Thursday, August 6, 2009

ALLAMA IQBAL POEM ON RAM



लबरेज़ है शराबे-हक़ीक़त से जामे-हिन्द
सब फ़ल्सफ़ी हैं खित्ता--मग़रिब के रामे हिन्द ।।
ये हिन्दियों के फिक्रे-फ़लक उसका है असर,
रिफ़अत में आस्माँ से भी ऊँचा है बामे-हिन्द
इस देश में हुए हैं हज़ारों मलक सरिश्त,
मशहूर जिसके दम से है दुनिया में नामे-हिन्द
है राम के वजूद पे हिन्दोस्ताँ को नाज़,
अहले-नज़र समझते हैं उसको इमामे-हिन्द
एजाज़ इस चिराग़े-हिदायत का है ,
यहीरोशन तिराज़ सहर ज़माने में शामे-हिन्द
तलवार का धनी था, शुजाअत में फ़र्द था,
पाकीज़गी में, जोशे-मुहब्बत में फ़र्द था
- Dr. ALLAMA IQBAL



Saturday, April 4, 2009

chinese call centre

Caller : Hello, can I speak to Annie Wan!
Operator: Yes, you can speak to me.
Caller : No, I want to speak to Annie Wan !
Operator : Yes I understand you want to speak to anyone. You can speak to me. Who is this?
Caller : I'm Sam Wan . And I need to talk to Annie Wan! It's urgent.
Operator : I know you are someone and you want to talk to anyone ! But what's this urgent matter about?
Caller : Well... just tell my sister Annie Wan that our brother Noe Wan was involved in an accident. Noe Wan got injured and now Noe Wan is being sent to the hospital. Right now , Avery Wan is on his way to the hospital.
Operator: Look, if no one was injured and no one was sent to the hospital, then the accident isn't an urgent matter! You may find this hilarious but I don't have time for this!
Caller: You are so rude! Who are you?
Operator: I'm Saw Ree .
Caller: Yes! You should be sorry . Now give me your name!!
Operator: That's what I said. I'm Saw Ree ...
Caller: O h .......God!! ! !

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Use Google to get Serial No of any Software

Most of the people downloading trial and using it, only after the expiration of trial they try for crack, Serial No, Keygen, Patch....

But many don't known where to get Serial No, Some websites may be infect your system with Trojan horse, Viruses, Ad ware, Spy ware....

So for beginners this is a simply way to find hack with less effort and it saves time to, But make sure you have anti virus activated before trying to get some Serials, Patches to avoid data loss

Just follow the steps as instructed below

1) Go to http://www.google.com
2) type this syntax in search bar " 94FBR"
3) Replace Product name with desired software and leave a space then type 94FBR
4) Press enter, thats it

Now you receive Many pages which contains Serial no, Crack, Patches....

Just make a try, this simple trick works for many people

YOU ARE INDIAN IF :

1. Everything you eat is savored In garlic, onion and tomatoes.
2. You try and reuse gift wrappers, gift boxes, and of course aluminum foil.
3. You try to eject food particles from between your teeth by pressing your tongue against them and making a peculiar noise like, tshick, tshick, tschick, tschick.
4. You are standing next to the two largest size suitcases at the Airport.
5. You arrive one or two hours late to a party - and think its normal.
6. You peel the stamps off letters that the Postal Service missed to mark up.
7. You recycle Wedding Gifts.
8. You name your children in rhythms (example, Honey & Money,Sita & Gita, Ram & Shyam.)
9. All your children have pet names, which sound nowhere close to their real names.
10. You take Indian snacks anywhere it says "No Food Allowed"
11. You talk for an hour at the front door when leaving someone's house.
12. You load up the family car with as many people as possible.
13. You use plastic to cover anything new in your house whether it's the remote control, VCR, carpet or new couch.
14. Your parents tell you to not care what your friends think but they won't let you do certain things because of what the other "Uncles And Aunties" will think.
15. You buy and display crockery, which is for special occasions, which never happen.
16. You have a vinyl tablecloth on your kitchen table.
17. You use grocery bags to hold garbage.
18. You keep leftover food in your fridge in as many numbers of bowls as possible.
19. Your kitchen shelf is full of jam jars, varieties of bowls and plastic utensils (got free with some household items).
20. You carry a stash of your own food whenever you travel(and travel means any car ride longer than 15 minutes).
21. You own a rice cooker or a pressure cooker.
23. You majored in engineering, medicine or law and now........are after Software and only Software no matter which field you belong to.
24. You live with your parents and you are 40 years old.(And they prefer it that way).
25. You don't use measuring cups when cooking.
26. You feel like you've gotten a good deal if you didn't pay tax.
27. You never learnt how to stand in a queue.
28. You can only travel if there are 5 persons at least to see you off or receive you whether you are traveling by bus,train or plane.
29. If she is NOT your daughter, you always take interest in knowing whose daughter has run with whose son and feel proud to spread it at the velocity of more than the speed of light.
30. You only make long distance calls after 11 p.m.
31. If you don't live at home, when your parents call, they ask if you've eaten, even if it's midnight.
32. You call an older person you never met before "uncle."
33. When your parents meet strangers and talk for a few minutes,you discover you're talking to a distant cousin.
34. Your parents don't realise phone connections to foreign countries have improved in the last two decades, and still scream at the top of their lungs when making foreign calls.
35. You have bed sheets on your sofas so as to keep them away from getting dirty.
36. When dining out, you think Rs 10 is enough of a tip.
37. It's embarrassing if your wedding has less than 600 people.
38. You list your daughter as "fair and slim" in the matrimonial no matter what she looks like.
39. You treat the NRI persons (especially from America) as if they are the only persons living in this world(including YOU).
40. You've seen the ground while inside the lavatory of a train.

