Yoginder Sikand (born 1967) is the author of several books on
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam> Islam-related issues in
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India> India. He is the editor and primary
writer of Qalandar, a monthly electronic publication covering relations
between Muslims and followers of other religions. Mr. Sikand is a known
Hindu baiter.

Sikand holds a  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master%27s_Degree> Master's
Degree in  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociology> sociology from
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jawaharlal_Nehru_University> Jawaharlal Nehru
University in  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Delhi> New Delhi, and a
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctor_of_Philosophy> PhD in history from the
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_London> University of London. He
currently lives in  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bangalore> Bangalore.


Books


*       The Origins and Development of the Tablighi jam'aat: (1920-2000. A
cross-country comparative study.(2002) New Delhi: Orient Longman. 
*       Sacred Spaces: Exploring Traditions of Shared Faith in India (2003).
New Delhi: Penguin Books. 
*       Muslims in India since 1947: Islamic perspectives on interfaith
relations(2004). London: Routledge Curzon. 
*       Islam, caste, and Dalit-Muslim relations in India (2004). New Delhi:
Global Media Publications. 
*       Bastions of the Believers: Madrasas and Islamic Education in India
(2005). 


External links


*        <http://www.indianmuslims.in/author/yoginder> Yoginder Sikand at
IndianMuslims.in 

 

 

From: Noushad AbdulRazak [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, March 13, 2009 4:10 PM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: {IIG} Madhyamam: A Muslim Media Success Story from Kerala

 

Who is this Yoginder Sikand

I received his article about Hira Centre also

Noushad
 

On 3/11/09, Ahamed Rafeeq <[email protected]> wrote: 

 

http://www.twocircles.net/2009mar09/madhyamam_muslim_media_success_story.htm
l


Madhyamam: A Muslim Media Success Story


By Yoginder Sikand,

Kerala's Muslims, who form roughly a quarter of the state's population, are
among the most literate Muslim communities in India. A major reason for, as
well as a consequence of, the community's high literacy rate is the thriving
Muslim-owned Malayalam press. Today, literally hundreds of magazines,
journals and newspapers are brought out by various Kerala Muslim
organizations. These deal not simply with religion (as in the case of many
north Indian Muslim-owned publications) but with social and political issues
as well. These publications have played a crucial role in promoting social
and political awareness among Kerala's Muslims and in getting Muslim views
and concerns across to fellow Malayali non-Muslims and to the state
authorities and in promoting closer interaction between the various
communities in Kerala.

Set up in 1987 by the Ideal Publications Trust, most of whose members are
affiliated with the Kerala unit of the Jamaat-e Islami, Madhyamam is
regarded as the most successful Muslim-owned daily newspaper in Kerala. It
boasts the third highest circulation among all Malayalam daily newspapers in
the state. Its chief editor O.Abdur Rahman stresses that it is not a
specifically Muslim or an Islamic paper. 'Madhyamam is geared to all
Malayalam readers and takes up general issues, while focusing in particular
on those related to marginalized and minority communities, including Dalits,
Adivasis and Backward Castes, and not just Muslims alone. We see it as the
voice of the voiceless', he states. 'We have been consistently
anti-imperialist, supporting a range of liberation movements and also
bitterly critiquing fascism, extremism in the name of religion and
terrorism', he adds. He describes Madhyamam as 'a value-based paper,
stressing ethics and morals, in contrast to commercial papers, whose sole
motive is profit-making.'


Madhyamam's editorial offices are located in Calicut, the major intellectual
centre for Muslims in Kerala. Currently, it brings out separate editions
from six cities in Kerala-Cochin, Trivandrum, Cannanore, Mallapuram,
Kottayam and Calicut-and two in Karnataka-Bangalore and Mangalore. Separate
Gulf editions, catering to the half million-odd Malayalis living in Arab
countries, come out from Dubai, Bahrain, Kuwait, Doha, Dammam, Riyadh and
Jeddah, making Madhyamam the largest-circulated Malayalam newspaper in the
region. In addition, the Madhyamam Weekly magazine has a circulation of some
25,000. Currently, the entire Madhyamam group has some 1200 staff on its
rolls, including around 500 full-time journalists.

