Munawwar Rana often lamented how division had seeped into the most ordinary spaces of life. Courtesy, respect, and shared ...
The International Islamic University’s Faculty of Languages and Literature has invited applications for diplomas, certificates, and ...
New York State’s Office of Language Access Annual Report 2024-2025 reveals key language services spending and usage shifts ...
Edited by Rakhshanda Jalil, the anthology contains 16 stories by non-Muslim writers, from the early decades of the 20th ...
Congress MP Shashi Tharoor met 16-year-old tech innovator Raul John Aju on a Vande Bharat train, discussing the importance of ...
Heart Lamp is a heart-warming collection that delights in the same measure that it educates. The book grips you from ...
The BPSC Special School Teacher Exam Pattern helps you know various aspects. It comprises exam mode, format, total questions, ...
Lyricist Muhammad Nasir, who passed away November 6, penned some of the most beloved songs across generations, defining ...
As reading shifts from shared print cultures to fragmented digital feeds, what happens to the common habits that once anchored public life?
When Urdu journalism is celebrating 200 years of its existence, it seems to be perhaps the best opportunity to clear some myths and misconceptions about Urdu. Urdu was born and flourished in India.
Gyanranjan (90) is known as much for his stories as for ' Pahal ' magazine, which he successfully edited for 35 years. whose motto was "For the scientific and progressive intellectual development of ...