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  • Article | Importance of Unity in Islam

    By: Human Appeal

    Using the power of Unity to change lives 

    There is so much we can gain just by uniting in good. Our Prophet (saw) was a man of unity. He ensured that he spread love and kindness wherever he went, and just through these actions, he attracted millions of people to join the religion of Islam.

    The power of unity is so vast, that just by coming together, we can change lives. We can uplift those who are feeling down and we can create a sense of belonging to those vulnerable and those who feel alone. Here are some ways in how we can attain unity to better ourselves and improve our interactions with others.

    1. Unity teaches us to be selfless

    “None of you will have faith until he loves for his brother what he loves for himself.” [al-Bukhari]

    Quite beautifully, this narration includes both Muslims and non-Muslims in relation to maintaining brotherhood. Imam an-Nawawi comments that here, our Prophet (saw) is directing us about dawah and how a believer should invite a non-believer to Islam just how he loves Islam for himself. He continues, “For this reason, it is recommended to supplicate for the disbeliever to be guided. The meaning of love here is an intention for good and benefit, and this meaning is religious love, not human love.”

    This type of love is therefore, quite unique. Just like how you may invite a friend to your home due to wanting their presence and to host them to the best of your abilities, inviting them to Islam with the same mentality is an example of exposing love to someone due to wanting good for them. This is the essence of unity, bringing together people from all walks of life and making them bond through love and respect.

    2. Knowing that we are like a structure

    Our Prophet (saw) said, “Verily, the believers are like a structure, each part strengthening the other,” and the Prophet clasped his fingers together. [al-Bukhari]

    This hadith highlights the importance of supporting one another during times of need willingly and sincerely. It also involves expressing a sense of joy and pleasure when helping one another, seeing it as an honour to be able to fulfil someone else’s need.

    This strengthens bonds between people. Even if you were to help someone less fortunate, in a completely different country, though you may not know the beneficiary in person, they will naturally have some sort of love for you and make du’a for you for the peace you’ve brought into their life. Attaining unity is therefore, not restricted. And just by viewing the believers as bricks that come together to build a structure, allows us to understand and visualise that so much good can come out of just supporting one another and being aware of each other’s conditions.

    3. Uniting through creating bonds

    Unity is key, but it involves effort from every individual, just how Allah (swt) mentions in the Qur’an,

    “And hold firmly to the rope of Allah all together and do not become divided. And remember the favour of Allah upon you – when you were enemies and He brought your hearts together and you became, by His favour, brothers.” [3:103]

    Our Prophet (saw) was a true inspiration in living the above verse. Being in a leadership position, he faced immense criticism to the point that he was pelted with stones, drenched in dirt and dust, and even his life was put in danger many times. Yet, our Prophet (saw) showed nothing but kindness and respect back to his enemies. He used kindness to change the world and create legacies that continue to live with us today. It was his kindness that made one of his worst enemies, ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab (ra), to be one of his closest friends, a khalifa and one of the ten promised paradise.

    Such is the power of kindness, in which unity can be achieved and love can be spread far and wide.

    4. Unity through giving to Charity

    “The parable of the believers in their affection, mercy, and compassion for each other is that of a body. When any limb aches, the whole body reacts with sleeplessness and fever.” [al-Bukhari]

    The love that a Muslim harbours in his heart should be so sincere that it makes him give towards those in difficulty. He feels the ache of another person and he reacts in the kindest of ways. This brings forth affection, mercy and compassion naturally towards others. In a tough world which holds obstacles of conflict, natural disasters and millions of less fortunate people, it is vital we spread love to unite in goodness. It is in these times that Allah (swt) has commanded us to help those who are in desperate need. It is in these times where we can unite to uplift others and bring good to the world. Through unity, we can make a huge difference.

    Unite with the most vulnerable people in this pandemic – providing water, food, healthcare, education, and livelihood support to people who need support around the globe.

    Through unity, a lot can be achieved. Unity brings people together, creating love, harmony and generosity between them. As believers, we can use unity as a platform to spread kindness to others, as well as an opportunity for our spiritual growth to become closer to Allah (swt).

    So, let’s reflect on the virtues of unity, allowing us to spread sincere kindness to our family, friends, humanity and the precarious world we inhabit. One way in which you can do this, is by donating to Human Appeal’s excellent projects that work towards improving livelihoods and helping to save vulnerable people and those living in poverty. 

    May Allah (swt) allow us to unite in goodness, love and generosity. May He allow us to enlighten those in desperate need with hope and may He maintain love in the bonds we have within our kinship and brotherhood.

