Map of the World

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Saturday, January 23, 2021

Moon Sighting

With the drastic rise in the number of Kitaab Gaabs and their followers causing confusion by the day, the beauty of the once divinely revealed message seems headed for total contamination. The amalgamation of unctuous hypocrites having differing religious and ideological views who often apply pecksniffian declarations on issues beyond their comprehension regarding theological jurisdictions deserve to be treated with contempt, if not, neglected, otherwise, they could lead the Muslim Ummah into a seemingly bottomless chasm. If the Shawwal moon is sighted in Saudi Arabia and other parts of Africa, then, it would be meaningless to continue with the fast even after the new Shawwal moon has been sighted by reliable Muslims. Relying on Saudi Arabia as the maker of the final verdict or حكم on moon sightings is unacceptable. Likewise, judging the one who sights the moon by his religious sectarian inclination is unfounded and a fabrication of the Islamic requirements of moon sightings. عيد الفطر or Eid ul Fitr is the Islamic religious festival that marks the end of the month of Ramadan. A look at the different ways Muslim Madhhabs perform the Eid ul Fitr salah illustrates existing dissimilarities and performances of rituals and prayer elements. Even the required charitable contributions to the needy and elderly could be different within a city because followers rely on the final decisions of their chosen religious scholars. The person who sights the new moon must be a Muslim who is not visually impaired, must be an adult who is sane, honest, and just and must not be a known Faasiq (sinner). To ensure the one who sighted the new moon is up to task, a testimony becomes compulsory. The declaration, "I testify" should be taken into consideration because, the Qur'an states, "And take testimony from the just and honest amongst you". While Ramadan, the 9th month of the Hijri calendar is dedicated to the observance of fasting for Muslims, Eid al-Fitr is observed at the start of the month of Shawwal which is the following month. The advancement of satellite technology aside, people have different vision types. Muscular degenaration is a major problem that impacts elderly vision. When someone is afflicted by farsightedness, the ability to see near objects get easier while distant objects appear blurry and this is known as hyperopia. One could suffer from nearsightedness or short-sightedness which is a condition known as myopia; optic neuritis is an inflammation of the optic nerve and unlike other visionary influences, it can be treated with corticosteroids. Strabismus can be identified by the looks of the eyes of a person since they are wall-eyed or cross-eyed. The human eye is estimated to be about 7 times sharper than cat eyes, and 40-60 times sharper than rats and goldfish. So, when searching for a new moon, it is best to put all these visual conditions into consideration. A day and night constitute 24 hours, meaning the world has 24 time zones. Longitudinally, there is a 15 degree separation in each hour. The International Date Line (IDL) creates 3 more time zones. As internationally accepted, the Universal Coordinated Time (UCT) starts at zero degrees longitude and that is the Prime Meridian, a global dissecting line that passes through London in England and Accra in Ghana respectively. The Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) is "about 334 feet east of the current Airy Transit Circle at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, England." That spot is 0 or zero degrees longitude. The measurements of the Earth's rotation is linked to geodetic coordinates. The application of GMT was put into use in 1884 after a gathering in Washington, DC. However, there is still differences of opinion among geographers that the zero degree could be somewhere else because 102-meter shift has been recorded which could be attributed to conventional and geodetic deflection. Since the earth is oval like an egg or spherical like a ball or comparable in shape to a handmade globe, the zero could be somewhere else. When traveling Eastward, you add 30 minutes or 15 degrees for every imaginary line, while, when headed Westward, you substract 30 minutes or 15 minutes for every line. Let's not forget the Continental Divide Line that starts in the Cape Spring Wales in Alaska. Call it a miracle, but, geographically, it is a serpentine line that divides entire North America into two parts. All rivers on the Eastern side of the line dump their waters into the Atlantic and Arctic Oceans and the Gulf of Mexico while those on the westside flow into the Pacific ocean. The saying "East is best, West is least" is known to navigators. Strange , isn't it? Remember, wherever you are on planet earth, you're always on the top. Whether you are located on the North, South, East or West, you'll still the sky above you. To give you an example, the "Heart of America" is a small town outside of Kansas City, Missouri known as Independence where the former US President, Harry S. Truman was born. A former Haberdasher (tailor), Truman became the 33rd President of the United States (1945-1953) after the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt. The historic Harry Truman Museum and Library aren't new to me. When traveling Westward towards Kansas and Colorado States, regardless of the means of transportation, you will be compelled to do time subtraction and if going Eastward, you add 30 minutes to your time every line you cross. Remember, the lines are imaginary. I wasn't surprised when my professor who was a former colonel in the United States Army, once told our class while engaged in a subject on East Asia Studies, that geography is a piece of cake and that he previously taught in other universities without having any specialization. For sure, it isn't a piece of cake, but to the Somali who is "Jack of all trades, master of none", it could be true because, the many years of listening to the most favorite dhegadhegeysi radio enhanced one's understanding of global geography. Unquestionably, Somalis are the most widely traveled and the most multilingual ethnic group in Africa. The absence of indhoindheysi or the perfect application of visualization of the crescent moon has remained a disagreeable and a permanent recurring theme among Somalis for centuries. Since Islam does not contradict science, on April 21 2008, a conference that was held in Doha Qadar titled "Mecca: the Center of the Earth, Theory and Practice" brought together scholars and theologians under the tutelage of Sheikh Dr. Yusuf al-Qaradawi of Egypt to deliberate on "Ijaz al-Qur'an", meaning the miraculous nature of the Qur'an. Despite the conference objecting to the Greenwich Meridian as a colonial creation even though the former Ottoman Empire was part of the attendees and that Makkah was under it's jurisdiction, the hope that the Mecca Time would serve as a universal defining time zone did not bear fruit. Even with the raising of the largest clock in the world in Makkah, resting on the fifth tallest freestanding building in the world, the Abraj Al Bait (Towers of the House), it has failed to capture what it was intended for. Instead, P.Z. Myers, referred to the Mecca clock Time proposal as a "cargo occult science"---a term denoting pseudoscience or an imagined hypothesis. To overcome the lack of compromise on the sighting of the moon---a phenomenon that is only common at the beginning and end of Ramadan, it would be wise to have reliable telescopes and other astronomical instruments. Among modern Muslim Ulamaa, the issue of moon sighting has transformed into moon fighting. The relentless moon fighting is plainly against the following Hadith: "Do not fast unless you sight the crescent, and do not break your fast till you sight the (following) crescent." (Al-Bukhari, Vol. 3:130). Like the growing fragments of sectarian tentacular filamentations, the religious scholars divide and rule tactics that is akin to political ignominy, will remain with humanity forever.

