In 1992, the editor of The Times of India
telephoned one of Mumbai’s most prominent businessmen, Yusuf K Hamied.
The editor asked Hamied, “as a Muslim leader” his opinion on communal
riots that were taking place in the city.
Hamied
replied: “Why aren’t you asking me as an Indian Jew? Because my name is
Hamied? My mother was Jewish!” His maternal grandparents had perished in
the Holocaust.
KA Hamied and Luba Hamied.
KA Hamied and Luba Hamied.Hamied, the chairman of one of India’s largest
pharmaceutical firms, Cipla, is the son of an aristocratic Muslim
scientist from India and a Jewish Communist from what is now Lithuania.
Defined
by his parents’ extraordinary marriage, he unites his father’s
scientific skills, business acumen, and Indian patriotism with his
mother’s compassion for the less fortunate.
Article continues after ad
He charges the Western pharmaceutical industry with “holding
three billion people in the Third World to ransom by using their
monopoly status to charge higher prices,” and has devoted himself to
making life-saving inexpensive generic medications for the inhabitants
of poorer countries.
Yusuf K Hamied: Maker of generic life-saving medications and scourge of the giant multi-national pharmaceutical houses.
Yusuf’s father: Khwaja Abdul Hamied (1898 - 1972)
Yusuf Hamied’s father, Khwaja Abdul (K.A.) Hamied, was born in
Aligarh. His paternal grandfather Khwaja Abdul Ali (1862-1948) traced
his lineage through spiritual guides to the Mughal emperors of India
back to Khwaja Ubaidullah Ahrar (1403-1490), a great Naqshbandi Sufi in
Uzbekistan.
His mother, Masud Jehan Begum (1872-1957), came from
the family of Shah Shuja ul-Mulk, the pro-British Amir of Afghanistan
(1803-1809 and 1839-1842), whose family fled to India after his
assassination in an anti-British uprising. Khwaja Abdul Ali’s uncle was
Sir Syed Ahmed Khan (1819-1898), the great Muslim educational and social
reformer.
KA Hamied with his his father, brothers, nieces, and son Yusuf.
The family of KA Hamied.Khwaja Abdul Ali entered the judicial service of the
British government in India, but his son KA Hamied passionately opposed
“the evils of foreign rule”. When Mahatma Gandhi’s Non-cooperation
Movement called for a boycott of government-run educational
institutions, Hamied organised a strike at his school, Muir Central
College. As a result, he was expelled from the university, then arrested
when he tried to disrupt graduation ceremonies.
Hamied then
returned to Aligarh, where Muslim nationalist leaders founded a new
university, Jamia Millia Islamia, which refused government funding.
Hamied taught chemistry there. He also supervised the production and
sale of khadi, or homespun cloth, which Gandhi had made a
central element of Indian nationalism. At his maternal uncle’s home, he
first met Gandhi as well as Motilal Nehru and his son Jawaharlal.
KA Hamied was active in Indian political affairs throughout his life.
KA and Luba Hamied with his good friend Zakir Husain (second from left), who became President of India.While teaching at Jamia, KA Hamied began a lifelong
friendship with Zakir Husain, who went on to become the President of
India. Hamied and Hussain later left for Germany to pursue graduate
studies. Hamied studied with one of the world’s leading chemists,
Professor A Rosenheim.
Yusuf’s mother: Luba Derczanska (1903 - 1991)
One day in 1925, Hamied joined some friends on a lake cruise near
Berlin. One of the passengers on the boat was a young woman named Luba
Derczanska. Luba was born in Wilno in Russian Poland (now Vilnius,
Lithuania) and had come to Berlin to study. From their first meeting,
the romance between Abdul Hamied and Luba Derczanska blossomed.
In
1928, Hamied married Luba in Berlin’s only mosque, and the following
year they were again married in the Choral Synagogue in Wilno and the
marriage was “solemnised” at a Register Office in London. Footprints: In defiance of bigoted times
Luba
was active in Communist circles in Berlin, and sought to bring her
Indian beau into the movement: the first gift that she ever gave Hamied
was a postcard of Lenin and for a time the couple were regulars at party
meetings (later in life, Hamied had very strong reservations and
concerns about Communism). Hamied was a prominent member of Indian
revolutionary circles in India.
