Chinese tech giant Huawei said on Monday it had developed a new way of making semiconductors that could get around its U.S.-enforced lack of access to the most
Technology

Chinese tech giant Huawei said on Monday it had developed a new way of making semiconductors that could get around its U.S.-enforced lack of access to the most advanced chipmaking equipment. Huawei has in recent years been at the centre of a geopolitical standoff after Washington warned its

<h4>World Tarot Day 2026: The most misunderstood tarot cards and what they actually mean</h4><h4>People tarot as entertainment or fear it
Horoscope

World Tarot Day 2026: The most misunderstood tarot cards and what they actually meanPeople tarot as entertainment or fear it because of the dramatic social media readings. But tarot was never meant to work through fear; it is a symbolic tool. Updated on: May 25

<h4>From mirrors to mood lighting, these 5 budget-friendly decor tricks can make small homes look surprisingly luxurious</h4><h4>Want to
Life Style

From mirrors to mood lighting, these 5 budget-friendly decor tricks can make small homes look surprisingly luxuriousWant to upgrade your home into a luxurious space? Here are some budget-friendly decor ideas you can consider for a beautiful home. Published on: May 25

A ​Bahraini court sentenced nine defendants ‌to life in prison ​and two others ⁠to three years in jail for collaborating with Iran’s Revolutionary
World

A ​Bahraini court sentenced nine defendants ‌to life in prison ​and two others ⁠to three years in jail for collaborating with Iran’s Revolutionary ‌Guard Corps (IRGC) to carry out what ‌it described as “hostile ‌and ⁠terrorist acts” against Bahrain

<h4>Tarot vs Astrology: Which one can predict your future better? An expert breaks it down</h4><h4>Astrology explains cosmic timing and
Horoscope

Tarot vs Astrology: Which one can predict your future better? An expert breaks it downAstrology explains cosmic timing and patterns. Tarot explains your emotional experience of those patterns. One gives you the map, the other acts like a mirror. Updated on: May 25

<h4>The Japanese fruit ‘sando’ is becoming India’s favourite summer dessert; take a look</h4><h4> With fluffy milk bread
Latest News

The Japanese fruit ‘sando’ is becoming India’s favourite summer dessert; take a look With fluffy milk bread, clouds of whipped cream, and jewel-like slices of fresh fruit tucked inside, the Japanese sando has become India’s go-to dessert Updated on: May 25

<h4>Madhuri Dixit serves ‘a little bit of drama’ as she gives classic white saree a modern twist with chic jacket</h4><h4>Madhuri Dixit
Life Style

Madhuri Dixit serves ‘a little bit of drama’ as she gives classic white saree a modern twist with chic jacketMadhuri Dixit proves age is just a number as she stuns in ivory saree with floral prints, layered with a sleek jacket, blending elegance with modern drama. Published on: May 25

<h4>3 elephant calves die within 17 days in Chhattisgarh’s Dharamjaigarh</h4><h4>Eight elephant calves have died in Dharamjaigarh forest
Latest News

3 elephant calves die within 17 days in Chhattisgarh’s DharamjaigarhEight elephant calves have died in Dharamjaigarh forest division over the past five months due to drowning, getting trapped in marshland, etc Published on: May 25, 2026 1:27 PM IST By Ritesh Mishra Share via Copy link Three

Book Box: Meet Safeena Husain, among Time's 2026 Women of the Year

Posted By: Jogendra Kumar Posted On: Mar 16, 2026Share Article
Meet Safeena Husain
Safeena Husain

Book Box: Meet Safeena Husain, among Time's 2026 Women of the Year

Book Box: Meet Safeena Husain, among Time's 2026 Women of the Year

The founder of Educate Girls on fighting for every last girl, and finally telling her own story.

