Frankenstein
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Air Marshal Nur Khan [February 1923 15 December 2011]
A paragon of probity, uprightness, sagacity and pure brilliance; qualities that shone through each stride of his, throughout his life.
The man who led the Pakistan Air Force outstandingly to achieve parity over the three times bigger Indian air force on the very first day of the 1965 war. He was the Commander-in-Chief of Pakistan Air Force from 1965 to 1969.
He was widely respected not only for his integrity but also for his sharp intelligence and outstanding management abilities. He later served as the Governor of West Pakistan and President of Pakistan Hockey Federation and Pakistan Cricket Board.
May he fly high in his Final Flight, Rest in Peace.
Remembering Madame Noor Jehan
[September 21, 1926 December 23, 2000]
Noor Jehan, the Melody Queen, affected the lives and standards of Pakistans impressionable society as no singer has done in the sub-continent before her. There have been many more brilliant crooners in this region ever since the Mughal Period; but theres no past example of such a singer who has influenced people of the two parts of sub-continent in so many various aspects of the social life. There is no other singer of such influence and long-term personal response as Noor Jehan in the 80-year film history of the sub-continent.
Noor Jehan the reigned supreme over the South Asian music scene for more than six decades. She rose from near oblivion of the
backwaters of Kasur, then hardly more than middle-sized Punjab town, to the dizzy heights of stardom as far back as the 40s, with
songs ranging from cclassical to folk and ghazal to geet. Her mastery over melody with a strong background of classical music remains unmatched. She sang Punjabi songs and Urdu ghazals with equal ease and amazing finesse.
Noor Jehan was born in Kasur on Sept 21, 1926. Her given name was Allah Wasai. She started her career on the stage at the age of six when Dewan Sardari Lal, financier of a theatre in Calcutta, took her there with her two older sisters Eiden Bai and Haidri Bandi, who were both stage singers. The three sisters instantly shot into the limelight. Allah Wasai became Baby Noor Jehan and never looked back again.
With a voice that pierced the soul and a personality that won hearts on both sides of the border, Noor Jehan shall always remain alive in the hearts and minds of her fans all over the world.
Parveen Shakir [November 24, 1952 - December 26, 1994] was a great Urdu Poet, Teacher and a Civil Servant of the Government of Pakistan.
Shakir started writing at an early age and published her first volume of poetry, Khushbu [Fragrance], to great acclaim, in 1976. She subsequently published other volumes of poetry - all well-received - Sad-barg [Marsh Marigold] in 1980, Khud Kalami [Soliloquy] and Inkar [Denial] in 1990, Kaf e Aina [The Mirror's Edge] besides a collection of her newspaper columns, titled Gosha-e-Chashm [The Sight Corner], and was awarded one of Pakistan's highest honours, the Pride of Performance for her outstanding contribution to literature.
Arguably, Shakir can be termed the first poetess to use the word larki [girl] in her works the male-dominated Urdu poetry scene seldom employs that word, and uses masculine syntax when talking about the 'lover'. Similarly, she often made use of the Urdu first-person, feminine pronoun in her verses which, though extremely common in prose, was rarely used in poetry, even by female poetesses, before her.
Some of Shakir's ghazalyaat or, more specifically, couplets, have gained an iconic status in Urdu literature. One of her most famous couplets if the one given above. Another famous, Shakir couplet is "Jugnuu ko din kay wakt parakhne ki zid karain/ Bachchay hamaray ehed kay chalaak ho gaye" [They insist upon evaluating the firefly in daylight/ The children of our age, have grown clever], which is often quoted to comment on the often surprising knowledge and awareness of the 21st century child.
On Dec 26th, 1994, Shakir's car collided with a bus while she was on her way to work in Islamabad. The accident resulted in her death, a great loss to the Urdu poetry world. The road on which the accident took place is named after her.
71 years ago,on 23rd March...thousands of Muslims from all over the sub-continent gathered in Lahore.They had one dream, one vision and one mission, that was to have a separate homeland for Muslims of the sub-continent.On that day, under the able leadership of M. Ali Jinnah and others, the struggle for Pakistan started and it ended with the creation of Pakistan!!
The Lahore (Pakistan) Resolution was presented by A. K. Fazlul Huq (person in white sherwani standing with Mohammad Ali Jinnah!)
On his 15th Death Anniversary, we dare to remember a man, a genius, a Pakistani who was and is conveniently and blatantly unacknowledged by this nation.
While the world clamoured in his praise, in his own home and by his own people, he was treated with nothing but shameless disdain.
He longed to be 'owned' by his Pakistan but, in vain.
In hope of a Pakistan, where sanity will prevail and that will someday, recognize and accept you in its history as a son that made this soil proud - we say, Rest in peace, Dr. Abdus Salam - a theoretical physicist who received the country's only Nobel Prize in Physics in 1979 for his work in Electro-Weak Theory.
Waheed Murad [October 2, 1938 November 23, 1983], a legendary Pakistani film Actor and Film-Maker. Waheed is also widely considered to be one of the most famous and influential actors of subcontinent.