Lake Saiful Malook: Winter 2013


Saiful Islam Qaddafi- A lesson for all the rulers



Javed Chaudhry About Saif ul Islam Gaddafi by dm_522c09cf20d0a

The World’s Biggest Websites Looked Like when they Launched..

It’s hard to imagine how the world’s biggest websites that we are using today looked like in the past or when they launched; today we will show you how these websites’ design changed.

Amazon.com – 1995

Amazon_1995 Amazon_2013


Facebook.com – 2004

Facebook_2004 Facebook_2013


Google.com – 1999

Google_1999 Google_2013


Twitter.com – 2006

Twitter_2006 Twitter_2013


Yahoo.com – 1996

Yahoo_1996 Yahoo_2013


Youtube.com – 2005

Youtube_2005 Youtube_2013
Source: www.msn.com/news


Lt General Raheel Sharif, third in terms of seniority, chosen as new Pakistan army chief

Lt General Raheel Sharif, third in terms of seniority, chosen as new Pakistan army chief


Lt General Raheel Sharif, the third in terms of seniority, was appointed as Pakistan's new army chief and the man tipped for the position of army chief, Lt General Rashad Mahmood was appointed to the largely ceremonial position of chairman of the joint chiefs of staff committee, local media said 
on Wednesday.

Geo Television reported that Sharif, who hails from Lahore, was chosen by prime minister Nawaz Sharif from a list of four candidates sent to him by the outgoing army chief General Pervez Ashfaq Kayani.
Earlier, the favourite for the position was General Mahmood, who was the second senior most in the rankings and seen as the favourite of General Kayani.
General Raheel Sharif comes from a military family. Hailing from the Frontier Corps, Sharif's elder brother - Shabbir Sharif was a recipient of Pakistan's highest military award, the Nishan-e-Haider. He is also related to another war hero, Major Aziz Bhatti.
Sharif has worked extensively on countering India's cold start doctrine with more sophisticated responses.
In a message on Twitter, the Pak prime minister confirmed the appointment at a time when tension continues with India over Kashmir and as the United States seeks Pakistan's help in bringing peace to neighbour Afghanistan.
Sharif is seen as a moderate who views the militant threat inside Pakistan as just as important as the strategic tussle with India.
General Sharif will take over as head of the 600,000-strong army from General Ashfaq Kayani, who is retiring after six years at the helm.
The change of command comes with the country facing a daunting array of challenges -- a homegrown Taliban insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives, vexed relations with India and the winding-down of the 12-year NATO mission in neighbouring Afghanistan.
"Sharif has played a big role in convincing the army that the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and assorted militants inside Pakistan are as big a threat (as India)," a retired senior army officer who Sharif has served under told Reuters.
The TTP is a group of Islamist militants in the country's lawless tribal areas next to Afghanistan. Sharif's appointment came as somewhat of a surprise as three other men had been seen as leading candidates.
Sharif, whose elder brother won Pakistan's highest military award for valour in the 1971 war with India, will formally take command on Thursday.
Departing commander Kayani has served as army chief since 2007 and has been given much credit for resisting the temptation to meddle overtly in politics.
When he confirmed his retirement last month he stressed that the armed forces "fully support and want to strengthen" democracy.
The general election in May marked a major landmark for Pakistani democracy as being the first time an elected government had completed its term and handed over power through the ballot box.
Nawaz, who made the appointment, will be hoping to avoid a repeat of events the last time he named an army chief -- General Pervez Musharraf overthrew him in a coup in 1999.
There has been much debate about how to deal with the campaign of violence waged against the state by the Pakistani Taliban.
The government has said it wants to pursue peace talks, but some have argued that a military offensive is needed to clear militant hideouts in the tribal northwest.
Analyst Hasan Askari said he thought the new commmander would take an uncompromising approach.
"He belongs to a family of soldiers, his father was a martyr, his brother was honoured with the highest military award, so I expect he will go for the extremist groups and clear the tribal areas," Askari told AFP.
"He has to secure the border with Afghanistan, so I think he will consult with his senior top brass officers and clear the troubled area along the Durand Line."  
The Durand Line is the official name for the Afghan-Pakistani border.

(With Reuters, AFP inputs)

Europe: a Blood Sucker for International Students

Europe: Once a land of opportunities for international students: now sucking the blood of the students from third world countries. Scandinavian belt was an exceptional but the lust of earning more and depriving large number of students from higher education has also adopted by them by introducing huge amounts of tuition fee and other charges. Only in Sweden, 97% decreased has been noticed due to the introduction of tuition fee and other barriers on educating the students of poor nations which had positively contributed to the economies and culture of those countries.

european-countries-revenue-generated-from-international-students

Source:http://monitor.icef.com/2013/05/europe-takes-stock-of-its-international-student-recruitment-strategies/

Social Media And The Job Hunt: Squeaky-Clean Profiles Need Not Apply by Meghan Casserly

