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Master Ayub making a commendable contribution in promoting education

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ISLAMABAD, Oct 19 (APP): Some thirty years ago, a diligent Pakistani, Muhammad Ayub from Islamabad decided to change the world with simple yet most effective weapon; Pen. He started off his journey with the simple conversation he had with a car washing boy in the slums of capital.

“Why don’t you study?”, he asked. “My parents are poor so I work”, the kid replied. “I’ll teach you”, said Master Ayub and brought him a notebook, a pencil, an eraser and started teaching him on the roadside. Next day, the kid brought his friends and then the next day 5 more children came to Ayub and he welcomed them with open arms and thus initiated the journey of commitment, hard work and selflessness.

Within a week, the number of students reached upto 50 and it has been growing  since then with every passing day. Many of his students work in the morning to support their families and come to school after 5 in the evening.

Muhammad Ayub alias master Ayub has been moving to many  places such as outside of shops or in the parking of some government school but most often authorities asked him to pack up. 

Talking to APP, Ayub said this journey has not been an easy one. “Many times I had to change the place because of objections from influential people living nearby or shopkeepers complaining about us being a hurdle in their business”, he added.

He finally shifted to his current location in the park, which is adjacent to some of the most expensive houses in the city but also near a slum where minority Christian families reside as most of his students are christian kids.

He said, “In the beginning I was teaching alone. Then gradually, my old students started coming along. Many college and university volunteers also started to teach English and mathematics to 10th graders”.
Hundreds of these students have passed out of high school while many of them have gained Master’s degrees as well.

Asiya, a municipality worker, has been attending Ayub’s school for ten years and finally got a respectable job to earn her livelihood.

Abid Ali, another old student, had been taught by Master Ayub and now was volunteering at the school in the evening alongside his masters degree from Quaid-e-Azam University Islamabad.

Saniya Morris, 15, said that she loved coming to take these classes. “I have many friends here. We learn together and try to compete with each other in grades.

I want to be a fighter pilot in the Pakistan Air Force”, she said. After taking lessons from her Mathematics and Science teacher, she  teaches younger students of junior grades.Master Ayub said,  “For the prosperity of our country , we have to give proper education to our coming generations.”

 “Education gives you hope and understanding for the future. It is the light that we carry towards hereafter.

My sole motive behind creating this setup was to prevent these kids from falling into wrong hands such as criminals or terrorists”, he said. Ayub expressed the optimism that his students would continue his legacy of teaching the poor kids to make them prepare for the world and its challenges.

He got his much awaited recognition including awards by the ministry of education in 2012 and a presidential award in 2015.

In 2018, Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (UK) also recognized Master Mohammad Ayub as the 54th Commonwealth Point of Light in honor of his exceptional voluntary service for improving education and opportunities for the young people in Islamabad.

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Build Libraries and develop Reading Culture

Fariyal Mir

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Reading is the strategy to relieve you from conflicts and libraries are the guardhouses for reading. It is the best policy that can lead you everywhere. One can easily move to the history of many centuries ago and can visualize the exact scenario. It takes to the trip of imagination and far beyond. Reading allows meeting with imaginative characters. They are able to talk and walk with the products of imagination. It has the strongest power to strengthen your opinion.  I would like to quote George R.R Martin who says that: “A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies.”

Moreover, reading introduces you to an unknown world where you can find the flavor of your life. It is the best friend of escapism. Reading books bless you with the treasure of knowledge. Garrison Keillor well said about the book: “A book is a gift you can open again and again.” Reading is a culture and it has led developed countries towards their developments. So why not develop this culture among the people.

Hence, to develop this culture there must a range of libraries. Libraries are the places that can motivate people toward reading culture. Building libraries do not charge that much amount but become the liveliest buildings. Such buildings are museums in themselves and engage people from reality to imagination. The walls decorated with books give the feeling of excitement and curiosity. Because once you become habitual of reading you can leave the world but not your reading habit.

Moreover, reading lets you put your feet in someone else shoes and walk on their behalf. It makes you like to feel things, to learn more, and to grasp a lot of experiences. In this way, it teaches you things before time. Foremost, it allows you to explore the world. Empower you to conquer the world through your imagination. Arouses your emotion and makes you a human being.

