| |
Bangladesh Cricket Join fellow Tigers fans to discuss Bangladesh Cricket
|

December 5, 2007, 08:34 AM
|
|
Cricket Legend
|
|
Join Date: August 16, 2007
Location: Canada
Favorite Player: Ash,Tamim, Rahim,Sakib
Posts: 4,650
|
|
I really dont know if Tapash Bhaisya went for prayers, I was not at the mosque, but there are Hindus who occasionally visit our mosques and they follow the rules, similarly, many Muslims visit Hindu temples. In Guyana, Hindus greet muslims by saying Assalam wa lai Kum, Muslims greet Hindus by saying Namaste, we intermingle a great deal, after all, we have the same ancestry, share a few common customs also.
When we have a Muslim function and dawat, we invite our Hindu friends and neighbours, and it is amazing to see them put their hands together during the opening and closing duas. We are also invited for their functions. For Diwali, Holi and Eid, Muslims and Hindus come together for these celebrations. Also everyone look forward to Christmas and we join our Christian friends and neighbours.
The only rule is that non muslims do not take part in the Zanazah prayers.
I hope that I have enlightened my Bangla friends here about our culture in Guyana.
|

December 5, 2007, 09:01 AM
|
|
Administrator BanglaCricket Founder
|
|
Join Date: June 20, 2002
Location: Virginia, USA
Favorite Player: তামীম, শা
Posts: 9,390
|
|
That reminds me of BD in Trinidad. our boys won ountless Trini hearts with their cricket and more importantly, with their attitude. Very easy going bunch and never hessitant to stop and chat a bit, even if the fans are not Bangladeshis. Just go back and look at some of the pictures I posted earlier from a foreign fan, our boys were playing cricket with tourists at the beach.
As for Ash, he is probably our biggest cricketing superstar and he makes folks take notice of his talent whenever he is ON. However, like most people says, he gives his wicket away a whole lot more then we'd like him to. If he can contain himself, we will see the records matching his true talent.
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by zainab
No bhai! I am not a Sri Lankan, but have lived in Colombo a few years. i am Guyanese
muslim. the people of Guyana fell in love with Ash after his spell bounding performance. So many people said that it was money well spent to see his magic with the bat. His batting was the highlight and when they went to the Queenstown mosque for prayers, so many people wanted to touch him and to speak to him. He was very gracious to everyone, and he is the one who made Guyana take notice of Bangladesh, that up to now many Guyanese still speak about the team and also they are great supporters.
|
__________________
Bangladesh - World Champions - World Cup 20**
বাংলাদেশ - বিশ্ব চাম্পিয়ন - বিশ্বকাপ ক্রিকেট ২০**
|

December 5, 2007, 11:55 AM
|
 |
Cricket Sage
|
|
Join Date: February 18, 2004
Location: The Bible Belt
Favorite Player: Anamul, Nasir, Taskin
Posts: 19,373
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by zainab
I really dont know if Tapash Bhaisya went for prayers, I was not at the mosque, but there are Hindus who occasionally visit our mosques and they follow the rules, similarly, many Muslims visit Hindu temples. In Guyana, Hindus greet muslims by saying Assalam wa lai Kum, Muslims greet Hindus by saying Namaste, we intermingle a great deal, after all, we have the same ancestry, share a few common customs also.
When we have a Muslim function and dawat, we invite our Hindu friends and neighbours, and it is amazing to see them put their hands together during the opening and closing duas. We are also invited for their functions. For Diwali, Holi and Eid, Muslims and Hindus come together for these celebrations. Also everyone look forward to Christmas and we join our Christian friends and neighbours.
The only rule is that non muslims do not take part in the Zanazah prayers.
I hope that I have enlightened my Bangla friends here about our culture in Guyana.
|
thats kinda cool...definitely not like that where i live (Music City, USA).
most of my friends would be surprised (i was too kind of) to find out there is an entire Bangladeshi community here seperate from ours. they are mostly hindu, but there is at least one christian family i know of (maybe more).
we never see them at dawats or our eid or shadheenota deebosh stuff...however there is one hindu family thats always there...for some reason he prefers to hang out with us. he's really nice, during prayer time, he actually goes and gets jainamaaz's out for the aunties and calls everyone as soon as its time to pray without actually praying himself. but there is a huge community of non-muslim bangladeshis and west bengalis that generally associate amongst themselves.
not sure how it is in other US cities.
__________________
Cricket cannot live with the mistaken belief that people want to see big hits. People like to see goals, but no one is talking of moving the goalposts a metre wider either side. (Harsha Bhogle)
|

