Poetry from Anakha S.J.

Pixelated gray image of a South Asian teen girl with earrings and dark curly hair.

Dark Rose

There is a dark red rose in my garden.

Morning dewdrops at the rise petals.

Sparkle like diamonds.

It seems to be the most beautiful rose in the world.

The rose in my yard settle in my heart.

A rose by the name LOVE has bloomed 8n my heart.

In morning, and in the evening,

I like to water her.

I love her, I care her,

My red rose, my red rose.

…   …   …   …   …   …   …   …   …   …   …   …   …

Anakha S J, 15 years old,  is a student in Govt. High School, Vithura, Kerala, India. Writing poetry and gardening are her passion and hobby.

Poetry from Eva Petropoulou Lianou

Light skinned middle aged European woman with long reddish-brown hair and a smile. She's in front of a lake on a sunny day with trees and people on the beach behind her.

Women in chains

Unloved Woman 2

I was alone for years…

Like a tree

During the rain

So when I met this man

It was love at the first sight

I think

Talking hours on the phone

Talking hours over the dinner table

-U are only mine, he whispers for years

– U belong to me, he repeat day after day

I didn’t react when he search my bag, my phone, my Facebook account..

He told me to delete my social media accounts

He told me no need to go to work because he will take care of me

He told me, never go out alone…

I do not like!!

I did not react,

I did not go away

I did not talk to anyone

I keep my secrets deep inside

Without smile

Without tears

One night, they find me

In a foetus position

Cover of blood

He stabbed me with the kitchen knife….

After we had celebrated our 5th anniversary

The police described the whole scene

as a

Crime of passion

……….. 

Speak up!!!! 

Open the door and run!!!!

Do not be afraid!!! 

Essay from Madina Furkatova

Young Central Asian teen girls seated at a classroom table listening to one of them standing to speak to them. Uzbek flags and bookshelves in the background.

Breaking Barriers: Young Women Leaders Transform Uzbekistan Through Revolutionary “EmpowerHer” Forum

Madina Furkatova 

Coordinator of Uzbekistan Youth Union,

 Founder of “Community Changers” volunteer club

Email: furqatovamadina7@gmail.com  Contact: +998901027107

In a groundbreaking initiative that connected 150 young women across Uzbekistan and Karakalpakstan, the “EmpowerHer: Republican Women Leaders Forum” has emerged as a catalyst for unprecedented change in female leadership development. This three-day online forum, spearheaded by the “Community Changers” club, addresses a critical gap that has long hindered the region’s progress: limited access to leadership development opportunities for young women.     

It was great opportunity and inspiration for me to join the Leader Girls Forum. It was a truly inspiring event where I learned practical skills on leadership, communication, and self-confidence.

I especially valued the supportive atmosphere and the chance to connect with other motivated young women. The forum encouraged me to believe in my potential and left a lasting positive impression. — Mehribon Xayrullayeva

Tackling the Root of Gender Inequality

The project directly confronts three fundamental challenges plaguing young women in Central Asia. Geographic isolation prevents talented women from connecting with peers and successful role models across different provinces, creating isolated pockets of untapped potential. A systematic information gap about international scholarships, prestigious university programs, and global career pathways has left countless capable women unaware of opportunities that could transform their futures. Most critically, the absence of structured leadership development programs specifically designed for young women has meant that practical skills in entrepreneurship, financial independence, and professional networking remain largely inaccessible.

We identified that talented young women remain underrepresented in key leadership roles across government, business, and civil society organizations due to lack of preparation and networks. The consequences are far-reaching: promising female talent either emigrates without contributing to local development or remains underutilized, missing opportunities for both personal growth and national advancement.

A Comprehensive Solution Taking Shape

The EmpowerHer forum operates through a systematic two-phase approach that has proven remarkably effective. Phase One involves a rigorous 20-day application and selection process, ensuring committed participants are identified through careful screening. Phase Two delivers an intensive three-day forum featuring expert speakers, interactive workshops, and crucial networking sessions.

The project’s success lies in its comprehensive components. Expert speaker sessions feature accomplished women leaders including Khurshida Rakhmonova, Chief Coordinator of Girls’ Voice Club; Saida Abdunazarova, winner of the US KECTIL and Aspire Leaders Program; and Gulnur Esova, a UK University Master’s student. These sessions provide participants with real-world insights from women who have successfully navigated international opportunities while maintaining their cultural roots.