A young friend who just scored her first internship at a NYC recruiting firm recently told me that she’s uncomfortable with her new job description. Instead of filing and sitting in on interviews, she’s spending her summer days in a high-walled cubicle poring over the social feeds of countless candidates applying “mostly,” she says, “for low- to mid-level financial and legal positions.” Her new bosses seem impressed with her comfort with the technology and are pleased with her vetting of new hires, but she describes the task as akin to “stalking crushes on Facebook,” something she’s “gotten embarrassingly good at in college.”
Either way, at 21, she’s become the gate-keeper to employment for thousands of New Yorkers and I was surprised to hear about the barriers to entry. Wedding pictures? Great. Baby photos? Even better. Photos with friends at parties, beaches and concerts? An absolute must.
“There’s a sense that a profile with no character has probably been scraped of some racy stuff or else the person has no social skills and won’t fit in.” Either way, she says, that candidate has been moved to the bottom of the pile.
According to the 2012 annual technology market survey from Eurocom Worldwide, “One in five tech executives say that a candidate’s social media profile has caused them not to hire that person.” Another recent survey shows that 37% of firms across industries browse social media profiles to evaluate each candidate’s character and personality .
But with all of the common wisdom floating around the web (and this site) on how careful job seekers must be about curating (read: editing) their social presence online, it seems to be that our advice might have crossed over from helpful to problematic. In a popular post on Forbes from contributor Lisa Quast in April, she says it’s important to leave out photos from Saturday night’s party in order to communicate a more professional demeanor. With so much time focusing on building a strong professional character on our Facebook pages and LinkedIn profiles we might possibly be leaving out a very critical element: our personalities.
By 2012 experts on using personal branding for professional purposes have really given up the notion of any real distinction between personal and professional presences, which was, until recently, the oft-repeated wisdom for job seekers. But keeping track of two Twitter feeds can be exhausting, and maintaining two Facebook profiles actually violates their code of conduct and could leave you banned from the network.
Instead, at least according to careers expert Joshua Waldman, something of a guru in using social media in the job hunt who gave a talk at this week’sNACE conference on the subject, says that everyone—employed, unemployed and the hopefully-soon-to-be-employed—should adopt a tone of what he calls “Public Private” online. “Think about a TV or radio show host,” he says. “They’re talking about personal details of their lives in a very public way. These details are important because they make themselves seem accessible to listeners but they’re definitely not deep secrets or potentially embarrassing.”
Job-seekers, Waldman says, should keep the public private in mind when posting to social networks or when selecting privacy settings. Aim to post something publicly private to the social graph at least once a week and you won’t wind up on the bottom of an intern’s pile, or worse, become the subject of a more thorough investigation. “Step into the mindset of a celebrity or a public figure,” he says. “There is information about you available online to anyone willing to work hard enough to find it.” It’s better, he says, to tame the lion by feeding it.
Waldman’s sentiment is echoed by James Alexander, the founder and CEO of Vizibility, an online reputation firm that helps individuals curate, package and distribute their social presence to colleagues, clients or potential employers through links or QR codes on business cards resumes and email signatures. “when people are looking to vet you, as they’re definitely going to, they need to be reaffirmed that you are who you say you are,” he says. For some that will mean a simple web search to see that everything you attest on your resume is true. For others, employers are looking for a social presences that illustrates creativity, engagement in a community or a level of expertise, all things that can be proved or disproved online.
The problem arises though, when a hiring manager (or an intern) hops online, finds one thing he or she doesn’t like, and your likelihood of employment comes to a screeching halt. Alexander’s recipe for success lies in bundling exactly what you want and delivering it on a silver platter. Think your own personal “Best of the Web.” Through Vizibility’s “SearchMe”function you can hand-pick your top five most flattering Google links and even create a specialized query for potential employers. Jane Smiths no longer have to contend with doppelgangers when queried as (“Jane Smith”+”graphic design”+”Austin”+”award-winning”). When a hiring manager looks at yourVizibility profile, she’ll automatically be prompted with mutual Facebook and LinkedIn contacts, and be provided with relevant (hand-picked) links to your work and presence on the web. No searching, no stumbling. Feeding the lion to avoid the pitfalls—quite cleverly, I might add.
Of course, there are also firms out there who make vetting candidates through the social graph their business. Social Intelligence, for example, assembles dossiers of plusses (honors, awards, charitable work) and minuses (references to drugs, explicit photos, evidence or racist or sexist attitudes) on potential hires for its clients. “We’re not detectives,” its CEO Max Drucker told theTimes last year. “All we assemble is what is publicly available on the Internet.”
Other companies have more magnanimous values in finding the best candidates through the social graph, like Reppify, which relies less on Facebook and Twitter and more on culture- or industry-specific networks or message boards to mole out wunderkinds. For engineers, networks like githuband reddit might take precedence or whether a candidate has answered a complicated query onQuora might bump a candidate up considerably despite a less-than-stellar Twitter following or a non-Ivy education.
But more than anything, says Reppify CEO Chirag Nangia, vetting a candidate through social networks is about putting all of the pieces together. Looking at one network alone–whether Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn or even Klout–could leave you with a troubling top candidate. Take the Biebs. “Justin Bieber may have 23 million Twitter followers, but he’s definitely not the best guy to do my online marketing,” Nangia says. “There’s a whole lot more to it.”
Hiring managers: tell that to the intern.