Every society, community, and family needs a building of books. There must be at one public library if not more than that so that the people can make their mind towards reading culture. A proper library setup can persuade most people toward reading culture. I grantee you when the people are engrossed into reading culture then there is no power to distract them. And every household will furnish their one wall for books. That would be amazing.

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Father of Modern Surgery, Abū al-Qāsim al-Zahrāwī

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Early Life:

The well-known Muslim scientist Abū al-Qāsim al-Zahrāwī, also spelled Abul Kasim, in full Abū al-Qāsim Khalaf ibn ʿAbbās al-Zahrāwī, Latin Albucasis, was born in 936, near Córdoba Spain. He had his origin from the Medinan tribe of Al-Ansar. He lived most of his life in Cordoba. It is also where he studied, taught, and practiced medicine and surgery. He was a medieval surgeon of Andalusian Spain, whose comprehensive medical text, combining Middle Eastern and Greco-Roman classical teachings, shaped European surgical procedures until the Renaissance.

The Surgical Man        

Al-Zahrawi remained the greatest surgical man. He specialized in curing disease by cauterization. And invented several devices used during surgery, for purposes such as inspection of the interior of the urethra. He also used surgical devices in applying and removing foreign bodies from the throat, the ear, and other body organs. The man of cure is ranked as the first to illustrate the various cannulae and the first to treat a wart with an iron tube and caustic metal as a boring instrument. He had performed laryngotomy on a slave girl without any experience but became successful and called it not dangerous.

Moreover, Al-Zahrawi is also considered to be pioneered neurosurgery and neurological diagnosis. He is known to have performed surgical treatments of head injuries, skull fractures, spinal injuries, hydrocephalus, subdural effusions, and headache. Al-Zahrawi had given the first clinical description of an operative procedure for hydrocephalus. And clearly described the evacuation of superficial intracranial fluid in hydrocephalic children. Other than this he had written a complete code of surgical conduct that is used by modern surgeons. He had made many surgical tools that became the base for the development of advanced tools.

His Book Kitab al-Tasrif

 Al-Zahrawi’s Kitab al-Tasrif is a medical encyclopedia comprised of thirty volumes that he completed in the year 1000. It covered a broad range of medical topics, including surgery, medicine, orthopedics, ophthalmology, pharmacology, nutrition, dentistry, childbirth, and pathology. The first volume in the encyclopedia is concerned with general principles of medicine, the second with pathology, while much of the rest discuss topics regarding pharmacology and drugs. The last treatise and the most celebrated one is about surgery. Al-Zahrawi stated that he chose to discuss the surgery in the last volume because surgery is the highest form of medicine, and one must not practice it until he becomes well-acquainted with all other branches of medicine.

The work contained data that had accumulated during a career that spanned almost 50 years of training, teaching, and practice. In it, he also wrote of the importance of a positive doctor-patient relationship and wrote affectionately of his students, whom he referred to as “my children”. He also emphasized the importance of treating patients irrespective of their social status. He encouraged the close observation of individual cases in order to make the most accurate diagnosis and the best possible treatment.

The wise surgeon once said about anatomy: “Before practicing surgery one should gain knowledge of anatomy and the function of organs so that he will understand their shape, connections, and borders. He should become thoroughly familiar with nerves muscles bones arteries and veins. If one does not comprehend anatomy and physiology one can commit a mistake that will result in the death of the patient. I have seen someone incise into a swelling in the neck thinking it was an abscess when it was an aneurysm and the patient dying on the spot.”

In short, he had given complete documentation and procedure along with a description. He has made the world of surgery.

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Death anniversary of poet Ahmed Faraz observed

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The 16th death anniversary of renowned Urdu poet, Ahmed Faraz was observed today.

Ahmad Faraz was born on January 12, 1931 in Kohat. The real name of Ahmad Faraz was Syed Ahmad Shah.

He started his career as a script writer with Radio Pakistan Peshawar and later joined Peshawar University as a lecturer.

Tanha Tanha, Be-awaz Gali Kuchon mian, Sab Awazain meri hai and Shab-e-Khoon are among his literary works.

He was a member of the Progressive Writers Movement.

The great Urdu poet was decorated with a number of national and international awards including the Nigar Award, Sitara-e-Imtiaz and Hilal-e-Imtiaz.

Ahmed Faraz died on this day in 2008, due to kidney failure and was buried in Islamabad.

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