I was once scrolling down my Facebook account and then I stopped at a post. It was Ms. Yvonne Ridley’s photo of 20 Scottish Muslims on a mission to visit a lonely grave in the Highlands. There they prayed and remembered the deceased with due honor. I was intrigued by the fact that the very grave is up the mountains and it belongs to the
Eva Lianou Petropoulou, an awarded author and poet from Greece, the cradle of Western Civilization, shares her poems
Eva Lianou Petropoulou is an awarded author and poet from Greece with more than 25 years in the literary field, having published more than 15 books. Her poems are translated in more than 20 languages. She is President of
A piece of fiction that narrates the story of archaeologist Sir John Marshall’s grandson Peter, who traveled a long way from London and breathed his last in Karachi before visiting Mohenjo-Daro, the site of Great Indus Civilization
On one cool evening in London, barrister Mazhar Kazi received a phone call from Dr. Imdad Ali, his
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
Yousif Ibrahim Abubaker Abdalla, a poet and writer from war-ravaged African country Sudan, shares his latest poem
Yousif Ibrahim Abubaker is a TEFL Teacher, Poet, Journalist, Activist, and Freelance Interpreter/ Translator from Umbda Omdurman – Sudan. He also has been working as a debate leader discussing various topics in many