  • Covid-19 will end in mid-Sept in India: Health Ministry officials

    New Delhi: When will the coronavirus pandemic end in India? There is no definite answer yet, but senior officials of the Health Ministry predict that the pandemic in India may go in mid-September this year.

    According to Dr Anil Kumar, Deputy Director General (Public Health), Directorate General of Health Services of the Ministry of Health and Family welfare, the pandemic in India will be over in mid-September.

    In his article published in Epidemiology International Journal, Kumar, along with co-author and Deputy Assistant Director General (Leprosy) of Directorate General of Health Services, Health Ministry, Rupali Roy, have predicted that the pandemic would extinguish in India in mid-September.

    Their prediction is based on Bailey’s model where Relative Removal Rate (BMRRR) is considered for reaching a conclusion.

    Speaking to IANS, Dr Kumar said, “There is a well-known model called Bailey’s Model. It is based on Relative Removal Rate which means how many cases are entering the pool and how many are going out of the pool. When the number of infected is equal to the number of removed patients, the coefficient will reach 100% threshold, then this pandemic will be over.”

    In this model, the removal rate is calculated which is the percentage of removed persons in the infected population. Further, a regression analysis has been done to show the linear relationship between the total infection rate and the total recovery rate.

    “This model is applicable on any infectious disease. Whatever you do, you will be reaching 100 per cent one day. The relative removal rate means all those who have got infection will be either cured or dead. when we did the study on May 19, it was 42% but now it is around 50 per cent and in the middle of september, it will be 100 percent,” said Kumar.

    According to this mathematical calculation, taking the rate to higher and higher level is reflection of moving forward in the right direction and success of control measures being taken. The linear regression analysis has been used in this study and it is showing that the linear line is reaching 100 in the middle of September, 2020.

    “So it may be interpreted that at that point of time, the number of the infected will be equal to the number of removed patients, and that’s why the coefficient will reach 100% threshold,” said the study.

    “This is a very good model to support analysis and interpretation of State and District data (whenever the number of cases is high) and it will also help in relevant decision-making in control activities of COVID 19 pandemic,” said the study.

    “This will further help the government to take long-term disease prevention and intervention programs,” it said.

    However Kumar said all the mathematical models are not absolute and it depends upon the quality of data available.

    “All states have different policies in reporting the number of cases. Some are reporting only severe cases, while some are reporting both severe and mild cases. A few states conduct less tests, thus report less cases. Therefore it is very important to report correct data for more accurate results,” said Kumar.

    Talking about the implementation of lockdown in the country, Kumar said the lockdown could have yielded even better results.

    “We could not achieve what we could have. However the idea of lockdown was very good, but due to various reasons, it was not so effective. Lockdown is more of an administrative decision, but the real measure needs to be taken at community level,” Kumar told IANS. “Otherwise, we can not get benefit of it, he added.

    “If you allow transmission to occur and no measures are taken at community level, then it will be very difficult to control the outbreak,” Kumar said.

    When asked what percentage of the population will get the infection in India, Kumar said the study does not predict the number of cases in the country. “No one can predict how much the population will get affected — it depends upon so many things such as, from now on, how people are going to maintain distancing and how public health measures will be taken in future.

    “It also depends upon how different governments are going to act,” Kumar said, adding it is very much possible to prevent so many corona cases from occurring in the country.

    “There should be uniformity in applying public health measures at the community level throughout the country. My model does not suggest the number of cases. I have only predicted when this will be over. The prediction depends upon the surveillance system and quality of data.” (IANS)

  • First death of non-local reported from Kashmir due to Covid-19 infection

    Srinagar: Kashmir reported first death of a non-local today due to Covid-19

    Sources told news agency KNT that a tailor from Kolkatta staying in a rented house in Saraibala area of Srinagar city suffered a heart attack yesterday and was shifted to SMHS Hospital where he succumbed.

    His body was shifted to mortuary and samples were taken which have been found positive.

    Jammu Kashmir has reported 41 deaths so for due to Covid-19 infection among which 36 are from Kashmir and four from Jammu while one is non-local. (KNT)

  • Man arrested for injuring pregnant cow by feeding explosive-mixed eatables in Himachal Pradesh

    The arrest was made after a video footage by cow owner went viral on social media.

    PTI

    A man was arrested in Bilaspur district near Shimla on Saturday on an allegation by the owner of a pregnant cow that he injured the bovine by feeding her some eatables mixed with explosives, said police.

    The incident follows the shocking death of a pregnant elephant who drowned after collapsing in Velliyar river in Palakkad district of Kerala due to starvation and exhaustion. She had been found dead with major injuries in her oral cavities, possibly suffered after eating or having been fed firecrackers-stuffed pineapple.

