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You Are A Winner ! Inspirational poem by Dr. Kishore Chandiramani | Mental Health | Emotions Clinic
In this video, Dr. Kishore Chandiramani, Psychiatrist at Emotions Clinic, Staffordshire, UK narrates an inspirational poem titled: You are a winner to help us understand what true success actually is !
Download the free ebook on Six Sessions on Emotions & Stress Management: https://www.emotionsclinic.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/book-emotions-and-stress.pdf?fbclid=IwAR3YRQ6xOywiaZGp7DpygyqLVpc-nwet2dt2T_Lg8ApYuDdz9KraWpHQ720
About Dr. Kishore Chandiramani Author, Emotions and Stress: How to Manage Them Amazon: https://amzn.to/39cZBYB
Dr. Kishore Chandiramani has worked as a psychiatrist for more than 30 years including 15 years in academic psychiatry. He currently works as a Consultant Psychiatrist in Nuffield Health at North Staffordshire Hospital and as a Second Opinion Appointed Doctor for the Care Quality Commission. He has served in various capacities i.e. Lecturer, Senior Lecturer, Assistant Professor, and Associate Professor at various universities across several countries.
He was awarded Gaskell Gold Medal and Prize for Clinical Excellence by the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 2002 and a distinction in the postgraduate diploma in Psychosexual Therapy by the University of Central Lancashire in 2008. After completing his higher specialist training in psychiatry he has sought further training and experience in the fields of Postnatal Depression, Relationship Counselling, Anxiety and Panic Disorders, Alcohol and Drug misuse, Workplace related stresses health management, old age psychiatry, biofeedback therapy, and legal aspects of psychiatry.
Dr. Chandiramani has received awards for his publications and presentations in scientific meetings. He has published numerous articles in national and international journals including the British Journal of Psychiatry, British Journal of Medical Psychology, American Journal of Psychotherapy, Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, Schizophrenia Research, European Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, etc. He has delivered guest lectures on mindfulness meditation at international conferences.
Dr. Chandiramani uses a number of different therapy approaches such as biofeedback therapy (computer-assisted stress management), Existential Psychotherapy, and mindfulness meditation. He runs a six-session Stress Management Programme that combines elements of psychoeducation, relaxation exercises, mindfulness meditation, and Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT).
He is experienced in Medico-Legal Work and has produced a large number of reports for mental health review tribunals, personal injury claims, mental capacity assessments, and occupational health issues. Apart from English he can understand and speaks several other languages, such as Hindi, Punjabi, Urdu, Sindhi, and Rajasthani.
Professional Qualifications: • MB, BS – SMS Medical College 1980 • MRCPsych 1999(Member Royal College of Psychiatrists) • Dipl Health Management 2000 • PG Dipl Existential Psychotherapy 2003 • MPhil Five Year Follow-up 2007 • PG Dipl in Psychosexual Therapy 2008 • Section 12 approved • GMC registered (General Medical Council)
Being a psychotherapist himself Dr. Chandiramani understands the needs of clients who are already in therapy with his therapy colleagues and uses medication very judiciously and only for a limited period of time until clients are able to use their own inner psychological resources more effectively.Before prescribing any medication Dr. Chandiramani discusses in detail the risks and benefits of each and every drug option with his clients involving them fully in decision making. He has worked effectively with clients who want to come off medication. You will find Dr. Chandiramani very polite, compassionate, knowledgeable, alert all the time to what you are saying, and open to receiving feedback from his clients directly. Dr. Chandiramani promises to refund your money if you are not satisfied with your consultation with him.He is a recognised provider with the following: AXA PPP recognised consultant psychiatrist BUPA recognised consultant psychiatrist, CIGNA recognised consultant psychiatrist, Standard Life recognised consultant psychiatrist, Pruhealth recognised consultant psychiatrist and AVIVA recognised consultant psychiatrist.
