
Zakir Ullah
Bio
I am so glad that you are here.
Stories (112)
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The Girls the River Remembers
The Girls the River Remembers:- The train screeched to a halt just before the Sutlej bridge. Smoke billowed from the engine, curling into a sky already heavy with ash. Inside the cramped carriage, silence clung to everything. Not peace—just the kind of silence that follows screams.
By Zakir Ullah10 months ago in Fiction
Rise Like the 100
Rise Like the 100: Lessons in Strength, Leadership, and Hope In the rubble of a broken world, a group of teenagers finds themselves facing the impossible—surviving on a radioactive Earth nearly a century after humanity’s self-destruction. The 100 by Kass Morgan might be set in a dystopian future, but its core is deeply human. It’s about pain, purpose, and the ability to rise when everything has fallen.
By Zakir Ullah10 months ago in Motivation
The Last Letter
The envelope was worn, its edges curled like forgotten memories. Clara found it under a loose floorboard in her grandmother’s attic, tucked beneath dusty photo albums and an old patchwork quilt that smelled faintly of lavender and time. The handwriting on it was delicate and trembling with age—her grandmother’s, but younger.
By Zakir Ullah10 months ago in Fiction
Coding for Everyone
Code Your Future: Why Learning to Program is the Smartest Move Today In the 21st century, coding isn’t just for tech geeks. It’s for creators, thinkers, problem-solvers, and anyone who wants to thrive in a digital world. Here's why coding matters and how you can begin—no matter your background.
By Zakir Ullah10 months ago in Education
The Standing Boy of Nagasaki
In the haunting ruins of post-war Nagasaki, amid twisted steel, crumbled buildings, and scorched earth, a quiet, solemn figure stands out — a boy, perhaps no older than ten, standing still with perfect posture. On his back, tied with a cloth, is the lifeless body of his baby brother. His face is calm, composed, and eerily mature. A U.S. Marine photographer, Joe O’Donnell, captured this moment — a photograph that would come to symbolize the human cost of war in a way no statistic ever could.
By Zakir Ullah10 months ago in Humans











