By A Representative Marking World Health Day and the fourth day of a nationwide campaign on occupational and environmental health, Jan Swasthya Abhiyan (JSA) Madhya Pradesh convened a critical discussion at Premanand Ashram, Jilharighat, declaring air pollution a full-blown public health emergency.
By Firoz Bakht Ahmed* Urdu is where words become art and heart, soft as silk and deep as soul. To call a spade a spade, when internationally celebrated Urdu poet Wasim Barelvi stated, “Usoolon pe aanch aaye to takrana zaroori hai / Jo zinda ho to zinda nazar aana zaruri hai!” (Protest is a must when principles are trampled / If you are living, show you aren’t compromised), the packed-to-capacity Modern School auditorium rose to its feet. True, Urdu is sweetness, politeness and grace woven into words, as said by Josh Malihabadi. Urdu speaks when hearts feel. You indeed need a shayar like Ali Sardar Jafri, Kaifi Azmi or Wasim Barelvi to tell you how beautiful this world is to live in — or how bad it is. All those connoisseurs of Urdu who thought the language was on oxygen or in a coma were proved wrong after witnessing a fully packed Modern School hall and an equally strong throng relishing the mushaira outside the state-of-the-art auditorium on the school’s basketball c...