Sunday, January 17, 2021

Why I Cherish WardheerNews

The website www.wardheernews.com, the most "scholarly and journalistic" online magazine in the Horn of Africa, means a lot to me. I learned about WardheerNews (WDN) decades ago while in the City of San Diego in California–the city known by the nickname "America's Finest City" and named after Saint Didacus in Spanish. It came to my attention while perusing through the pages of the famous San Diego Tribune while strolling along the beautiful coastline of the Pacific Ocean where I could see from a distance some of America's finest warships, perhaps the United States Navy's best of the best and the most sophisticated Aircraft Carriers, Battleships, Cruisers, Destroyers, Auxiliaries and frigates. The city for retirees, San Diego has the best weather in the United States with over 71° Fahrenheit in summer and above 50° in winter. In total, the city enjoys 300 days of sunny weather. To better understand the site's policies, it is best to peruse through the following lines to better understand the major requirements for posting articles and research papers: "Through admin@wardheernews.com, our readers may present their views and ideas to our Editorial Board members. Every effort will be made to respond to our readers comments without any delays. WardheerNews accepts articles that are exclusively intended for our readers. Articles are usually published after thorough scrutiny by our Editorial board." On the other hand, "WardheerNews does not publish or post articles found to be contravening the rules and regulations set forth by our editorial board team. Articles found to contain profanities or intended to malign the good names and reputations of individuals or groups will not be posted. Also articles published or appeared in other sites will not be considered for posting." The writer of the article on WDN succinctly explained how the website came to gain popularity, the names of the founders and their work stations and their educational backgrounds. It was on that material day that I learned the names of the people who made it a reality and who, up to this day, continue to make it running without any encumbrances. Even though I had known the town of Wardheer together with Walaal in the current Somali region in Ethiopia since adolescence, never at any time did I misconstrue the newly discovered WDN to have any relationship with a historical town. The title of the story, according to a close friend and honorable political leader was: "The Hassan Brothers." "The Hassan Brothers" as we now know today are Ahmed Hassan, Khalil Hassan, and Abdelkarim Hassan. Sons of the famous Abdirahman Hassan, the three have a saintly heritage and advanced and prolonged ancestral historical lineage because they hail from the most ancient city of Berbera along the Red Sea coast in the current unrecognized Somaliland State. Their great, great, great-grandfather was a man much revered by the Ottoman Empire such that they built him a beautiful palace solely for Islamic propagation. It was in 1984 while strolling with a friend Ibrahim Sambul near the palace and working for the American Engineering Firm MWK International, Limited, Incorporated that Ibrahim brought to my attention a strange historical narrative that almost jolted my nerves. My buddy requested me that we pay a visit to the occupants of the palace that required complete rehabilitation. After exchanging salaams with the generous and ebony colored ladies who served us the best quality northern Somalia tea popularly known as Barraad, my attention was altered by the beauty of the palace. After thorough observation of the finely manicured lawns and the old Ottoman Empire Arabesque design of the fountains and the general outlook of the construction design of the building, I felt perplexed by the historical legacy of Sheikh Yusuf who was offered the privilege to advance Islamic revivalism. Unfortunately, the Sheikh’s biography remains unwritten to this day. Reading has been my tradition long before the new WDN discovery and that I had been an avid reader of Newsweek and Time Magazines, some of Kenya's dailies, and the finely written weekly and that is the Weekly Review whose editor-in-chief was the Kenyan Harvard University educated Physicist and Historian Hillary Ng'weno. Mr. Ng'weno was also the founder of Nairobi Times, a paper that enjoyed good readership. While I admired the monthly publication Glamour and Drum Magazines and Somalia's Xiddigta Oktoobar, Heegan and Halgan among others, my first article on WDN appeared in the month of April 2006 respectively. The article was about the struggles of African students in the United States. After discovering the literary sagacity of the editors, is when I became a frequent freelance writer. For a