Archive for the ‘Features’ Category

15 Nov
2011

A Pakistani, a motorcycle and facebook.

Originally published on dawn.com. “I am so happy I didn’t plan anything, because everything worked out,” said 25 year-old Moin

26 Apr
2011

Education 2.0: The Khan Academy

First off, apologies for neglecting my blog. The Knight Fellowship, my project Hosh media and this play, Betrayed I am

9 Sep
2010

Granta 112: Pakistan

Cover painted by a truck artist from Karachi. All the lights of the current Pakistani literary explosion are in it

29 Aug
2010

Spirit of volunteerism runs high in Pakistani-Americans

Nestled behind a grand copper-domed mosque in a suburb just outside of Houston, Texas, dozens of patients fill up a waiting room. The buzz in the room is a mix of Spanish, English, Arabic and Urdu. A nurse in scrubs escorts an elderly patient in a burqa out into the waiting room, as a tall, blond lady in a floral sundress makes her way into the exam room along with her toddler and worried husband. The two women may seem to be from opposite ends of the world. But one thing has forced them to cross paths—the broken healthcare system in the US.

27 Aug
2010

Tweeting for Pakistan

From her home in Brooklyn, NewYork, Natasha Jahangir reached-out to one of the world’s most famous actors, in a rather unusual way. She tweeted: “It’s so sad @TomCruise is ignoring his Pakistani fans. -Help raise awareness/donations for Pakistan. Please RT! #pkfloods.” By using Twitter’s @ or mention function, Jahangir ensured that her message would feature in a tab on Tom Cruise’s page.

9 Aug
2010

Islamophobia and the un-American way

So much about the current Ground Zero Mosque debate has been upsetting-the ignorance that it has exposed, the vitriol that it has brought out, but most of all, the growing reality of Islamaphobia in America.

12 Jul
2010

Jewish folk makes a comeback for Palestine

Deep in downtown, the teasing strum of a guitar, hypnotic beat of percussions, and the wooing echo of horns bounce off lime-green soundproof walls in a dimly-lit rented studio. It is close to midnight on a weekday, and the Free Radicals are rehearsing a song inspired by a centuries-old Jewish music genre called Klezmer

10 Jun
2010

Tapping into the Tolerant Mind

Their politicians give them nothing but heart ache. Their mullahs nothing but hate. Who are Pakistanis supposed to turn to?

8 Jun
2010

Tales of deceptive degrees and dropouts

How many Pakistani parents send cheque after cheque for tuition without contacting their child’s university, and never find out that they had been misled from thousands of miles away?

25 May
2010

Breaking barriers: Miss USA Rima Fakih

Provocative, controversial and newsworthy–three words that describe this year’s Miss USA. Businessman extraordinaire Donald Trump has effectively brought the beauty pageant back from the dead. This year’s event not only got major network coverage but continues to be the topic of analysis and discussion from both the right and the left because this year’s 24 year-old winner Rima Fakih is of Arab descent.

A headline worth a thousand words

A headline worth a thousand words

After years and years of being neglected by the US and the world, Kashmir made it to the front page

Rule of law or Law of the jungle?

Rule of law or Law of the jungle?

the last few years, Pakistani masses have been watching and living a continuous marathon of violent films; and police officers have been pulled away from their primary duty of maintaining law and order & catching the bad guys, to primarily being security guards or the first line of defense in a suicide attack.

Tweeting for Pakistan

From her home in Brooklyn, NewYork, Natasha Jahangir reached-out to one of the world’s most famous actors, in a rather unusual way. She tweeted: “It’s so sad @TomCruise is ignoring his Pakistani fans. -Help raise awareness/donations for Pakistan. Please RT! #pkfloods.” By using Twitter’s @ or mention function, Jahangir ensured that her message would feature in a tab on Tom Cruise’s page.

And in disaster our media was born and in disaster it fails

And in disaster our media was born and in disaster it fails

Just like the earthquake in 2005, the army has been sent into the floods of Pakhtunkha to head rescue efforts. Why? Where are NDMA’s rescue workers? The federal government had put a hold on their Rs 300 mn budget for 2009-2010. They have been relying on donor money to carry out their training. Why didn’t our media catch it earlier? Why do we have to wait for a disaster to hold the powerful accountable

The ISI: America’s favorite scapegoat

The truth is the ISI is doing what spy agencies do; their actions are no different from the CIA.

The Virtual War comes home, again

The Virtual War comes home, again

I’ve never been a Vegas fan. Masked by grand shows and stars, the artificial magnanimity of the strip coupled with the pick-your-guilty-pleasure from our round-the-clock menu of booze, gambling and prostitution, seemed like a one-stop-shop to sell your soul.

To me, it made sense that the remote-control toy-operators that have killed over 900 people on Pakistani soil, were running their secret war right outside that very shop, from a base in Nevada. Little did I know, that they are also locking-into and annihilating targets 30-minutes away from my home in Houston, Texas

Michael Hastings, you are my hero

Michael Hastings, you are my hero

Michael Hasting, you are my hero. Not for bringing down General McChrystal. Not for shaking things up in the White House. But for doing your job

Tapping into the Tolerant Mind

Tapping into the Tolerant Mind

Their politicians give them nothing but heart ache. Their mullahs nothing but hate. Who are Pakistanis supposed to turn to?

“I’d rather be an Ahmadi in New York, than in Lahore”

I was deeply upset and enraged. I was mad at Zia-ul-Haq for selling his soul and pulling out the red carpet for all wannabe Jihadis. I was mad at all of Pakistan’s successive governments for turning a blind eye as their country became a fertile ground for breeding terrorism in the name of Islam. And I was mad at all those Pakistanis who are in denial of these facts, who think the problem is external and do nothing about it. But most of all I was mad at Bhutto for wrongly declaring Ahmadis non-Muslims in

Retracing

Retracing “Everybody Draw Mohammad Day”

A few friends and readers believe the contest was not an exercise in freedom of speech but just an excuse to insult Islam. And from what I understand through sources, most of the drawings that have resulted for the contest are indeed nothing more than demeaning and insulting to Islam and the Prophet. And for that I am deeply upset, hurt and sad

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