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What are you grateful for? What traditions hold special meaning for your family? What wisdoms guide your life? Whose story inspires you? This collection of nearly 100 personal stories will encourage readers to pause and reflect about issues that are truly meaningful in their lives. "30 Days" started as a blog during Ramadan sharing the personal stories of a Muslim family, but grew into an international storytelling platform that connects people of all backgrounds around things we universally value -- sharing kindness and doing good deeds, expressing gratitude and sincere wishes, cherishing traditions and wisdom from our elders. This handmade, commemorative, limited-edition volume, enhanced by exquisite artwork -- illuminations, miniature paintings, and calligraphy -- is intended to spark conversations between young and old, friends and strangers, and families of all traditions and configurations. After all, sharing stories helps us get to know each other better; it helps develop trust, build a connection, and start a friendship.
It is the day before Ramadan, and Natasha, a 1st grader, is preparing for her favorite religious holiday with her parents and older brother. Natasha and her family decorate their home, prepare their favorite foods, put together Ramadan Celebration baskets for neighbors, and head to the Mosque! The story teaches Ramadan terms while promoting family activities and multiculturalism.
The book shows the life of a young family in a new, struggling country. It is an insight into a different culture, without prejudice, as it has been lived day by day. It also lets you take part in the advancing of living standard of middleclass families in Asia. You learn that there are other ways of life that can lead you to success and happiness. Some chapters seem to be quite amusing, now that they are long behind. I actually wrote these chapters for my family, to tell them about the Pakistan they do not know. My daughter felt, this had a wider interest for other people, who wanted to know about the country and its day to day problems in a different way from the propaganda available on TV. The story is very personal, and I can not guarantee for the things I wrote about politics for instance; this reflects my personal opinion.
We all know that words can be used to hurt or used to heal. I have witnessed words that forever scared a child all the way into adulthood or transformed thinking for an entire lifetime that affected multiple generations. I recently read "The word ""no"" is heard with great frequency in our lives. There are signs all over our landscape with messages that read ""no smoking,"" "" no parking"" or ""no skateboards."" The word ""no"" is just a fact of life for us all."" I was not raised to accept no. My follow-up was ""Why Not."" My mother took the time to explain but sometimes the answer would be ""Life is not fair."" This book is dedicated to my mom and the many mentors and writers who used the power of their words to allow me to dream bigger dreams that someday this little girl from West Philadelphia could make a mark on this world to change the answer of ""Life is not fair,"" to an answer that says "life is fair" regardless of economic status, gender, race, creed, color or religion In sha Allah
In 1953 Watson and Crick discovered the double helical structure of DNA and Watson's personal account of the discovery, The Double Helix, was published in 1968. Genes, Girls and Gamow is also autobiographical, covering the period from when The Double Helix ends, in 1953, to a few years later, and ending with a Postscript bringing the story up to date. Here is Watson adjusting to new-found fame, carrying out tantalizing experiments on the role of RNA in biology, and falling in love. The book is enlivened with copies of handwritten letters from the larger than life character George Gamow, who had made significant contributions to physics but became intrigued by genes, RNA and the elusive genetic code. This is a tale of heartbreak, scientific excitement and ambition, laced with travelogue and '50s atmosphere.
Nowhere else in the world have both Islam and Christianity been more instrumental in shaping the history of a people and their way of life than in Africa. African Muslims and Christians have a lot in common, including kinship ties, shared languages and citizenship. Yet, despite the centuries of deep historical links and harmonious existence between the two religions, new challenges threaten this harmony. Conflicts involving Christians and Muslims in places like Sudan, Nigeria and Ivory Coast are common. These conflicts are fueled primarily by ignorance, stereotyping and prejudice, which in turn breed fear, suspicion and even hatred, in some cases leading to violence. My Neighbour's Faith sheds light on the beliefs and teaching of Islam by addressing matters of contemporary importance to Christians and the wider non-Muslim audience. It presents the human face of Islam--the face of a close relative, a neighbour, a teacher and even a head of state--in a balanced and critical way that gives a credible view of Islam.
This book is a complete work of fiction. The names, characters, the places, and the specifically described incidents are merely a product of the author's imagination They are used ficticiously and any specific resemblance to actual events, places or people, living and or deceased is completely coincidental. This material is meant to provide entertainment for the general public at large.