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Farewell – Poetry from Kosovo

Farewell, my heart’s beloved, In your eyes, I felt longing, In your embrace, a sob- Torn, yet still alive. Valbona R. Hadri, an acclaimed poetess from Kosovo, shares her poetry Valbona R. Hadri was born in Ferizaj, where she completed her primary and secondary education. She later earned a degree in Albanian Language

Indus’ Survival: Are we born to erase?

All of us need to realize that water scarcity is not just an environmental issue. It is a ticking time bomb for massive social unrest For international financing institutions, the choice is clear it is only to uphold the principles of equity and sustainability or risk complicity in a humanitarian catastrophe. The people of Sindh are

“Lost Muskan”: Pakistan’s Latest Victim of Forced Conversions

Sixteen-year-old Muskaan, a Christian girl from Sindh, was kidnapped, raped, and forcibly converted to Islam. After nine months in captivity, she escaped Naeem Sahoutara Sixteen-year-old Muskaan bursts into cheerful laughter, as she sings hymns during a Christmas party in a shelter home in Karachi. The Catholic Christian teenager,

For You – Poetry from Thailand

For you I’ll write like primeval oceans Hung with swollen voices That are not from the future Or the past or the present… Stephen A. Rozwenc, an American expat poet who resides in Thailand, shares his poem Stephen A. Rozwenc is an American expat poet who resides in Thailand. He has published 6 collections of

Bangladesh: History of Tanchangyas Minority

Anthropological study of the arrival of the small ethnic group Tanchangyas in Bangladesh A review of history shows that Dainaks or Tanchangyas came to Bangladesh unable to bear torture and oppression. It is said that the Arakanese used to persecute the Tanchangyas. The Tanchangyas have crossed a long path of history with the identity