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Dhaak : The Matrix | मायाजाल

Listen here:  http://dhaak.com/dhaak-podcast-the-matrix.php?icode=2 The matrix as we know it is all around us, we live in it and think it to be real. You have to understand. Most people are not ready to be unplugged. And many of them are so hopelessly dependent on the system that they will fight to protect it. The system is ones ego and ones ego shape our consciousness. They are fundamentally one and the same. To become unplugged implies shattering your illusive identity, the story about you and the world around you. It implies becoming face to face with reality, and thus acknowledge all the negative and positive aspects of the world around you, not only those fit to your story. Let's understand maya tonight dear listeners, my story will help you understand better. So happy listening and do share your views with me on https://instagram.com/tusharsarojsen  OR http://dhaak.com ‎

Welcome to my PODCAST - DHAAK

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Dhaak means drums in Bengali, and we intend to drum-roll for anyone who wishes for a Shoutout of her/his ideas. From creative domains to social causes to current affairs, we bring you the most curated content from across the globe. This podcast is hosted by your friendly neighborhood Tushar Sen (instagram: @tusharsarojsen ). Stay tuned and stay connected. Listen to "Dhaak" on Spreaker.

Indian and Pakistani societies, two bastions of Urdu poetry, inflict subtle discrimination on women poets

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We are living in times when “Dadis (grandmas) of Shaheen Bagh” daily shatter all manner of glass ceilings and barriers, yet some stereotypes refuse to go away. Take the case of women poets in Urdu. While Urdu poetry itself attracts enthusiastic mixed audiences across the Hindustani speaking regions, a curious gender divide trips up women poets. Stages of bias in Urdu poetry rendered in India and Pakistan Delhi-based poet Ameeta Parsuram ‘Meeta’ is known for her ghazal writing and her annual event “Bazm” in the Capital, an evening she describes as aimed at preserving the traditional form of ghazal gayaki. Pointing out “subtle discrimination”, she says that for every 10 male poets at a given mushaira (festival of Urdu poetry), there would be on average “two or three or fewer” women. “And it’s not as if there are not enough women poets!” Harder time Gauhar Raza, another successful Delhi-based poet, agrees that women have a harder time than their male counterparts in getting recogni...