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The Quiet Bloom: How Indian Muslims Are Reclaiming Their Dreams

The Quiet Bloom: How Indian Muslims Are Reclaiming Their Dreams

&NewLine;<p>There is a kind of revolution that does not announce itself with slogans or banners&period; It does not break windows or burn headlines&period; Instead&comma; it unfolds quietly in the dim light of late-night study sessions&comma; on dusty sports fields&comma; in rented rooms with borrowed books and second-hand dreams&period; That is where you will find it&period; And that is where&comma; today&comma; Indian Muslims are writing one of the most powerful stories of modern India&period; It&&num;8217&semi;s not just a story of personal success&period; It&&num;8217&semi;s a story of reclaiming space not through confrontation&comma; but through quiet&comma; persistent excellence&period; The kind that demands no applause but deserves every standing ovation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Take Majid Mujahid Hussain&comma; a 17-year-old from Burhanpur&comma; Madhya Pradesh&period; His town doesn&&num;8217&semi;t often make the news&comma; but Majid just gave it a reason to shine&period; When the JEE Advanced results were announced this year&comma; he had secured an All India Rank 3&period; He didn&&num;8217&semi;t have the best of coaching centres or unlimited resources&period; What he had was a belief so strong that for two years&comma; he shut out the noise literally by logging out of social media and logging into his dream&period; He didn&&num;8217&semi;t just crack an exam&semi; he cracked through the invisible wall of assumption that often shadows names like his&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Across the country&comma; in a different corner of struggle&comma; hundreds of other Muslim students rose&comma; too&period; At Rahmani30&comma; a quiet but fierce academic movement where 176 out of 205 students made it to JEE Advanced this year&period;<br &sol;>Most of them come from homes where dreams are often exchanged for duty&period;<br &sol;>Yet here they are&comma; knocking at the doors of the IlTs&comma; not asking for permission&comma; but proving they belong&period; And then there are the girls&period; Oh&comma; how they rise&period; In the heart of Pulwama&comma; Kashmir&comma; a name far too often associated with conflict&comma; where two young girls&comma; Sadaf Mushtaq and Simrah Mir&comma; shattered every stereotype by scoring over 99 percentiles in JEE Mains 2025&period; In a region where the world sees headlines&comma; they see possibilities&period; And they are turning those possibilities into truth&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>This spirit raw&comma; real&comma; and relentless&comma; is not limited to academics&period; On tracks and in pools&comma; on fields and under floodlights&comma; Muslim athletes are lifting not just medals but hopes&period; Mohammed Afsal ran faster than any Indian man has in seven years in the 800 meters&comma; setting a new national record&period; Shams Aalam&comma; a paraplegic swimmer from Bihar&comma; now holds a world record for open water swimming and is ranked number one globally in this category&period; With every stroke&comma; every lap&comma; he tells a world that often dismisses disability and identity&colon; &&num;8220&semi;I exist&period; I excel&period;&&num;8221&semi; Somewhere in Bandipora&comma; Kashmir&comma; Tajamul Islam&comma; kickboxing world champion and teenage coach&comma; is teaching young girls how to punch through patriarchy and fear&period; Her academy&comma; built not of concrete but of courage&comma; trains over 700 girls&period; She doesn&&num;8217&semi;t just build fighters&period; She builds freedom&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>This isn&&num;8217&semi;t just a collection of success stories&period; This is a cultural current&period;<br &sol;>A quiet rebellion&period; A soft but firm reminder that the Indian Muslim identity is not confined to victimhood or vilification&period; It is vibrant&comma; vast&comma; and victorious&period; It is filled with fathers who sell fruit so their daughters can become doctors&period;<br &sol;>With mothers who sew late into the night so their sons can afford coaching classes&period; With children who pray not just for themselves&comma; but for a future where merit is not filtered through mistrust&period; They are not just stories of individual talent&comma; but of collective resilience&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>If you listen closely&comma; there&&num;8217&semi;s no anger in these stories&period; Just focus&period; No demands&comma; only dedication&period; No bitterness&comma; only belief&period; It is time we tune in&period;<br &sol;>Time we amplify these voices&comma; not just in data sheets and sports pages&comma; but in the national conscience&period; Because what is unfolding quietly in the margins today may just redefine the mainstream tomorrow&period; And maybe&comma; just maybe&comma; this is how revolutions are meant to happen not with noise&comma; but with results&period;<br &sol;>Not with fury&comma; but with fire&period; Not with rage&comma; but with resolve&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>-Insha Warsi<br>Francophone and Journalism Studies&comma;<br>Jamia Millia Islamia&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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