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‘Uttara Kaanda’ book review: Silent voices speak

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'Uttara Kaanda' book review: Silent voices speak

Express News Service
A story is made up of events, but is both more and less than them. While the events may mean multiple things, the story forces them into specific interpretations and discards the rest. SL Bhyrappa deconstructs the classic Indian epic of the Ramayana into events, and back together into a different story in Uttara Kanda—one that focuses on Sita and the other women.

Bhyrappa is a well-known figure in Indian literature, and has never been one to hew to the mainstream. In his dozens of books written over decades, he has created a very individualistic—yet references-backed—vision of Indian spirituality and culture. It takes someone with a deep understanding of the storyteller’s art to notice the flaws in an epic, which is what Bhyrappa has done here.

The book begins with Sita in exile, struggling to manage her twin toddler sons. Her situation is dire, and were it not for her loyal maid with experience of bringing up children, and her sister Urmila, who sends over supplies, she would be worse off still. As she thinks back to her past days, and how she landed up here, we, the readers, begin a unique unseen narration of the entire Ramayana and beyond.

Unique—because, in addition to this being Sita’s viewpoint, it is also told completely in a limited first person. Epics are made easier to swallow by being, in writing terminology, third-person omniscient—the narrator knows everything happening everywhere—but Bhyrappa brings us the true terrors of Sita’s existence by narrowing the narrative. Information often comes to her days, or months later, through sources with their own bias. When Sita does not know what happened between Kaikeyi and Dasharatha, neither do we, until someone tells us. And when Sita is trapped in Raavana’s Ashok Vana, we have no idea of whether Rama knows about her, or whether he plans to do anything about it. And thence, we see that what sounds fair and just for the men in the story, sounds so unfair to the women. They’re expected to follow the conventions despite the whole picture never being made clear to them.

Indeed, none of the men in the cast come off looking good when examined closer. Whether it is Rama, who uses dharma as a crutch rather than an ideal, Sugreeva who lusts after his brother’s wife, or even Dasharatha who makes rash promises driven by lust again. Even Valmiki is a character here, and Bhyrappa points out how Valmiki, when writing his epic, is inclined to focus on the men’s story and end it at a point when things are looking good, instead of including the depressing aftermath.

Bhyrappa makes the story more believable by removing the traces of the supernatural from the tale. Hanuman, now, is a man named after the mythical Hanuman. The golden deer is just a deer and the disguised voice emanating is never explained. The magical bridge to Lanka is now replaced by rocks that were already there. It has the effect of making us look at the characters as more human and less literal Gods. A God may make his wife miserable to satisfy dharma, but how do we feel when a normal man does it?

The translation of the book by Rashmi Terdal is superb, achieving the twin goals of being fluent, and of bringing the native ethos to life. Rewriting epics has been a popular genre in Indian literature, with the regional influences adding extra colour to the plot. In Marathi retellings, for example, family members get called Dada and Mama—here, this is a Kannada version, so Terdal has retained the Anna, Appa, and Thaatha salutations. Characters eat millets and refer to them by Kannada names—navane, ragi, sajje.

This book is further proof of the riches in Indian literature—writers and books—that translation is bringing to new readers. An absorbing, thought-provoking read!

UP Cops: Man held under anti-conversion law, tried to change woman’s religion

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UP Cops: Man held under anti-conversion law, tried to change woman’s religion
By: Express News Service | Lucknow |

December 20, 2020 5:50:32 am
                                            <span itemprop="image" itemscope="" itemtype="https://schema.org/ImageObject">
                                                        <meta itemprop="url" content="https://images.indianexpress.com/2020/12/up-police.jpg"/>
                                                        <meta itemprop="width" content="1200"/>
                                                        <meta itemprop="height" content="667"/>
                                                    </span><span class="custom-caption"> <span class="ie-custom-caption">As per the FIR, the accused, Mohammad Saeed, concealed his identity and introduced himself to the woman, a mother of two, as Sunil Kumar. (Representational)</span></span>A 32-year-old man was arrested on Friday for allegedly coercing a 42-year-old married woman into changing her religion for marriage in Shahjahanpur district. This is the district’s first case registered under the Uttar Pradesh Prohibition of Unlawful Conversion of Religion Ordinance, 2020.