long time, I've been impressed by the importance of viewing knowledge from different perspectives and that's why I chose the ways of polymathy and philomathy. The former means the ability to learn and acquire enough multifarious subjects while the later implies the love for studying and learning. From childhood up to now, I've been inquisitive of every noble subject and that specializing in a specific field has never been my long term plan. It was only two years after it was launched that I jumped on the bandwagon by contributing nonstop, a habit that continues to this day. “And”, “because”, by the way, sorry our esteemed readers, for starting a sentence with “and” or “because” is ungrammatical. What I meant is, in high school, I had devoured most of the African Writers Series written by distinguished authors such as Chinua Achebe, Wole Soyinka, Taban lo liyong, Okot p'Bitek, Nurudin Farah, Ngugi wa Thion'go and others. I traveled the world over many times while a young man and no wonder it was James Hadley Chase who made my imaginary journey to the Orinoco River in South America a possibility. Chase gave me the chance to read his literary treasures like “There's a Hippie on the Highway, “An Ace Up My Sleeve”, and “The World in my pocket” and “Like a Hole in the Head” among others. Even though Commander Neil Armstrong was the first to relay back to earth the message “Houston, Tranquility Base Here, The Eagle has Landed” after traveling 240,000 to the moon on Apollo 11 in July 20, 1969 after the exhilarating landing, on the other hand, there was a 1975 book by Briton Jack Higgins that carried the same name and turned in to a film a year later. Maya Angelou was a great writer and because she was dark skinned, her poem “Phenomenal Woman”, must have been an eye opener and empowering for the millions of women who were struggling with stereotypes. If Rudyard Kipling, a man who was born in India was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature for his simple poem "If" for the botched Jameson Raid in Transvaal, South Africa, Maya Angelou who was born in Saint Louis, Missouri, and who left a fine legacy for humanity, was never considered for one. In my college years, my Iranian-American English lecturer, a braggadocio who spent 20 years in England, gave me an X while marking my English paper that contained the word "Briton." No wonder, another lecturer, a Mexican-American did the same since, to him, incumbent only implied a noun "the holder of an office" while mine referred to the adjective form of necessary or the responsibility of executing an assignment. Whoever said, "English was born in England, raised in America and died in Africa" must have been a literary racist vigilante whose aim was to tarnish the image of the African Continent. It is bigotry that created the different races we have today though there is only one race and that is the human race. Even though I read from a newspaper the prognostication regarding the future of computer technology while working in a small town in central Somalia with an American organization called Africare Incorporated in Jalalaqsi in 1983 in an era when the typewriter reigned supreme, it was twenty three years later when I got fortunate enough to own the old type desktop computer whose memory card was the flimsy floppy disk. After all efforts to navigate through the old type computer that was given to me by a White female co-worker after paying her a visit to her house while I was an Aircraft Marshaller (one who controls planes after landing) for Vanguard Airline failed to materialize, I sought the help of two Somalis who turned out to be “Jacks of none, masters of none” or technologically omnipotent. While an Aircraft Marshaller, there was a young man who was White and a great friend. His name was John. Those days America was so peaceful such that as a Muslim, I could perform my daily obligatory and supererogatory prayers without any suspicion from the airport employees and regular travelers. John loved to debate and discuss about religion. He was a Christian but I never bothered to ask him his denomination. In response to his question the name of the place where Muslims conduct their daily obligatory prayers, to test whether his knowledge, I responded telling him it is called 'Masjid'. “You mean Masqee”? he responded back. I was amazed by his clear pronunciation of the prayer house many pronounce as Mosque. Masjid and Masqee almost sound alike in pronunciation. In the 16th and the early 17th century, there was the Masque ceremony in Europe which should not be misinterpreted or associated with John’s pronunciation. Despite being college students, they were the types Somalis refer to as “waan daadshey”, a portmanteau implying blagging, bragging or “little knowledge is too