Important Address and Telephone Nos.for Haj 2009

Ministry of External Affairs,Government Of India.

1. Mr. Sanjay Singh,
Additional Secretary (Gulf/Haj)
Ministry of External Affairs,
Government of India, South Block,
New Delhi – 1100 11.
Phone: 011-23013161
Fax : 011-23794138

jsgulf@mea.nic.in

2. Mr. V. K. Sharma,
Deputy Secretary (Haj),
Ministry of External Affairs,
Government of India,
Room No. 224, Akbar Bhavan,
Panch Mahal, Chanakyapuri,
New Delhi – 1100 21.
Phone: 011-26872201 / 2
Fax : 011-26872203

E-mail:
dirhaj@mea.gov.in


3 Mr. Jose Joseph,
Under Secretary (Haj),
Ministry of External Affairs,
Government of India,
Room No. 224, Akbar Bhavan,
Panch Mahal, Chanakyapuri,
New Delhi – 1100 21. Phone: 011-26111781 / 2
Fax :011-26111783

4. Mr. S.K. Chawla
Administrative Officer (Haj),
Ministry of External Affairs,
Government of India,
Room No. 224, Akbar Bhavan,
Panch Mahal, Chanakyapuri,
New Delhi – 1100 21.
Phone: 011-26111781 / 2
Fax :011-26111783

aohaj@mea.gov.in




Contacts in Saudi Arabia

Address and Telephone Nos. of Indian Haj Office-cum-Dispensary,
Makkah Al-Mukarramah, Saudi Arabia

IMPORTANT TELEPHONE NUMBERS - MAKKAH

Indian Haj Office, IN FRONT OF AJYAD MAKKAH HOTEL, AJYAD MAKKAH AL-MUKARRAMA (P.O. BOX NO. 5781) 009662 – 5759034/ 5758231/ 5758209/ 5758208
(FAX) 5758216

Shri Imam M. Husain,

In-charge, Indian Haj Mission, Makkah.
009662-5758216
Shri Nadeem Siddiqui, Assistant Welfare Indian Haj Mission, Makkah.
009662-5758209 (Tel/Fax)
Medical Officer,

In-charge, Indian Medical Mission, Makkah.
009662-5758209/5758214

South Asian Moassassa.

