By Syed Shamsuddin In an age that celebrates rapid advancement—artificial intelligence, global connectivity, digital literacy, and unprecedented access to knowledge—it has become commonplace to equate education with progress. Nations flaunt enrollment statistics, literacy rates, and numbers of graduates as indicators of development. Parents invest heavily in private schooling, coaching academies, and foreign degrees. Governments race to build educational institutions and produce “skilled human capital” to feed an increasingly competitive economy. Yet beneath this glittering narrative lies a troubling paradox: we may be mass-producing a generation of individuals who are educated in the technical sense, yet deeply deprived of empathy, ethics, and human values. Such an imbalance does not herald progress; it risks ushering in a form of societal chaos where intellectual advancement coexists with moral decay. The crux of the issue is si...
By Syed Shamsuddin Earlier this year, I published an article titled "Paulownia: The Miracle Tree – Fast-Growing, Fire-Resistant, and Highly Valuable" on March 03, 2025 . Today, however, an interesting Facebook post reignited my interest in highlighting this remarkable species once again, given its multiple environmental, economic, and agricultural benefits. Gilgit-Baltistan, a region blessed with breathtaking landscapes, rivers, and fertile valleys, is witnessing a pressing environmental challenge: the widespread planting of Eucalyptus (Safeda). While often seen as a fast-growing timber tree, Eucalyptus has severe ecological drawbacks—it depletes underground water, exhausts soil fertility, and leaves land barren. A better, sustainable alternative exists: Paulownia, also known as the Empress Tree or Royal Chestnut . Already popular in Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Kashmir, and other regions of Pakistan, Paulownia offers economi...