Inside Micheal Jordan's Amazing Home!


How Chicks are made


36 countries where Pakistanis can travel without visas


36 countries where Pakistanis can travel without visas.

visa1visa2visaa


About Mother by Maulana Tariq Jameel Sb


Want to Quit Your Job and Work for Yourself? Follow These Steps First

Want to Quit Your Job and Work for Yourself? Follow These Steps First


checklist
How do you confidently make the leap from corporate employee to entrepreneur or consultant?
If you want to make it on your own, there are three important steps many successful entrepreneurs take before they head out.
While some folks get lucky or find a way to make it work without much planning, others end up returning to the corporate world they so desperately wanted to escape.
To ensure a smooth and successful transition to your new solopreneur life, take these three steps:

1. Reduce your costs

Live minimally. Gain freedom from your job by not needing the paycheck.
The more expensive your lifestyle, the riskier it is to jump to something new and uncertain that could have a potentially low income at start. The more you can reduce your overhead, the less risky it is to make that jump.
If you want to start something new or break out of a dead-end job, follow the path of the Ramen-eating hackers who live cheaply. If you live an elaborate lifestyle, you may burn through your paychecks. See how much you can cut.
Make it a game. Buy a $75 sewing machine and give up buying clothes for a year. Learn from the family in San Francisco that lives with no trash. Eat on the cheap. Give up restaurants and alcohol for a year, or even a few months. Track all your purchases and decide whether that night out with friends or new pair of shoes is more valuable to you than your freedom.
The nomadic entrepreneurs who live around the world and work from anywhere are often working in places where the cost of living is low. They’re not rich; they’ve often worked the airline systems to get thousands of frequent flyer miles and travel on the cheap. The life they’ve built is incredibly inexpensive, making the need for a giant business (and lots of possessions) unnecessary.
Sound like too much to give up? Consider how much you want to leave your job. What’s it worth to you? How much do you want to start this business? When you want it, you’ll make it happen.

2. Build a nest egg

Tuck away a little bit of money each paycheck to save for your future expenses. A great rule of thumb is to save enough to cover six months of expenses. But if you’re eager and motivated to make money once you take the leap, one or two months of savings might be enough to hold you over.
The lower your expenses, the longer you can stretch your savings. If every paycheck goes straight to paying your expenses, consider taking on a small side job to boost your income.
When I started my first job, I made less than the cost of my rent and loans. I picked up two side jobs: teaching swim lessons on the weekends and tutoring high school students in the evenings after work. That extra $200 a week was my savings and food budget, and I was able to save a little bit each month.
After a year, I had saved $4,000 and was ready to jump. It was just the cushion I needed for several months to concentrate on tweaking my side business endeavors. Soon I started making thousands of dollars on the side.
Allie Siarto of Lansing, Mich., built a side business as a photographer, which was entirely different from her day job managing Loudpixel (her first company). Another woman in New York spends her days at an advertising agency and works at J.Crew on the weekend shift to get a massive discount on her favorite clothes and add extra cash to her savings.

3. Hustle on the side

It’s called moonlighting, and it’s a great way to test whether something you want to do is feasible. The best time to try out your new project or company is when you have the structure of your current job to help support you.
Test the market viability by seeing if there’s any traction for your ideas, and tweak each iteration a bit to improve the offering. Perhaps you want to start a side culinary and health business. Set up evening showcases on the weekends for friends and family and let people know you’re doing a cooking class at a discount to raise awareness. Pitch your services to local vendors. Offer to teach at a high school. Spread the word about private lessons.
After a couple of months, reevaluate and see if you’ve made a profit. Tweak your project to build something people want that you also enjoy doing. If you need to, stay home and do things no one else is doing to make it work.
Leave your job when you need more space in your business or venture and when you have a few leads. You’ll be excited about what’s ahead because you’ll have already mitigated against risk.

When is it time to finally take the leap?

There are times when you need to make the leap without a nest egg, without changing your costs, without a plan. This happens, and people make it work. Sometimes the intensity of the jump forces laser-like clarity and an immediate reduction in expenses. But if your goal is to set out on your own by next summer, start building your business and reducing your overhead right now. (Click here to Tweet this thought.)
Most folks running their own businesses and building the life of their dreams are always in the process of doing that — running and building. These are active verbs, which take time, energy and innovation. It’s not about pulling all-nighters or creating an endless stream of energy; it’s about being smart about building something a little bit at a time.
People who are working on new projects or problems aren’t immune to risk. But they’ve mitigated potential risks by using strategic tools, building up their savings, creating clever cost-saving lifestyles and forming plans to tweak their systems to get what they want.

