AKFP Women Wing Pakistan distributed winter packages

Lahore, December 06, 2021 (PPI-OT):Alkhidmat Foundation Women Wing Pakistan distributed winter package comprising of warm clothes, blankets, pillows, and mattresses among the deserving women and orphans in Multan. For years, Alkhidmat Foundation has been providing winter necessities and other necessities of life, including sewing machines, to deserving and needy women.

For more information, contact:
Al-Khidmat Foundation Pakistan
711, Block J-2 Johar Town, Lahore, Pakistan
Tel: +92-42 35957260
Fax: +92-42 35957261
Email: info@al-khidmatfoundation.org
Website: http://al-khidmatfoundation.org/

Meeting with Advisory Board of Orphan Program

Lahore, December 06, 2021 (PPI-OT):Alkhidmat Foundation Pakistan, Muhammad Abdus Shakoor presided over the meeting of the Advisory Board of Alkhidmat Foundation Orphan Family Support Program held at Alkhidmat Complex Lahore. All the concerned office-bearers and management officials attended the meeting.

A report was presented in the board meeting on the performance of the Orphan Family Support Program. The future targets were also discussed in the board meeting. President Alkhidmat expressed satisfaction over the performance of the Alkhidmat Orphan Family Support Program. He also passed on instructions for setting the standard of education and training of dependent children on modern lines.

For more information, contact:
Al-Khidmat Foundation Pakistan
711, Block J-2 Johar Town, Lahore, Pakistan
Tel: +92-42 35957260
Fax: +92-42 35957261
Email: info@al-khidmatfoundation.org
Website: http://al-khidmatfoundation.org/

Mobilizing support for Afghanistan 

Lahore, December 06, 2021 (PPI-OT):Alkhidmat Foundation Pakistan hosted a seminar to raise awareness on the serious human crisis taking place in our brother Islamic country, Afghanistan, which has been home to wars and conflicts for ages. Pakistan Islamic Medical Association and Pak-Afghan Cooperation Forum also joined hands in the organisation of the seminar. The role of humanitarian organizations in rebuilding Afghanistan was the core theme of the discussion in the seminar. Muhammad Abdus Shakoor, President of Alkhidmat Foundation Pakistan presided over the seminar. Chairman Pak-Afghan Operation Forum, Habib-ur-Rehman Khattak delivered a keynote speech at the event.

The speakers urged that it is our human, moral, religious, and social responsibility to support the people of Afghanistan and raise their morale. They said that it is a big challenge for the welfare organisations to raise funding for rehabilitation in Afghan society and to ensure that food crises do not take place in the country. Members of Custom Health Society, HHRD, Ghazali Education Trust, Rahma Islamic Relief, Mosque and Madrassas Foundation, Help in Need, NGO World Foundation, Paraplegic Center Peshawar, POB Trust, Dar-e-Arqam, and DHF attended the seminar. The participants pledged to take every possible step to help the people of Afghanistan.

For more information, contact:
Al-Khidmat Foundation Pakistan
711, Block J-2 Johar Town, Lahore, Pakistan
Tel: +92-42 35957260
Fax: +92-42 35957261
Email: info@al-khidmatfoundation.org
Website: http://al-khidmatfoundation.org/

A virtual conference on – Emotions and the Subject of Modern History organized by GCU 

Lahore, December 06, 2021 (PPI-OT):Emotions create us as individuals. Being cognizant of the emotions of the past individuals and societies allows us the appreciation of the complexities of history. The significance of the human emotions during the course of history was stressed upon by eminent speakers in a virtual conference on “Emotions and the Subject of Modern History” organized by GCU’s recently established Institute of History.

The leading scholars of the field discussed the history of emotions in the context of religious intolerance, the institutionalization of Sufi Shrines and mediaeval monasteries, material culture, and the creation of knowledge. In his opening remarks, Prof Dr Asghar Zaidi, GCU’s VC said: “Emotions have a history in time and undergo various transformations by invoking, creating and negotiating with different social, political and cultural contexts. In the last two decades, the study of emotions has become an important site for historians to study past societies.”

Prof Zaidi stressed the need to understand human emotions to enable policy institutions to devise plans which could promote and shape societies where we have realization and respect for the emotions of individuals and communities. “I see this the only way forward in this world which is experiencing all kinds of extremism.”

John Corrigan, a distinguished professor of Religion and History of Emotions at the Florida State University discussed how emotions in American society led to religious intolerance. Hussain Ahmad Khan, a cultural historian and Director of the Institute of History explained that inanimate objects have the power to shape a historical process. In the nineteenth century, Indian crafts transformed the emotions of British colonials from patronizing pride to curiosity.

Albrecht Diem, a historian of Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages at Syracuse University, presented a paper on the regulation of passions and feeling at the monasteries. He argued that early mediaeval monastic rules not only provided outlines for organising communities, behavioural norms and disciplinary measures but also aimed at controlling, repressing and fostering emotions.

Lauren Mancia of the Brooklyn College, CUNY, and a historian of Emotions and Mediaeval Art, talked about how mediaeval monks were prescribed emotional redirection through a process of ‘confession’ from ‘cold’ devotional feeling to ‘warmed’, or right devotional feeling. Professor Mancia explained how even the most devout monks needed both textual and material tools to feel emotionally connected to the divine.

Ayyaz Gull, a historian of Emotions at the Institute of History, explained the role of Zuljanah in evoking and expressing the weeping of Shia community in Pakistani Punjab. Yasmin Syed, from the University of Barcelona, discussed the relationship between reason, emotions, and the construction of knowledge. Shehar Bano, from the Institute of History, highlighted the role of tears in establishing social relationships between shrine-based communities.

For more information, contact:
Public Relations Department,
Government College University (GCU)
Squash Complex, GC University, Lahore, Pakistan
UAN: +92-42-111-000-010 Ext: 296
Tel: +92-42-99213343
Cell: +92-321-8440769
Email: registrar@gcu.edu.pk
Website: http://www.gcu.edu.pk

9 in 10 (94%) Pakistanis agree that daughters take more care of their parents than sons: Gallup and Gilani Pakistan 

Islamabad, December 06, 2021 (PPI-OT):According to a survey conducted by Gallup and Gilani Pakistan, 9 in 10 (94%) Pakistanis agree that daughters take more care of their parents than sons.

A nationally representative sample of adult men and women from across the four provinces was asked the following question, “Do you think daughters take more care of their parents than sons?” In response to this question, 94% said yes and 5% said no. 1% did not know or provided no response.

Question: “Do you think daughters take more care of their parents than sons?”

For more information, contact:
Head Office,
Gallup Pakistan
Islamabad, Pakistan
Tel: +92-51-8445080
Email: isb@gallup.com.pk, caf@gallup.com.pk
Website: www.gallup.com.pk

Punjab University award Wajid Ali Khan PhD degree

Lahore, December 07, 2021 (PPI-OT):Punjab University has awarded PhD degree to the scholar Wajid Ali Khan S/o Muhammad Aslam Khan in the subject of Education after approval of his thesis entitled ‘Relationship of Secondary School Students’ Physics Achievement Scores with their Conceptual Knowledge and Problem Solving Skills’.

For more information, contact:
Registrar,
University of the Punjab
Quaid-e-Azam Campus, Lahore, Pakistan
Tel: +92-42-99231102
Fax: +92-42-99231103
E-Mail: registrar@pu.edu.pk
Website: http://pu.edu.pk/