Contact us: Emotions Clinic Address: 1 Lawson Terrace, Knutton Newcastle under Lyme Staffordshire, ST5 Phone: +44(0)1782 768656 Email: [email protected]
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Writing systems
Arabic
The Arabic script evolved from the Nabataean Aramaic script. It has been used since the 4th century CE, but the earliest document dates from 512. There are two main types of written Arabic:
Classical Arabic is the language of the Qur’an and classical literature. It differs from Modern Standard Arabic mainly in style and vocabulary, some of which is archaic.
Modern Standard Arabic is the universal language of the Arabic-speaking world which is understood by all Arabic speakers. It is the language of the vast majority of written material and of formal TV shows, lectures, etc.
Each Arabic speaking country or region also has its own variety of colloquial spoken Arabic. These colloquial varieties of Arabic appear in written form in some poetry, cartoons and comics, plays and personal letters.
Notable features
Type of writing system: abjad
Direction of writing: words are written in horizontal lines from right to left, numerals are written from left to right
Number of letters: 28 (in Arabic); some additional letters are used in Arabic when writing placenames or foreign words containing sounds which do not occur in Standard Arabic, such as /p/ or /g/. Additional letters are used when writing other languages.
Used to write: Arabic, Adamaua Fulfulde, Afrikaans, Arabic (Algerian), Arabic (Egyptian), Arabic (Lebanese), Arabic (Modern Standard), Arabic (Moroccan), Arabic (Syrian), Arabic (Tunisian), Arwi, Äynu, Azeri, Balti, Baluchi, Beja, Bosnian, Brahui, Chagatai, Chechen, Comorian, Crimean Tatar, Dargwa, Dari, Domari, Gilaki, Hausa, Hazaragi, Kabyle, Karakalpak, Konkani, Kashmiri, Kazakh, Khowar, Khorasani Turkic, Kurdish, Kyrgyz, Lezgi, Luri, Malay, Marwari, Mandekan, Mazandarani, Morisco, Mozarabic, Palula, Pashto, Persian, Punjabi, Qashqai, Rajasthani, Rohingya, Salar, Saraiki, Serer, Shabaki, Shina, Shughni, Sindhi, Somali, Tatar, Tausūg, Torwali, Urdu, Uyghur, Uzbek, Wakhi, Wolof, and a number of other languages
Most letters change form depending on whether they appear at the beginning, middle or end of a word, or on their own.
Letters that can be joined are always joined in both hand-written and printed Arabic.
Vowel diacritics, which are used to mark short vowels, and other special symbols appear only in the Qur’an. They are also used, though with less consistency, in other religious texts, in classical poetry, in books for children and foreign learners, and occasionally in complex texts to avoid ambiguity. Sometimes the diacritics are used for decorative purposes.
Consonants
This chart shows the letters change in different positions:
Vowel diacritics and other symbols
Numerals
These numerals are only used in the north of Africa, as Arabic speakers in the Middle East use the Hindu-Arabic numeral system (0, 1, 2...).
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The three male singers Mitha (lead singer), Mahmud, and Musruddin from the Mutwar community in Dhordo village (Banni) sing a song belonging to the kaafi genre. Mutwar speak and sing in Sindhi language (north Indian language group). Kaafi is usually a religious lecture interspersed with stories and songs; the duration could be the whole night. This Muslim devotional song – recorden in the traditional Bhunga roundhouse – remembers the home village and the dear relatives. This kaafi exclaims “Everybody left me, now I’m totally alone”.
Sachal Sarmast, Misri Shah, Khwaja Sahib Dino, Ruhal Fakir, Qadir Bux Bedal, Makhdoom Ameen Pakhan Dhani and Makhdoom Talibul Mola (father of Makhdoom Ameen Fahim) are illustrious kafi poets in Sindh. Punjabi and Seraiki poets like Shah Hussain and Bulleh Shah are popular in their respective languages.