’گنجے افراد میں امراض قلب کا خطرہ زیادہ‘

 ’گنجے افراد میں امراض قلب کا خطرہ زیادہ‘


’جن کے بال جوانی میں ہی جھڑ جائیں انہیں اپنے طرزِ زندگی پر نظرِ ثانی کرنے کی ضرورت ہے‘
جاپان میں ہونے والی ایک تحقیق کے مطابق گنجے افراد میں امراضِ قلب کا شکار ہونے کے لیے امکانات زیادہ ہوتے ہیں۔
37000 کے قریب افراد پر کی گئی یہ تحقیق آن لائن جرنل بی ایم جے اوپن میں شائع ہوئی ہے اور اس کے مطابق ایسے افراد جن کے بال گر رہے ہیں انہیں دل کی بیماری لاحق ہونے کا خطرہ بتیس فیصد زیادہ ہے۔

گنجا پن مردوں میں عام ہے اور جہاں پچاس فیصد افراد پچاس کے پیٹے میں بالوں سے محروم ہو جاتے ہیں وہیں ستّر سال کی عمر تک پہنچتے پہنچتے اسّی فیصد افراد کے بال گر جاتے ہیں۔تاہم محققین کے مطابق یہ خطرہ مٹاپے یا سگریٹ نوشی کی وجہ سے امراضِ قلب ہونے کے خطرے سے کہیں کم ہے۔

یونیورسٹی آف ٹوکیو کے محققین نے بالوں کے جھڑنے اور دل کی بیماریوں کا باہمی تعلق تلاش کرنے کے لیے ماضی میں ہونے والی تحقیقات کا بھی جائزہ لیا۔
تحقیقی ٹیم کے رکن ڈاکٹر ٹوموہیڈ یمادا نے بی بی سی کو بتایا کہ ’ہمیں گنجے پن اور دل کی بیماریوں کے تعلق کے قابلِ ذکر ثبوت ملے لیکن یہ ثبوت اتنے ٹھوس نہیں جتنے کہ سگریٹ نوشی، مٹاپے، کولیسٹرول کی شرح یا فشارِ خون کے اس بیماری سے تعلق کے ہیں۔‘
ڈاکٹر یمادا نے کہا کہ وہ افراد جن کے بال جوانی میں ہی جھڑ جائیں انہیں اپنے طرزِ زندگی پر نظرِ ثانی کرنے اور صحت مندانہ طریقے سے زندگی گزارنے کی کوشش کرنے کی ضرورت ہے۔
تاہم ان کا یہ بھی کہنا تھا کہ تحقیق کے نتائج اتنے ٹھوس نہیں کہ ہر گنجے شخص کو دل کی بیماری کی تشخیص کے لیے معائنہ کروانا پڑے۔
برٹش ہارٹ فاؤنڈیشن سے تعلق رکھنے والی ڈورین میڈوک کا کہنا ہے کہ اگرچہ یہ نتائج دلچسپ ہیں لیکن گنجے افراد کو اس تجزے سے پریشان نہیں ہونا چاہیے۔
انہوں نے کہا کہ ’مردوں میں گنجے پن اور امراضِ قلب کے تعلق کو حتمی طور پر ثابت کرنے کے لیے مزید تحقیق کی ضرورت ہے اور تب تک ضروری ہے کہ آپ اپنی توند کی فکر کریں نہ کہ گرتے بالوں کی۔‘
ڈورین میڈوک کا یہ بھی کہنا تھا کہ وراثت میں ملنے والے گنجے پن پر قابو پانا شاید ممکن نہ ہو لیکن آپ دل کی بیماریوں سے بچنے کی ہر ممکن کوشش کر سکتے ہیں۔

’خشک میوے کھانے والے طویل عمر پاتے ہیں‘


خشک میوہ جات کے انسانی صحت پر اثرات کے بارے میں یہ اب تک کی سب سے بڑی تحقیق تھی
ایک امریکی تحقیق کے مطابق خشک میوہ جات کھانے والے افراد کی عمر بظاہر طویل ہوتی ہے۔
طبی جریدے نیو انگلینڈ جرنل آف میڈیسن میں شائع ہونے والی تحقیق کے نتائج سے ظاہر ہوتا ہے کہ روزانہ کی بنیاد پر خشک میوے کھانا زیادہ فائدہ مند ثابت ہو سکتا ہے۔

تاہم برٹش ہارٹ فاؤنڈیشن کا کہنا ہے کہ اس دعوے کو ثابت کرنے کے لیے مزید تحقیق کی ضرورت ہے۔امریکی محققین کے مطابق ممکن ہے کہ خشک میوے کھانے والے افراد کا طرزِ زندگی صحت مندانہ ہو لیکن خشک میوے بھی ان کی طویل العمری میں اہم کردار ادا کرتے ہیں۔
اس تحقیق کے دوران 30 برس کے عرصے میں ایک لاکھ 20 ہزار افراد کا جائزہ لیا گیا اور پتہ چلا کہ جو لوگ باقاعدگی سے خشک میوے کھاتے رہے ان کے اس عرصے میں مرنے کے امکانات کم رہے۔
اعداد و شمار کے مطابق وہ لوگ جو ہفتے میں ایک مرتبہ خشک میوے کھاتے ہیں ان کے ایسا نہ کرنے والوں کے مقابلے میں مرنے کے امکانات 11 فیصد کم تھے۔
ہفتے میں چار مرتبہ میوہ کھانے والوں میں یہ شرح 14 فیصد اور روزانہ ایسا کرنے والوں میں 20 فیصد رہی۔
اس تحقیق کے مرکزی محقق ڈاکٹر چارلس فُش کا کہنا ہے کہ ’سب سے واضح فائدہ دل کی بیماری سے ہلاکت میں 29 فیصد کمی تھی۔ اس کے علاوہ ہم نے کینسر سے ہلاکت کے خطرے میں بھی 11 فیصد کی قابلِ ذکر کمی دیکھی۔‘
تاہم برٹش ہارٹ فاؤنڈیشن سے تعلق رکھنے والی سینیئر ماہرِ خوراک وکٹوریہ ٹیلر کا کہنا ہے کہ باقاعدگی سے میوہ جات کھانے اور دل کی بیماری سے ہلاکت کا ’یہ ایک دلچسپ تعلق ہے۔ ہمیں اس امر کی تصدیق کے لیے مزید تحقیق کی ضرورت ہے کہ آیا میوہ جات ہی دل کی حفاظت کرتے ہیں یا اس میں ان افراد کی طرزِ زندگی کا بھی عمل دخل ہے۔

