Sunday, June 14, 2009
Riaz Makan 2009 FOCUS Hike4Life Challenge in Kyrgyzstan
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
My Supreme Court nominee
This decision affects us all -- and so it must involve us all. I've recorded a special message to personally introduce Judge Sotomayor and explain why I'm so confident she will make an excellent Justice.
Please watch the video, and then pass this note on to friends and family to include them in this historic moment.
Judge Sotomayor has lived the America Dream. Born and raised in a South Bronx housing project, she distinguished herself in academia and then as a hard-charging New York District Attorney.
Judge Sotomayor has gone on to earn bipartisan acclaim as one of America's finest legal minds. As a Supreme Court Justice, she would bring more federal judicial experience to the Supreme Court than any Justice in 100 years. Judge Sotomayor would show fidelity to our Constitution and draw on a common-sense understanding of how the law affects our day-to-day lives.
A nomination for a lifetime appointment to the highest court in the land is one of the most important decisions a President can make. And the discussions that follow will be among the most important we have as a nation. You can begin the conversation today by watching this special message and then passing it on:
http://my.barackobama.com/SupremeCourt
Thank you,
President Barack Obama

Tuesday, May 12, 2009
URGENT - NEED HELP - ASAP
Date: May 11, 2009 2:27:26 PM PDT (CA) Subject: Re: URGENT - NEED HELP - ASAP Dear Friends: We have setup a privately run relief camp for thousands of affectees of Swat operation and we are looking into adding one more. This camp runs out of the Hujra of my Brother in-law in Mardan and is directly supporting thousands of people that are arriving in desperate situation specially women, children, and seniors. My sister who is a clinical psychological is also helping along with many other volunteers and supports. Most urgent items needed are medicine, cloths, food, and shelter. People of Mardan have really revived the example of Ansar-e-Madina and camp organizers have organized shelter for hundreds of affectees in their own houses along with their families. What we can do from our comfort zones? I really do not know the exact answer! We can pray, we can write, and we can contribute money to assist organizers to arrange for food, cloths, shelter, some basic toys for kids, and most importantly necessary medicine. Please Note: Please do not wait for the donors, government promises and American bills. Its time to think not about US but us and help our own people. God help those who help themselves. This displacement is considered among the donor agencies and United Nations as first of its kind in the history of Pakistan and stands second to Rwanda! This is just the start of the crisis. So, please think with love and respect before you contribute. Trust me, if it was a matter of few thousand rupees I would have contributed that myself without asking anyone, but this is a real tragedy and no matter how many charities come and work - it will never be enough. We have a real chance here to contribute directly for the survival and betterment of our daughters, sons, brothers, sisters, mothers, and fathers. I will personally be responsible for your contributions. Please contribute generously ask around other Pakistanies as well. I am waiting for a quick answer from you. This email is written in personal capacity to only Pakistani friends I know. This email is not written to have a debate on the subject. I would leave that for another time. At this time lets contribute if we can or contribute directly to a well established donor agency in your area. It does not matter to me. All I am doing Thanks in advance. May Allah Bless You More. Fee Aman Allah Mehdi Haqeer
Wednesday, May 06, 2009
TENJOOBERRYMUDS
Guest : "Sorry, I thought I dialed room-service."
Guest: "Uh..... Yes, I'd like to order bacon and eggs."
Guest: "Oh, English muffin!!! I've got it! You were saying 'toast'... Fine...Yes, an English muffin will be fine."
Guest: "No, just put the bodder on the side."
RoomService: "Copy?"
"Copy...tea..meel?"
Guest: "Whatever you say."