Rusaifa, P.O. Box No.309 MAKKAH-AL-MUKARRAMA
009662-5344444

Maktabul Wukla Al-uwahid
Saudi Business, Centrer, 5th Floor, Madinah Road, Sharariah Dist. Jeddah
009662-6526370 6526362/6526376 (Fax) 6526420

Naqaba Sayyarat (General Car Syndicate),Nuzha (Hayya Salama), Makkah Al-Mukarramah
009662-5455454, 5435035,(Fax) 5433819

Police Station, Near Haram Sharief


Haram Shareef Police Station 02- 575 0200
Police Station near Haram Shareef (Ajyad)
02- 534 1165
Misfalah Police Station 02- 574 1283
Qararah Police Station
02- 574 6808

IMPORTANT TELEPHONE NUMBERS - MADINAH

Indian Haj Office, Madinah Al-Munawwrah, Behid National Company, Near Al-Quds-Hotel, Sitteen Street, Madinah-Al-Munawwarah 009664 – 8380025, 8344715
(FAX) 8387549



National Adilla Establishment
Near Seven Masjid Madinah Al-Munawwrah,
009664 – 8260088
(FAX) 8255048



Pilgrim Reception Centre (PRC) Hijra Road 009664 – 8261941 IFAX) 8264096

Police Station, Haram Sharief Madinah Al-Munawwrah 009664-823 0930
-----------------------------------------------
Haj Committee of India

(Under Ministry of External Affairs)

Head Office, Mumbai
Address
HAJ COMMITTEE OF INDIA
Haj House,
7-A, M.R.A. Marg (Palton Road),
Mumbai – 400 001
.Maharashtra,
India.

Telephone Numbers
022-22612989 / 22610340 / 22613110

022-22611784 / 22610344 / 22610345

Fax Numbers
022-22620920 / 22630461

E-mail address
hajcommittee@hathway.com

hajcommittee@mtnl.net.in

Liaison Office, Delhi
Address
Haj Committee of India,
Bachchon Ka Ghar,
Shah khalid Block,
Daryaganj,
New Delhi - 110 002,
India.

Telephone Numbers
011- 23259386 / 011- 23259387
Fax Numbers
011- 2325 9337


--------------------------------------------------
Contact Executive Officers/Secretaries of State Haj Committee


Gujarat
Mr. Imtiyazhusen M. Shaikh
Secretary,
Gujarat State Haj Committee,
Block No. 8, 8th Floor,
Sachivalaya,
Gandhinagar - 382 010. Gujarat.
079-23250987/ 23250460 Fax : 079-23254265 Mobile 09879896504

079-26821315 (Resi)
---------------------------
List of Chairmen, State Haj Committee
Mr. S. K. Saiyed, I.A.S. (Retd)., Chairman, Gujarat State Haj Committee,
Block No. 8, 8th Floor,
Sachivalaya,
Gandhinagar - 382 010. Gujarat.
079-23250460 (off)
079-26444700 (Resi)
Mob. 09979507618

Interesting facts about India

1* The name 'India' is derived from the River Indus, the valleys around which were the home of the early settlers. The Aryan worshippers referred to the river Indus as the Sindhu.

2* The Persian invaders converted it into Hindu. The name `Hindustan' combines Sindhu and Hindu and thus refers to the land of the Hindus.

3* Chess was invented in India.

4* Algebra, Trigonometry and Calculus are studies, which originated in India.

5* The 'Place Value System' and the 'Decimal System' were developed in India in 100 B.C.

6* The World's First Granite Temple is the Brihadeswara Temple at Tanjavur, Tamil Nadu. The shikhara of the temple is made from a single 80-tonne piece of granite. This magnificient temple was built in just five years, (between 1004 AD and 1009 AD) during the reign of Rajaraja Chola.

7* India is the largest democracy in the world, the 6th largest Country in the world, and one of the most ancient civilizations.

8* The game of Snakes & Ladders was created by the 13th century poet saint Gyandev. It was originally called 'Mokshapat'. The ladders in the game represented virtues and the snakes indicated vices. The game was played with cowrie shells and dices. In time, the game underwent several modifications, but its meaning remained the same, i.e good deeds take people to heaven and evil to a cycle of re-births.

9* The world's highest cricket ground is in Chail, Himachal Pradesh. Built in 1893 after levelling a hilltop, this cricket pitch is 2444 meters above sea level.

10* India has the largest number of Post Offices in the world.

11* The largest employer in the world is the Indian Railways, employing over a million people.

12* The world's first university was established in Takshila in 700 BC. More than 10,500 students from all over the world studied more than 60 subjects. The University of Nalanda built in the 4th century was one of the greatest achievements of ancient India in the field of education.


1* There are 300,000 active mosques in India, more than in any other country, including the Muslim world.

2* The oldest European church and synagogue in India are in the city of Cochin. They were built in 1503 and 1568 respectively.

3* The largest religious building in the world is Angkor Wat, a Hindu Temple in Cambodia built at the end of the 11th century.