Berlin, 1928: KA Hamied and Luba with Maulana Mahommad Ali
(trademark crescent on his hat), the leader of the Khilafat Movement.Their parents were open-minded and welcoming, and the
warmth with which Luba’s parents Rubin and Paulina greeted Hamied on his
first visit to Wilno was matched by the welcome extended to Luba by
Abdul Ali and Masud Jehan when she went to Aligarh.
The Hamieds with Luba’s family in 1929. In the centre are Luba’s
brother Zorach and aunt. Zorach Derczanski came to India in 1934. The
aunt came to India in 1938 and was joined there in 1946 by her
non-Jewish husband Arthur Taenzler, a German flying ace in World War I.Their son Yusuf was born in Wilno during his parents’
last visit there before the Holocaust. Yusuf is the Arabic form of the
Hebrew name Joseph. It was the name of Luba’s grandfather, and hence
pleasing to her family, as well as the first name of the Polish
president, Józef Piłsudski, and so flattering to the Hamieds’ Polish
friends. A month after his birth, Yusuf’s parents took him back to
Bombay.
The Hamieds with her Jewish parents and their children – Yusuf and Sophie.
Yusuf and Sophie with their paternal grandmother Masud Jehan Begum,
who descended from the family of Amir Shuja ul-Mulk of Afghanistan.Though Luba was not an observant Jew, her son Yusuf
chose to memorialise her in the most active Indian synagogue. He heavily
supported the reconstruction of the Shaar Hashamaim Synagogue in Thane.
Shaar Hashamaim Synagogue in Thane.
Religious views
KA Hamied defined himself as an Indian who happened to be a Muslim,
and he became openly hostile to the Muslim League. He rejected the
notion that Hindus and Muslims were “separate nations” as Muhammad Ali
Jinnah argued. Unlike his brothers, who opted for Pakistan, he always
hoped for reconciliation in India between Hindus and Muslims. Take a look: Karachi's 'Yahoodi Masjid'
In
a speech to the Inter-Religious Seminar in Delhi on October 18, 1971,
KA Hamied said that the “study of religion is my special hobby” and that
“the basic attributes of this mysterious power, by whatever name we
call it, are the same in all religions.” He said that “an ideal man must
be a good man by virtue of his actions in society (and) may belong to
any religion so long as he follows the tenets of his religion”.
KA Hamied believed that there should be “no compulsion in religion”.Hamied always enthusiastically urged a partnership
between Jews and Muslims. He loved to talk about Islamic Spain, where
Jews and Muslims had joined to create a golden age, and once said that
“if the Jews, with their wealth, knowledge and scientific skill and
Arabs made a common cause, they would have a strong empire covering West
Asia and the entire coast of South Mediterranean”.
He always
emphasised that “the Arabs and Israelis should see the necessity of
getting out of this whirlpool of Russian and Western power politics” and
“sit together at a round table conference away from Western powers to
thrash out their differences and carve out a new future based on ancient
friendship, alliance and mutual regard”.
The Holocaust
He regularly visited Germany, where he had many friends, as well as
business dealings. Once, the Germans mistook him for a Jew and insulted
him. He foresaw something far worse than discrimination and insults, and
urged his Jewish friends to leave Germany. They insisted that as
members of the intellectual élite, they had nothing to worry about.
The
horrors of the Holocaust were to touch Hamied and Luba directly. In
June 1941, Nazi troops occupied Wilno, and almost immediately began the
extermination of the city’s Jews.
Luba’s siblings survived: her
brother Zorach was working for Hamied in Bombay, and her Communist
sisters had escaped to Moscow before the coming of the Germans.
However,
the Nazis murdered her elderly parents who were unable to emigrate.
Hamied tried to obtain visas so his in-laws could come to India. The
papers finally came through two weeks after the Derczanskis were killed. Take a look: The sole synagogue of Delhi
Their
son Yusuf was very moved when in 2008, during a visit to his
birthplace, Vilnius, he went to the Ponary Forest, where German units
massacred up to 100,000 people, the great majority of them Jews.
Recently,
he commissioned statues of Gandhi and his Lithuanian Jewish disciple
Hermann Kallenbach in Vilnius. In honour of his mother, he sponsored a
concert there by his life-long friend, the conductor Zubin Mehta.
Yusuf,
though focused on the lessons of the Holocaust, does not feel
threatened personally as a Jew. He sees anti-Muslim mob violence in
Bombay as particularly chilling, since to him it evokes the fear that
Indian Muslims may share the same fate as European Jews.
