Nuraini Mohammad Usman, popularly known as Prof Nurain, is a Nigerian poet, storyteller, photographer, essayist, creeping artist, and proud feminist. His artistry blends words, images, and emotions to tell meaningful stories. Born into the Muyawa family in Kano State and raised in Minna, Niger State, his diverse background shapes his creative voice. Nuraini began his education at Dayamas Model School, continued at Better Treasure International School, Al-Fawzu Azeem Academy, and Legend International School. He is currently a 100-level Software Engineering student at Maryam Abacha American University of Niger (MAAUN), Maradi, where he bridges creativity with technology while pursuing his dream of becoming a lecturer
The Impact of Social Media on the Lives of Young People
Nowadays, not only young people but almost everyone has become attached to social media. Many people even think that it is difficult to imagine life without social networks. Of course, modern life requires the use of the internet and social media. However, it is important to be careful when using them and to be able to distinguish useful information from unnecessary information. In particular, people should be able to analyze various unverified or fake news.Social media also has many advantages. For example, we can find almost any information we are looking for on the internet. It is also possible to keep up with daily news and follow events happening in different countries. In addition, there are many useful videos and lessons on social media for learning languages. Therefore, many young people have the opportunity to learn new knowledge and skills independently. However, the negative aspects of social media are also very serious. For instance, watching various short videos such as “shorts” can narrow people’s thinking ability, weaken speech fluency, cause them to waste time, reduce sleeping time, and even lead to memory decline. Moreover, the family environment may also be affected: instead of spending time with their families, many young people spend their time on social media. As a result, they may become unaware of feelings such as respect for parents and the importance of spending time together and having conversations with family members.
It is true that phones and the platforms or programs on them are created by humans and designed to function in a certain way. However, nowadays it seems that phones are controlling people. This is because many people easily become dependent on them. There are many young people who spend five to six hours or even more on their phones every day, wasting their time without any meaningful purpose. However, this does not mean that everyone is like that. There are also many young people who use social media properly and meaningfully. They have dreams and goals for their future and work hard to achieve them. Instead of wasting time, they use platforms such as Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok in a productive way and organize their daily activities according to a schedule to continue their studies. In my opinion, young people who spend their days on social media in a useless way have become detached from reality and dependent on their virtual lives. Time passes very quickly, and I believe that wasting it inefficiently is wrong. In addition, such people may cast a shadow or darkness over their own bright and promising future.
Bekturdiyeva Nargizabonu was born on December 7, 2007, in Khiva city of Khorezm region. She won first place at the regional stage and participated in the national Olympiad. In 2025, she graduated from school with a gold medal.
Currently, she is a first-year student in the Geography program at Urgench State University. She has three journalistic articles and is the holder of a DGU certificate.
Her articles have been published in the famous “Synchronized Chaos” journal in the USA and in the “Ijodkorlar” journal in Uzbekistan, and she has also participated in an anthology. She is also a member of the Argentine international organization “Juntos por las Letras.”
Moon-aphor
Wait, the moon is a big pizza pie
in the sky? I don’t think so. Man
in the Moon, I never quite saw it.
A dinner plate, a saucer, a heavenly
body. (I’d like one of those.)
Mistaken for a lamppost
on a drunken stumble home.
That’s more like it.
An orb. A cue ball.
At times a mere crescent,
a meniscus, the Dreamworks logo
of the boy fishing off its edge.
The cutout in an outhouse door.
A half moon doesn’t know
which way it’s headed,
it’s useless in guiding me.
The moon aligns with nothing.
Planets can at least do that
from our perspective on Earth.
Let’s face it, the moon is a symbol.
Maybe a cymbal. That’s it.
The moon is our soul.
Stephen Schwei is a Pushcart-nominated Houston poet with Wisconsin roots, published in Wax Poetry & Art, RFD Magazine, GetOutMag.com, Hidden Constellation, Borfski Press, and Table//Feast and is the winner of the 2023 Kenan Ince Memorial Prize in Poetry. He has published one volume of poetry, Bluebonnet Whispers and a collaboration, Catch Me at the Carnival. A gay man with three grown children and four wonderful grandchildren, who worked in Information Technology most of his life, he can be a mass of contradictions. Poetry helps to sort all of this out. www.stephenschwei.com @steveschwei
Happy New Year to all women in the world. March 8 of each year is International Women’s Day or International Women’s Day is the eighth of March of each year, and it is a global celebration of women’s social, political and economic achievements. In some countries such as Palestine, since March 8, 2011, China, Russia and Cuba, women have been given a day off on this day.
The celebration of this occasion came as a result of the first conference of the International Democratic Women’s Federation, which was held in Paris in 1945. It is known that the International Democratic Women’s Federation consists of organizations affiliated with communist parties, and it was the first global celebration of International Women’s Day, although some researchers believe that International Women’s Day was the result of some women’s strikes that occurred in the United States before that year.
In 1857, thousands of women took to the streets of New York City to protest the inhumane conditions under which they were forced to work, and although the police intervened in a brutal manner to disperse the demonstrators, the march succeeded in pushing political officials to put the problem of working women on the daily agenda.
