikharA said…

The demand for Muslim schools comes from parents who want their children a safe environment with an Islamic ethos.Parents see Muslim schools where children can develop their Islamic Identity where they won’t feel stigmatised for being Muslims and they can feel confident about their faith.Muslim schools are working to try to create a bridge between communities. There is a belief among ethnic minority parens that the British schooling
does not adequatly address their cultural needs. Failing to meet this need could result in feeling resentment among a group who already feel excluded. Setting up Muslim school is a defensive response. There are hundreds of state and Church schools where Muslim pupils are in majority. In my opinion, all such schools may be designated as Muslim community schools. There is no place for a non-Muslim child or a teacher in a Muslim school because bilingual Muslim children need bilingual Muslim teachers as role models during their developmental periods.

September 9, 2009 | 6 comments

 

Refurbished Hubble Space Telescope returns new images

CLICK TO ENLARGE + NASA, ESA, and the Hubble SM4 ERO Team

The Butterfly nebula, formally designated NGC 6302, is a planetary nebula roughly 3,800 light-years from the sun. The term planetary nebula is something of a misnomer, which arises from the fact that they are often round and resemble planets in low-resolution observations. But in fact planetary nebulae have nothing to do with planets—they are luminous clouds thrown off by dying stars.

The extended lobes of the Butterfly nebula are only a few thousand years old but were ejected with such high speed from their star that the nebula already spans more than two light-years.

This image of the nebula was released today in a suite of photographs from the newly revitalized Hubble Space Telescope. In a May space shuttle mission to Hubble, spacewalking astronauts completed a slew of repairs and upgrades to the 19-year-old observatory, including replacing the telescope’s workhorse camera with an enhanced successor, the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3). WFC3 captured this look at the Butterfly nebula in July.

America.gov Ramadan

Women's hands painted with henna (AP Images)
American Muslims trace their ancestry to more than 80 countries. America.gov explores the richness of these traditions through the lens of Ramadan.

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Duas For This Ramadan

Ramadan Dua: DAY 1

ALLAH, on this day make my fasts the fasts of those who fast (sincerely), and my standing up in prayer of those who stand up in prayer (obediently), awaken me in it from the sleep of the heedless, and forgive me my sins , O God of the worlds, and forgive me, O one who forgives the sinners.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 2

ALLAH, on this day, take me closer towards Your pleasure, keep me away from Your anger and punishment, grant me the opportunity to recite Your verses (of the Qur’an), by Your mercy, O the most Merciful.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 3

ALLAH, on this day, grant me wisdom and awareness, keep me away from foolishness and pretension, grant me a share in every blessing You send down, by You generosity, O the most Generous.

 

 

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 4

ALLAH, on this day, strengthen me in carrying out Your commands, let me taste the sweetness of Your remembrance, grant me, through Your graciousness, that I give thanks to You. Protect me, with Your protection and cover, O the most discerning of those who see.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 5

ALLAH, on this day, place me among those who seek forgiveness. Place me among Your righteous and obedient servants, and place me among Your close friends, by Your kindness, O the most Merciful.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 6

ALLAH, on this day, do not let me abase myself by incurring Your disobedience, and do not strike me with the whip of Your punishment, keep me away from the causes of Your anger, by and Your power, O the ultimate wish of those who desire.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 7

 

ALLAH, on this day, help me with its fasts and prayers, and keep me away from mistakes and sins of the day, grant me that I remember You continuously through the day, by Your assistance, O the Guide of those who stray.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 8

 

ALLAH, on this day, let me have mercy on the orphans, and feed [the hungry], and spread peace, and keep company with the noble-minded, O the shelter of the hopeful.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 9

 

ALLAH, on this day, grant me a share from Your mercy which is wide, guide me towards Your shining proofs, lead me to Your all encompassing pleasure, by Your love, O the hope of the desirous.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 10

ALLAH, on this day, make me, among those who rely on You, from those who You consider successful, and place me among those who are near to you, by Your favor, O goal of the seekers.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 11

ALLAH, on this day, make me love goodness, and dislike corruption and disobedience, bar me from anger and the fire [of Hell], by Your help, O the helper of those who seek help

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 12

ALLAH, on this day, beautify me with covering and chastity, cover me with the clothes of contentment and chastity, let me adhere to justice and fairness, and keep me safe from all that I fear, by Your protection, O the protector of the frightened.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 13

ALLAH, on this day, purify me from un-cleanliness and dirt, make me patient over events that are decreed, grant me the ability to be pious, and keep company with the good, by Your help, O the beloved of the destitute.

 

 

 

 

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 14

ALLAH, on this day, do not condemn me for slips, make me decrease mistakes and errors, do not make me a target for afflictions and troubles, by Your honor, O the honor of the Muslims.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 15

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 16

ALLAH, on this day, grant me compatibility with the good, keep me away from patching up with the evil, lead me in it, by Your mercy, to the permanent abode, by Your God ship, O the God of the worlds.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 17

ALLAH, on this day, guide me towards righteous actions, fulfill my needs and hopes, O One who does not need explanations nor questions, O One who knows what is in the chests of the (people of the) world. Bless Muhammad and his family, the Pure.