Updated on: Mar 16, 2026 7:07 AM IST By Sonya Dutta Choudhury Share via Copy link When Time magazine named Safeena Husain one of 16 Women of the Year 2026, she was standing outside at a Mumbai philanthropy conference, looking up at a sky so clear she could see the stars. “That almost never happens in Mumbai,” she told me later. “I felt so inspired.” Safeena Husain Making the impossible visible has been Safeena’s life’s work. For two decades, she has searched for the girls in India’s most forgotten villages, the ones with names like Maafi (forgive me for having a girl) and Missed Call (we asked God for a boy, but he missed the call). I had known I would love Safeena Husain before I even met her. As a mother of three girls — engineers, athletes, dreamers — I’ve felt deep gratitude to the women who made those futures possible. And Safeena Husain, founder of Educate Girls, is up there with the fighters. We meet early this year at the Jaipur Literature Festival. Sitting across from me, Safeena looks elegant in a teal blue silk sari and long navy coat. She smiled when she saw me holding Every Last Girl, the book she is there to launch. The book is full of heartbreaking stories. But it also offers hope, with many strategies to get girls into school. One innovative approach stages village plays dramatizing the life-and-death effects of illiteracy. Safeena speaks with intensity and clarity. We talk about her childhood reading, the process of writing her book, and the impact of winning the prestigious Ramon Magsaysay Award. Here are edited excerpts of our conversation.

Safeena, are you a reader?

My parents divorced when I was young. My mother remarried, and my stepfather was an alcoholic. We lived in a one-room janta flat in Delhi. I was always in my own world, a girl with her nose in a book. There used to be a mobile library outside Naoroji Nagar in Delhi that would come to our neighborhood, and I read a lot of books from there. I read books with all sorts of titles, like Yahan Ka Vyapari, which I later realized was a translation of The Merchant of Venice. I read a lot of stuff, but I read it all in Hindi. In Saket there was a sabzi mandi, and there was this place that rented comic books cheaply, and I read all those comic book digests—anything I could get my hands on.

You went from Hindi comic books to Nobel prize-winning Korean author Han Kang — how did that journey happen?

I shifted to reading in English, which was hard at first. I began with simpler books, like the Enid Blyton and Nancy Drew series. In high school, I moved to Oscar Wilde, G.B. Shaw, etc. Now I’m discovering many female writers—books like The Vegetarian (Han Kang) and Butter (by Asako Yuzuki) . There’s incredible writing out there, like Bunny (Mona Awad), wildly imaginative, and Sally Rooney. I love these young women with fresh voices.

And now you are the author of a book? What prompted this decision to write?

I was in Oxford giving a talk when the moderator later told me, “So much has been written about you—I’ve read your articles and media reports—but nothing in your own voice.” It struck me, because it was true. We’d done so much, but never shared our journey, thoughts, or ideas in our own voice. That planted the seed. The hardest part was deciding how to write the book and what it should be about. That took time. Then in 2019, after a TED Talk, I visited the TED bookstore in Vancouver and saw books by TED speakers. That gave me confidence: if I could give a TED Talk, maybe I could turn it into a TED book.

What did you decide this book should be—an academic book, a memoir, or something else?

That was the hardest decision. Writing about gender and education could go in a dense, academic direction—or be just a collection of stories. There were many ways to approach it. Eventually, I realized I wanted to write a human book—one that tells the story and builds the case for girls’ education in a simple, jargon-free way. This is not a sector book or an NGO book. It’s really a book for you and me and everybody.

What is the core message you want readers to take away from this book?

Sitting in cities, we think the problem of girls’ education is solved—but it isn’t. The book brings that reality back into focus, showing that the job isn’t done just because a woman heads the Reserve Bank or a few women hold high positions. It’s not done until every last girl is in school with real choices. I also want readers to see that this is solvable. It’s not hopeless. We have the data, algorithms to identify out-of-school girls, and community volunteers who support Educate Girls like Team Balika who say, “Every girl in my village must go to school.” It’s not just a book about the problem—it’s about solutions and creating urgency to act now, while we can still change these girls’ lives.

Can you take us through your process of writing the book?

I started by asking myself what I truly wanted to write. Then I built a skeletal structure: Part One is the girls world, Part Two is the beginning of the movement, Part Three is Moving at Speed. Once I had that, I focused on one chapter at a time. Much of it came from my own experiences—work, conversations, observed stories—so once I knew what to include, drafting was surprisingly quick. I dedicated one to two full days each week solely to the book, blocking the entire day for writing. Then I was fortunate to be nominated for the Rockefeller Bellagio residency in Italy, giving me a full month with no family and no dinners to cook—just time for the book. I arrived with a manuscript in pieces and, in about three weeks, brought it all together for my publisher. That residency gave me the focus and closure I needed.

You have shared a small part of your story in your book. Was it difficult?

I didn’t want the book to be all about my trauma, even though I’ve had a rough childhood. That wouldn’t serve the girls. At the same time, if I only told the girls’ stories and never acknowledged my own lived experience, it would feel a bit dishonest, as if I was an outsider just looking in. So I’ve shared some of my story, but the heart of the book is the girls.