dangerous.” Both were of the opinion that the computer was useless and outdated. However, after severe scrutiny and seeking guidance from reading a few books on computer studies, the gift of Karen, the lady who gave it to me as a gesture of goodwill, eventually opened up for me new corridors related to Information Technology (IT). Daily reflective practices and continuous craving engrossment devoid of procrastination gave me the option to pay attention to detail. After saving enough money to purchase a used desktop computer, I started writing exhaustively materials that were worthy of posting on WDN. Focus and critical thinking enabled me to come up with new topics that were commensurate with the editors' preferences. After discovering that the editors were literarians who emphasized the significance of eleemosynary work that could benefit humanity, I got immersed in more writing by putting together more educational tutorials of varying subjects. Philanthropy or acts of kindness are multidimensional from Islamic and philosophical perspectives and that's why I felt compelled to educate our youth through unstoppable writings on WardheerNews. The name Wardheer in Somali is a combination of 'War' for 'news' plus 'dheer' implying 'afar'. Thus, when joined, it means "News from Afar." Unlike other sites that give preference to articles and research papers written by their tribal members, act as mouthpieces for the warlords and fundamentalist groups they have lineage with, and those who fund them through corrupt means plus the retinue of political rejects who share with them contemptuous and distorted ideological formations, WDN is open for debate and inclusivity of opinions from contributors from all walks of life. Even though I don't know if the trend has vanished altogether, from what I gathered from fellow Somalis scattered worldwide, back in the nineties there was a website that was managed by tribal minded editorial team whose corrupt policy was "pay a little" or as they say in Kiswahili “Toa Kitu Kidogo” abbreviated TKK to have an article posted. Such demands to have articles posted on WDN have never happened in the past and present time. WDN is interested in the exchange of ideas without regard to tribe or clan, gender and sex, political or religious affiliation and place of origin. The site has been established to educate humanity. A look at our contributors on the "About Us" section contains a balanced approach to the names of unique foreign writers notably Professor Georgi Kapchits, a man who has mastered the Somali language, was a former broadcaster of Radio Moscow Somali Service, an author of numerous books written in Somali and currently engaged in releasing a dictionary containing 5,000 Somali proverbs. Amazingly, in a previous email exchange with the distinguished professor of Somali and Amharic languages whose friendly response began with "Gacaliye Aadan", on questioning him if he ever lived in Somalia in the past, he wrote back that he was in Puntland for two weeks only in 1992 in his lifetime. Dr. Kapchits is a Russian citizen and the author of Soothsayer Tasted-Somali Folktales. The digitized site also prides to have Marco Zoppi (PhD) who is a fellow at Roskilde University in Denmark with special interests in the welfare conditions of Somalis in Scandinavian Countries. WDN contributors are not chosen on tribal affiliation by the editorial board, but their commitments to the service of research and disseminating knowledge that are worthy of sharing with the readers. Some of WDN contributors are authors who have written books while others are reputable individuals who served international level jobs. WDN Contributors include the prolific writer Hassan Abukar, author of Mogadishu Memoir, Ismail Ali Ismail (Geeldoon) who authored Governance: The Scourge and Hope of Somalia, Faisal Roble who was a former Editor-in-Chief of WDN and currently holding a higher position with the City of Los Angeles, Safi Abdi who resides in Turkey and author of Offspring of Paradise and Said Jama Hussein who is known for his proficiency in Somali linguistics and etymology and author of Safar Aan Jaho Laheyn. Amazingly, the previously mentioned Professor Georgi Kapchits new dictionary written in Somali that contains 5,000 Somali proverbs. The beautifully cover crafted book with the new title Qaamuuska Casriga Af ee Maahmaahda Soomaaliyeed meaning A Modern Dictionary of Somali Proverbs has been released and is up for grabs for those willing to learn more about Somali proverbial expressions. I cherish WDN because of the amalgamation of writers from all walks of life who gave me the chance to learn diverse knowledge that touch on different subjects. It is a venue for those interested in grasping everything pertaining to “Somalinness.”