He
remembers his father’s stories of Jewish friends who believed that their
elevated place in society would protect them, and he says that Indian
Muslims who echo this sentiment are as naive as European Jews were.
The Cipla journey
After several years in India, Hamied gained success as a businessman,
and in 1935 he founded the Chemical, Industrial and Pharmaceutical
Laboratories or CIPLA. It has since become one of India’s most important
pharmaceutical companies.
KA And Yusuf Hamied created a successful multinational pharmaceutical company with a social conscience.KA Hamied had written in The Times of India on
December 11, 1964 that patent law should enforce “compulsory licensing”
to other manufacturers to prevent monopolistic predatory pricing.
Later, Yusuf picked up this same battle in the case of the astronomical pricing of AIDS medications by patent holders.
By
retro-engineering the first medication and antiretroviral cocktail
effective against HIV and AIDS and selling them at a fraction of the
price, he helped saved millions of lives.
Yusuf Hamied addressing the Indian Drug Manufacturers Association, 1976.Perhaps with the murders of his own grandparents and six
million other Jews in mind, Yusuf has called Big Pharma “global serial
killers,” “traders in Death,” and “death profiteers”.
He sees the
lack of access to life-saving medication by poor people in the
developing world due to cost as a form of “selective genocide in
healthcare” driven by Big Pharma’s desire for profits. This article was originally published on Café Dissensus Magazine and has been reproduced with permission.
Mr. and Mrs. 55! Vinita Butt and Jimmy Vining – Cineplot.com Cineplot.com img Yasmin (Vinita Butt) made her screen debut in Mr and Mrs 55. She also acted in Filmistan’s international venture, “Three Headed Cobra”. Vinita fell in love with makeup man Jimmy Vining while shooting for this film. They became man and wife in November 1955. After honeymooning in Mahabaleshwar, Vinita settled down as a home maker. Like Bhagyashree later, Vinita insisted on acting only in those movies that employed her husband as a technician. Vinita was clear about her career – “Either make a success of your chosen profession or get out of it.” She was born in Rawalpindi on 3 April 1937. Vinita spent the first seven years of her life in Kashmir. She arrived in Bombay in November 1954, sometime after she had done her Senior Cambridge in Bangalore. In Bangalore, she had appeared on the stage in Tagore’s “Sacrifice” and one of J. B. Priestley’s plays. Guru Du...
When A Portuguese Woman Intrigued With An Emperor In The Mughal Empire Juliana Dias da Costa was a prominent figure in the Mughal courts during the reign of Bahadur Shah I. We trace the Portuguese woman’s story, historical significance, and the reason why she has faded to obscurity since then. By Divya Sethu December 9, 2021 In the suburban village of Okhla, one of the oldest in Delhi, stands a tall board that reads ‘Sarai Julena Gaon’. This signboard is the last remaining proof of a sarai, or rest house, built for weary travellers built in the 18th century. Today, the area houses DDA (Delhi Development Authority) flats. The architect of this lost structure was a woman who once held much importance in the Mughal courts, even though she was a Christian and the daughter of a maid in the palace. This is the story of Juliana Dias da Costa, a woman of Portuguese descent, who worked in the Mughal harem and became a close confidant of Bahadur Shah I, India’s eighth Mughal emp...
Mini Bio (1) Vijaya Choudhury is an actress, known for Bhaiyya (1961), Captain Kishore (1957) and Rustom-E-Rome (1964). Trivia (2) Sister of actress Parveen Chaudhary (Choudhury). Real name is Qurasha Begum. Vijaya Choudhury | Movies, Vijaya Choudhury is an actress, known for (1961), (1957) and (1964).. Born on , , Vijaya hails from , , . As in 2020, Vijaya Choudhury 's age is * years. Vijaya Choudhury: Age, Wiki, Photos, Biography | FilmiFeed www.filmifeed.com › celebrity › vijaya-choudhury Feedback About Featured Snippets Vijaya Choudhury - IMDb www.imdb.com › name Vijaya Choudhury is an actress, known for Bhaiyya (1961), Captain Kishore ( 1957) ... Vijay Chaudhari | Vijaya Chaudhary | Vijaya Choudhary | Vijaya Choudhry ... Vijaya Choudhury - Times of India m.timesofindia.com › ETimes › Movies Vijaya Choudhury : Check out the list of all Vijaya...
Comments
Post a Comment