December 5, 2007, 01:43 PM
|
 |
Moderator BC Editorial Team
|
|
Join Date: February 25, 2004
Location: Fremont CA
Posts: 9,479
|
|
This is fast becoming an FC thread - but in the Bay Area we really don't give a hoot to your religion when it comes to dawats and adda's  Might be because it's all highly-educated Bangladeshis in the bay area (i.e. came for grad-school and then stayed types)
|

December 5, 2007, 01:56 PM
|
 |
Cricket Guru
|
|
Join Date: February 23, 2004
Location: Overland Park, Kansas
Favorite Player: Nantu Ghotok
Posts: 10,613
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by zainab
I really dont know if Tapash Bhaisya went for prayers, I was not at the mosque, but there are Hindus who occasionally visit our mosques and they follow the rules, similarly, many Muslims visit Hindu temples. In Guyana, Hindus greet muslims by saying Assalam wa lai Kum, Muslims greet Hindus by saying Namaste, we intermingle a great deal, after all, we have the same ancestry, share a few common customs also.
When we have a Muslim function and dawat, we invite our Hindu friends and neighbours, and it is amazing to see them put their hands together during the opening and closing duas. We are also invited for their functions. For Diwali, Holi and Eid, Muslims and Hindus come together for these celebrations. Also everyone look forward to Christmas and we join our Christian friends and neighbours.
The only rule is that non muslims do not take part in the Zanazah prayers.
I hope that I have enlightened my Bangla friends here about our culture in Guyana.
|
BTW Zainab We call Ashrafull by the Name "EID" which comes twice a year just like his big scores... (in case you didn't knew that by this time...)
__________________
1. Shahadat Hossain Bangladesh v Zimbabwe ( Harare,02/08/2006) [TV Mufambisi c K. Mashud; E Chigumbura lbw; P Utseya c K. Mashud] 2. Alok Kapali Bangladesh v Pakistan ( Peshawar, 27,28,29,30 August 2003) [S Ahmed c M Mortaza; D Kaneria lbw; U Gul lbw]
|

December 6, 2007, 07:29 AM
|
|
Cricket Legend
|
|
Join Date: August 16, 2007
Location: Canada
Favorite Player: Ash,Tamim, Rahim,Sakib
Posts: 4,650
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by akabir77
BTW Zainab We call Ashrafull by the Name "EID" which comes twice a year just like his big scores... (in case you didn't knew that by this time...)
|
I am aware of this. Poor fellow!~ I heard that in the Test matches an d ODIs for 2007, only one batsman from Bangladesh made a century and 87 runs, and who else? but our
Ashraful. somehow, his name always pops up, and regardless, how much he is criticised by Banglacricket, he holds most of the records for Bangladesh.
He did well in 2005, failed in 2006, did fairly well in 2007, now we have 2008 to look forward to. Anyhow, my belief is that Coach Siddons will sort him out a bit and within 6 months, Ash will be 50% better in his consistency, there is no problem with his style.
|

December 6, 2007, 01:37 PM
|
|
ODI Cricketer
|
|
Join Date: July 19, 2005
Posts: 847
|
|
Zainab, your posts are really great. I'm Sri Lankan but I like the way you support Bangladesh. You are probably as popular as Ash on this site by now...
Good to know that you've been in Sri Lanka too and wish you'd visit my country again.
|

December 6, 2007, 01:44 PM
|
 |
BanglaCricket Staff BC - Bangladesh Representative
|
|
Join Date: February 28, 2005
Location: Here
Favorite Player: Father of BD Cricket
Posts: 20,228
|
|
Hey Abherath... welcome back mate...
good to see you around again....
__________________
Fabi Ayyi Ala E Rabbikuma tukajjiban - فَبِأَيِّ آلاءِ رَبِّكُمَا تُكَذِّبَانِ
Then which of the favors of your Lord will you deny? "We do not deny any of our Lord's bounties/favors upon us."
|

