International Women’s Day is more than a date on the calendar; it is a mirror reflecting our collective failures and successes By Suhaib Idrees Lateef International Women’s Day, observed globally on March 8, stands as a profound testament to the historical and contemporary struggle for gender parity while celebrating the vast socio-economic and cultural achievements […]
Columns
Bells Ring Again
After months of chilling temperatures and winter closures, the bells are ringing once again across Kashmir. A look at how the administration, teachers, and students are braving the cold to prioritize the future of education in the North. By Sahil Manzoor The chilling cold of December fades away as winter finally loses its grip on […]
The Debt of Gratitude
We often measure success by what we’ve acquired, but the true architecture of our ambition is built on the quiet sacrifices of those who had the least to give. By Aubaid Ahmad Akhoon The psychology of the modern consumer is often a frantic race toward the next acquisition, a pursuit of the latest silhouette or […]
Ramadan: A Cellular and Spiritual Reset
Ramadan is often viewed through the lens of sacrifice, yet it functions as a sophisticated system for total recalibration By Waris Nissar The silhouette of a crescent moon signals more than a shift in the lunar calendar; it initiates a profound physiological and spiritual recalibration for nearly two billion people. While the public face of […]
Remembering Amma: A Tribute to Syeda Sakina Gilani
By Syed Majid Gilani When I reflect on the people who shaped and influenced my early life, one person stands foremost in my heart and mind. That person is Syeda Sakina Gilani, my late grandmother. Born in 1930 at Yarkand House in Malaratta, Srinagar, she was the daughter of S. Syed Ahmad Gilani. Her father […]
The Classroom Conundrum
Enrolment is up, but employable skills are down. The missing link isn’t the curriculum—it’s the person standing at the front of the room. By Mool Raj When we discuss higher education reform in India, the debate invariably gravitates toward the tangible: skyrocketing enrolment figures, the construction of sprawling new campuses, and the modernization of material […]
An Inheritance of Values
How the Light of a Late Father Still Guides Three Generations By Syed Majid Gilani In the quiet labyrinth of Srinagar’s old city, where the scent of history clings to the timbered eaves of Khanqah-e-Mualla, certain lives are lived not with the roar of a storm, but with the steady, unwavering glow of a sanctuary […]
The Art of the Ask
The barrier to entry for asking questions has collapsed, but the art of the interview is in danger. Are “armchair interviews” democratizing media or fueling one-sided narratives? By Aubaid Ahmad Akhoon In the modern media landscape, the interview has escaped the confines of the newsroom and the corporate boardroom. It has become the background noise […]
The Debt Illusion
Has Kashmir’s Appetite for Luxury Outpaced its Reality? By Rafiq Dar In Kashmir, there is an old saying that cuts to the bone of the valley’s current economic temper: “If one rides a horse, the other one climbs the wall.” It is a proverb about envy, about the desperate need to match a neighbor’s stride, […]
The Canopy of Common Ground
When a towering newcomer threatens to uproot centuries of peace in the Kingdom of the Talking Trees, the inhabitants must choose between ego and empathy. This modern allegory explores how a community’s greatest strength lies not in its tallest members, but in the invisible roots that bind them together. By Aubaid Akhoon Deep in the […]