Collapsing Nomadic Lifestyles

In the past, Western writers described Somalis as a nomadic community, pastoral nomadic and other times as peripatetic community. With the wealthy Somalis taking pride in camel ownership by purchasing the Somali dromedary in their hundreds at the famous Arbaca Bashaq livestock market on Wednesdays in Garissa, the current poor camel owners of the past, after suffering compounding drought and famine and various contagious diseases that decimated the beasts of burden they treasured most, finally made dangerous moves by settling in villages and towns to survive on handouts from the government and other philanthropic organizations like the Red Cross and other parties who are committed to the care of those in need. It is a new social change created by economic transformation since the pride of the herdsman that was the one humped camel has now been taken over by business magnates who established permanent ranches that are never short of water and pasture. Land Cruisers that are meant for rough terrain now navigate with ease through lands that were once impenetrable, out of bounds and impassable to the former nomad who was bereft of modern technicalities that require money and minds. Veterinarians keep watch over the camels health while wage earning herdsmen provide the necessary protection within certain ranges in protected ranches that are far from the reach of livestock rustlers and wild carnivores. With the outbreak of COVID-19 Pandemic and the closure of schools for the containment of the virus, the wealthy camel owners pack up for vacationing that is more comfortable than what we know as tourism. Loaded with tents, mattresses, bedsheets and duvets, kitchenware and cutlery, hiking shoes, mosquito nets and mosquito repellants, and other necessities such as dry food and bottled water for the grand material world allurements, the journey forward is one intended to introduce the children to a new world of adventure. By covering new ground, the children's exposure to new sceneries get ingrained in their minds for future recollections as they age in their lifetimes. For those Diaspora children whose return journeys got interrupted by the pandemic, such vacations become once in a lifetime experience. As the wheels of the convoys of vehicles
roll with precision and guidance, the sights of the various fauna and flora never seen before instill unforgettable historical events worth retelling to friends and relatives in later years. Like a family touring botanical gardens for the first time, annual, biannual, and perennial trees and plants capture their visions with some appearing thorny and others thornless. As for the fauna, the redheaded salamander lizards cross the rough terrain with tremendous speed as the driver struggles to evade rocks, potholes, and speeding dik diks. Terrified and afraid of the approaching unknowns, the proud Somali male daaxuur, the Egyptian Queen Hatshepsut much-adored Papio hamadryas baboon boisterously makes a sudden twist and turn with the intention of defending its territory from strangers. Mouths agape, the children focus on the strange animals they've never seen before. Then to their amazements, the world of acacia trees along the roadsides usher them into the 1773 trees specifications of the Swedish Botanist Carl Linnaeus, the father of modern taxonomy and the creator of binomial nomenclature in botanical, zoological, and taxonomical sciences. Using their modern smart phones and tablets loaded with unlimited internet data, each one struggles to uncover the names of the strange thorny acacias lining both sides of the unpaved roads. Some take snapshots to compare with the images appearing in their search engines. Names like Acacia albida, Acacia senegal, and Acacia seyal and other unheard of species appear in their searches. Unfortunately, their searches suddenly get interrupted as the convoys of vehicles continue with their arduous journeys into rocky plains and deserts resulting from soil erosion, abandoned fields with reddish colored lineups of anthills and towering accumulated sand dunes. After hours of cruising through areas that suffered land degradation, one of the drivers relays the message that they are about to enter Libaaxlow or the Lion Haven. Within minutes of hearing the shocking news, fear grips the hearts and minds of the rambunctious children who were raised in lands that were devoid of beastly wild animals.

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

https://wardheernews.com/somalias-electoral-transition-requires-immediate-national-deliberation/

Garissa County Governor: The Responsible Administrator

https://wardheernews.com/garissa-county-governor-the-responsible-administrator/

Somalia's Beauty of the Past

  Somalia is a Horn of Africa nation bordering Ethiopia, Djibouti, Kenya and the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean and endowed with assortments o...