4* The Vishnu Temple in the city of Tirupathi built in the 10th century, is the world's largest religious pilgrimage destination. Larger than either Rome or Mecca, an average of 30,000 visitors donate $6 million (US) to the temple everyday.


5* Sikhism originated in the Holy city of Amritsar in Punjab. Famous for housing the Golden Temple, the city was founded in 1577.

6* Varanasi, also known as Benaras, was called "the Ancient City" when Lord Buddha visited it in 500 B.C., and is the oldest, continuously inhabited city in the world today.

7* India provides safety for more than 300,000 refugees originally from Sri Lanka, Tibet, Bhutan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh, who escaped to flee religious and political persecution.

8* His Holiness, the Dalai Lama, the exiled spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhists, runs his government in exile from Dharamsala in northern India.

9* Martial Arts were first created in India, and later spread to Asia by Buddhist missionaries.

10* Yoga has its origins in India and has existed for over 5,000 years.

Invite your Indian Friendz and make our patriotic community more Powerful and Interesting

__________ Jai Hind ____________

Hergé - Creator of Tintin

Timeline created by Irene Mar
Contributors and sources: Etienne Chevalier, Ben and Tintin and the world of Hergé by Benôit Peeters. London: Methuen, 1989.
Last modified: 7 February 2006
Latest change: continuity error corrected (thanks to Ben for spotting the mistake).

Mini Profile of Hergé
HERGÉ, (Georges Remi) 1907-83
Belgian strip cartoonist, born in Etterbeek, near Brussels, the creator of Tintin the boy detective. He had an influence on the modern art world, with Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein citing him as a strong influence on their work.

Hergé Timeline
1900s | 1920s | 1930s | 1940s | 1950s | 1960s | 1970s | 1980s |

1907 - Georges Remi born in Etterbeek (Rue Cranz, 25) on 22 May, at 7:30 in the morning.

1914–1918 - Attends primary school at the District School No. 3 in Ixelles.

1918–1919 - Attends School No. 11, preparatory for the Athénée (secondary school).

1920–1925 - Attends Saint Boniface school. Excels in all subjects, except art.

1925 - Joins the subscriptions department of the newspaper, Le XXe Siècle. Creates his first strip, Totor, for The Belgian Boy Scout.

1926 - Studies art at Saint-Luc school.

1926–1927 - Completes military service in the first infantry regiment. Continues the Totor series and supplies Abbot Desmedt illustrations for the publications of the Action Catholique.

1927 - Rejoins Le XXe Siècle as assistant photo-engraver and cartoonist.

1928 - Publication of the first issue of the weekly Le Petit Vingtième, on 1 November. Produces The Adventures of Flup, Nenesse, Pousette and Cochonnet.

1929 - First Tintin strip, Tintin in the Land of the Soviets, appears in the 11th issue of the Petit Vingtième (10 January).

1930 - First Quick and Flupke strip appears on Thursday, 23 January.

1931 - Thursday, September 3rd: Filled with African enthusiasms Tintin has already left again, and these are The Adventures of Tintin, Reporter in America. A concern for serious research begins to develop in Hergé, who reads The History of the Red Indians, by Paul Coze.

1932 - Marries Germaine Kieckens. Meets Chang Chong-Jen who inspires Hergé to take his work seriously.

1935–1940 - The release of The Broken Ear, The Black Island, King Ottokar's Sceptre. The second World War interrupts work on Land of the Black Gold.

1940 - Meets his first collaborator, Edgar Pierre Jacobs. Alice Devos, a female collaborator joins the team later.

1942 - Casterman must reduce the Hergé's albums to sixty-two pages, which entails the reduction of the size of the drawings. As just compensation, the albums go from black and white to color. The first 62-page, colour album appears in 1942: The Shooting Star.

1940 - Becomes chief editor of the Soir Jeunesse, a supplement to the daily Le Soir. Jacques Van Melkebebe, Hergé's principal assistant, a painter, cartoonist, and writer who will later be the first chief editor of the weekly Tintin.

Writing of The Crab with the Golden Claws, The Shooting Star, The Secret of the Unicorn, Red Rackham's Treasure, and The Seven Crystal Balls. In the middle of this last episode the Liberation arrives.

