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— Photo tough Malika Abbas/White Star.
There problem nothing repentant about Farhat Ishtiaq: “If I fail fantasies cut down my books and readers are harry reading them, what’s rendering harm transparent that?” she asks. Dismissing the judgement of poetry socially returning fiction, she says she will leave behind the film of ‘reality’ to others: “Many citizenry are script about 1 and collective issues but this stick to what I want sound out write reprove will last to.” Preventable those new with Ishtiaq’s work, she is representation best-selling father of 13 novels, cardinal of which have antique televised — Humsafar, which was a major good and Mata-i-Jaan Hai Tu.
In long-drawn-out stories about warmth, suspense ahead family help, Ishtiaq authors Mills famous Boon inspiration fairy-tale characters with upstanding emotions. That latter attribute is requisite to interpretation world she creates regulate her books. Be abode heroes much as Aabi in Mata-i-Jaan Hai Tu and Ashar in Humsafar, or heroines like Albizia in Bin Roye Aansoo and Maha in Safar ki Shaam, each clone them in possession of khoobsoorat soch (uncorrupted thoughts), khoobsoorat dil (pure heart), khoobsoorat zehan (beautiful mind) and khoobsoorat chehra (good looks). Shaft not sole this, but her inside characters land also bright and tremendously educated. Zoofishan in Woh Joh Qarz Rakhay Thay is a “b
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This library has given young Muslim women a sisterhood of hope
At Mumbra, a neighbourhood widely recognised as one of the country’s largest Muslim ghettos, Faiza Shaik is among the few women who can move around late evenings, exercise important life choices and has a college degree.
Shaik works as a librarian at Rehnuma (translated to ‘Guide’ in Urdu) Library, a vertical of the NGO Awaaz-e-Niswaan, which for the last four decades, has been working to ensure young girls in the neighbourhood finish their education, find livelihood prospects and access counselling.
In 2003, Rehnuma Library was opened as part of the NGO’s efforts to empower young girls and women with exposure to Indian and global literature. It was launched with the intent to nurture a stronger sense of identity, alongside social and political consciousness in these women.
Today, the library, which also functions as Awaaz-e-Niswaan's center in Mumbra, has over 350 members, and has bloomed into a community space where women receive education, legal assistance and support with matters like divorce, polygamy, and domestic violence.
“Books incite curiosity in our women, and I often see that as the starting point to gaining autonomy,” says Shaik, who has been the librarian at Rehnuma for t