Can you talk a little about how your own life shaped the work you do for girls’ education?

I had a rough childhood. There was violence, there was abuse, and at that time we didn’t even have words for it. We didn’t have the vocabulary, and society also made you internalize that somehow you were at fault, that you were not a “good girl,” that you should just shut up. Because of all of that, I couldn’t continue my education after the 12th. It was a harsh time—everyone around me said: “Marry her off, finish it off, otherwise what will she do?” I was lost. I even lived at a Krishna ashram for a while, tried many paths, but nothing worked. In that moment, an aunt stood up for me. I lived in her home for two years, and she just gave me a lot of love. And then, slowly, I came back to education. I went straight to the London School of Economics. I was 21, and everyone entering was like 18, but I told myself: it’s fine, I can be a mature student. I didn’t have money, so I did everything—worked in the vegetarian café washing dishes and on the cash till, restocked books in the library, gave tuitions, worked in Southall making naans and rotis, did bookkeeping for small businesses—just to survive. That whole journey gave me this strength that I can survive, I can stand up. So when I see girls now—like Halima, whose mother passed away during COVID, who had to run the house and then, four or five years later, when she wants to come back to education, she’s suddenly “over-age” and ineligible—I completely understand that guilt, that shame, that feeling of being left behind. A lot of this book really comes from that place.

You have received international recognition with the prestigious Ramon Magsaysay Award 2025. How has that impacted you?

It’s changed the type of energy and motivation it’s given the whole team. It’s like, oh my god, now we’ve got it—go, go, go! There is a much greater sense of responsibility. And now, being named one of Time's 16 Woman of the Year — what's that been like? It feels like our girls are being seen on a global platform. When TIME reached out for an interview, we had a sense something might be brewing, but nothing was confirmed then… we were kept in the dark right until the official announcement! When it came through and I saw that list — Teyana Taylor, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Chloé Zhao, Mel Robbins — I was humbled and honestly a little overwhelmed. I stepped outside. The Mumbai sky was so clear you could see the stars. I stood there thinking about our girls. (Sonya Dutta Choudhury is a Mumbai-based journalist and the founder of Sonya’s Book Box, a bespoke book service. Each week, she brings you specially curated books to give you an immersive understanding of people and places. If you have any reading recommendations or reading dilemmas, write to her at sonyasbookbox@gmail.com. The views expressed are personal) Check India news real-time updates, latest news from India, latest at HindustanTime News / India News / Book Box: Meet Safeena Husain, Among Time's 2026 Women Of The Year See Less

When Time magazine named Safeena Husain one of 16 Women of the Year 2026, she was standing outside at a Mumbai philanthropy conference, looking up at a sky so clear she could see the stars. “That almost never happens in Mumbai,” she told me later. “I felt so inspired.”

Making the impossible visible has been Safeena’s life’s work. For two decades, she has searched for the girls in India’s most forgotten villages, the ones with names like Maafi (forgive me for having a girl) and Missed Call (we asked God for a boy, but he missed the call).

I had known I would love Safeena Husain before I even met her.

As a mother of three girls — engineers, athletes, dreamers — I’ve felt deep gratitude to the women who made those futures possible. And Safeena Husain, founder of Educate Girls, is up there with the fighters.

We meet early this year at the Jaipur Literature Festival. Sitting across from me, Safeena looks elegant in a teal blue silk sari and long navy coat. She smiled when she saw me holding Every Last Girl, the book she is there to launch.

The book is full of heartbreaking stories. But it also offers hope, with many strategies to get girls into school. One innovative approach stages village plays dramatizing the life-and-death effects of illiteracy.

Safeena speaks with intensity and clarity. We talk about her childhood reading, the process of writing her book, and the impact of winning the prestigious Ramon Magsaysay Award. Here are edited excerpts of our conversation.

There used to be a mobile library outside Naoroji Nagar in Delhi that would come to our neighborhood, and I read a lot of books from there.

I read books with all sorts of titles, like Yahan Ka Vyapari, which I later realized was a translation of The Merchant of Venice. I read a lot of stuff, but I read it all in Hindi.

In Saket there was a sabzi mandi, and there was this place that rented comic books cheaply, and I read all those comic book digests—anything I could get my hands on.

