Saturday 28 October 2006

The rebirth of Lodz draws Poland's young emigrants back



By Jerome Taylor in Lodz
Published: 28 October 2006


On a dusty building site in the heart of Poland's unheralded second city, the skeletal remains of what were once the region's famous redbrick textile factories are being brought back to life as fashionable apartments.
These sleek modern dwellings are the latest sign that Lodz - or Wodz as it is pronounced - is giving the lie to scare stories suggesting eastern Europe is going west and staying there.
The gentrified flats are being snapped up by Polish immigrants from Britain and Ireland, people who left their country two years ago when Poland joined the European Union and now want to return home and start a new life, thanks to the higher wages they earned abroad.
"Poles in London, Berlin or Dublin are buying these flats in Lodz because they know something is happening in this city," says Dorota Uravska, who works with the Australian company developing the derelict factories.
Cities like Lodz are undergoing an economic recovery, thanks to the huge amounts of cash and foreign investment opened up by Poland's entry in the EU. Structural funds from the EU alone are worth a staggering $60bn (£31.6bn) until 2013 and Poland's economic growth remains a healthy 5 per cent. All along the two and a half miles of the recently renovated Piotrkowska Street, Europe's longest high street, the fashionable boutiques, bars and restaurants are bustling with locals as they savour the transformation of a city where half the work force was out of a job as recently as the early 1990s, after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
The present unemployment is 14 per cent and set to keep falling. Three thousand jobs were created last year alone as international companies including Gillette, Indesit and Dell moved in to take advantage of low wages and a willing workforce.
Pawel is typical of the twenty-somethings of Lodz in having worked abroad, in Scotland and Holland, but deciding to come back. "This city is definitely going places now," he said. "There was no way I could stay away for ever."
For the 800,000 inhabitants, the city's turnaround is a fitting comeback for a town that was once nicknamed Ziemia Obiecana, the Promised Land. In the latter half of the 19th century, it was the second-largest city in the Russian empire and one of central Europe's largest textile manufacturers. Almost a third of the population was Jewish, and German, Russian and even Lancashire cotton workers flocked to its booming mills.
The Second World War destroyed any hopes of Lodz retaining its multicultural heritage. As few as 4,000 of the city's 300,000 Jews survived the extermination camps, and nearly all the German families fled the Soviet army as it advanced on Berlin. Remarkably, Lodz managed to avoid bombs and shells and, with Krakow, remains one of the few major Polish cities to survive the war architecturally.
But Lodz's tragic history has also provided the city with a second valuable job-creating asset: tourism. Two hours' west of Warsaw and economically run down, for years Lodz remained far from the tourist trail. Now it is the third most visited city after Warsaw and Krakow.
The Mayor, Jerzy Kropiwnicki, believes recognising Lodz's past is the key to securing the city's future. In 2004, the city marked the 60th anniversary of the liquidation of the Lodz ghetto by opening a giant memorial commemorating those who died.
"For the past 60 years, these commemorations had been rather timid," he said. "The unexpected result of [the 2004] commemorations was that visits from Germans and Jews skyrocketed. We decided the city's past was its best asset and that we must promote Lodz as a city with roots in four cultures, German, Jewish, Polish and Russian."
Asked what he would say to people in Lodz thinking of leaving for western Europe to seek higher wages, the Mayor said: "I would say learn what you can learn in the place you are and once you have learned what you can, come back."




ends.




Wednesday 11 October 2006

Koran provides the ultimate memory test for Muslim boys

(Photo:http://www.quran.gov.ae/)

By Jerome Taylor

Published: The Independent, 11 October 2006


They come from far and wide hoping to find instant fame in what is one of the Islamic world's most hotly fought-over competitions - young men and boys hungry to display their talent to the world.But this is no glitzy ceremony searching for the next pop idol. This is Dubai's International Holy Koran Award, a highly prestigious recitation competition in which contestants as young as nine recite Islam's holy book from memory. The annual award, sponsored by Dubai's ruler, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum, held its final round last night. Eighty contestants aged 21 and under, from across the globe, now have a nervous two-day wait before the winner is announced."The competition has ended. Now the judges will deliberate and winners will be announced on Thursday," said Ahmed Al Zahid, a spokesman for the award who said it was the "Olympics of Koran reading".Since the start of Ramadan, when the competition begins, scores of young contestants have climbed a large stage in front of an audience of thousands and began their recitation of the Koran at a random place chosen by the judges.In scenes reminiscent of an American spelling bee, any lapses in memory or mispronunciation in Arabic were corrected by the sounding of a bell as the judges, prominent Islamic scholars from across the region, assessed the contestant's ability to recite the Koran according to Islamic practice.Reciting the Koran from memory, a practice known as tajweed, plays a central role in helping Muslims gain a deeper understanding of their faith. Entrants are expected to be able to recite the holy book - estimated to contain more than 77,000 words - in full.Mohammed Luwan, a 20-year-old contestant from Nigeria, said: "I began to memorise the Holy Koran when I was 15 and completed memorisation of the holy book at 17."The award's youngest entrant, nine-year-old Australian Abdullah al Zahabi, amazed the audience last week as he took to the stage to begin his recitation.Standing next to his father afterwards, he told Gulf News: "My brother and I memorised the Koran at an early age and with help and support from my parents." He said that he wants to be a Muslim scholar when he grows up.He competed against 10-year-old Khubaib Muhammad, who has spent hours each day for the last three years in preparation for the award. Before taking to the stage, he said: "It was hard work, but ultimately it was worth it because I got here. I'm not nervous. I'm ready and prepared."Now in its tenth year, the event has become one of the most prestigious tajweed competitions in the world, with a top prize of more than pounds 35,000. The winners can expect a raft of invitations from across the world to recite holy texts during religious gatherings.The competition also contains a separate programme for prisoners in Dubai, who can reduce their jail terms by proving that they can learn the Koran.The programme is not open for those facing the death sentence or guilty of murder, but for those on lesser sentences, memorising the whole of the holy book can knock 20 years off their time in prison. The winners can expect invitations from across the world to recite texts.


ends.