Amar Bail by Umera Ahmed* is a, poignant Urdu romantic tragedy focusing on the intense, troubled love story of Umar Jehangir and Aleezay Sikandar. Set against the backdrop of Pakistan’s bureaucratic culture and corruption, it explores themes of imbalanced relationships, broken families, and the sacrifices made in love.
Amar Bail (English: Mistletoe) is a love story of Umar Jehangir and Aleezay Sikandar, set-up in the backdrop of Pakistani bureaucratic culture. It is a story of imbalanced relationships, broken families, lust for power, complexes, insecurities and amidst all problems of love, its intensity and sacrifices.
In the end, we learn that Umar did indeed love Aleezay, adding a poignant twist to their story. Even though I loved Umar, I ended up falling for Junaid as well. He's a nice guy, and his family is amazing too. Through Junaid and his family, Aleezay finally got the love and care she had always wanted.
I didn't feel the depth of Aleezah or Umar's relationship, the "love" that they had for each other, their friendship as two displaced children in broken families was understandable, but they're love isn't. The entire story just made me depressed.
Her most famous work, and the one that heightened her career was Peer-e-Kamil and Meri Zaat Zara-e-Benishan. Amarbail is also one of the most famous novel of Umera Ahmed. Umera started her writing career in 1998 when she started publishing stories in the monthly Urdu magazines.
And, it is one hell of a love story. Talia Murad (Taasha): The protagonist. I like her so much, cuz she is everything that I wanted to be when I was a little girl. She is smart, she is slim, she knows how to dress, she can kill with her words, and on and on.
Once established, this vine can be very difficult to control. If possible, you should cut the vine down as much as possible, then you could treat the ends with a brush killer full strength such as Fertilome Brush and Stump Killer to prevent regrowth.
Noun, Feminine. a parasitic climbing plant of the convolvulus family, with leafless stems that are attached to the host plant, Cuscuta reflexa. An epidendrum, or parasitical plant similar to the mistletoe.
1. Jannat Ke Pattay. Arguably her most popular novel, Jannat Ke Pattay is a story of self-discovery, faith, and resilience. It follows Haya Suleman, a young woman who embarks on a transformative journey as she unravels the mysteries surrounding her life.
Amar bail or dodder (Cuscuta) - yellow parasitic plant without leaves. Cuscuta is a commonly used in traditional Chinese medicine. on green grass, racemosa, cipó-chumbo, Yellow filaments. Cuscuta or Tali putri is a genus of flowering plants.
The botanical name of the amarbel is Cuscuta reflexa. It's also called the giant dodder. The Cuscuta plant is called a parasite because it has no chlorophyll and absorbs food material from the host. In this process, the host is deprived of its valuable nutrients.
Companion planting: Incorporate plants that repel Japanese beetles such as catnip, chives, garlic, odorless marigold, nasturtium, white geranium, rue, or tansy near susceptible plants to help keep the beetles away.
Seeds of Amarbel germinate in the soil seedlings are long filamentous and without cotyledons the young plants grow and perform circumutation or rotatory movement and they twin around the stem and sometime leaves of host plant. If the host plant is not available the young plant of amarbel will die.
Nemrah Ahmed published her first novel Mere Khuab, Mere Jugnu at the age of 16 in 2007 in Shuaa Digest, a women's monthly magazine; it was later published as a hardcover book. After obtaining her master's degree in English literature, she undertook writing as a full-time job.
So it's not that reading or thinking about romance is inherently wrong. But even “clean” romance books could be wrong for some people to read in certain situations if they are drawing our hearts away from Christ and creating unhealthy dynamics in marriage.
The Forty Rules of Love unfolds two tantalizing parallel narratives--one contemporary and the other set in the thirteenth century, when Rumi encountered his spiritual mentor, Shams, the whirling dervish--that together explore the enduring power of Rumi's work.