Now I’m discovering many female writers—books like The Vegetarian (Han Kang) and Butter (by Asako Yuzuki) . There’s incredible writing out there, like Bunny (Mona Awad), wildly imaginative, and Sally Rooney. I love these young women with fresh voices.

It struck me, because it was true. We’d done so much, but never shared our journey, thoughts, or ideas in our own voice. That planted the seed.

The hardest part was deciding how to write the book and what it should be about. That took time. Then in 2019, after a TED Talk, I visited the TED bookstore in Vancouver and saw books by TED speakers. That gave me confidence: if I could give a TED Talk, maybe I could turn it into a TED book.

Eventually, I realized I wanted to write a human book—one that tells the story and builds the case for girls’ education in a simple, jargon-free way. This is not a sector book or an NGO book. It’s really a book for you and me and everybody.

I also want readers to see that this is solvable. It’s not hopeless. We have the data, algorithms to identify out-of-school girls, and community volunteers who support Educate Girls like Team Balika who say, “Every girl in my village must go to school.”

It’s not just a book about the problem—it’s about solutions and creating urgency to act now, while we can still change these girls’ lives.

Once I had that, I focused on one chapter at a time. Much of it came from my own experiences—work, conversations, observed stories—so once I knew what to include, drafting was surprisingly quick.

I dedicated one to two full days each week solely to the book, blocking the entire day for writing.

Then I was fortunate to be nominated for the Rockefeller Bellagio residency in Italy, giving me a full month with no family and no dinners to cook—just time for the book. I arrived with a manuscript in pieces and, in about three weeks, brought it all together for my publisher. That residency gave me the focus and closure I needed.

At the same time, if I only told the girls’ stories and never acknowledged my own lived experience, it would feel a bit dishonest, as if I was an outsider just looking in. So I’ve shared some of my story, but the heart of the book is the girls.

Because of all of that, I couldn’t continue my education after the 12th. It was a harsh time—everyone around me said: “Marry her off, finish it off, otherwise what will she do?” I was lost. I even lived at a Krishna ashram for a while, tried many paths, but nothing worked.

In that moment, an aunt stood up for me. I lived in her home for two years, and she just gave me a lot of love. And then, slowly, I came back to education. I went straight to the London School of Economics. I was 21, and everyone entering was like 18, but I told myself: it’s fine, I can be a mature student.

I didn’t have money, so I did everything—worked in the vegetarian café washing dishes and on the cash till, restocked books in the library, gave tuitions, worked in Southall making naans and rotis, did bookkeeping for small businesses—just to survive. That whole journey gave me this strength that I can survive, I can stand up.

So when I see girls now—like Halima, whose mother passed away during COVID, who had to run the house and then, four or five years later, when she wants to come back to education, she’s suddenly “over-age” and ineligible—I completely understand that guilt, that shame, that feeling of being left behind. A lot of this book really comes from that place.

And now, being named one of Time's 16 Woman of the Year — what's that been like?

It feels like our girls are being seen on a global platform.

When TIME reached out for an interview, we had a sense something might be brewing, but nothing was confirmed then… we were kept in the dark right until the official announcement!

When it came through and I saw that list — Teyana Taylor, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Chloé Zhao, Mel Robbins — I was humbled and honestly a little overwhelmed. I stepped outside. The Mumbai sky was so clear you could see the stars. I stood there thinking about our girls.

(Sonya Dutta Choudhury is a Mumbai-based journalist and the founder of Sonya’s Book Box, a bespoke book service. Each week, she brings you specially curated books to give you an immersive understanding of people and places. If you have any reading recommendations or reading dilemmas, write to her at sonyasbookbox@gmail.com. The views expressed are personal)

Comment on Post

Leave a comment

If you have a News Orbit 360 user account, your address will be used to display your profile picture.


