Caliph Usman and Mathematics

Caliph Umar established a net-work of Madrassas as a mass scale education program. He was himself a very educated person in Arabic.
In these Madrassas READING and writing of Arabic, its poetry were the main subject. During his time CALIPH USMAN ordered the inclusion of MATHEMATICS as well. The book in which I read this, is very authentic, as to how this thought came to the mind of this great Caliph.

During vacant and pensive moments this question bothered me again and again. However, one day the only possible answer flashed.

In case you have some vacant and pensive moments you can spare, please give a thought, and then we can compare notes.

THERE IS NO HURRY.

I am not writing my point of view, as it may tarnish your view. There is another interesting piece of information from our history, which I will write afterwards.

SEHRA NAWARD

” Revenge Of The Unforgiven” By Paul Krugman

A worth reading article by Nobel Prize winner , Paul Krugman, on US and world economy which is showing the signs of slipping again. He has been persistently arguing to keep the Monetary Policy easy and forgive the mortgages for people who are under water. It may sound unfair to some, but  he argues that there is no other way out. some excerpts from the article; ( F. Sheikh)

What, after all, is our fundamental economic problem? A simplified but broadly correct account of what went wrong goes like this: In the years leading up to the Great Recession, we had an explosion of credit (mainly to the private sector). Old notions of prudence, for both lenders and borrowers, were cast aside; debt levels that would once have been considered deeply unsound became the norm.

Then the music stopped, the money stopped flowing, and everyone began trying to “deleverage,” to reduce the level of debt. For each individual, this was prudent. But my spending is your income and your spending is my income, so when everyone tries to pay down debt at the same time, you get a depressed economy.

So what can be done? Historically, the solution to high levels of debt has often involved writing off and forgiving much of that debt. Sometimes this happens explicitly: In the 1930s F.D.R. helped borrowers refinance with much cheaper mortgages, while in this crisis Iceland is outright canceling a significant part of the debt households ran up during the bubble years. More often, debt relief takes place implicitly, through “financial repression”: government policies hold interest rates down, while inflation erodes the real value of debt.

Why are debtors receiving so little relief? As I said, it’s about righteousness — the sense that any kind of debt forgiveness would involve rewarding bad behavior. In America, the famous Rick Santelli rant that gave birth to the Tea Party wasn’t about taxes or spending — it was a furious denunciation of proposals to help troubled homeowners. In Europe, austerity policies have been driven less by economic analysis than by Germany’s moral indignation over the notion that irresponsible borrowers might not face the full consequences of their actions.

So the policy response to a crisis of excessive debt has, in effect, been a demand that debtors pay off their debts in full. What does history say about that strategy? That’s easy: It doesn’t work. Whatever progress debtors make through suffering and saving is more than offset through depression and deflation. That is, for example, what happened to Britain after World War I, when it tried to pay off its debt with huge budget surpluses while returning to the gold standard: Despite years of sacrifice, it made almost no progress in bringing down the ratio of debt to G.D.P.

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/13/opinion/paul-krugman-how-righteousness-killed-the-world-economy.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=c-column-top-span-region&region=c-column-top-span-region&WT.nav=c-column-top-span-region

 

 

Loneliness

A Poem by Natasha

LONELINESS

 

Loneliness complained
I turned a deaf ear
Loneliness tried to explain
But I know the fears…

 

Loneliness looked into my eyes Quietly
I turned away…
I know the sadness
But what could I possibly say?

 

I too have walked on that barren land
I have heard those echoes
I have seen the darkness
Have longed for a shadow

 

I have suffered through those lonely nights
I have lived those gloomy days
I have faced those empty moments… …
I am still in that maddening maze!

 

Screams fill the air
None can be heard
Something dies each second
But not a single leaf is stirred

 

I know how it is I know the hurt is true

You try to get up and breathe,

but breaths are rare and few..

 

…knowing all, I then offered myself

So quietly we started to walk

On the secluded path, so hazy and cold

We walked together

With no one to hold

 

Natasha