A major challenge that Madhyamam has had to contend with is lack of
sufficient advertisement revenue. Explains Abdur Rahman, 'Newspapers survive
on money from advertisements, but from the very beginning we had decided, as
a matter of policy, to be very selective about the advertisements we
published. No ads showing immodestly-clad women, no ads for banks, alchohol,
fraudulent investments and movies. This is why we had to suffer major
losses, and even now just manage to break even.' A portion of the profits
that the paper generates is diverted to the Madhyamam Health Care Programme,
which provides free medical facilities to poor people, irrespective of
religion and caste in hospitals with which it has a tie-up with. In the last
six years, some 3000 patients have benefited from the Programme at a cost of
3 crore rupees.

A major problem that Muslim-run papers face, Abdur Rahman explains, is the
lack of professionally-qualified journalists. It was to address this concern
that last year the Madhyamam Institute of Journalism was launched. Currently
located in the paper's Calicut office, the Institute offers a one year
diploma in journalism. At present, it has fourteen students-girls and boys,
Muslims and Hindus-on its rolls. The course fee is Rs.20,000. 'This is the
only Muslim-run institution of its kind in Kerala,' says Abdur Rahman. The
course involves considerable hands-on training in Madhyamam itself, and
successful students are likely to be absorbed by the newspaper after they
finish.

What lessons does the successful Madhyamam experiment provide for
Muslim-owned media houses in India? How is it that Madhyamam has made such
bold strides, in contrast to many Muslim-run papers in other parts of the
country? Abdur Rahman insists that for Muslim-owned newspapers in India to
be effective must be broad-based in their appeal and approach, and not
limited just to Muslims alone. 'A Muslim-owned daily newspaper should be
secular, and not confined to simply Muslim community or religious issues,'
he says. 'This is the only way we can present our views and problems to the
wider society. Otherwise, others will not take us seriously and we won't be
able to have any impact outside a narrow Muslim circle. The example of
ghettoized north Indian Urdu papers well illustrates this argument. Because
of our approach, many of our readers are non-Muslims.'

'We do not regularly publish articles on or about religion as such, limiting
ourselves, as any newspaper should, to just news and views about news',
Abdur Rahman elaborates. 'On religious festivals we bring out special
issues, but this is not limited to just Muslim festivals. We do this for
Onam and Vishu-Malayali Hindu festivals-and for Christmas as well.' He
contrasts this ecumenical approach to that of most Muslim-run publications
in other parts of India, which, he laments, 'focus only on Islam alone,
often narrowly defined, and ignore social issues.'

'At the same time,' Abdur Rahman continues, 'this does not mean that a
Muslim daily newspaper should ignore Muslim concerns. What we in Madhyamam
do is to present news as news, and highlight all relevant news, and not just
developments concerned only with Muslims. But we also highlight our own
views about the news in our editorial pages and in the columns to which we
invite specialists to contribute. In this way, Muslim perspectives on
various developments can be articulated. We also allow people to critique us
in our columns. Muslim papers must allow this, and abstain from a one-way
monologue.'

Another advice that Abdur Rahman gives for Muslim-run papers is to invite
non-Muslim writers to contribute their views. 'A number of leading
non-Muslim intellectuals and social activists write for Madhyamam.' To make
for a healthy work environment, he also suggests that Muslim-owned papers
employ non-Muslim professionals too and not make themselves into a
Muslim-only concern. 'In Madhyamam some forty per cent of our journalists
are non-Muslims-Christians, Hindus, Marxists and atheists. And our staff
have their own political leanings and affiliations. Some are pro-Muslim
League, others are with the Congress, and yet others are with the
Communists, but that does not matter as long as they work in a professional
manner,' he says. This openness to others, he remarks, is a hallmark of
Kerala society, where different religious communities share a common culture
and a strong common identity as Malayalis. 'A major drawback of most
Muslim-owned papers', he opines, 'is the lack of professionalism. A
multi-religious and multi-communal workplace can make much of a difference
in this regard.'

Madhyamam has ambitious plans for the future, says Abdur Rahman. These
include a daily English newspaper, with simultaneous editions from Delhi,
Mumbai, Calcutta, Hyderabad, Bangalore and Chennai, a regular television
channel (that would follow the same media policy as Madhyamam), as well as
new editions from some other locations in Kerala. Certainly, then, a novel
experiment that other Muslim media houses could learn much from.

 






 

 


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