Friday weekly off: UP Madrasa Education Board member protests status quo in 2023

Qamar Ali argues that since madrasas are being modernised on the lines of basic schools, it would be better if they also have holidays on Sundays instead of Fridays

Update: 2022-12-26 13:27 GMT

A member of the Uttar Pradesh Madrasa Education Board has protested the release of the annual calendar for next year that marks Fridays as weekly-offs in Islamic seminaries, ignoring a proposal to shift it to Sunday like other state schools.

Board member Qamar Ali, who had proposed Sunday holidays in madrasas in the state, said on Monday (December 26) that he would complain to Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath about the calendar being issued without any discussion in the board.

Ali had placed his proposal in the board meeting on December 20 and it was expected to be taken up for discussion in the next meeting.

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Speaking to PTI, Ali accused board chairman Iftikhar Ahmad Javed of releasing the calendar for 2023 on December 24 without consulting other members. “On my proposal to shift weekly-offs in madrasas on Sunday, the board chairman had publicly said that the board’s plenary meeting in January would consider the issue,” he said.

Arbitrariness charge

Accusing the board chairman of arbitrariness, Ali alleged that he does not take the opinion of board members before doing any work. “Members of the board are answerable to the Muslim community and…a peculiar situation arises in case of decisions which are harmful,” he said.

Board chairman Javed termed Alis allegations “false” and said: “He can complain to the Chief Minister if he wants, but the routine work will definitely be done.”

Asked about his statement that the suggestion to have holiday on Sundays instead of Fridays would be decided in next month’s full board meeting, Javed said there was no need to discuss the proposal in the meeting.

Why it helps to work on Fridays

Arguing in favour of his proposal, Ali said when government officials visit madrasas on Fridays to give information about various welfare schemes of the state government, they find them closed. And when officials have holidays on Sundays, the madrasas are open.

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Since madrasas are being modernised on the lines of basic schools, it would be better if they also have holidays on Sundays instead of Fridays, Ali argued.

In a recent survey, it was found that 8,500 madrasas were unrecognised in Uttar Pradesh. Only 558 of them are government-aided.

With agency inputs

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