Skill development workshops cover essential areas: personal development, financial independence, CV enhancement, startup creation, and leadership discovery. The networking platform connects participants from various provinces and Karakalpakstan, creating unprecedented cross-regional collaboration opportunities. A certification program provides official certificates valuable for scholarship applications, while a talent registry creates a “Talented Girls List” for ongoing support and project tracking.

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Addressing Global Sustainability Goals

The forum directly advances multiple United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, primarily SDG 4 (Quality Education) and SDG 5 (Gender Equality). “Research shows that when women lead, there is significant positive impact on students’ academic performance and overall well-being,”. “Our empowered participants will contribute to educational excellence in their communities.”

The project also connects to SDG 8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth) through entrepreneurship training, SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities) by providing equal opportunities across different regions, and SDG 17 (Partnerships for the Goals) through international networking and collaboration opportunities.

Measuring Real Impact

The forum’s success is measured through both quantitative and qualitative metrics. All 150 participants completed the program and received certificates, achieving a 100% completion rate. More importantly, the project tracks long-term outcomes including scholarship applications, career advancement, and startup initiatives launched by participants.

Success benchmarks are ambitious yet achievable: Year one targets 90% participant satisfaction with 50% pursuing new opportunities and establishment of an active alumni network. By year two, the program aims to expand to 300+ participants with secured international partnerships. Year three envisions regional recognition as the premier women’s leadership platform with a 500+ alumni network and measurable SDG impact in participant communities.Mentalaba - Universitet haqida batafsil
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Building Sustainable Networks

The forum’s vision extends far beyond a single event. To establish EmpowerHer as the premier leadership development platform for young women in Central Asia, creating a generation of confident, skilled, and internationally connected female leaders who drive sustainable development in their communities.

The EmpowerHer forum represents more than professional development—it embodies a fundamental shift toward gender equality and sustainable progress. As these 150 young women leaders return to their communities armed with new skills, networks, and confidence, they carry with them the potential to transform not just their own futures, but the trajectory of Central Asia’s development.

Through partnerships with the Uzbekistan Youth Union Samarkand Provincial Council and Samarkand State Institute of Foreign Languages, with future collaboration planned with the Uzbekistan Volunteer Association, EmpowerHer demonstrates that sustainable change requires comprehensive, culturally-sensitive approaches to women’s empowerment. The revolution in female leadership has begun, one empowered woman at a time.

Poetry from Summer Kim

Jeju

This is where the tangerines fell,

       the fruits that made my tummy blow up 

This is where I learned to ride a bike,

Downhill, no brakes, just me and my dad

This is where I got dirt under my nails 

       and I ran with no shoes  

This is where we ran until we fell 

       the waves were loud and big  

       the wind smells like fish

       and all my childhood memories sit

This is where I felt free.

       No one ever stopping me.

Warm Breeze 

A leaf falls softly from a tree 

It spins slowly 

Landing on the ground with the others 

Making a pile of red and brown 

An ant walks across the ground 

Carrying a crumb bigger than itself 

It works all day long 

Trying to bring food back to its home 

A bee flies from flower to flower 

It buzzes loudly in the air 

Helping plants grow strong and healthy 

A butterfly floats in the warm air

Spreading its beautiful wings

It lands on a flower for a moment 

But calmly drifts away 

A flower stands in the middle of the field 

As the smell of honey fills the atmosphere,

Its petals bloom 

It sways gently in the warm breeze

Sunlem and Bright

They hang on branches,

They are Sunlem and bright

They smell fresh and bitter 

They are like a small burst of summer.

They feel smooth and cool.

They ooze refreshing juice 

They taste sour at first 

They bring a little sweet at last 

They wake up the senses

They brighten every meal

Summer Kim is a student writer attending a school in New Jersey with a love for quiet stories, late-night journaling, and the rhythm of well-crafted sentences. Her work explores memory, identity, and the small moments that shape us. When she’s not writing, she enjoys reading contemporary poetry and walking through the woods.

Poetry from Sushant Thapa

Young South Asian man with short dark hair and a white and brown and green striped shirt.

Blessing Notes

I look at the world,

I step out

Of luxury.

I am an unspoken solace.

Who knocked me down?

Who raised me like flower?

I met thousands of walkers,

I kissed one art like life.

My departure must be happy,

I look at you,

A bare silence eating you

From within.

Expressions can fill your eyes,

And make you empty

To fill like a dance of worship.

Rejoice in expression

Buy in blessing notes,

Your own version of

The world.