<b>The Canadian Grand Prix was the race in which the Formula 1 title battle finally came alive this year.</b> It was also, however
Sports
The title battle finally came alive - then Antonelli took control

The Canadian Grand Prix was the race in which the Formula 1 title battle finally came alive this year. It was also, however, the race in which it took a potentially decisive turn, putting a huge dent in George Russell's hopes of beating his 19-year-old Mercedes team-mate Kimi Antonelli to the

1 days ago

<h4>CBSE Class 12 answer sheet scanned copies application window ends today, direct link here</h4><h4>CBSE Class 12 answer sheet scanned
Education
CBSE Class 12 answer sheet scanned copies application window ends today

CBSE Class 12 answer sheet scanned copies application window ends today, direct link hereCBSE Class 12 answer sheet scanned copies application window will close today, May 25, 2026. The direct link to apply is given here. Published on: May 25

1 days ago

<h4>Microsoft techie couple in Noida breaks down ₹1.6 lakh monthly expenses, says city feels balanced despite rising costs</h4><h4>A
Latest News
Microsoft techie couple in Noida breaks down ₹1

Microsoft techie couple in Noida breaks down ₹1.6 lakh monthly expenses, says city feels balanced despite rising costsA Microsoft couple in Noida revealed they spent around ₹1.6 lakh monthly while balancing work, lifestyle and family needs. Published on: May 25

1 days ago

A CBSE Class 12 student has raised serious concerns over the board’s re-evaluation process after claiming the Physics answer sheet uploaded under his roll
Latest News
This Is Not My Handwriting

A CBSE Class 12 student has raised serious concerns over the board’s re-evaluation process after claiming the Physics answer sheet uploaded under his roll number does not belong to him. The student shared comparisons of multiple answer sheets and demanded an urgent investigation into the alleged

1 days ago

Thyroid disorder cases have been gradually rising over the past few years, especially in younger adults and the younger working generations
Life Style
World Thyroid Day

Thyroid disorder cases have been gradually rising over the past few years, especially in younger adults and the younger working generations. Even though genes and autoimmune disorders play a role, the way we live our lives is becoming a reason for thyroid problems. We speak to Dr Aravind Badiger

1 days ago

<h4>Sandhu finishes T-63, Sterne wins after gap of 13 years</h4><h4>Sandhu finishes T-63, Sterne wins after gap of 13 years</h4>
Sports
Sandhu finishes T-63

Sandhu finishes T-63, Sterne wins after gap of 13 yearsSandhu finishes T-63, Sterne wins after gap of 13 years Published on: May 25, 2026 1:47 PM IST PTI Share via Copy link Rinkven , Indian golfer Yuvraj Sandhu endured a difficult final day to finish T-63 at the Soudal Open here

1 days ago

<h4>Mumbai's old building redevelopment market grows 16% in 2025; Momentum continues in 2026: Data</h4><h4>Mumbai real estate: A total of 1
Latest News
Mumbai's redevelopment deals grows 16% in 2025

Mumbai's old building redevelopment market grows 16% in 2025; Momentum continues in 2026: DataMumbai real estate: A total of 1,094 development agreements (DAs) were signed between January 2020 and March 15, 2026, according to data from Knight Frank India Published on: May 25

1 days ago

<strong>New Delhi:</strong> Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath issued statewide directions on Bakrid across the state
Latest News
No public animal sacrifice

New Delhi: Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath issued statewide directions on Bakrid across the state. In a meeting with officials, Adityanath reviewed the festival’s preparedness and also looked into Ganga Dussehra arrangements and actions against illegal activities

1 days ago

Chinese artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek will make ‌permanent a 75% price cut ​on its flagship V4-Pro artificial intelligence ⁠model
Technology
China's DeepSeek to make permanent 75% price cut on flagship V4‑Pro AI model

Chinese artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek will make ‌permanent a 75% price cut ​on its flagship V4-Pro artificial intelligence ⁠model, keeping prices at a quarter of their original level, the company said in ‌a statement on Saturday. DeepSeek did not disclose whether the permanent

1 days ago

For years, carbohydrates have been put on trial in the fitness world. Scroll through social media, and you will find countless posts blaming carbs for weight
Life Style
Thinking Of Cutting Carbs From Your Meals To Get Fit

For years, carbohydrates have been put on trial in the fitness world. Scroll through social media, and you will find countless posts blaming carbs for weight gain, sluggishness, and poor fitness results. Many athletes and fitness enthusiasts respond by cutting carbs drastically

1 days ago

<h4>‘Work culture is not hell’: Man who worked in Europe, UK, Canada and US says Bengaluru’s real problem is commute</h4><h4>A man
Latest News
Man who worked abroad says Bengaluru’s real issue is commute

‘Work culture is not hell’: Man who worked in Europe, UK, Canada and US says Bengaluru’s real problem is commuteA man claimed Bengaluru’s commute, not work culture, is the real reason many professionals feel exhausted. Published on: May 25, 2026 10:56 AM IST By Mahipal Singh Chouhan Share