Sunday, April 26, 2009
Agora Gallery - Tazim Jaffer - Exhibition Announcement
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Reception: Thursday, May 7, 2009, 6-8 pm
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![]() 530 West 25th Street, Chelsea New York Tel 212-226-4151 / Fax 212-966-4380 Agora Gallery / Art Mine / ARTisSpectrum |
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Wednesday, April 01, 2009
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Maisha Furaha - Maarifa Ya Kuanda Mishkaki Asili
Mahitaji
- Nyama nusu kilo
- Papai mbichi
- Tangawizi mbichi
- Limao 2
- Ndizi 3
- Chumvi kiasi
Kuandaa
- Katakata nyama vipande vidogo,nyama iwe nundu tafadhali
- Ponda tangawizi weka kwenye nyama
- Kamulia malimao
- Fefenya chumvi
- Katakata papai na weka kwenye nyama
- Vichanganye na vifunike viache kwa nusu saa
- Washa moto kama unatumia mkaa
- Chomeka nyama kwenye chuma au stick(zipo special kwenye supermarkets)
- Anza kuchoma hadi ziwe ukaa
- Menya ndizi na ziweke motoni zigeuze zikiiva utaona zimekuwa ngumu
- Andaa sahani weka mishkaki yako na ndizi na matango/pilipili au kashumbari kama unapenda
Monday, March 30, 2009
SUPER FOODS - YOGURT

Saturday, March 28, 2009
WOMAN HIT BY TRUCK AS SHE TALKED ON PHONE

The moment before she died, Soraya Nanji, 28, was laughing on her cellphone with a good friend.
"`Oh my God,' I heard her say," her friend, Tylar Bertie, told the Star.
The phone dropped from Nanji's hand as she walked along Front St. just before 10 o'clock Wednesday night. Trucks honked in the background and cars drove by.
"I heard a (bystander) scream," said Bertie, 28, a former roommate. "I thought maybe she fell, dropped her phone."
And Bertie thought her friend would come back on the phone for sure so she could share another funny story. "She was eager to hear the story. I thought she'd call me back."
But that never happened.
Bertie, who was at her parents' home in Richmond Hill at the time, later saw a news flash on TV about a young woman hit by a truck while talking on the phone. She knew it was her friend.
"I called the police ... they were able to I.D. her based on what I said," Bertie said.
"Soraya was on her phone all the time. I can't imagine something like this happening when you do something as routine as this all the time," she said. "She'd walk and talk all the time. It's just so unbelievable."
Nanji had called Bertie to wish her a good flight before Bertie left yesterday for Florida, where she was flying to help her sister Lakeyshia move back to Toronto.
"She was just an amazing, amazing person who always saw the best in people," said Bertie.
At the time of the accident, they had been talking and laughing for about five or 10 minutes. It was about 9:50 p.m. Nanji had been having dinner with another former roommate in the Entertainment District and was walking to the condo she shared with two roommates several blocks west.
Nanji, an administrative assistant in sales and marketing, had worked at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre since July, said her boss David Chisholm, who said his staff was still reeling from the news.
Born in Uganda, Nanji grew up in Vancouver, where she met her current roommates.
She completed a bachelor of administrative studies at York University in 2007.
With files from Paola Loriggio and Michele Henry
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
The Ismaili Equation | BCBusiness
About the exploits and achievements of several former AK School Alumni including Firoz Rasul and Mossadiq Umedaly in BC.
Friday, March 20, 2009
How a kid from Northern Secondary became CNN’s chief business correspondent
WITH NORTH AMERICA mired in a recession, the auto sector flirting with collapse, energy and gas prices fluctuating by the week and the housing market at extreme lows, money is on the minds of North Americans. That's especially the case for North Toronto's Ali Velshi who, as CNN's chief business correspondent, has become a trusted voice during what is for many a stressful time.
Flick to CNN at any point in the day, and you're bound to come across Velshi, 39, recognizable in his trademark three-piece suit, distinctive glasses and bald pate, dissecting the latest market fiasco and explaining how to interpret the news.
But with the increased gravity of the times comes heightened responsibility for the man to whom many turn for advice.
"We've learned in the last four months here at CNN how seriously people take our reporting, how much they depend on it and how much they act on it," he says. Because many viewers don't fully understand the intricacies of the financial system, Velshi says a vital part of his job is converting econobabble into a more digestible form. That's no small task.
"I spend my day running explanations by people," says Velshi. "I'll call up friends or fellow journalists and say, 'Look, this is how I'm thinking of explaining this. Do you get it?' and they'll say yes or no."
That Velshi engages in such a drawn-out process each day suggests he understands the importance of his job, something he underscores in conversation.