As per the FIR, the accused, Mohammad Saeed, concealed his identity and introduced himself to the woman, a mother of two, as Sunil Kumar.

He is alleged to have threatened her to convert and sexually assaulted her.

The FIR has been registered against Saeed and his family members under IPC sections 147 (rioting), 323 (voluntarily causing hurt), 384 (extortion), 376 (rape) and 506 (criminal intimidation), and sections of the anti-conversion law. Police said they were probing the role of his family members.

Earlier, the woman and her mother accompanied by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and other right-wing organisations reached the police station concerned and got an FIR registered.

“The woman has alleged that the accused came to her contact around four-five years ago. As per the allegations, he introduced himself as Hindu and later established physical relations with her. He used to regularly talk to her over phone. It has also been alleged that her started pressuring her for marriage,” said Shahjahanpur SP (City) Sanjay Kumar. Her husband stays in Mathura.

Talking to the media, the woman alleged that the man, who identified himself as Sunil, had come to her house to rent a room and took her phone number.]

“He started talking to me over phone and with increasing closeness, he started threatening me. He made videos of me and started asking for money. He asked me to transfer my land and house in his name. He physically and mentally abused me. He also threatened me with acid attack,” she alleged.

“He was forcing me to get married after conversion and wanted me to sign a nikahanama. His mother also came to my house and said the same. On December 10, seven-eight of his family members came and asked me to sign the nikahanama. When I started shouting, they started beating me. I informed my family and went to the police,” she claimed.

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Foreign Minister Receives Credentials from New Ambassador of the European Union to Belize

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Foreign Minister Receives Credentials from New Ambassador of the European Union to Belize

Senator the Honourable Eamon Courtenay, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade, and Immigration received copies of the Letter of Credence of the new Ambassador of the European Union to Belize, Her Excellency Marianne Van Steen at a virtual ceremony on December 17, 2020.
Following her presentation, Foreign Minister Courtenay and Ambassador Van Steen held substantive discussions on key areas of Belize-EU relations, including the recently achieved political deal on the new Partnership Agreement between the EU and the Organisation of African, Caribbean, and Pacific States (OACPS), the EU blacklists of non-cooperative tax jurisdictions and AML/CFT, and the Schengen visa waiver.
The EU is one of Belize’s most significant political, development, and trading partners. In his remarks, Minister Courtenay said that the Government of Belize is looking forward to a strong, effective, and efficient partnership with the EU characterized by open and constructive dialogue.
Accompanying the Foreign Minister was Honourable Ramon Cervantes, Minister of State, and Ambassador Amalia Mai, Chief Executive Officer in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade.
 

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Supporters of hardliner Rizieq Shihab clash with Indonesia police – Religion News

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Supporters of hardliner Rizieq Shihab clash with Indonesia police - Religion News

Religious leader recently returned from self-exile after leaving the country in 2017 amid allegations of involvement in a pornography case.

Supporters of firebrand Indonesian Muslim leader Rizieq Shihab have clashed with police during a demonstration in Jakarta, after demanding their spiritual figurehead be released from police detention.

Several hundred protesters had gathered in the capital of the world’s largest Muslim-majority nation on Friday, with scuffles breaking out after police told the group that large gatherings were prohibited amid the pandemic.

“For the safety of our souls … the police and the military will disperse [protesters] and act decisively,” a police officer told protesters, blasting the message through a sound system.

The police have been investigating the controversial scholar for violations of health protocols during the pandemic after large gatherings to mark his return to Indonesia in November after fleeing to Saudi Arabia in 2017.

