Sunday, 26 July 2015

Class Wars


Check in your Legs at Bag Drop or Amputate and stow them in overhead Bins?


Over the years, we have witnessed both First and Business Classes evolve radically in terms of comfortability. In terms of seating, for example, first class have shifted from a large seat to an angled fully reclining bed, and finally to the Etihad style private-jet-like mini en suite or the luxurious residence aimed at the rich and famous. Same goes for Business Class, which changed from a medium sized seat to a full recliner.  This style was introduced nearly 20 years ago and is now widely accepted as the industry standard by most large airlines, thanks to British Airways!


One would expect the same evolution in the economy cabin, where 70% of the passengers are crammed, which funds the majority of the operating costs. Unfortunately, conditions have actually deteriorated. For example, a Boeing 777 was designed to accommodate nine seats abreast; it has now changed to 10 seats abreast, reducing the width and space between each passenger dramatically. Generally, nine abreast would give a generous 18.5 inch width, but, thanks to breakthrough by Emirates, the majority of large carriers now carry ten seats abreast, bringing the width down to 16.9 inch. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. If everything above isn't bad enough, let's carry on. Now, passengers are having to sacrifice leg room too. What twenty years ago was 34 inch has now been cut to now an average of 31 inch as is offered by BA or Qatar, or, even worse 28 inch as is offered by EasyJet. Judging by the way the trend is unfolding, over the next twenty years, the economy passengers will probably be asked to either check-in their legs at the bag drop counter or just amputate themselves and stow their legs in the overhead bins. As dramatic as it sounds, it's the sad reality for those who can barely afford air travel despite travelling in groups, with families, or even the elderly.

We are also in the know about plans by seat and interior manufacturers to reduce space even more, further squashing passengers. The plans are to have economy passengers sit in a face-to-face configuration. Now, imagine sitting like that on a 14 hour flight! Things will carry on this way until someone revolutionary decides to disrupt the trend just like when BA stunned the aviation world by turning their first class seats into angled lie flat beds.

I am going to change the industry in ways the world hasn’t imagined. Not only will we improve the economy class dramatically, but we’ll also dismantle business and first class products. We want to level the playing field, abolish the class wars, and offer a human class configuration, not a cattle class one.

By Kazi Shafiqur Rahman, Founder and CEO, Firnas Airways

Friday, 12 April 2013

My Father


My father inspired, motivated and supported me to make the very best of my life.

For him, life was all about Allah and helping other people to get in touch with their spiritual side. 

He loved teaching people, young and old, and he was at a training camp when he had the stroke from which he eventually died. He’d gone to learn to become a teaching inspector, because he wanted to train teachers. Wherever he went, he loved teaching, even when he just met children or men that he didn’t know very well, he would ask questions and try to teach them even a little.

Not only did he teach other people, he was mine and my family’s teacher. He taught us all how to read and write in Arabic, which was a bonus when we went to Madrasah ourselves. We knew things other kids didn't know which made us feel very special, especially when it came to reading Quran with its proper pronunciations, and the Subject of Basic Islamic knowledge. It was all thanks to my beloved father. 

My younger brother Ashiq and I had to join him at every tuition he gave at the weekends and at the evening classes he ran on weekdays in Burner Hall. It all seemed very daunting  to me at that time, as I was missing all the fun of playing with my toys. Nevertheless, he taught me how to teach kids myself, which was very beneficial because my first job was teaching two young kids and I continued tutoring until I started our new business Sunnamusk.

Today, I have a successful business, but I know that Dad was upset that I didn’t stick in at school, for some reason I just didn't like studying at all. It just wasn't in me, but I loved doing more practical things such as design and technology and ICT at school. 

I am the third of five brothers and I have two sisters. Dad sent us all to private schools, because he wanted us to have the best educations. My second brother Sheikh Kazi Luthfur Rahman is a graduate of Al Azhar University in Cairo, one of the oldest Islamic universities in the world, and my fourth brother Kazi Ashiqur Rahman is still studying in Azhar.