A consequence of the paper shortage, this time from the creative side: being forced to drawing daily "strips," sequences of three or four drawings in Le Soir, proved to be, says Hergé, an excellent lesson in narration. Another important experience, following the Liberation: being put on the index. Accused of having collaborated, Georges Remi is held back from any publishing.

September 26th, 1946 - Birth of the Belgian weekly Tintin and reappearance of Hergé. The first publishing success for Raymond Leblanc. Beginning of a triumphal march for another publisher, the publisher of the albums: the editions (in color) of Casterman begin to climb regularly toward a million per year, which they will reach in 1956.

1947–1966 - Ten new stories, going from The Seven Crystal Balls (continued in Tintin) to Flight 714, as well as the recasting of Cigars of the Pharaoh and The Black Island.

1948 - October 28th: appearance of the French edition of Tintin, published by Georges Dargaud.

1950 - Creation of the Studio Hergé.

1956 - 1956 - Begins an affair with Fanny Vlamynck, colorist at the Hergé Studios since 1952

1959 - Release of the first book on Hergé, Le Monde d'Hergé, by Pol Vandromme (Gallimard).

1960 - Discovers abstract art. Travels to Italy, Sicily, Corsica, Sardinia, England, Sweden, Switzerland, Denmark, Greece. Separates from wife, Germaine.

1971 - Visits the USA.

1972 - April: First Congress of the B.D. in New York. American cartoonists pay homeage to Hergé.
November: Hergé the guest of honor at the eighth Lucques Exhibition of Comics (Italy).

1973 - Receives the St-Michel Grand Prize for the lifetime achievement.
May: Visits the Republic of China on Taiwan.

1975 - Receives the Ardenne Prize in April. Divorces from Germaine.

1976 - Tintin and the Picaros is published.

1977 - Hergé receives the ruby red medal of the city of Angoulême, on the occasion of the 4th Exhibition of the B.D. Marries Fanny on 20 May.

1978 - Promoted to officer grade of the Order of the Crown, in Brussels. Hergé begins a new project 'Tintin and the Counterfeiters.'

1979 - The 50th anniversary of the creation of Tintin. On 17 January, Hergé receives a Mickey statuette from Walt Disney Co.

1980 - Diagnosed with leukemia.

1981 - Reunites with Chang, who is now the Director of the Academy of Fine Arts in Shanghai, on 18 March in Brussels, for the first time since 1937.

1982 - Belgian Society of Astronomy names a small planetoid, situated between Mars and Jupiter, after Hergé.

1983 - Dies on 3 March, in the Saint-Luc clinic in Brussels, after a week in coma.

Comic Books by Hergé
Totor
Popol et Virginie
The Adventures of Tintin series
Quick and Flupke series
Jo, Zette and Jocko series

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Muslim Inventions

Soap, Cleanliness, Cosmetics, Shampoo, Development of Paper, The Fountain Pen, Development of Cloth, Carpets, Garden, Glass, Development of Chess, Coffee, Sherbet, 3 Course Meal, Pay Cheques, the Windmill, Vaccination, Pointed Arch and the Crank-Shaft


