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Posts Tagged ‘quaid-e-azam’

I Love Pakistan

August 14th, 2011 Kinza Tahir 2 comments

PAKISTAN FLAGI live in Pakistan and I’m proud. This phrase should be said by every Pakistani. Some people feel shameful and often move to other countries. Sometimes they don’t feel safe here due to recent riots happening in different parts of the country. I don’t think one should leave their hometown if it’s in crisis but should just support their nation.

Pakistan is 64 this year. It’s a great feeling. I cannot believe Pakistan has come this far. It has seen its share of problems and faced its share of setbacks but it always strikes back. Pakistan is very special for me mainly because it’s my mother country and it has taught me a lot.

What my country taught me has been very useful. It’s given me experience, contributed to my skills and given me excitement to live my life. The best thing about Pakistan is its people. They are humble, kind and very devoted.  They have been cooperative not only to their friends but to complete strangers as well.
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23rd March (Pakistan Day)

March 22nd, 2010 Yousuf Rafi 1 comment

The Pakistan Day is a national holiday in Pakistan to commemorate the Lahore Resolution and also to celebrate the adoption of the first constitution of Pakistan in 1956 during the transition of the Dominion of Pakistan to the Islamic Republic of Pakistan of March 23, 1956.

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History housed: The Flagstaff House

November 16th, 2009 Arsalaan 1 comment

By Peerzada Salman

Flagstaff 1An old man, holding his little grandson’s hand, has just arrived at the Quaid-i-Azam House and Museum. He says the child has come all the way from a remote area in Punjab to see the place the Father of the Nation once lived in. They return disappointed. Reason: it is 1pm, lunch time for those working at the museum.

Avoiding desultory discussion let’s establish one thing at the outset: apart from being an exceedingly intelligent individual, Mohammad Ali Jinnah had a sharp aesthetic sense. The elegant dresses that he wore, the classy hats that he put on, and the linguistic panache with which he communicated with friends and colleagues endorse this observation. It also mirrors in the buildings he chose as his abode.

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