Indonesia is grappling with the worst coronavirus outbreak in Southeast Asia, averaging more than 6,000 new cases a day this week.

Police deployed thousands on the streets of Jakarta on Friday to guard the protest, with a new requirement for people to present a negative rapid COVID-19 test to enter the capital likely thwarting some supporters from joining the rally.

Rizieq is the leader of the Islamic Defenders’ Front (FPI). His return to Indonesia was marked with events attended by thousands of his followers.

Rizieq had left for Saudi Arabia amid allegations that he had violated the country’s anti-pornography laws by exchanging graphic messages and nude pictures over the messaging app WhatsApp with a woman.

The calls for his release also come after six of the scholar’s bodyguards were shot dead following a clash with police on a highway earlier this month.

The FPI, once notorious for raiding bars and brothels, has become more politically influential in recent years, particularly after helping orchestrate mass rallies against Jakarta’s former Christian governor in 2016 that were the largest in decades.

FM Dendias: European Union’s power of resolution is slow-moving

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FM Dendias: European Union's power of resolution is slow-moving
The European Union’s power of resolution is slow-moving, said Foreign Affairs Minister Nikos Dendias on the conclusions of the most recent European Council summit in Brussels, speaking to Parapolitika newspaper on Saturday.

                <p>The European Council referred to specific sanctions against Turkey's economy and trade sectors, a fact which also points to a potential re-evaluation of the EU-Turkey customs agreement, said the minister. The European Council also mentioned a potential expansion of said sanctions to additional persons and entities, he added.</p><aside id="viral-news" class="links-tracker-container" data-area="Viral"/><p>All this is "a first step," he pointed out, "even though the government never said it suffices."

Commenting on what he called the attitude of some European countries who say that imposing an arms exports embargo to Turkey would undermine NATO’s cohesion, he said that contrary to that belief came the US sanctions against Turkey, one day before the latest European Council meeting, on the premise that its procurement of arms is to the detriment of NATO’s security.

The effect of US sanctions against Turkey will become apparent over time, and is “a loud and clear message.” The last time the US imposed any sanctions against Turkey was in 1974, after the Turkish invasion of Cyprus, noted the minister. This latest decision by the US is a confirmation, a practical realization of what US State Secretary Mike Pompeo had recently said at the NATO summit of foreign ministers, that Turkey is openly undermining the stability and the cohesion of the NATO alliance.

Greece-US relations are at a stage never before reached so successfully, said Dendias, adding that talks on the new strategic cooperation agreement between the two countries are already underway.

“We are looking forward to a deeper involvement of the US in the Eastern Mediterranean region, as this would undoubtedly contribute to regional peace and stability,” he concluded.

Women associations leader calls for religion tolerance for national development

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Women associations leader calls for religion tolerance for national development

The President, Federation of Muslim Women Associations in Nigeria, Mrs Halima Jibril, on Saturday charged religious leaders to promote religion tolerance to engender national development.

Jibril gave the charge in Abuja at the opening of a three-day summit on “’Religious Tolerance in Nigeria’’.

She stressed the need for joint regular inter-religious programmes to foster love and unity among the two major faiths in the country.

She also appealed to religious and faith-based organisations to rise to their obligations and assist the needy, irrespective of religious affiliations.

In his remarks, the Project Officer of Search for Common Ground, an international NGO, Mr Adamu Ephraim, maintained that religion tolerance could be achieved if all leaders promoted peaceful co-existence.

The summit, which had “Advancing Religious Tolerance’’ as its theme, had more than 100 Christian and Muslim leaders in attendance. (NAN)

READ ALSO:  UATH honours 80 COVID-19 frontline healthcare workers

Austrian MEP Names Hungary and Poland as ‘Brexit Suspects’ Inside European Union

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Austrian MEP Names Hungary and Poland as 'Brexit Suspects' Inside European Union

An Austrian MEP has accused Hungary and Poland of harbouring political “Brexit suspects” who sow divisions within the European Union (EU).