Come Together

Come again

Let’s kiss the rose.

Let it bloom,

Let it not be plucked

Like the lie

That befell as a curse

By the ugly world

That tried to separate us.

There is a dark rain

That fell at night

Silent like a lost key.

I rose like holy chants

At the midnight hour.

Yes, the night was howling

The secrets of dawn

Which it foresaw as a life

In us.

The time is still passing

Like our heartbeats.

The rose will not fade

Like the unloving world.

Dying of Hunger

There is a statue,

An old one.

It has an umbrella

For the rain,

Boots for the feet,

And a smile

For the weak.

I can only relate it to

The under nourished world

Where unborn artists

Who sculpts such statues

Die of hunger

In their childhood.

Bittersweet Symphony

The evening falls,

I hear your departure.

Preaching sermons

Make me weak,

I keep chanting for your presence,

The faded photograph smiles

At my darkness.

One thin touch of remembrance

Can cure the amnesiac memory,

In love’s bittersweet symphony.

Stars sing,

The moon lays its opera.

The universe is a spiritual dot,

My mask is your honesty,

Nothing is hidden among us.

We share dreams

And the world kisses your feet.

I surrender to your footsteps

And I knock down my gate

Of unmoving walls.

Imagination spills

And lightens up the night sky.

I have created a beloved

In my poetry.

Updated Bio: Sushant Thapa has published Nine books of English poetry, namely: The Poetic Burden and Other Poems (Authorspress, New Delhi, 2020), Abstraction and Other Poems (Impspired, UK, 2021), Minutes of Merit (Haoajan, Kolkata, 2021), Love’s Cradle (World Inkers Printing and Publishing, New York, USA and Senegal, Africa, 2023), Spontaneity: A New Name of Rhyme (Ambar Publication House, New Delhi, 2023), Chorus of Simplicity and Other New Poems (Ukiyoto Publishing, 2024), Finding My Soul in Kathmandu (Ukiyoto Publishing, 2024), The Walking Rebel Micropoems and Poems (Transcendent Zero Press, Houston, Texas, USA) and My Grandfather Had Been a Cowboy (Ukiyoto Publishing, 2025). He has also published a collection of flash fiction and short stories titled “The One Rupee Taker and Other Stories from Nepal” published in 2024 by Ukiyoto Publishing. Sushant has translated a book of poems by Nepalese Poet Kamal Dhungana entitled “Dark Shadows”. It was published by Authorspress, New Delhi, India in 2022. He is an English lecturer in Biratnagar, Nepal.   

Poetry from Wazed Abdullah

Young South Asian boy with short black hair and a light blue collared shirt.
Wazed Abdullah

A Dark Glaring Night

A dark night whispers softly and deep,

The moon keeps watching while others sleep.

Stars likes sparking in heaven’s dome,

Guiding my thoughts though I’m alone.

The drifting clouds sail slow and near,

Their shadows fall, yet all is clear.

Beside the crystal lake I sit and see,

The sky pour all its elegances on me.

Wazed Abdullah is a student of grade ten in Harimohan Government High School, Chapainawabganj, Bangladesh.

Essay from Sarvinoz Orifova

Central Asian woman with long dark hair, small earrings, and a flowered red and black coat over a black top.

The Power of Hope in Difficult Times

Life is full of challenges, and everyone faces moments when the path forward seems uncertain. During these difficult times, one of the strongest forces that helps us continue is hope. Hope is more than just a feeling; it is a guiding light that gives us the strength to keep moving even when everything seems dark.

When people go through hardships such as loss, failure, or loneliness, hope reminds them that tomorrow can be better. It allows us to believe in new beginnings and motivates us to work toward them. Without hope, even the smallest obstacles can feel overwhelming, but with hope, even the greatest challenges become bearable.

Hope is not blind optimism. It does not ignore reality, but rather teaches us to face it with courage. It inspires creativity, resilience, and patience. A hopeful person can turn problems into opportunities for growth, because hope provides the energy to search for solutions instead of giving up.

In my own life, I have found that hope often comes from the people I love and from the goals I set for myself. Whenever I have felt discouraged, remembering my dreams and the support around me has given me the courage to try again. Each small step forward becomes easier when hope is present in my heart.

Hope is like a seed planted deep within us. With care and faith, it grows stronger every day, even in the hardest seasons. For me, hope is not only a personal strength but also a gift I want to share with others. By encouraging and supporting each other, we can spread hope and remind the world that no night lasts forever—the dawn always comes.