Al-Ameen Mission

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Al-Ameen Mission is a residential institute where located in the village Khalatpur in Howrah district of West Bengal, India. Established in 1986, it is now spread across 7 districts of the state with 8 branches and spread in. It has 12 thousand residential students now. About 20 thousand students passed from here. It has also started it's journey to incorporate the CBSE curriculum. Very recently Al Ameen Mission has started some branches which are following the CBSE curriculum.

History[]

The Secretary-General of the Mission, Nurul Islam, had set up the Khalatpur Junior High Madrasa in 1976, when he was still studying his 10th Standard. In May 1984, he started the Institute of Islamic Culture, setting up a hostel for the institute in 1986 in the Madrasa building itself, with the collection of one fistful of rice from every home in his village, Khalatpur. In January 1987, it was renamed as Al-Ameen Mission inspired by the Al-Ameen Educational Society of Dr. Mumtaj Ahmed Khan and Ramkrishna mission. It was later financially supported by industrialist Mustaque Hossain and many others.[1][2]

Al-Ameen Mission follows the curriculum of West Bengal Board of Secondary Education. It was awarded "The Telegraph School Award for Excellence" which is shared with the South Point High School in 2002.[3]

Activities[]

As well as being an educational institute, Al-Ameen Mission also does charitable work for the Muslim community. It has helped unemployed Muslims with loans and has scholarship programs to help other communities' needy students.

On 19 May 2015, Al-Ameen Mission received Banga Bhushan Award. For the past many years Al Ameen Mission is the center of national News (Times of India, The Telegraph, etc.) for lifting the underprivileged kids to the profession and out of poverty.

Funding[]

The mission is mostly run by donation and zakat. Muslims throughout the country contribute their zakat to the Mission, which takes care of 25% of seats reserved for the poor, destitute, and orphans. It has received funding from many sources such as Pataka Industries Pvt. Limited, the Maulana Azad Education Foundation and the Board of Waqfs, West Bengal.

Campus[]

The main campus of Mission, Al-Ameen Mission for Boys, is located at Khalatpur, Howrah

Management[]

The main campus of Mission, Al-Ameen Mission. This is as a board. The main campus Khalatpur maintains the others campus. Across West Bengal Al Ameen runs about 50 schools. Most of them are directly run by Al Ameen Mission and a few are located in remote village areas which are run by local non-profit for better management and service. Those academies are called in "Collaboration with Al Ameen Mission". They are academically identical to Al Ameen Mission.

Teachers of Al-Ameen[]

Al-Ameen Mission has a good number of permanent teachers as well as visiting teachers from some reputed schools and colleges. The visiting teachers have shown passion of education beyond traditional teaching territories, as some them become long term associates of Al-Ameen to nurture the talents from the backward minorities. Of all the visiting teachers, Mrinal Kanti Dowari, who died in September 2020 was known for being the authoring standard textbooks of higher secondary physics in West Bengal remain an withstanding legacy to the Al-Ameen students. Despite most of the permanent teachers in Al-Ameen lacked what it takes to be an outstanding educator or orator during the golden age of Al-Ameen i.e. 2000 -2006 (duration when the institution can be considered to have come of age), the dedication was notable regardless of their stature and meagre pay. And the students testimonials speaks out that loud. The success of Al-Ameen students is not just the success of the school but the enduring triumph of the devotion of the teachers to the most well known educational movement among Bengali Muslims in recent times. However, there are few teachers which needs to be mentioned for the unequivocal support to the side of the students, be it educational, sentimental, inspirational or motivational. Dr. Mosarraf Hossain, Amir Hossain, Harun Halder, Madat Ali, S.Zakaria, Syed Shaheed-ul Islam, Rabial Hossain Khan, Prof Susil Kumar Das, Sk Md Iyamin, Mridul Ahamed, Pervej Alam, Md Nur Alam, Dr. Gahul Amen, Dr.A. Khan, KMZ et al, muftiR. were the patrons. Many says has these teachers were not there, Al-Ameen would have been known a lot differently. And to a big extent Dr.Mosarraf Hossain can be safely assumed to be the role model of the students by popular judgement. Dr.Hossain and Syed Shaheed-ul Islam have left Al-Ameen shortly after 2006 to start new chapters of educational movement among Bengali Muslims.