An Easy Way to Find Career Success: Buck Up and Grow Up!



  • By Jessica Stillman


grow up
  • Graduating from college and entering the career world can come as a shock.
If you were lucky, your parents and teachers set tasks, rewarded success and protected you as best they could from anything scary that threatened during the last 18 years, providing a stable, reliable world. Then you went to college, and things might have gotten a bit wilder, but in many ways they also stayed remarkably similar –your professors set assignments and gave out grades while TAs and phone calls (and checks) from the parents protected you from many of the world’s ups and downs.
Now you’re out on your own and looking for your job. Isn’t it reasonable to expect to find an employer that looks out for your interests, directs your efforts and rewards your successes at least a little like those surrounding you in your early life did? Isn’t that, after all, what the employee-employer compact is all about?
Fat chance. Several decades ago, workers might have been able to trade hard work and loyalty for a job that provided security, advancement and a modicum of security from life’s strongest storms – but not anymore.
According to London Business School professor Lynda Gratton, author of a new book entitled The Shift: The Future of Work Is Already Here, new career realities demand we give up our dreams of a sheltering employer that protects us like children and face up to the fact that we all need to grow up.She recently wrote in Forbes:
We are in the midst of an industrial revolution greater than the world has ever seen with all the turbulence, the challenges and the opportunities that previous revolutions have brought. Partly as a result of this, it seems to me that the relationship between companies and their employees is undergoing a fundamental shift. All over the world the old Parent to Child relationship is moving towards a potentially more balanced Adult to Adult relationship.
So what does that mean for young careerists struggling to come to terms with this new reality of work? How does acknowledging that your employer these days is in no way like your mom change how you approach your working life? Gratton offers some suggestions in The Wall Street Journal:
Temper tantrums don’t change reality. Make the tough choices. Is the current reality harsh? Sure, it is. American workers face a tough economy and stiff competition from abroad as well as from ever more efficient and intelligent technology. But covering your eyes, whining and bitching, and generally refusing to accept reality doesn’t change that.
“Being a young graduate in a country with near-zero growth is not pleasant and we know the psychological scarring this experience can leave. Context can indeed be overwhelming and it can feel as if there are no real options against which choices can be made,” Gratton writes, but “it is crucial to see choices even in these potentially more restricted contexts.”
Don’t let yourself pretend that a lack of good and easy choices is the same thing as no choices at all.
Stop waiting for someone to explain the assignment and direct your own development. In this new world, you need to set your own assignments and direct your own development because making it in a tough market is all about building skills. You need to ensure you keep learning.
“Good work provides opportunities to do exciting and stretching work with talented peers,” Gratton writes. “Bad work may pay well but in the long term erodes your intellectual capital.”
Don’t be a baby about saving and retirement. Our parents and grandparents may have had long-term employers looking out for them in their golden years, but Gen Y is unlikely to be offered these same sort of benefits.
Be realistic about this and look out for yourself. Gratton suggests most of us have three options: “Build a career that enables you to work longer (at least into your late 60s or early 70s), be prepared (like the Chinese who save around 40 percent of their income) to save a significant proportion of your income throughout your working life, [or] consider ways to reduce your consumption and live more simply.”
What do you think of Gratton’s prescriptions? Are they strong but necessary medicine for young people who are often in denial about career realities – or overly cruel?