 

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 18

 

ALLAH, on this day, make me love goodness, and dislike corruption and disobedience, bar me from anger and the fire [of Hell], by Your help, O the helper of those who seek help.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 19

ALLAH, on this day, multiply for me its blessings, and ease my path towards its bounties, do not deprive me of the acceptance of its good deeds, O the Guide towards the clear truth.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 20

ALLAH, on this day, open for me the doors of the heavens, and lock the doors of Hell from me, help me to recite the Qur’an, O the One who sends down tranquility into the hearts of believers.

 

 

 

 

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 21

ALLAH, on this day, show me the way to win Your pleasure, do not let Shaytan have a means over me, make Paradise an abode and a resting place for me, O the One who fulfills the requests of the needy.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 22

ALLAH, on this day, open for me the doors of Your Grace, send down on me its blessings, help me towards the causes of Your mercy, and give me a place in the comforts of Paradise, O the one who answers the call of the distressed.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 23

ALLAH, on this day, wash away my sins, purify me from all flaws, examine my heart with (for) the piety of the hearts, O One who overlooks the shortcomings of the sinners.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 24

ALLAH, on this day, I ask You for what pleases You, and I seek refuge in You from what displeases You, I ask You to grant me the opportunity to obey You and not disobey You, O One who is generous with those who ask

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 25

ALLAH, on this day, make me among those who love Your friends, and hate Your enemies, following the way of Your last Prophet, O the Guardian of the hearts of the Prophets.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 26

 

ALLAH, on this day, make my efforts worthy of appreciation, and my sins forgiven, my deeds accepted, my flaws concealed, O the best of those who hear.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 27

ALLAH, on this day, bestow on me the blessings of Laylatul Qadr, change my affairs from (being) difficult to (being) easy, accept my apologies, and decrease for me [my] sins and burdens, O the Compassionate with His righteous servants.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 28

ALLAH, on this day, grant me a share in its nawafil (recommended prayers), honor me by attending to my problems, make closer the means to approach You, from all the means, O One who is not preoccupied by the requests of the beseechers.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 29

O ALLAH, on this day, cover me with Your mercy, grant me in it success and protection, purify my heart from the darkness of false accusations, O the Merciful to His believing servants.

 

Ramadan Dua: DAY 30

O ALLAH, on this day, make my fasts worthy of appreciation and acceptance, according to what pleases You, and pleases the Messenger, the branches being strengthened by the roots, for the sake of our leader, Muhammad, and his purified family. Praise be to ALLAH, the Lord of the worlds.

 

 

Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan held at Newark Airport; claims racial profiling due to Muslim name

Updated Saturday, August 15th 2009, 6:25 PM

Singh/AP

Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan

This never happened to Schwarzenegger.

Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan, who plays a Muslim mistaken for a terrorist in his latest film, says he was racially profiled at Newark Airport and detained for two hours on Friday.

The 43-year-old “Tom Cruise of India” – cited last year by Newsweek as one of the world’s 50 most influential men – was released only after Indian diplomats intervened.

“I was really being hassled, perhaps because of my name being Khan,” the international box office sensation charged Saturday in a text message to reporters.

“These guys wouldn’t let me through.”

Khan, who has appeared in more than 70 films, said he was waiting for his luggage Friday when his name popped up on a computer alert list. Security then pulled him aside.

“Absolutely uncalled for, I think,” Khan said. “I felt angry and humiliated.”

Khan said he endured two hours of interrogation before he was allowed to call the Indian embassy in Washington. An official there vouched for the star, who was then released.

“I was really taken aback,” Khan told an Indian television station. “I did not want to say anything just in case they took everything wrong, because I am a little worried about Americans because they do have this issue when your name is Muslim.”

Officials at U.S. Customs and Border Protection did not answer multiple inquiries Saturday about the case.

The actor insisted he had all the proper paperwork when he was brought to a detention room at the New Jersey airport. But, he said, Khan “is a Muslim name, and I think the name is common on their checklist.”

New Dehli-based U.S. Ambassador Timothy Roemer said officials were trying to “ascertain the facts of the case.”

“Shah Rukh Khan, the actor and global icon, is a very welcome guest in the United States,” Roemer said Saturday. “Many Americans love his films.”

But there were no Bollywood buffs in Newark as Khan came through the airport on his way to Chicago for a celebration of India’s independence day.

“I told them I am a movie star,” Khan said – although the line fell on deaf ears.

He recently signed a deal with Fox Star Studios to finance and distribute his new movie, “My Name is Khan” – the story of a Muslim man mistaken for a terrorist in post-9/11 America.

The incident caused outrage in his homeland, where the Khan-troversy dominated television news.

Last month, Continental Airlines apologized to former Indian President Abdul Kalam for frisking him at New Delhi’s airport.

lmcshane@nydailynews.com

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