The best books on Endangered Languages The Illness – Poetry from China Poem: My Homesick Heart Over 200 countries to broadcast NBA Abu Dhabi Games 2025 Healing Through the Heritage UAE plays key role in global golf development INDEX signs agreement with Egypt’s UPA to enhance strategic cooperation Adrien Saddier wins maiden title at Italian Open on his 200th DP World Tour start
Business Middle East - Mebusiness

e&

They march – A Poem from Kolkata

They march They learn to face their fear They learn to protest They protest against a murder They want justice They learn to unite and march. Suhina Biswasmajumdar, an eminent poet from Kolkata, West Bengal, shares a poem she wrote for a promising doctor recently gang-raped and murdered in Kolkata A writer from

Afghanistan: 20 years of steady education progress ‘almost wiped out’

Girls and women across Afghanistan lack access to secondary education since the Taliban takeover - UN Women/Sayed Habib Bidell Afghanistan is currently the only country in the world where secondary and higher education is strictly forbidden to women and girls over age 12. New York The de facto authorities in Afghanistan “have

5 books on Partition highlight hope amidst conflict and the human cost of Independence

These five works of fiction by women authors are set against the backdrop of the Independence and Partition of India, and inspire us with their strong, resilient characters who survive turbulent times. By Chanda Bisht The month of August always brings up mixed memories for those in the Subcontinent. While India celebrates its 78th

Kazan International Film Festival (Altyn Minbar), Twenty Years of Dreams

Cinema is the mirror of our dreams, illuminating the giant silver screen, from which light flows into the hearts and minds of viewers. In the city of Kazan, twenty years ago, the symbol of the (Altyn Minbar) added a human dimension to this light, which was the Kazan International Film Festival, which I have been monitoring since its

I still believe in humanity!

20 years ago, I landed on British soil with my husband and two kids. As a spouse of a PhD student, I had a mission to survive for 3 years, taking care of my family and supporting him until he successfully accomplished his studies. I had a choice of two: whether to confine myself to my house with minimal exposure to the street