The Fiji
Muslim League is a
Muslim religious and social
organisation based in
Suva,
Fiji. Nearly 7% of Fiji's total
population, including 16% of the
Indian community, is Muslim. The
Fiji Muslim League also pursues
actively the conversion of
indigenous Fijians from
Christianity to
Islam and has attracted
several hundred converts in this
initiative.
Establishment of Fiji Muslim League
By 1908 there
were about 4000 Muslims in Fiji, a
third of them still indentured. In
1915 the Anjuman Hidayat-e-Islam
was established in
Nausori and in 1916 the
Anjuman Ishait El Islam was
established in Lautoka. Around Suva
there were only about 70 Muslims,
without a school or a mosque. But as
the number of Muslims in the capital
city steadily grew, Anjuman-e-Islam
was formed in 1919. The Fiji Muslim
League was formed on 31 October
1926, at a meeting at the Jame
Masjid in Toorak.
Role of Fiji Muslim League in
education and welfare
The Fiji Muslim
League has made valuable
contribution in the field of
education in Fiji. The first
school, Islamic Girls School, was
already in existence in 1926 and is
today known as Suva Muslim Primary
School. Today, the Fiji Muslim
League owns and manages seventeen
primary and five secondary schools
plus a tertiary institution (Islamic
Institute of the South Pacific). The
Fiji Muslim League accepts as
students and staff members of all
ethnic groups domiciled in Fiji. In
2000 its student population was:
4464 in secondary and 5243 in
primary schools. In the secondary
schools 3015 were Muslims, 994
Fijians/Christians, and 455 others,
including Hindus.
The Fiji Muslim
League provides help for tertiary
studies for needy Muslims through
loans from its Education Trust and
the Islamic Development Bank (IDB).
Of the two IDB loan/awards for
tertiary studies one is given
locally for information technology
and the other for the study of
medicine in
Pakistan. Most of the latter in
recent times have been allocated for
training Muslim female doctors; some
have qualified and are working in
Fiji.
Besides
education, the Fiji Muslim League
from its outset has attempted to
assist in satisfying all the social
needs of Muslims. Currently its
involvement in social welfare is
both at national and branch levels.
In times of natural disasters or
turmoil the Fiji Muslim League
directly helps Muslims whose homes
and lives are disrupted. Its charity
keeps many families clothed, fed and
housed, and Muslim children sent to
school.
Muslims and politics
Since 1929 the
Fiji Muslim League has sought to
obtain separate representation for
Muslims, in the
Legislative Council till 1970,
and in Parliament (both the
House of Representatives and the
Senate) since 1970. Except for
the period between 1932 and 1937,
Muslims have been represented well
in Fiji’s
Parliament. From 1937 to 1963,
there was always one Muslim
nominated into the Legislative
Council out of a total of five
Fiji Indian representatives. The
Muslim Political Front was
formed to advance Muslim political
rights and in 1966 it joined the
newly formed Alliance Party, but
voting trends have shown that most
Muslims have tended to vote for the
Party representing Fiji Indians,
showing that their political
aspirations are not different from
the other 84% of the Fiji Indians.
As of January
2007, the President of the Fiji
Muslim League is a prominent
businessman,
Hafiz Khan. Appointed to the
Senate on 13 July 2005 to fill a
vacancy caused by the death of Dr
Ahmed Ali, Khan became one of
the nine out of 32 Senators
nominated by the
Prime Minister of Fiji (a
further 14 are chosen by the [Great
Council of Chiefs], eight by the
Leader of the Opposition, and
one by the
Council of Rotuma). Khan was
formally sworn in on 22 August 2005.
In June 2006, he became
Vice-President of the Senate and
served in this capacity until the
military coup of 5 December
2006.
Source :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiji_Muslim_League
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