Bilal can i have a talk with you




















As of now, this track is currently not as popular as other songs out there. Talk To You Lil' Darlin' doesn't provide as much energy as other songs but, this track can still be danceable to some people. Since this track has a tempo of , the tempo markings of this song would be Allegro fast, quick, and bright.

Based on the tempo, this track could possibly be a great song to play while you are jogging or cycling. Overall, we believe that this song has a fast tempo. In other words, for DJs who are harmonically matchings songs, the Camelot key for this track is 6A. So, the perfect camelot match for 6A would be either 6A or 5B. Janan Ganesh : The other thing about Wanderlust in the German sense is that it always majoredon the rural setting. Janan Ganesh : And the Casper Friedrich painting idea of what it was to travel, which is that you explore landscape before you explore the city, if you do the city at all.

And I think that has very much changed over the past couple of hundred years. I possess the urban landscape wherever it is, on whichever continent. Bilal Qureshi : Over the past decade my own Wanderlust has been focused beyond Europe on the arrivals and departures gate of Dubai International Airport.

Bilal Qureshi : The Middle Eastern city is a great crossroads between East and West with easy flights to Africa, East Asia, and Europe, which has made modern Wanderlust — and a more global version of Wanderlust — possible. Anna Winger : I still remember when I was very young and first started traveling by myself, how.

Anna Winger : I love that feeling, the fact that the weather was so different, as soon as the planelanded, you were already looking at different kinds of trees — I was flying there from Boston — I just love that feeling. Everybody just photographs everything. So there was obviously a price we were paying for all of this easy access. Bilal Qureshi : Well you know going back to the worse part of it a little bit — you mentioned being a travel agent when you were younger and the feeling of travel that addicts you forever.

How does the feeling of Wanderlust, that kind of deep longing to go somewhere else and to be dislocated and displaced, and have your mind blown. How does it sit alongside this kind of ease of travel? Not to contrast them in an explicit way, one is good and one is bad …. I like feeling a bit cut off so that you get uncomfortable. The big word in travel over the last year has been transformative.

We called her Appi. She never had the chance to come visit us in the US, but on trips home to Pakistan I would always go sit by her side because she loved to tell the stories of her own travels. Bilal Qureshi : In , Appi took a car trip that is physically and politically impossible today. She drove with her three kids from Lahore across Asia and Europe … to London … in a van.

The journey took 22 days. And she kept a diary of every detail and everything she saw. Every time I visited her at home in Lahore, she would read to me from that book. I recorded this reading from one of her favorite entries. Crossing the border from Pakistan through the epic mountain passes that divide the two countries. The piercing eyes and faces of the people and the feeling of arriving in such a different climate and in such a different scent. But in her extraordinary language and in the observations she recorded, she distilled cultures and geographies into words, images, and sounds that I still revisit I felt like the land of my ancestors.

Music has helped me kind of access places. Some of our country's most capable people from the media, legal sector, and judiciary were being killed on their doorsteps in Kabul and across the country. As talks between the Americans and Taliban took place, I remember a local police chief stood up in the middle of a war council meeting and suddenly accused the Americans of abandoning Afghan forces by talking to the enemy.

Like many Afghans his relationship with America is steeped in pain. One of my former classmates is a member of the Taliban and we are the same age. Over the last 20 years, we have continued to talk despite the fact that he's adhering to a different ideology.

But recently, I saw him at a wedding and I could see how his attitude had hardened and soured. I saw and felt how this conflict has really divided Afghans. When we met, we could barely converse. He wasn't the guy that I remember from our days in Peshawar, playing cricket and stuffing our faces with juicy oranges. How could I know that all these years later I would find him on the other side?

His story is also one of deep personal loss. His brother, father, and uncle were killed in a raid that was based on false intelligence and petty local rivalries. Separated as we are, I can't help but hope for a future of national reconciliation.

But that seems a distant possibility now. I covered the regional capitals falling to the Taliban in recent weeks, with massive surrenders where no one put up a fight. But I didn't think they could make it into Kabul and take over the city. The night before it happened, officials I spoke to still thought they could hold it with the help of US air strikes. And there was talk of a peaceful transition of power into an inclusive government. But then [former president] Ghani left by helicopter and suddenly the Taliban were in the city.

There was fear hanging in the air - people were very scared to see them back. I took two changes of clothes and was taken to an undisclosed location with my wife, my baby daughter and my parents.

This is a city I know intimately - every inch of it. I belong to this city and it's unbelievable to think no place was safe for me. I thought about my daughter Sola - her name means "peace" - and it was simply devastating to think the future we had hoped for her was now in tatters.

As I left for the airport, I was reminded that for the second time in my life, I was leaving Afghanistan behind. When I got there, memories from years of work came back to overwhelm me - trips I had taken with officials or as a journalist heading to the front lines of the war. Then I saw all these people, all these families lining up to flee.

A generation of Afghans burying their dreams and aspirations. But this time I wasn't there to cover the story. I was there to join them. Follow Bilal Sarwary on Twitter. AfghanistanYouNeverSee - more about the author. Image source, Getty Images. Same scene, different time Afghans flee Kabul in None of our lives would ever be the same. Image source, Bilal Sarwary. Bilal Sarwary in in Paghman, Afghanistan. Men had their beards shaved after the Taliban were driven out. The ensuing years were a catalogue of errors.

The year was the turning point. More on the Afghan crisis. Who are the Taliban? Where will all the Afghan refugees go? What is Sharia law? A bomb destroyed a wedding in , killing Our country's landscape is deceptive.

A US-Taliban deal was struck in Doha in Afghan working women to stay at home for now Bittersweet relief for Afghan evacuee now in UK. Image source, US Army.



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