On March 8, 1908, thousands of female textile workers returned to demonstrate again in the streets of New York City, but this time they carried pieces of dry bread and bouquets of roses in a symbolic move with its significance, and they chose the slogan “Bread and Roses” for their protest movement. This time, the march demanded reducing working hours, stopping child labor, and granting women the right to vote.
The bread and roses demonstrations marked the beginning of the formation of an enthusiastic feminist movement within the United States, especially after middle-class women joined the wave of demands for equality and fairness, raising slogans demanding political rights, most notably the right to vote. The celebration of March 8 began as American Women’s Day in commemoration of the New York demonstrations in 1909. American women contributed to pushing European countries to designate March 8 as Women’s Day, and the proposal of the American delegation to designate one day a year to celebrate women on a global level was adopted after the success of the experiment in the United States. However, the designation of March 8 as International Women’s Day did not happen until many years later, because the United Nations did not agree to adopt this occasion until 1977, when the international organization issued a resolution calling on the countries of the world to adopt any day of the year they choose to celebrate women, and the majority of countries decided to choose March 8. Consequently, that day became a symbol of women’s struggle, with women around the world demonstrating to demand their just rights.
في اليوم العالمي للمرأةكل سنة وجميع نساء العالم بألف خير8 آذار من كل عاماليوم الدولي للمرأة أو اليوم العالمي للمرأة هو اليوم الثامن من شهر آذار/مارس من كل عام، وفيه يُحتفل عالميًا بالإنجازات الاجتماعية والسياسية والاقتصادية للنساء. وفي بعض الدول كفلسطين، منذ 8 آذار/مارس 2011، والصين وروسيا وكوبا تحصل النساء على إجازة في هذا اليوم.الاحتفال بهذه المناسبة جاء على إثر عقد أول مؤتمر للاتحاد النسائي الديمقراطي العالمي والذي عقد في باريس عام 1945. ومن المعروف أن اتحاد النساء الديمقراطي العالمي يتكون من المنظمات الرديفة للأحزاب الشيوعية، وكان أول احتفال عالمي بيوم المرأة العالمي رغم أن بعض الباحثين يرجح ان اليوم العالمي للمرأة كان على إثر بعض الإضرابات النسائية التي حدثت في الولايات المتحدة قبل ذلك العام.في عام 1857 خرج آلاف النساء للاحتجاج في شوارع مدينة نيويورك على الظروف اللاإنسانية التي كن يجبرن على العمل تحتها، ورغم أن الشرطة تدخلت بطريقة وحشية لتفريق المتظاهرات إلا أن المسيرة نجحت في دفع المسئولين السياسيين إلى طرح مشكلة المرأة العاملة على جداول الأعمال اليومية. وفي الثامن من آذار/مارس من سنة 1908 عادت الآلاف من عاملات النسيج للتظاهر من جديد في شوارع مدينة نيويورك لكنهن حملن هذه المرة قطعا من الخبز اليابس وباقات من الورود في خطوة رمزية لها دلالتها واخترن لحركتهن الاحتجاجية تلك شعار “خبز وورود”.طالبت المسيرة هذه المرة بتخفيض ساعات العمل ووقف تشغيل الأطفال ومنح النساء حق الاقتراع.شكلت مُظاهرات الخبز والورود بداية تشكل حركة نسوية متحمسة داخل الولايات المتحدة خصوصا بعد انضمام نساء من الطبقة المتوسطة إلى موجة المطالبة بالمساواة والإنصاف رفعن شعارات تطالب بالحقوق السياسية وعلى رأسها الحق في الانتخاب، وبدأ الاحتفال بالثامن من آذار/مارس كيوم المرأة الأمريكية تخليدا لخروج مظاهرات نيويورك سنة 1909 وقد ساهمت النساء الأمريكيات في دفع الدول الأوربية إلى تخصيص الثامن من آذار/مارس كيوم للمرأة وقد تم تبني اقتراح الوفد الأمريكي بتخصيص يوم واحد في السنة للاحتفال بالمرأة على الصعيد العالمي بعد نجاح التجربة داخل الولايات المتحدة. غير أن تخصيص يوم الثامن من آذار/مارس كعيد عالمي للمرأة لم يتم إلا بعد سنوات طويلة، ذلك لأن منظمة الأمم المتحدة لم توافق على تبني تلك المناسبة إلا سنة 1977 عندما أصدرت المنظمة الدولية قرارا يدعو دول العالم إلى اعتماد أي يوم من السنة يختارونه للاحتفال بالمرأة فقررت غالبية الدول اختيار الثامن من آذار/مارس. وتحول بالتالي ذلك اليوم إلى رمز لنضال المرأة تخرج فيه النساء عبر العالم في مظاهرات للمطالبة بحقوقهن العادلة.مجمود سعيد كعوش
Sevinch Rustamova Shukhrat qizi was born on October 13, 2005, Kashkadarya region, Uzbekistan. She is currently a third-year student of the Faculty of Medicine (Med-01U group) at Kimyo International University in Tashkent.
She has participated in several international Olympiads and has a strong interest in poetry and literature. Her poems and creative works have been published in international anthologies in Egypt and Qatar.
In addition, in 2025 she took part in an International Anthology in Turkey, where she presented her creative works and delivered a speech on an international platform.
Furthermore, her scientific articles and theses have been published in a number of high-level academic journals. She also actively participates in national conferences and scientific forums, contributing to academic and literary discussions.