Dilruba khan biography of abraham lincoln
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HAMIDUL HAQ
is an Arabic word which means Preserver of Rights. If it is so , in fact as it is, Hamidul Huq was a man worthy of his name.
he was also born in the month of January in 1901 in a respectable Muslim family of Ramnagar in Feni. He was the youngest son of his father and so favorite to his parents. But alas! he lost his father in 1908 at the age of 7, only to be cared and reared by his accomplished mother.
He was a Zaminder, a lawyer, a writer, a journalist, a diplomat, a politician—all mingled in one in him to make him worthy of his name. As a Zaminder, he appreciated the steps taken to preserve the rights of the subjects, as a lawyer he always fought against the wrong-doers to establish rights and truth, as a writer and journalist, he advocated the cause of rightful claim of the people; as a politician, he was always with the preserver of rights of the people; and as a diplomat in foreign land he was always vocal to establish rightful claim and correct stand for his country.
Mr. Huq Chowdhury got married in 1933. He had .two sons and seven daughters during 42 years of their conjugal li
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Politics & Identity
This page showcases samples of my research, both for reporting and academic projects. Links provided throughout.
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Women in Congress
Conducted historical research, co-produced, co-photographed, and wrote for special section on Women of the 116th Congress for The New York Times.
Pitched, researched, and co-photographed The Women of the 116th Congress, which included portraits of 130 out of 131 women members of Congress, shot in the style of historical portrait paintings. The story ran as a special section featuring 27 different covers, each featuring a different local woman member of Congress that varied depending on where that version of the paper was printed and distributed, It was subsequently published as a book by Abrams Books with a foreword by Roxane Gay.
Researched focused on the history of women’s involvement in politics in the United States, focusing specifically on women’s membership in Congress, including biographies of historic women members of Congress. Elicited quotes from the offices of 130 of the women serving in the 116th Congress, and wrote introduction essay to special section and book.
I spoke with Beth Flynn about the making of the project on the Vision Slightly Blurred podcast and with Marisa Schwartz Ta