December 6, 2007, 01:50 PM
|
 |
Cricket Sage
|
|
Join Date: February 18, 2004
Location: The Bible Belt
Favorite Player: Anamul, Nasir, Taskin
Posts: 19,373
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by zainab
I am aware of this. Poor fellow!~ I heard that in the Test matches an d ODIs for 2007, only one batsman from Bangladesh made a century and 87 runs, and who else? but our
Ashraful. somehow, his name always pops up, and regardless, how much he is criticised by Banglacricket, he holds most of the records for Bangladesh.
He did well in 2005, failed in 2006, did fairly well in 2007, now we have 2008 to look forward to. Anyhow, my belief is that Coach Siddons will sort him out a bit and within 6 months, Ash will be 50% better in his consistency, there is no problem with his style.
|
sohel bhai (who is absent due to cyclone relief work) and i are perhaps the 2 biggest ash supporters here. of course when ash is on song, everyone loves the boyish arrogance which flows from his bat (even the opposition fans). but most people criticize ash harshly because he is the only one in our side who is expected to perform in a way which would make even the legends of the game envious. and mind you, he has done that. i watched his 158* against India back in 2004 live (it was my first experience watching bangladesh - what a way to start, eh) and it was simply FLAWLESS. the strokes were executed with perfection, he was not once beaten by pace or turn, not once edged a delivery, but he middled everything, and never offered a chance during his 194 ball innings.
for the same reason you will find that aftab is also criticized, because he can be the best sidekick to a batting genius. contrast this to shahriar nafees. no one is ridiculing him, because we know that while he is the best opener we've had in either form of the game, he is not near the talent level of aftab or ash.
__________________
Cricket cannot live with the mistaken belief that people want to see big hits. People like to see goals, but no one is talking of moving the goalposts a metre wider either side. (Harsha Bhogle)
|

December 6, 2007, 01:54 PM
|
 |
Cricket Sage
|
|
Join Date: February 18, 2004
Location: The Bible Belt
Favorite Player: Anamul, Nasir, Taskin
Posts: 19,373
|
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by RazabQ
This is fast becoming an FC thread - but in the Bay Area we really don't give a hoot to your religion when it comes to dawats and adda's  Might be because it's all highly-educated Bangladeshis in the bay area (i.e. came for grad-school and then stayed types)
|
haha...razab bhai calling our nashville community uneducated.
actually, we do have a further split in the bangladeshi community. first split is due to religious reasons and is rarely bridged. the second split is within the muslim bangladeshi community between the educated and the not-so educated. this gap is actually bridged with regularity in some cases.
most of the bangladeshis in our community here are physicians (mostly psychiatrists), but there are a good number of engineers and PhDs (mostly young post-docs or researchers at Vanderbilt but a few university faculty as well).
__________________
Cricket cannot live with the mistaken belief that people want to see big hits. People like to see goals, but no one is talking of moving the goalposts a metre wider either side. (Harsha Bhogle)
|

December 6, 2007, 02:54 PM
|
 |
Test Cricketer
|
|
Join Date: February 24, 2005
Location: In the deserts of arabia
Favorite Player: They betrayed us
Posts: 1,408
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by al Furqaan
sohel bhai (who is absent due to cyclone relief work) and i are perhaps the 2 biggest ash supporters here.
|
Al Furqaan bhai, how can you forget me in that list  ?
__________________
'You won't succeed the task until you have succeeded the task within yourself' - Ruhaan Israr Eskander
[Revolutionist inventor and discoverer]
|

December 6, 2007, 04:33 PM
|
|
Cricket Legend
|
|
Join Date: August 16, 2007
Location: Canada
Favorite Player: Ash,Tamim, Rahim,Sakib
Posts: 4,650
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by abherath
Zainab, your posts are really great. I'm Sri Lankan but I like the way you support Bangladesh. You are probably as popular as Ash on this site by now...
Good to know that you've been in Sri Lanka too and wish you'd visit my country again.
|
Thank you. I support Sri Lanka too, know Sangakkara personally. I support BD against SRI Lanka, but when Sri Lanka is playing another team, I support them. Was so sad to see them get so beaten up by the aussies, but happy to see that they beat England in the first test.
By the way, I lived in Colombo in 2000 and 2001, have visited this beautiful country all over excepting the North. I was in Colombo recently, usually stay at the Taj Samudra.I have been to Sri Lanka many times especially after the Tsunami, did a lot of work for an orphange in Galle.
It was in 2001, that I became more interested in BD cricket because I was at the SSC when Ashraful made his maiden century after playing Murali as a pro, only 17 yrs old, I was amazed at the audacity of him. He won my heart then.
You must be proud of Murali and also Sangakkara, they are both at the top of the ICC test rankings. I only pray that Ash can have the same mental approach and determination like Sangakkara, then maybe by the time he reaches Sangha's age, he can be a good batsman.
Last edited by zainab; December 6, 2007 at 05:11 PM.
|

