The people, who came to Sindh after One Unit, should not have citizenship rights, particularly the right to vote – Dr. Hamida Khuhro
[Translator’s note: This is a translation of renowned historian Dr. Hamida Khuhro’s comprehensive interview, originally published in the Sindhi magazine Nao Niapo, Karachi in May, 1986. The
India’s nomadic pastoralists migrate for eight months a year, covering huge distances
The animals are returning on a biblical scale, flooding into this green expanse, like grains of sand rushing into an hourglass. Water buffalo, camel caravans, herds of cows and goats swarm over the horizon towards me on these vast, stark plains
At this critical juncture the voices of humanist poets like Tanveer Abbasi are vital towards steadying our bearings in the storm
Whose corpse is this on the battlefield?
Hee kehnjo lash aa jang jey maidan ma.n*?
As the news media inundates our screens with a deluge of images of lifeless bodies in the deadly wars raging in the
Sindh’s struggle revolved around two points – it was believed that Sindh would be an independent and sovereign country – Dr. Hamida Khuhro
[Translator’s note: This is a translation of renowned historian Dr. Hamida Khuhro’s comprehensive interview, originally published in the Sindhi magazine Nao Niapo, Karachi
I strongly disagree with a viewpoint that Sindh has no history of resistance – Dr. Hamida Khuhro
[Translator’s note: This is a translation of renowned historian Dr. Hamida Khuhro’s comprehensive interview, originally published in the Sindhi magazine Nao Niapo, Karachi in May, 1986. The interview panel consisted of