It’s all very different to the world my father was born into, in a remote village in Bangladesh called Kolakuta. Dad’s family were very, very poor, but he educated himself with very little money – he didn’t even have the money to travel to his school. But he overcame that and eventually became a well-respected Islamic scholar and Nadia qualified teacher.

The Enfield Mosque sponsored him to come to the UK in 1986, the year that I was born. In 1997, he brought us all over to join him and be a full family here in UK. 

Dad was an imam, and in the evenings, he would teach children. He had so many students, and he was so proud when they did well. One is now the CEO of the Ebrahim College in London and many others have progressed into different fields, such as Abdullah who is currently our flagship shop contractor.

I didn’t make dad proud through my education or my spiritual life, but I know I made him proud in other ways. He loved to tell people about my creativity – if a kettle or a light stopped working, just by looking at it I can see what’s wrong with it and fix it in minutes. He used to find it fascinating that a boy who hated to study could fix things so easily, things that would take other people days to work out or have no hope of fixing at all.

When I was small, I made a little cart back home with three wheels which was supposed to look like a plane. He thought this was fascinating and he told everyone about it right up until he passed away.

Dad came from a very traditional background and he was amazed at the things we can do today with the internet and other technologies. Talking to people in China online and making business deals when we’re not in China in person was all a wow factor to him, because he was more used to seeing people in person to get things done.

My father was delighted that we have a thriving business, Sunnamusk. I will always be grateful for the help he gave us to start the business in 2008. We spent only £400 to buy stock, which we sold on market stalls, at Islamic events and from car boot sales. Ebrahim College is where we had our first stall, by the way, which marked the beginning of Sunnamusk. We grew very fast and we are now turning over £0.5m a year. Praise Be to Allah as this is all thanks to my mother and father’s prayers and support in hard times.

Dad was very independent, he always tried to do things himself; he tried to have breakfast himself, he was not a burden on anybody - not even my sister in laws, and we all know daughter in laws look after the parent in laws. He did everything himself including the household shopping and let me tell you, he did a damned good job. It’s a very hard job doing the household shopping – I did it after he passed away and felt the hardship of carrying those shopping bags home. Those meat, chicken, fish and vegetable bags were so heavy that I would stop halfway and continue after a minute’s break. It just shows how much he did to raise the family.

Dad never gave us money for free like some other fathers do. Instead, he lent us money and we had to return it. I now see the wisdom in paying back the money because he taught us what it was like in the real world and how to be responsible. I'm sure it was not his intention that we just had to pay him back because he was not stingy; in fact he was a very giving man and he helped countless people back home, which we only realised after he passed away. It was such a good feeling to see how many poor families he had helped though he did not have much income himself. 

He taught us to be independent and that’s what we did. In terms of business he would say, ‘do your business, but don’t lose your connection with Allah. Whatever you do, you have to keep Allah and the Prophet SAW happy, as if you have the intention of pleasing Allah via business then you business will be a form of worship’. That’s something I always try to remember, and I strive to stay on the path, the Prophet SAW and my beloved father took.

Discipline and punctuality were so important to him. He taught us to do the things we said we would do, and to do them on time. He was a very disciplined man himself and he was never late for appointments. He had his set timetable for doing things - and only disciplined people have timetables. He would wake up before dawn every day and pray before morning prayers. That’s what happened the day he had the stroke, which eventually killed him.

I was getting married in April, and before that the whole family went to Mecca in Saudi Arabia and then on to Bangladesh. I went back to the UK, because I had business, dad and the rest of the family came back 15 days later but he suddenly felt an urge to go back home again. 

He bought his ticket to return after five days, and he told everybody he would not come back to the UK again. We all thought he just joking because we thought that wouldn’t be able to stay by himself, especially without my mother. But dad insisted on going, so on 19th March 2012 me, my brother Ashiq and my big brother Abdur Rahman dropped him off at Heathrow Terminal 4 to put him on his Qatar Airways flight.

On the way to the airport he gave us a very long lecture, it almost felt like somebody is giving their final will. He told us not be like cats and that we should be like lions, as his life was that of a lion – he feared no man apart from Allah the almighty. 

