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Showing posts from June, 2020

Unsung Hero of Uzbekistan- Hamza Hakimzade Niyazi

The life of Uzbek poet and composer Hamza Hakimzade Niyazi (1889–1929), a prominent figure who facilitated socialist reform in the Uzbek republic and helped to elevate the Uzbek language to literary status. Niyazi is one of the most prominent forerunners of distinctive Uzbek literature and the founder of modern Uzbek musical forms In youth, he organized a free school for children of poor neighborhoods and himself wrote primers for children. He joined The Bolsheviks in 1920 and organized a theater troop for the Uzbek and   Tajik Red Army soldiers. His immortal works – are included in the thesaurus of world literature and translated into hundreds of the world's languages.  Niyazi's work Niyoziys extolled the Russian Revolution and was directly connected with the struggle for social justice and liberation in Uzbekistan. Many of Niyazi's other works, including his poems, dramas and other writings were likewise often written in the turmoil of revolution and describe Niyazi's...

Modern Melancholy

The green cypress trees fields of tulips & poppies, brought that terrible beauty now lost and unforeseen. Expelled from paradise, left without a choice We have been numb, filled with agony and joy. Forced to embrace humiliation & violence meanness has seeped into our souls, We've drifted far until we realize. We are the inhabitants of the modern world, ugly chimneys & polluted skies. A ridiculed life is as now, surrounded by despair misery and incessant sorrows. Looking out for somewhere sublime, Melancholy brings a sudden peace from the ugliness of human tragedy. @Natasa

World Environment Day- Build Sustainable & Environment Friendly Society

5th June, World Environment Day, lessons to be learned from Chernobyl  and Fukushima  nuclear disasters. "Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's needs, but not every man's greed."- Gandhi Nuclear power plants can catastrophically fail, causing vast human and environmental damage. The corporations that run the power plants, however, are protected from catastrophic economic failure by government limits on liability, which shifts the economic burden to the public. If the corporations that own nuclear power plants had to bear the burden of potential financial losses in the event of a catastrophic accident, they would not build the plants because they know the risks are unacceptable. It is government liability limits, such as the Price-Anderson Act in the US, that make nuclear power plants possible, leaving the taxpayers responsible for the overwhelming monetary costs of nuclear industry failures. No other private industry is given such liability protection. Nuclear ...