December 6, 2007, 04:44 PM
|
|
Cricket Legend
|
|
Join Date: August 16, 2007
Location: Canada
Favorite Player: Ash,Tamim, Rahim,Sakib
Posts: 4,650
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by al Furqaan
sohel bhai (who is absent due to cyclone relief work) and i are perhaps the 2 biggest ash supporters here. of course when ash is on song, everyone loves the boyish arrogance which flows from his bat (even the opposition fans). but most people criticize ash harshly because he is the only one in our side who is expected to perform in a way which would make even the legends of the game envious. and mind you, he has done that. i watched his 158* against India back in 2004 live (it was my first experience watching bangladesh - what a way to start, eh) and it was simply FLAWLESS. the strokes were executed with perfection, he was not once beaten by pace or turn, not once edged a delivery, but he middled everything, and never offered a chance during his 194 ball innings.
for the same reason you will find that aftab is also criticized, because he can be the best sidekick to a batting genius. contrast this to shahriar nafees. no one is ridiculing him, because we know that while he is the best opener we've had in either form of the game, he is not near the talent level of aftab or ash.
|
In my heart,I dont think anyone can match him. I also witnessed his maiden Test century in 2001 at the SSC in Colombo,_{17yrs old} saw him in Cardiff and witnessed his elegant batting in Guyana. It saddens me to see him fail when he has so much talent. I know he is aware of it, especially he is so scared of failing when a whole nation depends on him. What a burden on young shoulders!
I am mad with Aftab too, because here is a guy with natural talent, but also plays stupidly like Ash.
Last edited by zainab; December 11, 2007 at 09:14 AM.
|

December 6, 2007, 04:55 PM
|
 |
Cricket Guru
|
|
Join Date: June 18, 2005
Location: AB,Canada
Favorite Player: nasir hossain
Posts: 8,573
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by zainab
Thank you. I support Sri Lanka too, know Sangakkara personally. I support BD against SRI Lanka, but when Sri Lanka is playing another team, I support them. Was so sad to see them get so beaten up by the aussies, but happy to see that they beat England in the first test.
By the way, I lived in Colombo in 1970 and 1971, have visited this beautiful country all over excepting the North. I was in Colombo recently, usually stay at the Taj Samudra.I have been to Sri Lanka many times especially after the Tsunami, did a lot of work for an orphange in Galle.
It was in 1971 that I became more interested in BD cricket because I was at the SSC when Ashraful made his maiden century after playing Murali as a pro, only 17 yrs old, I was amazed at the audacity of him. He won my heart then.
You must be proud of Murali and also Sangakkara, they are both at the top of the ICC test rankings. I only pray that Ash can have the same mental approach and determination like Sangakkara, then maybe by the time he reaches Sangha's age, he can be a good batsman.
|
that must be typo. you mean 2001.
__________________
All our lives we are giving and accepting reasons. Reasons are the coin we pay for the beliefs we hold.
|

December 6, 2007, 05:09 PM
|
|
Cricket Legend
|
|
Join Date: August 16, 2007
Location: Canada
Favorite Player: Ash,Tamim, Rahim,Sakib
Posts: 4,650
|
|
Yes, it is a typo error, you guys are spot on. It is the year 2000 and 2001.
|

December 6, 2007, 06:11 PM
|
 |
Cricket Sage
|
|
Join Date: February 18, 2004
Location: The Bible Belt
Favorite Player: Anamul, Nasir, Taskin
Posts: 19,373
|
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by israr
Al Furqaan bhai, how can you forget me in that list  ?
|
sorry bhai, bhul hoise...maaf koren bhai.
i knew someone else was down there i just couldn't remember who.
good luck, may allah bless your souls and those of your families.
__________________
Cricket cannot live with the mistaken belief that people want to see big hits. People like to see goals, but no one is talking of moving the goalposts a metre wider either side. (Harsha Bhogle)
|
|
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
|
|
|
| Thread Tools |
|
|
| Display Modes |
Linear Mode
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is On
|
|
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:39 PM.
|
|