Tuesday, 25 February 2014

Samina Baig, The Young Woman Who Climbs Mountains, Literally

Malala Yousafzai may be the most famous young Pakistani woman in the world – but she should perhaps share that status with 21-year old Samina Khayyal Baig, a young lady who, like Malala, has shattered the stereotypes about females from her country. Samina is a mountaineer – not just any mountain climber, but a woman who has already scaled the tallest peak in the world, Mount Everest, and plans to conquer many more. Samina and her brother Mirza Ali Baig recently scaled Mount Aconcagua in Argentina, making them the first Pakistanis to have reached the summit of the highest peak in South America. The Alpine Club of Pakistan reported that the duo arrived at the top of Aconcagua – which is 6,961 meters (or 22,838 feet) high – on Dec. 13, after “battling harsh weather conditions for almost nine hours.”


Samina had already achieved legendary status in Pakistan – in May of this year, she became the very first woman from her country to scale the highest mountain on earth, Mount Everest in Nepal. She is also the third Pakistani to climb Everest (regardless of gender) and, for the record, the youngest Muslim woman to do so (at the tender age of only 21). But this is only the beginning of Samina’s quest – in late November she and her brother left Pakistan to embark on a grand adventure to climb seven peaks in seven continents (Argentina was the first stop on their global excursion). According to ACP, Samina and Mirza will next voyage to Antarctica in January to attempt to climb Mount Vinson (16,050 ft.), then move on to Tanzania in East Africa to scale Mount Kilimanjaro (19,341 ft.) before returning to their native Pakistan for a rest.

Subsequently, the siblings will travel to Indonesia to scurry up Puncak Jaya (16,024 ft.). By next summer, they hope to be in Alaska in the United States to climb Mount McKinley (20,322 ft.). The pair’s seventh, and last, mountain will be Mount Elbrus (18,510 ft.) in the western Caucasus, the highest peak in Europe, in August 2014.

Dawn, an English-language Pakistani newspaper, reported that the expedition has been sponsored by a Pakistani philanthropist, an American citizen, and is designed to improve Pakistan’s image around the world and also to encourage gender equality. “Our goal is to connect with the world to promulgate not just peace and understanding but a love for nature, the nuanced beauty of different places,” Mirza, 30, said at a reception before their eight-month global expedition. “Our aim is also to promote peace and love for nature and its inhabitants. We’ve had enough of bombs, we should give peace a chance now.” Mirza works as a mountain guide, expedition leader and trainer in the Karakoram, Himalaya and Hindu Kush ranges.

Sunday, 23 February 2014

Mazdoor Of Pakistan

"Mazdoor"
Mera Naam Ashique Hussain Hai, may Sakkhar sy hn, Karachi aye hue 5 saal hogye hain ab Eid Pe Hi Gao'n (Village) Jata hn.
may meri wife or 3 bachy yehi rhty hain Rent k ghr pe..
rozana taqreeban 400 rupay kama laita hn... I Asked " aap ki taleem kitni hai "
He Smiled and Said "Agr Parhta To Yaha Hota!!!!"
meri koshish hai k bachn ko taleem dilwao mgr aj k time may mushkil hai.
Photo Courtesy: Kami Khan
Page: www.facebook.com/RandKStudios
#Unsung Story Of Pakistan

Saturday, 22 February 2014

World Record

The Human Flag - 29,000 students took part to take back the world record.
 Info By RNK Studios
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Introduction of Jan Koum (Creator OF WhatsApp)
He was born and raised in a small village outside of Kiev, Ukraine. 
According to a profile in Forbes, he is the only child of a housewife and a construction manager and grew up in a house with no hot water. At 16, he and his mother immigrated to Silicon Valley, where they struggled financially and lived on food stamps. His father died in 1997, his mother in 2000. 
As a teenager, Koum taught himself computer programming. 
He did it by purchasing used books and returning them to the store when he was done with them. He enrolled in San Jose State University, but dropped out when he got a job at Yahoo as an infrastructure engineer. 
He signed his deal with Facebook at the North County Social Services office. 
He used to collect food stamps there with his mother. 
In 2009, Koum wanted to give up. 
He wanted to pack WhatsApp in, but his friend and eventual co-founder, Brian Acton, talked him out of it. By early 2011, WhatsApp was in the top 20 of all apps in the U.S. iTunes App Store. By February 2013, WhatsApp had almost 200 million active users.
Mark Zuckerberg had to court him.
The Facebook CEO had his eye on WhatsApp for a long time and began wooing Koum early in 2012. Their long courtship included quiet dinners, long walks and coffee shop conversations.
His net worth is now around $6.8 billion. 
Forbes estimates that Koum owns approximately 45 percent of WhatsApp, which translates to him netting about $6.8 billion in the deal. 


Thursday, 20 February 2014

Human Flag Record of Pakistanis

29,040 Pakistanis set the record for the 'Largest Human Flag'
The record is now confirmed and recognized by Guinness World Records representatives.
Congratulations Pakistan