This article is a profile of Dilbar Ashilbayeva, the head of the Information Service of the Tortkul District Khokimiyat of the Republic of Uzbekistan, Republic of Karakalpakstan Bekchanova Manzura.
A WOMAN STRIVING FOR HER DREAMS
Woman. How subtle and capable of great deeds in His place. Flowers bloom on the paths a woman walks. Wherever a woman goes, it becomes a garden.
The person I want to tell you today is also about a woman who brought happiness and joy to her own life and the lives of those around her, possessing great courage in her small frame…
Dilbar Ashilbayeva was born in 1995 in the capital, Nukus. Life subjected him to trials from birth. However, Dilbar, who has been interested in science and professions since childhood, graduated from school with good grades and also mastered the sewing profession perfectly. He graduated from Karakalpak State University with a degree in Karakalpak language and literature. Dilbar also loves sports. Recently, she took an honorable 2nd place in the Para Badminton Olympiad held in the Republic of Karakalpakstan. Currently, he is conducting another training on the development of the teacher’s activity.
Relatives – her mother-in-law Chaman Komilova, her husband Aymurat Allamuratov, and all other family members have a very warm opinion about Dilbar, who, as fate would have it, became a bride in the “Kaltaminor” village citizens’ assembly of Turtkul district. “Thank her parents for raising such a girl,” says her mother-in-law, Chaman-opa.
Speaking about his daughter-in-law’s qualities, he spoke with particular pride and emotion about her craftsmanship, diligence, and aspiration. I was frightened. After all, our cow is a bit reckless. “I said I’ll buy you a gentle cow, and then you can freely milk the cow,” the mother says sincerely and lovingly.
By fate’s decree, my son couldn’t walk after finishing his studies. We took him to many places, but there was no result. But even though my son sits at home, he’s always in motion, He knows several languages. He is very interested in chess, checkers, and computer science. After we united the youth, thanks to the opportunities created by our state for people with disabilities, my son also entered Karakalpak State University with his knowledge. Currently, he is in his 2nd year. But he doesn’t sit quietly at home. He doesn’t like sitting idle. He bought a black-and-white and color printer on credit and has been contributing to the family by producing the necessary paper. He also aims to educate children at school.
Of course, today, having talked with the families of these educators, seeing their interest in life, love and appreciation for life, mutual respect and attention, having talked with such sincere people, we witnessed how much strength, patience, and courage they have.
The director of School No. 10, where Dilbar Ashilbayeva works, and the deputy of the Jokargy Kenes of the Republic of Karakalpakstan, Sayat Gichgeldiyeva, also expressed their warm opinions on this matter.
In our holy religion, acquiring knowledge is considered an obligation for every Muslim, both women and men. Why specifically for women? Because in the family, the upbringing, morality, and knowledge of a child largely depends on the mother. It is precisely intelligent, conscious mothers who raise a comprehensively capable, educated generation. In the development of such great figures as our great ancestors – Amir Temur, Zahiriddin Muhammad Babur, Alisher Navoi, Abu Nasr Al-Farabi, Abu Ali ibn Sino, there was a place and prayers for book-loving, enlightened mothers.
Unfortunately, in our recent history, in particular, during the last khanates, not enough attention was paid to women’s education. In some cases, there were even periods when they were strictly forbidden to study. But Uzbek women, whose blood reflected the spirit of courageous women like Tomaris, Bibikhanim, Nodirabegim, and Uvaysi, fought for education, to find their place in society, and to liberate their homeland from colonialism. They worked resolutely towards their dreams, despite all obstacles.
There have been many such heroes in our history. The Jadid movement was especially widespread in Bukhara. In the 1929s, many young people were sent to study in Germany and Turkey under the leadership of our Jadid grandfather Abdurauf Fitrat. Among them were future doctors like 17-year-old Khayriniso Majidkhanova and scientists like Maryam Sultanmurodova. They aimed to serve the country with science for the prosperity of the homeland. Because the foundation of any society that dreamed of independence was science and the experience of developed countries.
Unfortunately, the former Soviet Union did not allow this. They were afraid of the people who recognized their rights and fought for freedom. In 1938, along with intellectuals such as Fitrat, Abdulla Qodiriy, and Chulpon, young girls with lofty dreams were also shot. However, this tragedy did not make the girls who wanted to get an education give up their dreams or scare them. On the contrary, it strengthened their determination, perseverance, and thirst for enlightenment.