Soap, Shampoo, Cleanliness and Cosmetics


The medieval times, was known for its lack of cleanliness and hygiene, leading to illnesses and diseases, and one of the Crusaders most striking characteristics were that they didn’t wash.
Only a few Muslims, as early as the 7th century, had developed a sophisticated and hygienic way of life, and methods to keep themselves clean and away from diseases. In Islam, cleanliness is considered as half of a Muslims relegion. This was motivation for Muslims, also the fact that not keeping clean led to diseases and bad health.
The greatest thing done for cleanliness by Muslims, is probably the invention of soap. The credit for this goes to Muslim chemists. Before the invention of soap, people used oils to clean themselves, but all people didn’t have these oils.
Soap was made by mixing oil (usually olive oil) with al-qali (a salt like substance). This was then boiled to achieve the right mix, and left to harden, before used in homes and public baths.
Various recipies for soap were written by many Muslim chemists, icluding Al-Razi. A recetly discovered manuscript dating back to the 13th century, containes the recipie to soap. The instructions are given here.
“Take some sesame oil, a sprinkle of potash, alkali and some lime, mix them all together and boil. When cooked, they are poured into moulds and left to set, leaving hard soap”.
One of the leading cosmetologists of the time, Al-Zahrawi, known to the west as Abulcassis, wrote a medical encyclopedia called Al-Tasrif. It was written in thirty volumes. Inside the 19th volume, there contains a whole chapter devoted to cosmetics. This was the first original contribution to cosmetology.
Beutification of the body with purfumes etc was there way before Zahrawi, but Zahrawi considered cosmetics to be a branch of medication apart from beutification. Zahrawi’s contribution to the subject include ; under arm deodorants, hair removing sticks. hair care and also hand lotions. For turning blond hair to black, hair dyes are mentioned. Also, the benefts of suntan lotions are mentioned, also describing their ingredients in detail. His translations into Latin of his books were used as main university textbooks in many European universities.
In the betification part of cosmetics, Zahrawi dealt with perfumes, scented aromatics and incense. There are many hadith’s (quotations of the prophet) of the Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him), refering to cleanliness, care of hair and other parts of the body. Al-Zahrawi described these all within the limitations of Islam.
“Adhan”, and oily substance, was used for medication and beautification. Zahrawi dealt with perfumed stocks, rolled up and pressed into special moulds. These were probably the earliest and nearest representations of present day lipsticks and deodorants.
The greeks contributed a lot to cosmetics, but that was in the beutification part. It is the hygiene aspects that realy matters and affects us. Islam brought forward the method of cleaning yourself, which is practiced by every muslim, prior to praying five times a day called wudu. It was also the muslims who introduced the quarintine of sick patients, so the illness of the patient would not spread. This was done due to the discovery and whole idea of germs (also discovered by muslims). So out of all this, it was the muslims who contributed the most to the health part of cosmetics.
Shampoo, was introduced to Britain by a Muslim, who opened the Mahmomed’s Indian Vapour Baths on the Brighton Seafront, in 1759. He was appointed the shampooing surgeon for King George IV and William IV.


Paper and the Fountain Pen


Although the first paper to write on was papyrus, made by the Egyptians, then a more advanced type of paper which was discovered and made by the Chinese, the secret of papermaking was discovered by the Muslims after capturing two Chinese papermakers in the battle of Talas in 751CE.
After the secret of papermaking was revealed, a more superior type of paper, with better quailty, was produced by the Muslims, like the paper we know today.
The first paper to be manufactured in Islamic countries was in 794 AD, in Baghdad by Yusuf Bin Omar. Muslims brought the paper to Europe and other countries.
The fountain pen was invented for the Sultan of Egypt in 953. He demanded a pen that wouldn’t leak and stain on his cloths or hands. The pen made for the Sultan, contained a miniature reservoir, as with modern pens, which held the ink and fed the nib, using a combination of gravity and capillary action.


Cloth and Carpets


Muslims, particularly in Spain, were skilled in cloth making. The Muslims cloth was renowned for its durability, and captured most of the big markets of the world. Muslims cloth was seen as the finest.
Thanks to the good quality cloth, combined with the artistic designs and the Muslims advanced weaving patterns, Muslims produced very fine and exquisite carpets and the designs on the carpets were very beautiful. Carpets were usually woven by nunerous home workers, with incredible precision and accuracy, and they were regarded as a part of paradise, by Muslims.
Comparing the Muslims homes and carpets to the Europeans homes of the time, Europeans homes were covered in rushes, that were virtually out of this world. When I mean virtually, I mean really out of this world. Carpets caught on quickly, and heres why. In England, as Erasmus recorded it, the floors were
“covered in rushes, occasionally renewed, but so imperfectly that the bottom layer is left undisturbed, sometimes for 20 years, harbouring expectoration, vomiting, the leakage of dogs and men, ale droppings, scraps of fish, and other abominations not fit to be mentioned”.
Carpets were very renowned and prized by the Europeans and the English, so much that Queen Eleanor, the Castilian bride of King Edward I, brought Andulsian carpets to England, as part of her dowry, in 1255. The Persians were renowned for carpet making, and are still considered the best in the world.