’انقلابی شاعر‘

ظفر سید
پاکستان کو دنیا کے نقشے پر نمودار ہوئے زیادہ وقت نہیں گزرا تھا۔ راولپنڈی کے ایک گھر میں دو میجر جنرل، دو بریگیڈیئر، ایک ایئر کموڈور، کئی کرنل اور دوسرے فوجی موجود تھے۔ گرما گرم بحث، دلائل اور جوابی دلائل سگریٹوں کے دھویں اور چائے کی پیالیوں سے اٹھتی ہوئی بھاپ میں مدغم ہو رہے تھے۔
فوجیوں کی اس محفل میں ایک مدھم آواز اور دھیمے لہجے میں سہج سہج بولنے والے صاحب بھی موجود تھے جن کا زیادہ تر وقت تو ایک سگریٹ سے دوسرا سگریٹ جلانے میں گزرا، لیکن جب بھی وہ بھی بولتے، کمرے پر خاموشی چھا جاتی۔
یہ بات ہے 23 فروری 1951 کی، اور یہ آٹھ گھنٹوں پر محیط نشست میجر جنرل اکبر خان کے گھر پر منعقد ہوئی تھی اور اس میں حکومتِ وقت کا تختہ الٹنے کے منصوبے پر غور کیا گیا تھا۔ یہ سہج سہج بولنے والے شریکِ محفل فیض احمد فیض تھے۔ یہ وہ واقعہ ہے جو بعد میں پنڈی سازش کیس کے نام سے مشہور و معروف ہوا۔
باغیوں کے اس اجلاس میں فیض کے علاوہ کمیونسٹ پارٹی کے سرگرم نظریاتی و عملی کارکنان سجاد ظہیر اور محمد حسین عطا بھی شامل تھے۔
سوال یہ ہے کہ فیض احمد فیض اس چکر میں کیسے پڑ گئے؟
فیض احمد فیض کے نواسے علی مدیح ہاشمی نے بی بی سی کو بتایا کہ پاکستانی فوج روایتی طور دائیں بازو کے خیالات کی پروردہ در رہی ہے۔ لیکن اس سرد شام سجنے والی نشست میں غالباً ملک کی تاریخ میں پہلی بار فوجی بغاوت بپا کرنے کے لیے بائیں بازو کی آئیڈیالوجی سے استفادہ کرنی کوشش کی گئی۔ منصوبہ یہ تھا کہ ملکی قیادت کو گرفتار کر کے اقتدار پر قبضہ جما لیا جائے، جس کے بعد ملک میں عام انتخابات منعقد کروائے جائیں جن میں کمیونسٹ پارٹی کو بھی حصہ لینے کی اجازت ہو۔
اس نشست میں شریک لوگوں میں سے صرف ظفراللہ پوشنی زندہ بچے ہیں جو اُس وقت فوج میں کیپٹن تھے
یاد رہے کہ اس دور میں پاکستان امریکہ سے پینگیں بڑھا رہا تھا۔ جہاں امریکہ میں میکارتھی ازم کے تحت بائیں بازو سے تعلق رکھنے والوں کا ناطقہ بند کیا گیا، وہیں پاکستان میں بھی کمیونسٹ پارٹی کے ’سرخوں‘ کی ہر قسم کی سیاسی سرگرمیوں کو سختی سے کچل دیا گیا۔
فیض کمیونسٹ پارٹی سے جذباتی طور پر وابستہ تھے، اس بغاوت سے ان کی پارٹی کو فائدہ پہنچتا۔ دوسری جانب چونکہ شاعرِ طرح دار ہونے کے ناتے سارا ملک ان کا پرستار تھا، ساتھ ہی ساتھ وہ ملک کے ایک سرکردہ اخبار پاکستان ٹائمز کے مدیر بھی تھے، اس لیے ان کے ذمے بغاوت کے بعد کی فضا میں عوامی رائے عامہ کو ہموار کرنے کا کام لگایا جانا تھا۔
اس نشست میں جتنے لوگ موجود تھے، وہ سب رزقِ خاک ہو چکے ہیں، صرف ظفراللہ پوشنی زندہ بچے ہیں جو اس وقت فوج میں کیپٹن تھے۔
انھوں نے بی بی سی کو 1951 کی اس محفل کی تفصیلات بتاتے ہوئے کہا کہ میجر جنرل اکبر حکومت کی پالیسیوں سے سخت ناخوش تھے۔ وہ 1948 کی جنگِ کشمیر میں پاکستانی فوج کے کمانڈر تھے۔ انھیں اس بات کا قلق تھا کہ انھیں جنگ کے حتمی نتیجے کے بغیر ہی واپس بلا لیا گیا تھا۔
ظفراللہ پوشنی نے انکشاف کیا کہ اس رات پنڈی سازش کیس کے ارکان کسی نتیجے تک نہیں پہنچ پائے تھے۔ فیض اور سجاد ظہیر بھی اس غیر جمہوری عمل کے حق میں نہیں تھے، انھوں نے اس کے خلاف دلائل دیے۔ آٹھ گھنٹے کی تند و تیز بحث و تمحیص کے بعد بالآخر جنرل اکبر خان کے پیش کردہ منصوبے کو ناقابلِ عمل سمجھ کر رد کر دیا گیا۔

’زندانی‘ اشعار

  • متاعِ لوح و قلم چھن گئی تو کیا غم ہے
    کہ خونِ دل میں ڈبو لی ہیں انگلیاں میں نے