Omonova Sevinch Oybek qizi, 2nd year student of Tashkent Pharmaceutical Institute
J.J. Campbell (1976 – ?) is trapped in suburbia, hoping to escape one day. He’s been widely published over the years, most recently at Disturb the Universe Magazine, The Beatnik Cowboy, The Rye Whiskey Review, Misfit Magazine and Mad Swirl. You can find him most days betting on baseball games and taking care of his disabled mother. He has a blog, but rarely finds the time to write on it anymore. (https://evildelights.blogspot.com)
The breath of the Keukenhof tulip garden is divine
A treasure trove of man-made nature masterpieces.
Rows like rainbow lines in a tulip garden
Attracting the attention of sightseers
Wonder and magic lie there
A glimpse of paradise on earth
In this sanctuary, the heart finds peace.
A place surrounded by trees and flowers
Beautifully connected by sunshine
Windmill in the middle of the garden
Truly looks like a picturesque design
Let’s get lost in the beauty of the Keukenhof Tulip Garden.
Faisal Justin is a passionate young poet and author who brings a unique voice to the literary world. Having spent four years as a refugee, he now resides in the Netherlands, where he is committed to furthering his education. Motivated by his dedication to the Rohingya community, he strives to amplify their stories and challenges, ensuring their voices resonate globally. Through his writing and advocacy, he aims to inspire change and foster hope within his community, believing that collective efforts can lead to a brighter future.
searching in silence for what the heart longs to shout.
But you—
your words, even clumsy,
come to awaken mine.
You bring back impulses I thought extinguished,
tender angers,
new shivers,
phrases I would never have dared to lay on the page.
Love is kind.
Love is frightening.
Love both enlightens and blinds.
It touches even those
who claim not to want it.
It seeps through the cracks,
and sometimes, waiting blossoms into a silent miracle.
It also hides in those blurred friendships,
where glances say more than lips,
where gestures brush against something greater
without ever naming it.
I don’t always understand the situation.
But I dare.
I dare anyway.
I dare to hope despite the unknown.
I dare to look for you in the crowd,
to lose myself in your silence,
to follow you in the gentle shadow of your absences.
I dare to move toward you
even when everything tells me to step back.
I dare to drink from your laughter,
to share crumbs of light between two silences,
to watch you smile without saying a word,
and to spend nights guessing if you dream of me.
I don’t know where all this leads,
but I go—
with a beating heart, in a low voice,
with my doubts,
my impulses,
and this wild need to tell you:
I am here,
I am everywhere,
in this mad world,
in this blurred horizon.
—
II
The Smile and the Silence
A smile
does not mean
one is happy.
There are tears
in the heart
that never reach the eyes.
We come from a life
woven of contradictions,
and we leave it
without ever solving them.
We move forward
between shadow and blur,
head held high,
heart held low.
I leave hanging
the endless questions:
life,
death,
and the reasons to stay.
Sometimes,
a smile is a barrier,
a barrier against falling apart.
There are cries
we hide in our eyes,
screams muffled
inside silences.
And the one who smiles the most…
is often the one
nobody
understands.
A sad soul
A realist mind
—
Hanen MAROUANI
Strasbourg 07.08.2025
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BIOGRAPHY:
Hanen Marouani is a Tunisian-Italian poet and researcher with a PhD in French language and literature, focused on Reported Speech in the Narratives of Albert Camus: An Enunciative Approach. She is the author of several poetry collections, essays, and articles, and her work centers on Francophone poetry, intercultural dialogue, and the visibility of marginalized voices.
She contributes to “Le Pan Poétique des Muses” as a journalist and literary columnist, and collaborates with the “Union of Arab Journalists and Writers” in Europe. Active in literary translation through “ATLAS”, she also leads workshops and community initiatives exploring creativity, humanity, and women’s voices across cultures.
A two-time laureate of the “Eugen Ionescu doctoral and postdoctoral research program” (2018, 2022) in Romania, she continues to combine scholarship and creation with strong intercultural engagement.
Her collection “Tout ira bien… ” won the 2023 International Poetry Prize of the Poéféministe Orientales Review, and she received the Francophonie Europoésie UNICEF Prize in Paris in 2022 for her literary work. Since 2023, she has served on the jury of the Dina Sahyouni Literary Prize, after chairing in 2022 the international poetry contest Poetry and Pandemic, organized by the Agence Universitaire de la Francophonie.