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The Unseen – Poetry of an Albanian Exiled Poet

No one sees them, pretending not to notice, They remain the ghosts of misery living among us, Some whisper that they pollute us so much, Somebody who have never seen misery in life. Kujtim Hajdari, an Albanian exiled poet, shares his poems Kujtim Hajdari was born in Hajdaraj, on April 10, 1956, in the city of Lushnjë,

Rock Carvings in Azad Kashmir’s Chitter Pari

Alongside cup-marks, the Chitter Pari rock art site features anthropomorphic, zoomorphic and geometric motifs In 2008, I visited Chitter Pari for the first time as I was travelling to Mirpur City. A friend had told me about the rock carvings in Chitter Pari village while I was doing research on the cultural landscape in Punjab’s

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

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

India-Pakistan javelin rivalry at Paris Olympics sends rare peace message back home

KARACHI / NEW DELHI As Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem won a gold medal in the men’s javelin in Paris on Thursday, thousands of miles away, his close Indian rival Neeraj Chopra’s mother was among the firsts to congratulate him. Back home, Nadeem’s mother, swamped by hundreds of cheering crowds in her remote village of