    زباں پہ مہر لگی ہے تو کیا کہ رکھ دی ہے
    ہر ایک حلقۂ زنجیر میں زباں میں نے
  • چمن میں غارتِ گل چیں سے جانے کیا گزری
    قفس سے آج صبا بے قرار گزری ہے
  • درِ قفس پہ اندھیرے کی مہر لگتی ہے
    تو فیض دل میں ستارے اترنے لگتے ہیں
  • صبا نے پھر درِ زنداں پہ آ کے دستک دی
    سحر قریب ہے، دل سے کہو نہ گھبرائے
اسی رات ایک مخبر نے چپکے سے پولیس کو خبر کر دی۔ نو مارچ 1951 کو وزیرِ اعظم لیاقت علی خان نے اس سازش کو طشت از بام کر دیا، جس کے بعد اس محفل کے دیگر شرکت کنندگان کے ساتھ فیض کو بھی گرفتار کر جیل میں ڈال دیا گیا۔
اس کے بعد فیض کی زندگی کے اگلے چار سال ملک کی مختلف جیلوں میں گزرے۔ یہ دور ان کے لیے ذاتی طور پر ضرور تکلیف دہ رہا ہو گا، لیکن اس سے ان کی تخلیق صلاحیتوں کو مہمیز لگی۔ ان کی کئی پرکیف نظمیں اور غزلیں اسی دور کی دین ہیں۔ فیض جیل ہی میں تھے کہ ان کا مجموعۂ کلام ’دستِ صبا‘ منظرِ عام پر آیا۔ اس کے علاوہ ’زنداں نامہ‘ کی اکثر و بیشتر شاعری پسِ زنداں ہی تصنیف ہوئی۔
جیل میں فیض کے ساتھی قیدی میجر محمد اسحٰق ’زنداں نامہ‘ کے دیباچے میں لکھتے ہیں:
’شعر کا عالم طاری ہوتا تو فیض صاحب خاموش ہو جایا کرتے تھے۔ البتہ اٹھتے بیٹھتے گنگنا چکنے کے بعد ادھر ادھر دیکھنے لگتے۔ ہم بھانپ لیتے تھے کہ سامعین کی ضرورت ہے۔۔۔ اگر نظم یا غزل تیار ہوتی تھی تو ایک آدھ شعر سنا دیا کرتے تھے۔‘
پوشنی صاحب کے بیان کردہ حقائق سے ظاہر ہوتا ہے کہ فیض کی جذباتی وابستگی کتنی شدید کیوں نہ ہو، وہ کسی صورت ایک غیر جمہوری اور غیر سیاسی عمل میں شریک نہیں ہونا چاہتے تھے۔ یہ بات ان ادیبوں اور ’دانشوروں‘ کے لیے لمحۂ فکریہ ہے جو بعد میں جمہوریت پر شب خون مار کر اقتدار میں آنے والی فوجی حکومتوں کے کاسہ لیس بنے رہے۔
(فیض کی 29ویں برسی اور ملکی تاریخ میں پہلی بار کسی سابق جرنیل کے خلاف آئین توڑنے کے مقدمے کے آغاز کے موقعے پر لکھا گیا۔)