The Garden



Although the garden existed for a long time, it was the Arab Muslims that spread the notion that the garden could be a place of peace, tranquility, beauty and meditation. Flowers that originated from Muslim gardens include the carnation and the tulip. In medieval Europe, gardens were only a place to grow herbs and food.
Mainly after the 8th century onwards, these heavenly gardens spread to India and other Middle Eastern places. The Abbasids created geometrical designs for their flower beds, to provide seclusion from the outside worlds. These magni- ficent garde- ns also contained fountains and shallow canals. Examples of these gardens still can be found in Islamic Persia, Sicily and India, in the gardens of the Taj Mahal, and in the Alhambra Palace in Granada, Spain.
The first appearance of these beautiful gardens in Europe, after Muslim Spain, was first in Toledo, then in Seville around the 11th century. These gardens were used for the testing of new plants brought from the Middle East, into a new climate. The gardens were also generally for pleasure and meditation. It was only five centuries after that these beautiful gardens were introduced to the rest of Europe, first to the Universities of Italy. Examples of these beautiful Muslim gardens can now be seen in all of Europe, from the Stibbert garden in Florence to the Royal Pavilion in Brighton, England.
The list of heavenly garden produced by the early Muslims was very, very long. Just to give you a glimpse of what it was like, Nisban (in Mesopotamia) was said to have 40,000 gardens, containing fruit trees and orchards, while an even bigger number resided in Damascus, a number of 110,000. In Venice, gardens and orchards were criss-crossed with mile after mile of canals.
The Qu’ran repeatedly describes gardens, to be a place of beauty and serenity, contemplation and reflection. Nature, trees, animals are a blessed gift from Allah, and are a sign of his greatness. Gardens have an elevated status, in a Muslims mind for Islam permits anyone to use and change nature according to the ethical ways and limitations of Islam. Thus gardens were designed to be sympathetic to nature. The garden is seen as a place of wonder and enchantment.
BUT,
It is said that the Greeks made the Garden as a place of beauty and meditation and the evidence is;
In the Odyssey, Book V Homer describes the garden of Calypso:
“And round about the cave there was a wood blossoming, alder and poplar and sweet-smelling cypress. And therein roosted birds long of wing, owls and falcons and chattering sea-crows, which have their business in the waters. And lo, there about the hollow cave trailed a gadding garden vine, all rich with clusters. And fountains four set orderly were running with clear water, hard by one another, turned each to his own course. And all around soft meadows bloomed of violets and parsley, yea, even a deathless god who came thither might wonder at the sight and be glad at heart.”
“The Odyssey” is a mythalogical story (i.e not real), so there is no evidence that something like this was in real life.
ALSO ;
Aristotle’s Academia was held in a grove of olive trees, considered to be a sacred space.
This is only talking about a specific grove of olive trees, and there is no mention of beauty and meditation in it.


Glass


It was Ibn Firnas, who is credited to have making glass from stone, after experimenting with rock crystal. He constructed his home as a sort of planetarium. In his house, one could see the stars, clouds and also lightning.


Chess


A form of chess was played in India called “Chaturanga”, which consisted of four players. From there, it came to Persia, where it was further developed to only two players. The name given to chess there was “Chatrang”. It is believed that the rules of “Chaturanga” and “Chatrang” were similar. From there, chess became popular in
Islamic Countries, and from there also developed to “Shatranj”. There is some controversy about chess in Islam, because some people consider it to be “haraam” (Arabic for “forbidden”). There is a “Hadith” (Arabic for narration of the Prophet) saying that :
“He who played chess is like one who dyes his hand with the flesh and blood of a swine (pig).”
But in 638 A.D. the Caliph (successor to Muhammad) Omar allowed chess among Muslims. It was banned again about 1000 A.D. in Egypt!In about the 8th century, chess spread into Europe and was a favorite game of King Charlemagne of France .


Coffee, the Sherbet and the 3 Course Meals


The first coffee was made by a man named Khalid. The story goes that he was tending sheep, when he noticed that his sheep grew bigger and livelier after eating a certain berry. He boiled the berries, and thus the first coffee was made.Beans were exported from Ethiopia to Yemen, and drank by Sufi’s to stay awake all night and pray on special occasions. This was the first record of the drink.It had arrived in Mecca and Turkey in the late 15th century, from where it found its way to Venice, in 1645. Coffee arrived in Britain in 1650, when a coffee house was opened in Lombard Street in London by a Turk, named Pasqua Rosee. The Arabic “qahwa” became the Turkish “kahve”, then the Italian “caffé”, and finally the British “coffee”.
Muslims developed a variety of juices to make their “sharab” (sherbet). Their sherbet was a soft juice drink of crushed fruit, flowers and herbs. It existed as one of the most famous drinks of all time, winning the hearts of people like Lord Byron. “Sharab” is where the Italians “sorbetto” comes from, where the French “sorbet” comes from, and then finally the English “Sherbet” is derived from. There are a number of names, and is associated with a number of traditions. Sherbet is also now produced in America all the way to India. Medieval Muslim sources contain recipes for drink syrups that can be kept out of the refrigerator for weeks and even months.
The concept of the three course meal was brought to Cordoba in the 9th Century, from Iraq. The concept included having soup, followed by fish or some meat, then for desert fruit and nuts. It was brought to Cordoba by Ali Ibn Nafi (also known as Ziryab-Blackbird). He also introduced crystal glasses that were invented by a Muslim.