    The arrest was made after a video footage by cow owner Gurdial Singh, accusing his neighbour Nand Lal Dhiman of Dahad village in Bilaspur district, of being behind injuries to the pregnant animal last month, went viral on social media.

    Bilaspur Superintendent of Police Dewakar Sharma said Nand Lal was arrested on Saturday from his village Dahad.

    Police had visited the crime spot in the village along with a medical team, which examined the cow whose mouth and jaw were found heavily injured, the SP said, adding the cow was given prompt medical aid .

    The wounds appeared to have been inflicted by some explosive material that people in rural areas use to deter animals from damaging their crops, said Mr. Sharma, adding the medical team has collected some samples of the cow’s blood and injured skin near the jaw for further forensic tests.

    The SP said the police had registered a case in this regard on May 26 itself in response to cow owner Gurdial Singh’s complaint dated May 25 that his pregnant cow was grazing in a field at a distance of 20 meters from his house at 8.15 p.m. when he heard an explosion.

    On reaching the explosion site, he (Mr. Singh) found that his cow’s jaw was injured in the explosion, the SP said separately in a letter, apprising the State police chief of the sensitive incident.

    The cow owner had added in his complaint that he suspected his neighbour Nand Lal being behind the mischief, the SP wrote to the Himachal DGP.

    On Gurdial Singh’s complaint, also endorsed by deputy chief of Dahad village panchayat, police had registered a case under Indian Penal Code section 429, involving the mischief of maiming or killing cattle, and other relevant sections of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animal Act, the SP wrote to the state DGP.

    SP Dewakar Sharma also informed the DGP that the cow was given prompt medical aid .

    Days after the incident, the cow also gave birth to a baby calf, he wrote to the DGP.

  • Delhi malls, restaurants & religious places set to open

    PTI

    New Delhi: Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal has announced that malls, restaurants and religious places in Delhi would open from Monday after more than two months since the coronavirus lockdown was imposed, but banquets and hotels would remain closed.

    At an online briefing on Sunday, Kejriwal said hotels and banquets might be converted into hospitals in the coming days to treat the novel coronavirus patients and, therefore, they would remain shut.

    “Malls, restaurants and religious places will be opening from tomorrow in Delhi in accordance with Centre’s guidelines,” he said.

    The Delhi government will implement instructions — like maintaining social distancing and wearing masks — that the Centre and its experts have asked to be taken at these places, Kejriwal said.

    “In view of the rising number of coronavirus cases, we might attach hotels and banquets with hospitals and convert them into hospitals,” he said. “Hotels and banquet halls will not be opened for now.”

    The Centre had said on May 30 that ‘Unlock-1’ would be initiated in the country from June 8 and the coronavirus lockdown would be relaxed to a great extent.

    Kejriwal urged the elderly, who are at a higher risk of contracting the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), to confine themselves in a room and not to interact with anyone in their families in order to protect themselves.

    Delhi has so far registered over 27,500 coronavirus cases, including 761 deaths.

  • 2 J&K districts lose green tags

    PTI

    Jammu: The Jammu and Kashmir administration issued a fresh classification of the districts on Sunday a day ahead of the implementation of the coronavirus lockdown relaxations.

    Kathua and Samba districts in Jammu region were dropped from the list of red zones, while Poonch and Rajouri lost their green tags. The four are now included in the list of orange zones.

    An order issued by Chief Secretary BVR Subrahmanyam said there were nine districts in the red zone — Srinagar, Budgam, Anantnag, Pulwama, Kulgam, Shopian, Baramulla and Kupwara in Kashmir, and Ramban in Jammu.

    Nine districts — Ganderbal and Bandipora in Kashmir, and Jammu, Udhampur, Kathua, Samba, Udhampur, Reasi, Poonch and Rajouri in Jammu region — are in the orange category.

    Doda and Kishtwar districts in the Chenab valley in Jammu region continued to remain under the green list, the order read.

    It said in Kathua district’s Lakhanpur, the gateway to Jammu and Kashmir along Jammu-Pathankot highway, would be a red zone with a 500 metre buffer.

    The Union territory has so far registered 3,467 COVID-19 cases, including 40 deaths.

    The order said the classification of the districts was done for implementing the lockdown relaxations from Monday after a detailed review of the current situation.