Parveen Shakir


How To Make Money Without A Job by Deborah L. Jacobs

Once you've landed an assignment, you can juggle deadlines and delegate some of the work if necessary. Credit: Peter Till / Getty ImagesBefore joining the staff of Forbes in July of 2011, I was happily self-employed for 23 years. For much of this time my husband and I ran two mostly unrelated home-based businesses. He worked in his office in the front of the house, while I was in mine across the hall. Our office doors were usually closed and we knocked before interrupting each other. Until our son was old enough to go to school, we had a full-time babysitter to take care of him downstairs while we worked upstairs. Our only break during the workday was to eat lunch with our child.
Upon observing our traffic patterns, our house painter once said, “It’s like you’re in an office!“ Others remarked about our discipline. We didn’t have a choice. If we didn’t produce, we didn’t get paid, and we needed that money to live on. So for all the flexibility about setting our own hours and balancing work and family, we didn’t vary much from the routine. If we took time off to see the class play or take our son to the pediatrician, we made up for it in the evening or on weekends. Come to think of it, we worked a lot of evenings and weekends anyway.
With widespread layoffs pushing many people into business for themselves, we hear from a lot of folks who are wondering how to set up shop and structure their new work life. We tell them that self employment can be a bit of an emotional roller coaster, with higher highs and lower lows than you’re probably used to. Whether you want to start something on the side or say goodbye to corporate life forever, here are some tips for starting your own business.
Leave yourself a financial safety net. While creditors require you to pay promptly, most of your own clients won’t rush to compensate you. Even if you write “payment due in 30 days” on your invoice, it’s a rare client that sticks to that time frame. Schedules of 60 or even 90 days are all too common. Complaining about tardy payment or imposing a late charge could drive business away.To minimize tensions while you wait for the work to come in — and then wait to get paid — set aside enough money to cover six months of expenses (a year is even better).
Do what you know. Don’t waste savings on buying an existing business or a franchise. Instead, get ready for what Arlington Heights, Ill. new-business consultant Jeff Williams has dubbed the “scratch startup.” Williams counsels “desperation entrepreneurs”—laid-off employees who aren’t likely to get back into the corporate world. He tells them to sell a skill or a product they already know.
Ken Proskie, 59, is a Williams client who was laid off in 2004 from his job as a health and safety manager for a large manufacturer. Working from an office in his Evanston, Ill. home, he began pitching his services to a network of 300 colleagues from professional associations. After three years, Proskie says, he matched his corporate salary and today has more than enough work. “Now I wish I had made the transition five or ten years sooner,’’ he says. It would have given him time to take on employees and expand.
Don’t bet your savings on a long-shot new venture either. New York financial planner Karen C. Altfest says she has one 70-year-old client who can’t retire yet because she sank all her money into a perfume business startup—in her 60s. Although she worked very hard in the enterprise for two years, going from store to store, it bombed; turned out not enough people liked her scents.
Find a comfortable workspace. It’s important to choose a spot where you won’t have a lot of interruptions and distractions. Working at home avoids the need to pay office rent and makes you eligible for tax write offs. But you must jealously guard your work time, which means limiting trips to the refrigerator, telling friends and family you can’t chat during the workday, and explaining to the UPS guy that you won’t accept packages for neighbors. If you find you are unable to be productive at home, consider working from another location.
Spend judiciously. New technologies and social media continue to reduce the costs of starting and operating a small business. Put seed money towards equipment that can help you embrace technology: laptop, iPad and smartphone. You’ll want to buy a comfortable work chair, if you don’t already have one, but there’s no need to pay top dollar for other furniture. With so many companies scaling back, there are plenty of good deals on secondhand equipment. Try auctions (live or online), going-out-of-business sales and used office furniture stores.
Create digital footprints. These days if people can’t find you on Google, they might decide you don’t exist. Build a Web site. Then get busy online. Social media like LinkedIn and Twitter, along with the websites and Listservs of many professional associations, make low-cost networking and business-building far easier. If you’re already using Facebook FB -1.01% for your personal life, think about creating a separate page for your business. While some business owners limit their tweets to shop talk, others use Twitter to develop a broader persona. (See my post, “How To Grandstand (Gracefully) On The Web.”)
For professionals, there are a few sites that rival LinkedIn. Write your profile, join groups in your field of interest. Then chime into the discussions. Being the boss is not a job for people who are shy about blowing their own horns, but self-promotion shouldn’t be all you do. As with networking in person, helping other people is part of the game.
Present a professional image. Answer all phone calls by stating your name or the name of your business. Avoid referring to yourself as a “freelancer.” (Instead, use your company name, say you’re a consultant, self-employed, or in business for yourself.) When you finally meet in person,follow these tips to make sure your body language reinforces the good impressions you’ve already made.
Go after more work than you can handle. In the early stages, running your own business is a lot like being a lonely Maytag repairman who’s always waiting for the phone to ring. Many of your marketing efforts won’t lead to business right away, and even promising “nibbles” may not pan out. So hedge your bets by pursuing many avenues at a time. Once you’ve landed an assignment, you can juggle deadlines and delegate some of the work if necessary. For information about new ways to find work, see “As Job Growth Lags, Companies Outsource Work To Freelancers Through The Cloud.”
Charge what the market will bear. While eager to bring in work, you don’t want to sell yourself short. Yet you know that bidding too high could drive away business. If you can roughly estimate the time you’ll need to spend, charge a lump-sum. Lump-sum fees are potentially more lucrative, especially if you’ve done the kind of work before and don’t need to reinvent the wheel. Another advantage is that clients don’t know exactly how long the project takes you. Therefore, they may be willing to pay more, in effect, than if you charge by the hour.
On the other hand, lump sums are risky if you don’t know — or have no control over — how much time you must put in. Here, the risk is that the client may demand more work (like endless changes). What sounded like good money when you bid on the job can quickly turn into slave wages.
So if you’re unsure about the scope of work, charge by the hour. To figure your hourly rate, take your most recent salary and divide it by 2,000 hours/year (that’s 40 hours per week for 50 weeks). Increase that sum by 30% to cover your expenses — most notably health insurance.
Once you put your price on the table, be open to negotiation. If the client objects to the fee and you really want the job, you could say, “I don’t want price to prevent us from working together. What’s your budget?” Meanwhile, ask yourself whether there are other advantages to the project. Your first goal, especially the beginning, is to gain experience and build relationships. Do good work that keeps clients happy and, chances are, they’ll send more business your way. At that point, you’ll have plenty of time to raise your rates.
Get help as you need it. By hiring subcontractors when you don’t have time to do everything yourself, and bringing in consultants if your own expertise falls short, you free yourself to go after other money-generating pursuits. Call upon extra hands (including students and hourly workers) for time-consuming chores. You can put together a virtual staff to handle everything from research to Web design.
Build a support team. Exchange ideas and leads with other business owners in your area. Surround yourself with people who believe in your ability to be successful. Be prepared for the inevitable downswings: you will want to have an optimistic friend or family member around who can be your cheerleader during these times.
Keep in mind that there is no preset formula for success. You may need to modify your plans – and your expectations – until you find what works best. No matter what, though, you’ll have the satisfaction of knowing that you’re in charge. And when You & Co. does better than you ever dreamed, you’ll have yourself to thank.