- Resonance of heritage: Silent for years, Kafi music to be heard again
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I was just thinking about the time when I was added to this random whatsapp group and I started talking to this girl from sindh and instantly fell in love with her voice and accent so much that the very same day I asked my friend to set her up with another sindhi friend of ours from another group (don't judge me pls her voice was very cute and I really admired that sindhi guy and couldn't stop myself from dreaming about them together) so fast forward to the next day (IT ALL HAPPENED IN ONE DAY YES) so I gave my friend all her details so he could get the guy to propose to her (for marriage, no haram relationship lmao. I was thinking way too far) I was so excited, I told that girl that I've found her a sindhi guy who had all the credentials of being an eligible husband and it so happened that they were actually from the same city; I WAS LITERALLY PLAYING CUPID FOR TWO PEOPLE IN PAKISTAN WHILE I WAS SITTING IN THE LECTURE ROOM IN MUMBAI. Anyhow, the guy actually agreed to get his mom talk to her mom; everything was going perfect but then the girl said NO because the guy wAsn'T a sAyeD and her family won't agree.
And this is how my dream to become a hindustani cupid for sindhi jawans shattered into a million pieces. *Cries in Cupid*
#pls don't judge me#i was young and naive and dreamt of being a cupid#i was cute too#a little dumb but cute
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Lecturers and Teachers Jobs in Karachi Aga Education Service Schools
Lecturers and Teachers Jobs in Karachi Aga Education Service Schools
Lecturers and Teachers Jobs in Karachi Aga Education Service Schools Lecturers and Teachers Jobs in Karachi Aga Education Service Schools Vacant Positions: Lecturer Teachers Teaching Staff is required for English, Urdu, Mathematics, General Knowledge, Social Studies, Science, Computer Science, Sindhi, Islamiyat, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Economics, and Pakistan Studies. Interested…
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Bakhtawar Cadet College for Girls Jobs 2022 June Lecturers & Others Latest
Bakhtawar Cadet College for Girls Jobs 2022 June Lecturers & Others Latest
Bakhtawar Cadet College for Girls Jobs 2022 June Lecturers & Others Latest Positions: === BPS-19 === Vice Principal === BPS-18 === Adjutant (Female) Chief Warden (Female) Bursar === Lecturers (Female) (BPS-17) === Mathematics Botany Zoology Physics Chemistry Pakistan Studies Computer Science Sindhi Islamiyat === BPS-17 === Admin Officer === BPS-16 === Office Superintendent SIMS Incharge…
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Shaheed Benazir Bhutto Girls Cadet College Larkana Latest Jobs 2021
Shaheed Benazir Bhutto Girls Cadet College Larkana Latest Jobs 2021
The equipped school needs to employ Vice-Principal (BPS-18), Lecturer English (BPS-17), Lecturer Mathematics (BPS-17), Lecturer Biology (BPS-17), Lecturer Physics (BPS-17), Lecturer General Science (BPS-17), Lecturer Chemistry (BPS-17), Lecturer Social Studies (BPS-17), Lecturer Islamiyat (BPS-17), Lecturer Urdu (BPS-17), Lecturer Sindhi (BPS-17), Lecturer Computer Science (BPS-17), Lecturer…
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RPSC College Lecturer Result 2020 [घोषित] Rajasthan PSC College Lecturer SINDHI Result [SINDHI 2014] Released on rpsc.rajasthan.gov.in
RPSC College Lecturer Result 2020 SINDHI rpsc.rajasthan.gov.inReleased Rajasthan Public Service Commission has been Released RPSC College Lecturer SINDHI 2014 Examination Result on 19 November 2020 available now on official website. The Candidates can check RPSC College Lecturer Result 2020 SINDHI final Merit list and Final Selected Candidates list by Roll Number/Date of Birth wise on official…
