Ink, Fabric, and the Strength to Stand Alone in Kashmir
By Muhammad Rameez Kumar
The winter sun spills over the rooftops of Plan Bandipora, setting the mountains aglow with golden light.
In the narrow lanes below, children dart after stray puppies, and the damp earth smells fresh from the morning frost.
Inside a small, silent home, a young woman leans over a sheet of paper. Her hand moves with calm precision. Each letter flows like it belongs only to her, a signature of patience and care.
This is 25-year-old Sabreena Bano. In this still room, she is silently shaping a life that many of her peers are still chasing.
Young Kashmiris of her age mostly spend years preparing for government jobs, endlessly chasing exams, or hoping for opportunities that rarely come. Sabreena chose differently. She built her own.
Growing up in a modest household, she understood early that life rarely offers guarantees. But it does offer choices, sometimes disguised as challenges.
After finishing school, she completed a Bachelor of Education, followed by a Master’s in Social Work. She wanted knowledge and understanding: how society works, what people struggle with, and how systems shape lives.
But she knew degrees alone could not forge a path........





















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