Thursday, March 27, 2008

எண்பது தலைமுறைக்கும் மேலாக இன இழிவில் வாழும் இஸ்லாமியர்கள்!!!

அரபிய தீபகற்பத்தில் ஏமன் நாட்டில் வாழும் அல் அக்தும் என்ற தலித்துகளும், இஸ்லாம் ஆளும் நாடுகளில் முக்கியமாக சவுதி அரேபியா, மௌரிட்டானியா, டார்பர் ஆகிய இடங்களில் அரபுகளின் அடிமைகளாக வாழும் கருப்பின மக்களும் இஸ்லாமை தங்கள் மீது இன இழிவு கொண்டுவந்ததாகவே கருதுகிறார்கள்.

அரபு ஜாதிவெறியும் அரபு இனவெறியும் பற்றி இந்த பக்கங்களில் ஆயிரக்கணக்கான செய்திகள் இருக்கின்றன.

அரபு ஜாதிவெறி படிக்க

இஸ்லாமிய அடிமைமுறை பற்றிபடிக்க

Languishing at the Bottom of Yemen’s Ladder
Bryan Denton for The New York Times
In Yemen’s capital, Sana, the Akhdam live crammed into a stinking warren of low concrete blocks. More Photos >


By ROBERT F. WORTH
Published: February 27, 2008
SANA, Yemen — By day, they sweep the streets of the Old City, ragged, dark-skinned men in orange jump suits. By night, they retreat to fetid slums on the edge of town.

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The Akhdam of Yemen

The New York Times
The Akhdam held a demonstration in Taiz this month. More Photos »
They are known as “Al Akhdam” — the servants. Set apart by their African features, they form a kind of hereditary caste at the very bottom of Yemen’s social ladder.

Degrading myths pursue them: they eat their own dead, and their women are all prostitutes. Worst of all, they are reviled as outsiders in their own country, descendants of an Ethiopian army that is said to have crossed the Red Sea to oppress Yemen before the arrival of Islam.

“We are ready to work, but people say we are good for nothing but servants; they will not accept us,” said Ali Izzil Muhammad Obaid, a 20-year-old man who lives in a filthy Akhdam shantytown on the edge of this capital. “So we have no hope.”

In fact, the Akhdam — who prefer to be known as “Al Muhamasheen,” or the marginalized ones — may have been in this southern corner of the Arabian Peninsula for as long as anyone, and their ethnic origins are unclear. Their debased status is a remnant of Yemen’s old social hierarchy, which collapsed after the 1962 revolution struck down the thousand-year-old Imamate.

But where Yemen’s other hereditary social classes, the sayyids and the judges and the sheiks, and even the lower orders like butchers and ironworkers, slowly dissolved, the Akhdam retained their separate position. There are more than a million of them among Yemen’s fast-growing population of 22 million, concentrated in segregated slums in the major cities.

“All the doors are closed to us except sweeping streets and begging,” Mr. Obaid said. “We are surviving, but we are not living.”

The Akhdam have not been offered the kind of affirmative action programs India’s government has used to improve the lot of the Dalits, or untouchables, there. In part, that is because Yemen never had a formal caste system like India’s.

As a result, the Akhdam have languished at the margins of society, suffering a persistent discrimination that flouts the egalitarian maxims of the Yemeni state.

Even the recent waves of immigrants from Ethiopia and Somalia, many of them desperately poor, have fared better than the Akhdam, and do not share their stigma.

The Akhdam who work as street sweepers, for instance, are rarely granted contracts even after decades of work, despite the fact that all Yemeni civil servants are supposed to be granted contracts after six months, said Suha Bashren, a relief official with Oxfam here. They receive no benefits, and almost no time off.

“If any supervisor wants to dismiss them, they can do that,” said Ali Abdullah Saeed Hawdal, who started working as a street sweeper in 1968. “The supervisors use violence against them with no fear of penalties. They treat them as people with no rights.”

The living conditions of the Akhdam are appalling, even by the standards of Yemen, one of the poorest countries in the Arab world.

In one Akhdam shantytown on the edge of Sana, more than 7,000 people live crammed into a stinking warren of low concrete blocks next to a mountain of trash. Young children, many of them barefoot, run through narrow, muddy lanes full of human waste and garbage.

A young woman named Nouria Abdullah stood outside the tiny cubicle — perhaps 6 feet by 8 feet, with a ceiling too low to allow her to stand up — where she lives with her husband and six children. Inside, a thin plastic sheet covered a dirt floor. A small plastic mirror hung on the wall, and a single filthy pillow lay in the corner.

Nearby, a single latrine, in a room approximately 3 feet by 3 feet, serves about 50 people. The residents must carry water in plastic jugs from a tank on the edge of the slum, supplied by a charity group.

Wearing a brown dress, with a rag tied around her head, Ms. Abdullah said she and her family brought in no more than 1,000 Yemeni riyals a week, about $5. She begs for change, while her husband, Muhammad, gathers metal and electrical components from trash heaps and sells them.

Like most people in the shantytown, they have no documents, and they do not know how old they are.

“We are living like animals,” Ms. Abdullah said. “We cook and sleep and live in the same room. We need other shelters.”

When the winter rains come, the houses are flooded, she said. On the cold days in winter, the family burns trash to stay warm.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

நன்றி

Anonymous said...

ithuthan pathil

எழில் said...

மறுமொழிகளுக்கு நன்றி

Anonymous said...

Why the islamists never refer to the plight of al akhdam?