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Cadet College Karampur Jobs 2020 for Lecturers & Clerks 2020 Job Advertisement Pakistan Cadet College Karampur, Pakistan Army, Government of Pakistan is seeking individuals to fill the positions of Lecturer, Lecturer English, Lecturer Physics, Lecturer Chemistry, Lecturer Maths, Lecturer Biology, Lecturer IT, Lecturer Sindhi, Lecturer Pak Studies, Lecturer Urdu, Lecturer Islamiat, Music Teacher, Mess Manager, Care Taker, Pesh Imam, UDC, Upper Division Clerk, Clerk, Senior Clerk, Library Assistant, Computer Lab Assistant, Science Lab Assistant, Mess Assistant, Junior Clerk, Nurse, Male Nurse, Electrician, Carpenter, Plumber, Moazin, Security Assistant, Cook, Nan Bai, Helper, Dish Washer, House Bearer, Security Guard. You can apply online at vacancy after registering at site. Telephone: 071-5805562 Source link
#Cadet College jobs#Cadet College Karampur Jobs 2020 for Lecturers & Clerks#Cadet College Karampur Jobs 2020 for Lecturers & Clerks 2020#Cadet College Karampur Jobs 2020 for Lecturers & Clerks in Pakistan#Cadet College Karampur Jobs 2020 for Lecturers & Clerks in Shikarpur#Cadet College Karampur Jobs 2020 for Lecturers & Clerks in Sindh#Care Taker Jobs in Cadet College#Carpenter Jobs in Cadet College#Clerk Jobs in Cadet College#Computer Lab Assistant Jobs in Cadet College#Cook Jobs in Cadet College#Dish Washer Jobs in Cadet College#Electrician Jobs in Cadet College#Government Cadet College Karampur Jobs 2020 for Lecturers & Clerks#Helper Jobs in Cadet College#House Bearer Jobs in Cadet College#jobs in Cadet College#jobs in Teaching#Junior Clerk Jobs in Cadet College#Lecturer Biology Jobs in Cadet College#Lecturer Chemistry Jobs in Cadet College#Lecturer English Jobs in Cadet College#Lecturer Islamiat Jobs in Cadet College#Lecturer IT Jobs in Cadet College#Lecturer Jobs in Cadet College#Lecturer Maths Jobs in Cadet College#Lecturer Pak Studies Jobs in Cadet College#Lecturer Physics Jobs in Cadet College#Lecturer Sindhi Jobs in Cadet College#Lecturer Urdu Jobs in Cadet College
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The Karachi Theosophical Society
Feature published in Newsline.
The chaos of Karachi’s MA Jinnah Road is muted inside the library at Jamshed Memorial Hall – a nostalgic byword for Karachi’s generations past. Leather-bound volumes of the first edition of Helena Blavatsky’s The Secret Doctrine line the shelves. This is the home of the Karachi Theosophical Society, a relic of a more enlightened period in the decaying city’s lifeline.
The Society’s genesis in Pakistan lies in inspirational lectures delivered by Annie Besant, a leader of the Indian Independence Movement and one of theosophy’s most influential figures, in Karachi in 1896 and Hyderabad, Sindh, in 1901.
Universal brotherhood is a central tenet of the Theosophical Society — as is scientific, philosophical and mystical inquiry, open to all religions and bound by none. Theosophists believe an ancient wisdom underlies all creeds. They seek to access a higher spiritual plane, through meditation, intuition and the study of theosophical literature.
“We are all renegades here,” says Hamid Mayet, General Secretary of the Karachi Theosophical Society and President of the Theosophical Order of Service, Pakistan. Having defied social norms and challenged the status quo for much of his life, Mayet is the best man for the job. Beneath his casual, easy-going demeanour lies a steely resolve. He moves across its corridors of Jamshed Memorial Hall with the air of a man who has broken free of the baggage of tradition.