Branches[]

Al-Ameen Mission[]

  1. Al-Ameen Mission for Boys & Girls, khalatpur, Udaynaranpur, Howrah
  2. Al-Ameen Mission for Boys & Girls, Belpukur, Dakshin Dinajpur.
  3. Al-Ameen Mission for Boys & Girls, Patharchapri, Birbhum near the shrine of Hazrath Data Mahboob Shah Wali.
  4. Al-Ameen Mission for Boys & Girls, Dhuliyan, Murshidabad.
  5. Al-Ameen Mission for Boys, Panchur, Kolkata

Al-Ameen Mission Trust[]

  1. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Beldanga
  2. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Nayabaz
  3. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Khalisani
  4. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Uluberia
  5. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Newtown
  6. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Hasnecha
  7. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Suryapur
  8. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Chapra
  9. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Malda
  10. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Memari
  11. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Jalpaiguri
  12. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Midnapur
  13. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Ujunia
  14. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Rampurhat
  15. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Jharbari
  16. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Hemtabad
  17. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Siliguri
  18. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Kharagpur
  19. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Ratanpur
  20. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Bhabta
  21. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Ranchi[4]
  22. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Howly
  23. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, New Town
  24. Plassey Girls Hostel, Nadia
  25. Chichuria High School Boys Hostel
  26. Sudhakarpur High School Boys Hostel
  27. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Tripura
  28. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Patna
  29. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Maricha
  30. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Coochbehar
  31. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Baruipur
  32. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Umarpur
  33. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Lohapur
  34. Al-Ameen Mission Academy, Indore

Al-Ameen Education Council[]

  1. Al-Ameen Academy, Baruipur (G)
  2. Al-Ameen Academy, Paikpari
  3. Al-Ameen Academy, Babnan
  4. Al-Ameen Academy, Dubrajpur
  5. Al-Ameen Academy, Sugarh
  6. Al-Ameen Academy, Mahammadpur
  7. Al-Ameen Academy, Uluberia
  8. Al-Ameen Academy, Jaynagar
  9. Al-Ameen Academy, Burdwan
  10. Al-Ameen Academy, Usthi
  11. Al-Ameen Academy, Papuri
  12. Al-Ameen Academy, Kelejora
  13. Al-Ameen Academy, Bankura
  14. AL-Hedayet Mission School, Ranihati
  15. Al-Ameen Academy, Jibonpur
  16. Al-Ameen Academy, Baishnabnagar
  17. Al-Ameen Academy, Taldi
  18. Al-Ameen Academy, Bhangar
  19. Al-Ameen Academy, Galsi
  20. Al-Ameen Academy, Paschim Durgapur
  21. Al-Ameen Academy, Hasamudipur
  22. Al-Ameen Academy, Horiharpara
  23. Al-Ameen Academy, Hemtabad
  24. Al-Ameen Academy, Birpur
  25. Al-Ameen Academy, Kalna
  26. Al-Ameen Academy, Nowda
  27. Al-Ameen Academy, Pandua
  28. Al-Ameen Academy, Surjapur
  29. Al-Ameen Academy, Kotbar
  30. Al-Ameen Academy, Baruipur

References[]

  1. ^ "Al-Ameen Mission". alameenmission.org. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  2. ^ "School Bells Echo Amidst Paddy Fields".
  3. ^ "At a glance: The telegraph school awards for excellence 2009". www.telegraphindia.com. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  4. ^ Yengkhom, Sumati (19 June 2015). "Al-Ameen takes mission to Ranchi and Assam | Kolkata News - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
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