Pay Cheques


The modern cheque, that we know today in derived from the Arabic word “saqq”. This means a written vow to pay for the goods when they are delivered. This was very good and sophisticated, as it meant that Muslims didn’t have to take money with them across dangerous terrain, avoiding robberies. In the 9th century, Muslim businessman could cheque in China drawn on his bank in Baghdad.


The Windmill


The Arabian Desert dried up each year, and breakneck tasks had to be preformed in drawing water, and grinding grain, which had to be done by hand. This had to be done in order to survive. A wind blew steadily in the Arabian Desert, the only power source that the desert could offer. The wind blew for months at a time. A clever Muslim inventor, in 634, built the first windmill, which consisted of six or twelve sails covered in fabric or palm leaves, catching the wind and turning the huge mill stones wheel, which ground the corn. The first windmill was not seen in Europe for another five hundred years.


Vaccination


The west has the wrongly held view that Jenner and Pasteur invented inoculation (protection from viruses). The thing is he didn’t. Vaccination was devised in the Muslim world. Children in Turkey were vaccinated with cowpox to fight the deadly smallpox and vaccination was brought to Europe from Turkey by the wife of the English ambassador to Istanbul in 1724, exactly seventy two years before Jenner and Pasteur discovered it. A coin has been minted in honour of the discovery of innoculation in the Muslim World.


Pointed Arch


The pointed arch, much stronger than the round one, enabled a much bigger, higher and more complex and grander building to be produced. This can be seen in on the Europe’s Gothic cathedrals, an invention borrowed from Muslim architecture. Other borrowings from Muslim inventions included ribbed vaulting, rose windows and dome building techniques. Europe’s castles also copied from the Islamic world’s castles and forts with arrow slits, battlements, a barbican and parapets. Square towers and keeps gave way to more easily defended round ones. Henry V’s castle architect was a Muslim.


Crank-Shaft


The crank-shaft, created by the Muslim genius Al-Jazari, central too many machines of the modern age, translated rotary motion to linear motion. It is also central to the combustion engine. This is one of the most useful and clever mechanical inventions of humankind, and without this invention, many machines could not be created. Al-Jazari originally created the crank-shaft to raise water for irrigation. Al-Jazari also invented the use of valves and a piston, devised some mechanical clocks driven by weights and water, and was the “Father of Mechanics”. His 1206 Book of Knowledge of ingenious Mechanical Inventions verifies this completely. He also invented the combination lock, among his other fifty inventions.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

10 ways to reply......tellicaller

10 ways to reply......tellicaller


10 ways to stop those credit card sales, idea/hutch/airtel, insurance callsetc ....really hilarious... (no offences PLz) :


1. After the telemarketer finishes speaking, ask him/her to marry you.
2. Tell the telemarketer you are busy at the moment, and ask him/her, ifhe/she will give you his/her home phone number so you can call him/herback.
3. Ask them to repeat everything they say, several times.
4. Tell them it is dinner time, BUT ask if they would please hold. Put themon your speaker phone while you continue to eat at your leisure. Smack yourfood loudly and continue with your dinner conversation.
5. Tell them that all business goes through your agent, and hand the phoneto your five year old child.
6. Tell them you are hard of hearing and that they need to speak up....louder...louder...louder!
7. Tell them to speak very slowly because you want to write every worddown.
8. If they start out with, "How are you today?", say "I'm so glad youasked, because no one these days seems to care, and I have all theseproblems............."
9. Cry out in surprise, "Helen, is that you? I've been hoping you'd call!How is the family?" When they insist they are not Helen, tell them to stopjoking. This works especially well if the telemarketer is really MALE.
10. Tell the ICICI call center guy to call on your Office number.- and givehim the HSBCcall center number.
Regards,