Hailing from an affluent Indian family of Johannesburg, Mayet grew up in South Africa during Apartheid. “Within the Indian community itself – whether it was Hindus or Muslims – there was discrimination against blacks and a pronounced class inequality,” he recalls. “I found it all very hypocritical; attitudes seemed to contradict the religions that were so ardently being followed.”Inspired by anti-Apartheid leaders such as Dr Yusuf Dadoo, chairman of the South African Communist Party, Mayet started rebelling at a young age and became a conscientious objector. At the age of 16 he joined the youth wing of the Pan African National Congress. “In my heart of hearts, I was trying to identify with the common man,” he says. “I felt embarrassed that I was from a well-off family, when all around me there was racial and economic inequality.”In Pakistan, theosophists prefer to remain below the radar. The Karachi Theosophical Society’s website doesn’t give away any names. The fate of Dara Mirza, a former chapter president, is testimony to the darkness that engulfs the city. Mirza’s portrait hangs beside those of Blavatsky – co-founder of the Theosophical Society – and Jamshed Nusserwanjee, a former president of the Karachi chapter and the city’s first mayor. A descendant of Sindhi literary scholar Mirza Kaleech Baig, his ancestors migrated to Sindh from Georgia in the mid-nineteenth century. He was the president of the Society for over three decades, until September 14, 2007, when his body was found in Mauripur, Karachi. He had been kidnapped on the way to work earlier that day. The episode remains buried in a deafening silence.
“Dara Mirza, a learned man, had a strong grasp of esoteric philosophy,” says Mayet. The Esoteric school focuses on accessing the higher spiritual plane – described in theosophical texts as “the unexplained laws of nature and powers latent in man.” According to Mayet, the previous generation of members, such as Amir Ali Hoodbhoy and Hatim Alvi, carried out a deep study of theosophical literature. The current membership of 50, however, gravitates towards the Theosophical Order of Service (TOS) – a social services wing.
The ever-expanding Montessori at Jamshed Memorial Hall provides underprivileged students with a quality education at a fee of Rs 1,700 a month. Nusserwanjee and Minwalla felt that Italian educator Maria Montessori’s emphasis on creative and independent thinking had much in common with the values of theosophy.
The theosophists of Karachi are currently working towards opening a Montessori at the Besant Lodge in Hyderabad – a structure that Mayet describes as being “far more impressive than ours.” After the demise of the Lodge’s president – the renowned scholar and political activist Ibrahim Joyo in 2017 – membership has dwindled. A member of the Progressive Writers’ Movement, Joyo’s controversial work Save Sindh, Save the Continent – From Feudal Lords, Capitalists and their Communalism, published in 1947, resulted in the termination of his teaching post at the Sindh Madressa. Joyo was not the only theosophist to find himself at odds with the Madressa. A few decades earlier, Hatim Alvi, a student at the institution, was expelled for writing an article critical of the British rule.
“The Theosophical Society attracts people who tend to think out of the box,” says Mayet. “It has nothing to do with political orientation. Nor are we a religious organisation. This is a society that promotes unity.” He says it was Joyo’s interest in Sufi culture that made him gravitate towards theosophy. “Sufism is closer to esoteric philosophy.”
“If you want to find God, you can find him in the garden,” says Mushtaq Jindani, Joint Secretary of the Karachi Theosophical Society and Director Education, TOS. “You can cultivate God in the garden.” Jindani heads a small club called The Linkers, a group of people interested in mind sciences – the kind that deal with spirituality in relation to the mind and body.
Mayet is doing his best to make the Karachi chapter sustainable, so that he can hand it over to the next generation in working condition. “It has existed for over a hundred years, and I want it to be there for another hundred,” he says.
Theosophists of Hollywood
Of Hungarian descent and a Gnostic bishop, he is an author and incumbent President of Besant Lodge in Los Angeles. The name is Stephan – pronounced Stephaan – Hoeller. The eyes, half-closed, look neither up nor down, but see everything. And despite his advanced years, the bearing is sturdy. He holds his cup of coffee at a tilt. This may look like a mannerism, but it may also be because his grip is not quite firm. Tellingly, the initials ‘S.H.’ are embroidered on the cuffs of his crisp shirt.
