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| Late
: Dr. Akhtar Hameed Khan
| Remembering Dr. Akhtar Hameed
Khan
Tribute
Tuesday October 06 2009 23:28:53 PM BDT
By Nasim Yousaf
Dr. Akhtar Hameed Khan, social scientist, was
born into a cultured and noble family on July 15, 1914 in Agra,
India. He was the eldest son of Khan Sahib Amir Ahmad Khan. After
completing his education in India, he joined the Indian Civil
Service (I.C.S.). After joining the prestigious group of government
servants, Dr. Khan went to Magdelene College at Cambridge University
for two years, from 1936 to 1938.
In 1939, Dr. Khan married
Hameedah Begum, the oldest daughter of the famous leader from South
Asia, Allama Inayatullah Khan Al-Mashriqi. Their Nikah (Islamic
marriage) ceremony was held at the end of 1939, and their Rukhsati
(bride’s departure from parent’s home) was held in May 1940.
After Hameedah’s death, he re-married. From his first wife, he had
three daughters and a son and from his second wife, he had a
daughter.
Dr. Khan was the founder of the Pakistan Academy
for Rural Development, Comilla (now known as Bangladesh Academy for
Rural Development, BARD) and the Orangi Pilot Project (OPP),
Karachi. The BARD was started in 1958 whereas the OPP was launched
in 1980. Dr. Khan achieved global recognition as a result of his
work on these exemplary community development projects.
In
the early 1960’s, Dr. Khan formally introduced microfinance /
microcredit through the Comilla Co-operatives scheme (also known as
Comilla Model or Comilla Approach); he demonstrated to the world
that microfinance / microcredit models could work and could be
applied on global scale. Today microcredit is a buzzword in the
world of economic development and poverty alleviation.
Crediting Dr. Khan on microcredit, Louis A. Picard, Robert
Groelsema, and Terry F. Buss wrote in their book entitled, Foreign
Aid and Foreign Policy: Lessons for the Next Half-Century: "The
village small cooperative loan system set up through Comilla was a
forerunner of the Grameen Bank, now considered a major breakthrough
in terms of microcredit."
Microcapital Monitor
(Massachusetts, USA) wrote in its issue of May 2008 under
“Pioneers in Microfinance” (under written by Deutsche Bank):
“…Khan is the originator of two development exemplars: the
Comilla Model and the Orangi Pilot Project. Dr. Akhtar Hameed Khan
help lay the basic foundations of the microcredit movement through
his work on the Comilla Model of rural development in the 1960’s
and the Orangi Pilot Project in the 1980’s.”
Under the
Comilla Co-operatives scheme, Dr. Khan also introduced microsavings.
Initially the villagers could not grasp the concept, and Arthur F.
Raper wrote of these villagers in his book: “‘What does the man
[Dr. Khan] mean — telling us [villagers] to save?’…‘When we
tell him we are too poor to save, he says that is why we must
save.’” Raper went on to write in reference to said scheme:
“The savings in the early days appear tiny indeed. During April,
savings of the first seven agriculture societies ranged from
Rs.12.00 to Rs. 65.00. The per-member monthly savings ranged from
Rs.0. 60 (12 cents) to Rs. 2.65.”
Recognizing Dr. Khan’s
overall achievements at the Comilla Academy, the Board of Trustees
of The Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation (Philippines) honored him
with the Magsaysay Award, also known as Asia's Nobel Prize, in
August 1963. In 1964, Michigan State University awarded him with an
Honorary Doctorate for his works and accomplishments.
In his
lifetime, Dr. Khan was also given many other awards for his
innovative ideas, tremendous achievements, and contributions towards
economic and human development. Among these were the
Nishan-i-Imtiaz, Hilal-e-Pakistan, Sitra-i-Pakistan, and Jinnah
Award.
Dr. Khan was also invited to speak at various forums
and he shared his ideas at various institutions around the globe.
Dr. Khan was a visiting professor at many distinguished
universities, such as Harvard, Princeton, and Michigan State
Universities in the USA, Lund University in Sweden, and Oxford
University in England. Dr. Khan was also on the boards of various
educational institutions in Pakistan.
Throughout the course
of his lifetime, not only did he establish himself as a social
scientist but also as a scholar and a poet. Dr. Khan possessed an
immense amount of knowledge, and we could have learned much more
from him, but his time came to depart. Dr. Khan left us on October
09, 1999; he died in the USA where he was visiting his family.
Today, Dr. Khan’s ideas and works are quoted in books and
journals and are not only globally recognized but replicated in
various countries of the world. Millions of unprivileged people are
benefiting from these projects in Pakistan, in Bangladesh, and
across the globe.
May Dr. Akhtar Hameed Khan rest in peace
and may God bless his soul.
Nasim Yousaf E Mil :
infoahkhan@yahoo.com A web site has been dedicated to Dr. Khan:
http://akhtar-hameed-khan.8m.com
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