He flew to Bangladesh, then travelled to India to visit his family over there and finally went to Comilla in Bangladesh to train to be a teaching inspector.

One morning, he got up as normal to pray, then he must have fallen asleep again, and while he was asleep, he had a stroke. He was found by the imam of the mosque he had built back home for the sake of Allah. The imam couldn’t wake him. Dad was only young, he was very healthy and very strong. We just couldn’t believe this had happened to him.

He was treated in a number of different hospitals in Bangladesh. While he was in hospital, I got married and rather than the big wedding we’d all planned, it was a small event. The very next day, my wife and I flew to Bangladesh. We were there for 15 days and the rest of the family dropped everything they were doing to be with him. He was in hospital for nearly two months before he passed away, and he was buried in front of his mosque that he had built. He’d always said: ‘That’s a very nice place for a graveyard’, and that’s where he’s buried.

In February 2013, the whole family went back to Bangladesh to visit his grave. As father and son, we had had quite a distant relationship – if he would go one way, I would go the other way, but being there beside his grave, I felt connected with him again.

My father was loved and respected throughout our community, and he will always be a huge inspiration to me. I love my dad for all that he did for us, especially for me, I feel he taught me every lesson I need in life to live a good life. 

I will always remember Dad walking down to East London Mosque near the shop that we are launching on Greatorex Street on cold snowy days, in his massive cream coat, his head wrapped in a scarf and his big shoes that looked twice the size of his feet.

I love you dad. You're always in a precious place in my heart.

Monday, 21 February 2011

Definition of Insanity

Definition of Insanity, Kazi Shafiqur Rahman

Albert Einstein once said "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results". Think about this quote for a second and ask yourself, are you doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results, is life getting to you from every direction? Is nothing moving forward in life? Do you feel you are stuck with everything? well if you are then you may fall in the category of INSANE as Albert Einstein beautifully defined, No Offence!.

I am only sharing some personal experience I gained in life through my day to day activities and some Business dealings; I am not saying this will work for everyone, Maybe you are on the right track already. But some people are really stuck in life, they lost motivation in life, don’t forget, WHAT WE DO TODAY, WILL DECIDE, WHERE YOU WILL BE TOMORROW!

Now the question is, do you want your tomorrow to be different? If so then you better do something different today to see the result tomorrow, same rule applies with life, what we do in life, will decide where we will be in the hereafter, will you be in Hell or Paradise? And guess what? we get to make that decision, are we doing the things our creator wants us to do, or are we like yes I will do it later or perhaps are we doing the opposite to what Allah wants us to do?. Because don’t forget my fellow human being, later might be too late. Prophet said, we must not delay in doing good deeds. Do not procrastinate; procrastination can be the biggest killer.
Shay tan has few tricks he commonly plays on the minds of mankind, and one of them is procrastination, it doesn’t necessarily have to be in religious activities that he will make us procrastinate on. It is not only Muslims that he targets, shaytans target is Human being as a whole, we are his problems, he is our opponent, this is the only reason why Allah expelled him from paradise, when Allah created Adam who is a human being as we all know and was asked to prostrate to him, all the angels prostrated other then the Iblis (Leader Of Shytan) as he felt he was superior.
He is on a mission to misguide mankind; he promised Allah of his mission, he will attack us from right, left, front, back, top, bottom and centre. And we all know that.

Nonetheless apologies for diverting off the subject as i felt it was necessary to address the issue as it go with the topic.

Whatever it is that you may want, the first and foremost thing you should start doing is, try and change the way you do or approach things. Before you do things make sure the decision you are making is concrete and this is what you defiantly what you want. Make plans on how you will do things, Make a plan B and C, if one fails try another one, but be sure not to jump from one plan to another instantly, give it some time, or else you might build a habit of changing things all the time. You should not try to change straight away, start off making small changes and get used to it, to get used to something or make a good habit; it usually takes 21 days according to research.

All in a nutshell, I would refer back to the topic to the topic. Start doing things differently to expect the results differently.