Stephan hands Winter Lazerus, fellow theosophist and property manager at Besant Lodge, a letter he received in the post. “God knows what it means,” he says, amused by its cryptic content. Lazerus proceeds to examine the note and its accompanying talisman – an aboriginal woman holding a wand.
I pray you understand. I can only hope to sit with you again over eggs and beacon. The time is now.
1. Fix a tall drink, 2. Listen to the next song, 3. Remember, 4. The gift is yours so tear it open. Love, H E S
On an enclosed page torn out of a dictionary, the word ‘wizard’ is underlined.
Lazerus, clad in all black and sporting a pony-tail, cuts a tall, shadowy figure. He lives in an old cottage behind Besant Lodge. This is the quaint and leafy neighbourhood of Beachwood Canyon. It is the home of Stephan, Lazerus and the Theosophical Society. It is also home to the sprawling Hollywood sign – an intruder in this quiet part of Los Angeles. But the Society predates Hollywood – cinema was a comparative latecomer in these parts.
“The theosophists came to these hills because they believed that the spiritual and creative energy was strong here,” explains Stephan. And so in 1912, Albert Warrington and his associates founded the hamlet of Krotona – the society’s first national headquarters. The colony, located up the hill from Besant Lodge’s current location, is a collection of Moorish structures that have been converted into apartments. “Dora van Gelder Kunz, a former president of the Society, writer and famous clairvoyant, also believed that there was an angelic energy present in this particular part of Southern California,” continues Stephan.
The Lodge’s stained glass windows give its interior a church-like quality. They display the celestial symbols illustrated in theosophical teacher Geoffrey Hodson’s The Kingdom of the Gods. “Many think that this building was part of the old colony of Krotona,” says Stephan, “but that is not the case.” It was in fact a neighbourhood movie theatre, built in the early 1920s. “The first silent film theatre in Los Angeles,” Lazerus proudly adds. His cottage, even older, was once a bookshop. The Society bought both properties in 1954, while Stephan was on the board of directors.
This easternmost tail of the Santa Monica Mountains has always lured theosophy into its fold. Although Krotona relocated to Ojai owing to financial difficulties during the Great Depression, the Society returned in the incarnation of a rented facility near Beachwood Canyon before acquiring its current location. The commune in Ojai, now the Krotona Institute of Theosophy, is a thriving centre of research and spiritual learning.
Unlike many residential areas of Los Angeles, “there is a sense of community here, in Beachwood Canyon,” says Lazerus, “a real sense of the old part of L.A.” To locals, Besant Lodge is a community centre of sorts. “The Los Angeles chapter has about 20 to 30 members,” says Stephan. It hosts lectures, classes, readings, joint activities with the Gnostic Church, and has “offered Spanish lessons for the last 20 years.”
Further west, in the winding lanes of Bel Air, lifeless mansions gaze coldly at passing cars. Beachwood Canyon, however, has a soul. A nameless canyon and remote farming community in the 1880s, it became the site for an ambitious yet short-lived housing project – Hollywoodland – in the 1920s. “We border the largest municipal wilderness preserve in the world, where mountain lions roam,” says Lazerus, referring to Griffith Park.
Stephan produces a rare photo of Annie Besant. She is about to board a Goliath airliner with Charles Blech, general secretary of the Theosophical Society in France, and an unnamed gentleman. On the Lodge’s wall hangs the charter of Krotona, bearing Besant’s signature. It is dated 1920 – the year she visited the colony, as the Society’s international president.
Stephan, an aristocrat, struggled against oppression in his early years. When a Soviet-style communist regime consolidated power after the Second World War, his family lost all their property and lived in great need. He left Hungary, arriving in the US in 1952. “The Nazis had destroyed a lot of theosophist literature during the war, and subsequently, so did the communists,” says Stephan. “Totalitarian governments do not like organisations such as the Theosophical Society.” At first, Stephan dreamt of becoming a Catholic priest. And although he was 15 when he first heard of theosophy, it wasn’t until his arrival in Southern California that he joined the Society.
