The Musalman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Musalman
Type Daily newspaper
Format Broadsheet

Owner Syed Nasarulla
Founded 1927
Language Urdu
Price 75 paise
Headquarters Chennai
Circulation 22,000

The Musalman (Urdu: مسلمان) is the oldest Urdu-language daily newspaper published from Chennai in India.[1] It is an evening paper with four pages, all of which are handwritten by calligraphers, before being mass-produced with a printing press.[2] According to the Wired and The Times of India, The Musalman is possibly the only "handwritten" newspaper in the world.[3][1]

Contents

[edit] History

The newspaper was founded by Syed Azmathullah in 1927.[1] It was inaugurated by Dr. Mukhtar Ahmed Ansari, the president of the Madras session of the Indian National Congress.[4] Since its inception, the newspaper's office has been located at the Triplicane High Road in Chennai.

After Syed Azmathullah's death, the newspaper was edited by Syed Fazullah, who died on 26 April 2008, at the age of 78.[1] In 2007, Fazullah had expressed fear that the newspaper might die with him, since his sons were not interested in carrying on the calligraphy tradition.[5] Fazullah's son, Syed Nasarulla, had stated that he has no interest in calligraphy, and "there will be changes", when he takes over.[2]

As of 30 April 2008, the new editor is yet to be decided, but the newspaper is published everyday, still "hand-written".

[edit] The team

The calligraphers, known as katibs, work in a little corner of a 800 sq. ft. one-room office. They don't have many facilities — only two wall fans, three bulbs and a tube light.[1] As of 2008, the calligraphy team consists of one man and two women, who work almost three hours on each page of the hand-written newspaper.[1] The hand-written product is processed onto a photo negative and mass-produced with a printing press.

Rahman Husseini is the current chief katib (copywriter) of the paper. He joined the newspaper as an accountant, and took over as the Katib, when the then chief katib passed away at the age of 1980. Rahman Husseni earns Rs. 2,500 a month. Other katibs include Shabana and Khurshid. They are paid Rs. 60 a day per page.[4]

The chief reporter is Chinnaswamy Balasubramaniam, who has been with the newspaper for past 20 years.[4] The newspaper has correspondents all over India, including New Delhi, Kolkata, and Hyderabad.[1]

The newspaper's office often hosts renowned poets, religious leaders and royalty, some of whom contribute to the pages.[2]

[edit] Format

The newspaper consists of four pages. The front page is for national and international news, the second and the third pages are for local news, and the fourth page is for sports. Some space is left blank at the bottom right corner of the front page, in case there is some breaking news.[1]

As of April 2008, the paper is sold for 75 paise a copy, and has around 22,000 subscribers.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Kamini Mathai. "Each page of this Urdu newspaper is handwritten by 'katibs'", The Times of India, 2008-04-30. Retrieved on 2008-04-30. 
  2. ^ a b c Scott Carney (2007-06-07). A Handwritten Daily Paper in India Faces the Digital Future. Wired. Retrieved on 2008-04-30. (Also on ABC News)
  3. ^ Scott Carney (2007-06-07). India's News Calligraphers Do It on Deadline. Wired. Retrieved on 2008-04-30.
  4. ^ a b c Suganthy Krishnamachari. "Newspaper nurtures art", The Hindu, 2007-11-02. Retrieved on 2008-04-30. 
  5. ^ Image 7 of 22. India's News Calligraphers Do It on Deadline. Wired.

[edit] External links