  • Indo-Pak armies exchange fire across LoC in Uri

    Srinagar: Indo-Pak armies Sunday exchanged gunfire across the Line of Control at Hajipeer sector in north Kashmir’s Uri.
    An official told news agency KINS that,Pakistani troopers resorted to heavy shelling on Indian Army posts at Hajipeer sector of Uri , which was retaliated effectively.
    An Army official also confirmed to news agency KINS and said “second time in a day Pakistan initiated unprovoked ceasefire violation by firing of small arms and intense mortar shelling along Line of Control in Hajipeer sector. “The Indian army is retaliating befittingly,” he added.
    Locals said that panic gripped in the area when the heavy shelling from both the sides took place.
    A Police official told news agency KINS shelling from both sides is going on, however no loss of life or injury was reported so far.(KINS)

  • Eastern Ladakh standoff: Indian, Chinese armies agree to resolve issue through talks

    PTI

    New Delhi: Indian and Chinese military commanders agreed to peacefully resolve the current border issue in eastern Ladakh in accordance with bilateral pacts as well as the agreement reached between leadership of the two countries, the External Affairs Ministry said on Sunday

    The two sides held high-level military talks on Saturday in an attempt to resolve the month-long bitter standoff in mountainous eastern Ladakh

    “Both sides agreed to peacefully resolve the situation in the border areas in accordance with various bilateral agreements and keeping in view the agreement between the leaders that peace and tranquillity in the India-China border regions is essential for the overall development of bilateral relations, the MEA said in a brief statement

    The military talks took place at the Border Personnel Meeting Point in Maldo on the Chinese side of the Line of Actual Control in Chushul sector

    “Both sides also noted that this year marked the 70th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries and agreed that an early resolution would contribute to the further development of the relationship,” the MEA said

    “Accordingly, the two sides will continue the military and diplomatic engagements to resolve the situation and to ensure peace and tranquillity in the border areas,” it said.

  • Covid-19: Community spread is a reality in Kashmir now, we have to accept it, live with it, says Director SKIMS

    ‘In days ahead, positive cases will surge, we have to take precautions, follow guidelines to minimize transmission, Docs getting infected is a professional hazard’

    Srinagar: As Jammu and Kashmir witnesses highest ever spike in covid cases in past 24 hours with over 440 cases including pregnant women and doctors tested positive for the virus, Director Sher-e-Kashmir Institute of Medical Science (SKIMS) soura, Dr AG Ahanger Sunday disclosed that community spread is a reality in Kashmir and people have to accept it.
    In an exclusive interview with news agency KINS, Dr Ahanger said that Kashmir is facing a community spread of Covid-19 for sure. “This is a reality and we have to accept it and learn to live with it,” the top medico said, after J&K witnessed the highest ever spike in Covid positive cases since the pandemic outbreak in the UT.

    Asked whether the community spread is going to affect more people in the days ahead, he said obviously more people will get exposed to the virus due to the community spread. “What we need to do is to take preventive measures already in public domain put by the government and health experts of Kashmir,” he said.

    Dr Ahanger said that people shouldn’t panic and instead get ready to fight the pandemic. “We have to take precautions to minimize the effect of community spread. Guidelines already in public domain need to be followed in spirit,” he said and reiterated that “we have to learn to live with the virus and at the same time play our bit to minimize its spread.”

    To a query whether relaxations in lockdown will result in more positive cases, Director SKIMS said that the number of cases will rise but at the same time “precautions need to be followed rigorously .”

    “Those who have herd immunity will be able to fight the pandemic once they get affected. People with weak immunity can’t fight the virus and will suffer. So it’s time to boost your immunity by taking the diet used to make the immunity stronger,” Dr Ahanger said.

    On the recovery rate of the patients in Kashmir, he said that it can accurately be analysed once the entire population is tested for the virus. Replying to a query that doctors too were getting infected with the virus, the Director SKIMS said that if somebody doesn’t take precautions and they would obviously fall prey to the virus. “Once preventive measures are taken properly and the gear is used, I don’t think there is any scope of getting infected,” Dr Ahanger said. He, however, said that doctors getting infected with the Covid-19 is a “professional hazard.”

    Pertinently, Covid-19 has widened its ambit in J&K and has recorded 40 deaths besides over 3500 people have been affected with the virus so far. What has added more to the worry is a large number of pregnant women are fast falling prey to this deadly pandemic.(KINS)

  • No COVID-19 case at SKUAST-K Shalimar campus, says VC Professor Nazir

    Srinagar: Vice-Chancellor Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology Kashmir (SKUAST-K) Professor Nazeer Ahmed Sunday said there has been no coronavirus case at SKUAST- Shalimar campus.

    There are social media reports that multiple COVID-19 cases are at SKUAST campus Shalimar.

    “These are all baseless reports. No COVID-19 case has been detected at SKUAST campus Shalimar. Our university is also open and staff also come,” Professor Nazir told news agency KINS.

    He said there is a quarantine centre at the SKUAST campus Shalimar. “But no positive case has been reported at SKUAST-K. There is no truth in these reports,” he added. (KINS)