“Gool Minwalla was concerned that the Muslims’ suspicions of other religions would one day become a problem for their own countries,” says Stephan. “She was a fine lady,” he says of the former president of the Society, whom he had met in Ojai in the early ’80s. According to Stephan, it was during Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s tenure that religious intolerance first surfaced in Pakistan.
When Stephan first joined Besant Lodge 60 years ago, there were over 100 members. The current membership is only a fraction of this, owing to the existence of numerous other spiritual organisations. In what seems like a valedictory remark he emphasises the need to reconnect the “threads” that link theosophical societies across the globe.
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Army Model School & College Chachro Jobs 2022 for Teachers
Army Model School & College Chachro Jobs 2022 for Teachers
Army Model School & College Chachro Jobs 2022 for Teachers Army Model School & College Chachro Jobs 2022 for Teachers Army Model School & College jobs advertisement dated about 1 July 2022 in daily Kawish Newspaper invites application for the vacant post of urdu teacher, mathematics teacher, teacher, sindhi teacher, chemistry lecturer, lecturer, biology teacher, biology lecturer, science teacher…
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Jobs in Bakhtawar Cadet College For Girls Nawabshah Lecturers, Lab Assistants & Others Latest Jobs December 2021
Jobs in Bakhtawar Cadet College For Girls Nawabshah Lecturers, Lab Assistants & Others Latest Jobs December 2021
Jobs in Bakhtawar Cadet College For Girls Nawabshah Lecturers, Lab Assistants & Others Latest Jobs December 2021 College Vacant Positions / Posts: === Lecturer (Female) (BPS-17) === Botany / Zoology Chemistry Computer Science English Islamiat Mathematics Physics Sindhi Urdu === BPS-16 === Office Superintendent === BPS-15 === PS to Principal === BPS-14 === Manager Student Affairs Drill…
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Join World Sindhi Congress for the largest international Sindhi event of the year, the 29th annual Internation Conference on Sindh. Lectures, presentations, and performances will be shared by renowned activists, scholars and politicians from around the world. The event begins October 28th, 2017 in London, UK. https://www.facebook.com/events/231243810708600/?ti=icl #events #community #london #londonevents #sindh #sindhi #pakistan #conference
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Lectureship Past Papers SPSC PDF Download
Lectureship Past Papers SPSC PDF Download
Lectureship Past Papers Sindh Public Service Commission (SPSC) PDF Download
Past Question Papers of:
Education
Economics
Sindhi
Pakistan Studies
Political Science
Botany
Physics
Computer Science
Chemistry
Islamiat / Islamic Studies
Islamic History
Urdu Literature
Mathematics
Sociology
English
Commerce
Zoology
etc etc
Follow the link to get the Largest Collection of Download FREE Books/Notes for…
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#Botany#Chemistry#Commerce#Computer Science#Economics#education#English#Islamiat / Islamic Studies#Islamic History#Lecturer Question Papers#Lectureship Past Papers SPSC#Mathematics#Pakistan Studies#Physics#Political Science#Sindh Public Service Commission#Sindhi#Sociology#SPSC#Urdu Literature#Zoology
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Multiple Jobs in Cadet College Karampur
Multiple Jobs in Cadet College Karampur
Multiple jobs vacancies have been announced at the Cadet College Karampur. The organisation is offering wonderful job opportunities for fresh and experienced candidates.
