SINDHI ASSOCIATION OF NORTH AMERICA
Convention 1988
New York, NY
Fourth SANA Convention (June 25-26, 1988 - New York)
The
fourth annual General Body meeting was held in New York on the
weekend of June 25-26, 1988. The coordinator of the meeting was
Badar Shaikh with support from Sarfraz Abbasi, and others.
In addition to the annual meeting of members, an Adabi Mehfil
moderated by Dr. Aijaz Turk, a musical program, and a picnic was
organized in conjunction with the conference. Several delegates from
Sindh (Pakistan), UK, and India also attended the conferences. The key
decisions made the meeting included authorizing Dr. Aijaz Turk to
pursue discussion of the Sindhi Language project with officials
of Sindh University and the Institute of Sindhology. SANA
provided an initial grant of $ 500 to Dr. Aftab Kazi to start a
quality publication called “The Sindh Journal of Asian and African
Affairs”. SANA also provided a donation of $ 500 to Mr. Aijaz
Sindhi to start a Sindh magazine “SANEH” from New York.
The meeting approved a moderate increase in SANA membership fees;
and Dr. Aijaz Turk announced the formation of a SANA Medical
Chapter.
Total donation pledges made the meeting exceeded $ 5,000.
The speakers at the New York meeting included Professor Ghulam Mustafa Shah, Hafeez Pirzado, Makhdoom Khaliquzaman, and Dr. Khalid Laghari. Mr. Hafeez Pirzado in a moving speech talked about the systematic colonization of Sindh. He said that the 1973 constitution had failed and there was a need of a new constitution with equal rights for all four provinces. The emotion and resolve of North American Sindhis was apparent when almost every one joined and sang “Sindhri te sar ker na deendo e yar, sahando ker e mayar oh yar”.
The
meeting appointed an Advisory Committee consisting of Shoukat Ansari,
Shankar Lakhvani, Razzak Memon, Badar Shaikh (New York), Amanullah Turk,
Asif Wafai, Aftab Kazi, Mohammad Ali Mahar, Mahmood Qalbani, Dr. Badar
Shaikh (Maryland), Aijaz Turk, Adam Khan Laghari, and Aijaz Abro was
formed.
In his report, the President of SANA said that he had written letters to
prominent Sindhis in Europe, Far East and Middle East to form
Sindhi organizations and to launch a campaign for Sindhi Rights. [this
appeal eventually precipitatd in the formation of the Sindhi
Association of United Kingdom and Europe (SAKUE)]. The highlights
from other EC reports included information that the Toronto
Metropolitan library reported that about 200 books in Sindhi and/or
about Sindh were received from North American Sindhis.