Othmar Karas, a member of the conservative European People’s Party (EPP) bloc, made the accusation in a forthright speech to the European Parliament on Friday in which he also attacked the UK for daring to leave the EU.

“We must also learn the consequences from Brexit in the debate over the future of Europe,” he said. “We must learn the lessons from Brexit in the way we deal with one another.

“There are many Brexit suspects amongst us in Hungary and Poland and other member states,” Karas added. “Those who break shared laws and play off the interests of their citizens are not contributing to securing a common future.”

The two former Eastern Bloc nations wrung concessions from Brussels earlier this month when they forced the removal of “rule of law” clauses from the EU’s 2021-27 budget bill by threatening to veto the legislation. That prompted Hungarian-born US billionaire George Soros – a major funder of political NGOs – to accuse the EU of “surrender”.

Both countries have come under attack from EU apparatchiks over their programmes of judicial reform, and have also refused to accept the bloc’s quotas for accepting minimum numbers of asylum seekers during the Mediterranean migrant crisis.

While the Polish and Hungarian governments have not overtly threatened to follow the UK out of the door, several EU countries have significant Eurosceptic movements and parties – even core member states like Italy, the Netherlands, France and Germany. 

Karas is a member of the Austrian People’s Party (ÖVP) of Chancellor Sebastian Kurz – whose government takes a similar anti-immigration stance to Hungary and Poland, and has adopted a so-called “burqa ban” on face coverings in public that is widely seen as targeting Muslim women.

The MEP also laid into British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government – as the clock ticked down to a no-deal Brexit – and attempted to drive a wedge between the Brexiteer PM and the Leave-voting majority.

“Withdrawals do not solve problems,” Karas said. “None of the Brexit promises can be delivered except for withdrawal, and that is a defeat.”

Addressing the ongoing UK-EU talks towards a post-Brexit trade agreement, Karas insisted: “We are are trying to defend the rights and values of the European Union” by demanding Britain follow Brussels’ rules even after the transition period ends on December 31. “We are defending the rights of the citizens, and we are working to ensure fairness,” he claimed. “That is the basis of the negotiations.”
Karas attacked Johnson for seeking a free-trade agreement with no strings attached in the form of ‘regulatory alignment’ and continued European rights to the lion’s share of the catch in the UK’s vast fishing waters. “On the other side of the Channel, unfortunately, what has been asserted is a form of tactics made up of cherry-picking and arrogance and duplicity to their own citizens,” he said.

Dize: Jesus is the reason for the season; swing the pendulum in the direction of love | RELIGION COMMENTARY

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Dize: Jesus is the reason for the season; swing the pendulum in the direction of love | RELIGION COMMENTARY

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Tigray conflict: EU increases humanitarian support by €23.7 million in Ethiopia, Sudan and Kenya

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Tigray conflict: EU increases humanitarian support by €23.7 million in Ethiopia, Sudan and Kenya

European Commission Press release Brussels, 19 Dec 2020 To address the urgent humanitarian crisis linked to the conflict in the Tigray region of Ethiopia, the EU has today increased humanitarian funding for the area by €23.7 million.

European Parliament’s Resolution Amounts to ‘Obsequity’ to Biden: Iran

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European Parliament’s Resolution Amounts to ‘Obsequity’ to Biden: Iran


A senior Iranian official says the anti-Tehran resolution passed by the European Parliament amounts to “kissing up to” US President-elect Joe Biden.

Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, the special aide to Iran’s Parliament speaker, said in a tweet that the resolution is tantamount to the violation of the rights of 80 million Iranians.

“Those behind the killing of hundreds of children suffering from special diseases due to sanctions, and those hosting hypocritical terrorists have no right to talk about human rights and demand the release of spies and dual-nationality murderers of the Iranian scientist,” the top official said in his tweet.

Europe should care about its own interests,” he added.






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