"I've gone from thinking about this as an important job to thinking about it as a crucial job. Just like everybody else has to do their part in this economy, I think that our reporting on CNN, my reporting, is important and influential … so we want to be very responsible."
Because economic news is so connected to the national nervous system, however, the way Velshi reports can influence the way his (vast) viewership reacts. Velshi therefore aims to strike a certain balance in the way he addresses a topic.
"What I want to do is make sure I am always conveying the importance of the issue without inciting panic in my viewers and listeners. That's not going to be helpful or useful," he says.
Velshi's commitment to his craft demands long hours. He is often at work by 4 a.m. and not out of the office until 8 p.m. "That's a long day. A short day is if I'm in at 5 a.m. and leave work after my show at 1 p.m.," he says.
But he's not complaining. "It's stimulating. It's an environment where people are really curious, and I get to interact with a lot of people," he says.
In addition to his role as chief business correspondent, Velshi is host of Your $$$$$, CNN's weekend business round-table program; a regular contributor and anchor for Issue #1; and he hosts his own radio show, The Ali Velshi Show.
Of late, discussion on Velshi's shows has centred on the effect the Obama administration will have on the economy.
Velshi thinks that having a knowledgeable team in the White House will give many Americans confidence, which should result in a buoyed market.
But Velshi warns that while an injection of money is needed where that money is applied is of central importance.
"Imagine you're taking penicillin for an infection," he says. "It may not work if you rub it on your palm; it may need to be injected or ingested. We have got to apply this money in the right way to the economy so that it has the desired effect."
As for the inspirational quality of President Obama? Velshi is optimistic but not naive. Obama's message of hope is important for Americans to hear, but equally important is for Obama to take a dispassionate approach to mending the economy.
"I think the average American, the average citizen of the world, wants to know that the president has his finger on the pulse and is going to make decisions that are going to be ultimately good for the economy, the country and the world — more so than his political interests — and I think that's the message we got during his inauguration speech," he says.
Velshi has some ideas of his own on how the average North American can brace for financial difficulties. Velshi's latest book, Gimme My Money Back: Your Guide to Beating the Financial Crisis, outlines a three-step approach to financial survival.
"First, you can only control things you can control," he says. "You can't control the housing crisis; you can't control the credit crisis. But you can control your debt, savings and investments, in that order. So I suggest that they budget and pay off any high-interest debt."
Next, Velshi recommends that his readers save for the possibility of losing a job, which is very conceivable in this environment, he says.
"Ultimately once they've dealt with some degree of their debt and put some money away in an emergency fund, I really think that this environment provides a great opportunity for people to become investors if they're not already," he says.
On paper, screen and radio, Velshi comes across as informed, confident and affable. But it wasn't always the case. Velshi earned his stripes as a business reporter on Toronto's CityPulse and Report on Business Television. In those early days, Velshi had trouble finding his groove.
"Back when I started on television, I was really awkward," says Velshi, who talks in person just as he does on television: quickly, clearly and with energy and enthusiasm. "I've always loved people, but on TV that didn't come naturally. At first it was really rough. If I'd watched myself, I wouldn't have hired myself."
Those days are long gone. Perhaps the secret to Velshi's current-day onscreen ease lies in his eagerness to continually improve his craft and learn as much as he can from his experiences. Such was the case when he was a student at Toronto's Northern Secondary School.
"Northern was a huge school, with about 2,000 students," he says. "It was really fun, like a little metropolis unto itself."
But it was the diversity of the school's student body that made the biggest impression on Velshi.
"I grew up in Toronto in the early '70s when it wasn't the melting pot it is today," says Velshi, who was born in Kenya and whose father, Murad Velshi, was Ontario's first Indian- Canadian member of the legislative assembly. "It was exciting for me to be at a place that gave me the opportunity to learn about other people."
Velshi returned the favour last year, by lending a hand in the reconstruction of Northern's football field, which was in a serious state of disrepair.
Velshi flew to Toronto in the midst of the winter's worst snowstorm, to speak at a fundraiser at the school. The event raised $19,000.
"To me, football at school is an opportunity for people. Northern was a football school, at least when I went there. Without the field, that opportunity is gone," says Velshi. "These days, public schools are feeling the pinch. When I was in school, if a field needed repair, it would just be repaired."