Deadline for the application to the cadet college in Karampur is 15th August, 2020
How to Apply Instructions from the Job Provider
Application along with CV with full particulars must include three photographs,…
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#cadet college jobs#Care Taker#Carpenter#Computer Lab Assistant#Cook#Dish Washer#Electrician#Helper to Cook#House Bearer#Junior Clerk#Lecturer (Biology)#Lecturer (Chemistry#Lecturer (English)#Lecturer (Islamiat)#Lecturer (IT)#Lecturer (Maths)#Lecturer (Pak Studies)#Lecturer (Physics)#Lecturer (Sindhi)#Lecturer (Urdu)#Library Assistant#Male Nurse#Mess Assistant#Mess Manager#Moazin#Music Teacher#Nan Bai#Pesh Imam#Plumber#Science Lab Assistant
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Rasul Bux Palejo
Rasul Bux Palejo (born September 21, 1930) is a notable Sindhi nationalist leader, scholar and writer. He is father of Ayaz Latif Palijo leading Human Rights lawyer and leader. He is founder and chairman of Awami Tehreek (People's Movement), a progressive leftist party.
Early life
Palejo (sindhi رسول بخش پليجو) was born at the village Mungar Khan Palijo, Jungshahi, Thatta District, Sindh on September 21, 1930, to Ali Mohammad Palijo and Laadee Bai. He got his early education at his village and secondary education at Sindh Madarstul Islam in Karachi. He did his law graduation from Sindh Law College Karachi. At the age of 15, he was fluent in Sindhi, Urdu, and English languages, and later became conversant inHindi, Arabic, Balochi, Bengali, Siraiki, Punjabi and Persian.[citation needed]
Political work
A prolific writer and scholar, Palejo served as a Supreme Court lawyer.[citation needed] He is a former political prisoner, having been jailed under political charges for more than 11 years especially during the Movement for Restoration of Democracy (MRD) in Pakistan. Most of his prisoner life, he was kept on Kot Lakhpat Jail, Punjab during 1980s.[citation needed] He was declared as "Prisoner of Conscience" by Amnesty International in 1981.[citation needed]
Books and international lectures He has written more than twenty books on politics, pure literature (short stories), literary criticism, history and political thought. He is a widely traveled scholar and had visited several times almost all regions across the world. As a visiting faculty, he has been delivering lectures at Jawahar Lal Nehru New Delhi (JNU), Delhi University, University of Chicago, University of Cambridge, University of Sussex, University of Essex, Kinston University, University of Milwaukee, Institute of Oriental Studies- Moscow, Houston University and number of other global academic institutions throughout the world.
Some of his famous books,
Andha Oondha Wej- Rasool Bux Palijo
Awhan Jey Pujaran(your worshiper)- Rasool Bux Palijo
Kot Lakhpat Jo Qaidi(Prisnor of Kot Lakhpat)- Rasool Bux Palijo
Jin Jhoona Garah Jalayo- Rasool Bux Palijo
Sandi Zat Hanjan- Rasool Bux Palijo
Maositong -Rasool Bux Palijo
Pase garhagul (stories) -Rasool Bux Palijo
siyasi Adab vol:01 -Rasool Bux Palijo
siyasi Adab vol:02 -Rasool Bux Palijo
siyasi Adab vol:03 -Rasool Bux Palijo
sindh Panjab water dispute -Rasool Bux Palijo
Personal life
Rasool Bux Palijo was born in a lower middle class rural family of Thatta Sindh. After completing his initial education in Jungshahi and Thatta, he went to Sindh Madarsa in Karachi though his parents wanted him to stay in Thatta and look after the family. Then he did his LLB from Jinnah College and began a successful law career focused on criminal law. Prior to his work in law, he briefly held various positions with newspapers and educational institutions.
He got well versed in literature by reading Kant, Hegel, Karl Marx, Vladimir Lenin, Mao Zedong, Mohandas Gandhi and Muhammad Ali Jinnah.[citation needed] He was an outspoken critic of the feudal system and bureaucrats.[citation needed]
He was married to Sindhi singer, activist and author Zarina Baloch until her death on 25th Oct 2006. The union yielded a son Ayaz Latif Palijo.[1]
#Thatta District#Sindhi nationalism#Sindh#Rasul Bux Palejo#Palijo#Karachi#Jungshahi#Ayaz Latif Palijo
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