Coming back to Northern Secondary provided a chance for Velshi to return to the city he loves, a luxury that seems to be getting rarer and rarer. "I don't come to Toronto as often as I'd like. I used to come back four times a year, but now it's down to two or three. I'd like it to be more often. My parents are still there, and I'm in touch with my friends and family," he says. "Toronto is in my heart all the time."
– With files from Haig Balian
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Help yourself by helping others
Sunday, March 15, 2009
Monday, March 09, 2009
For the Aga Khan, Buildings Are Bridges
''THE instability that we see around the world, from Afghanistan to Central Europe, is a consequence of the rejection of cultural pluralism,'' said the Aga Khan, a man who knows a great deal about cultural pluralism.
He blames that rejection on the enormous gulf of knowledge between the Islamic and the non-Islamic world, a situation that, he said, leaves him deeply saddened.
It is late September, and the Aga Khan is speaking to an interviewer in a Boston hotel suite, where he has come to introduce the latest brainchild of one of his favorite causes. Called ArchNet, a collaboration among the Aga Khan Trust for Culture, Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, it is billed as the world's largest online resource for the study of Islamic architecture, urban planning and landscape design.
Saturday, March 07, 2009
A Gujarati's Only Wish
A Gujarati having no child, no money, no home and a blind mother, prays to God. God happy with his prayers, grants him only one wish!
Gujarati: Oh God I want my mother to see my wife putting Diamond bangles on my Child's hands in our new mansion!
God: Wow! I still have a lot to learn from these Gujaratis!
Submitted by Mohamed Jamal - AKS Dar Es Salaam
Friday, March 06, 2009
Update: Sad News: Alnasir "Flint" Nathoo has passed away!
"Beautified for mankind is love of the joys (that come) from women and offspring; and stored-up heaps of gold and silver, and horses branded (with their mark), and cattle and land. That is comfort of the life of the world. Allah! With Him is a more excellent abode" (Holy Quran; III:
Thursday, March 05, 2009
Sad News: Alnasir "Flint" Nathoo has passed away!
Wednesday, March 04, 2009
Be like ...
Be like the river in generosity and help
Be like the sun in tenderness and mercy
Be like the night in covering the faults of others
Be like the dead in anger and nervousness
Be like the earth in modesty and humility
Be like the sea in tolerance
Be like your appearance or appear like yourself.
- Mowlana Jalal ud din Rumi
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Monday, February 16, 2009
The Life of Prophet Muhammad -1/6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 1 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 2 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 3 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 4 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 5 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 6 of 6
The Life of Prophet Muhammad - 2/6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 1 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 2 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 3 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 4 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 5 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 6 of 6
The Life of Prophet Muhammad - 3/6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 1 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 2 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 3 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 4 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 5 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 6 of 6
The Life of Prophet Muhammad - 4/6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 1 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 2 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 3 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 4 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 5 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 6 of 6
The Life of Prophet Muhammad - 5/6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 1 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 2 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 3 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 4 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 5 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 6 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - 6/6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 1 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 2 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 3 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 4 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 5 of 6
The Life of the Prophet Muhammad - Part 6 of 6
Biography: Muhammad The Prophet - History Channel
(1 of 6)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZLHUiELhKk&feature=related
(2 of 6)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P9uZJc4O9fo&feature=related
(3 of 6)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5QSNujLW-0&feature=related
(4 of 6)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L3Mtd7qXvxg&feature=related
(5 of 6)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eaprtdtkoXQ&feature=related
(6 of 6)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IDg3OMm2H4&feature=related
The Art of Begging
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Azim Premji on Charlie Rose - FEBRUARY 10, 2009
Tuesday, February 03, 2009
Thursday, January 08, 2009
Mohabbat Hi Na Jo Samjhe
Sadru Mohamed aka Abhi, coscos. (AK School Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania 1968), taught me this song when I was in High School. I must have been in 9th grade. He was my seat mate in class. Its one of the few ghazals I still know and remember. Abhi became an Anesthesiologist and then a businessman. Lives with his family in Chicago. Haven't been in touch lately. Has anyone been in contact with him, or know his whereabouts?