1 days ago

Sunrisers Hyderabad’s victory over Royal Challengers Bengaluru in their last league outing has brought the curtain down on the top-two battle in IPL 2026
Sports
IPL 2026 Qualifier 1 confirmed

Sunrisers Hyderabad’s victory over Royal Challengers Bengaluru in their last league outing has brought the curtain down on the top-two battle in IPL 2026, with both finalists now officially confirmed. Although RCB walked away on the losing side

1 days ago

, which has a global market capitalisation of $343 billion, has advocated modernising India’s power grid to help drive the country’s AI dream
Technology
Upgrade grid to realise AI dream

, which has a global market capitalisation of $343 billion, has advocated modernising India’s power grid to help drive the country’s AI dream, underscoring the intricate linkages and dependencies across multiple domains and utilities crucial to acing the technology that's now grabbing 80% of

1 days ago

<h4>Aishwarya Rai's stylist gets emotional about dressing 'icon' for her high-stakes Cannes return: 'What a week it’s been'</h4><h4>Stylist
Life Style
Aishwarya Rai's stylist gets emotional about dressing 'icon' for Cannes return

Aishwarya Rai's stylist gets emotional about dressing 'icon' for her high-stakes Cannes return: 'What a week it’s been'Stylist Mohit Rai hails Aishwarya Rai as Cannes ‘legend’, silencing critics with a masterclass in avant-garde couture: ‘Showing the children how it’s done’

1 days ago

<h4>Uttar Pradesh groom murder main accused killed in police ‘encounter’</h4><h4>Police said Ravi Yadav, the accused
Latest News
Uttar Pradesh groom murder main accused killed in police ‘encounter’

Uttar Pradesh groom murder main accused killed in police ‘encounter’Police said Ravi Yadav, the accused, who carried a reward of ₹1 lakh on his head, was on a motorcycle when he was asked to stop during vehicle checking Published on: May 25, 2026 10:54 AM IST By HT Correspondent Share via

1 days ago

Girls Aloud star Nicola Roberts has announced the birth of her first child. In a social media post, the singer, 40, said her daughter had
Life Style
Girls Aloud star Nicola Roberts announces birth of baby girl

Girls Aloud star Nicola Roberts has announced the birth of her first child. In a social media post, the singer, 40, said her daughter had "arrived healthy and content a couple of weeks ago at 38 weeks" and was "thriving". Photos from her Instagram account show the star holding her baby

1 days ago

Uber's board met on Saturday to discuss raising its offer for after a major shareholder rebuffed Uber's bid that would value the German food delivery group at
Technology
Uber weighs higher bid for Delivery Hero

Uber's board met on Saturday to discuss raising its offer for after a major shareholder rebuffed Uber's bid that would value the German food delivery group at over 11.5 billion ‌euros ($13.39 billion), the ⁠Financial ⁠Times reported on Sunday

1 days ago

Editorial independence is core to our work. Some links may earn us a commission, without influencing our opinions.<h4>Looking for a compact bedroom air
Technology
Looking for a Bedroom Air Purifier

Editorial independence is core to our work. Some links may earn us a commission, without influencing our opinions.Looking for a compact bedroom air purifier? Here's why Qubo R250 is a solid choiceThe compact Qubo R250 punches above its weight with rapid HEPA filtration and smooth smart controls

1 days ago

<h4>May 25 Birthday Horoscope: Here's what the tarot cards have in store for you this year</h4><h4>If your birthday falls on May 25
Latest News
May 25 Birthday Horoscope

May 25 Birthday Horoscope: Here's what the tarot cards have in store for you this yearIf your birthday falls on May 25, here’s what your year ahead looks like, as per Tarot. Published on: May 25, 2026 11:00 AM IST By Kishori Sud Share via Copy link If you were born on May 25

1 days ago

Opposition parties in Kerala accused the Congress of double standards after Kerala’s former chief electoral officer assumed charge as the secretary to Chief
Politics
Row erupts after Kerala poll officer takes charge as secretary to chief minister

Opposition parties in Kerala accused the Congress of double standards after Kerala’s former chief electoral officer assumed charge as the secretary to Chief Minister VD Satheesan on Sunday, PTI reported. Rathan U Kelkar, a 2003-batch Kerala cadre Indian Administrative Services officer

1 days ago

In late April, India's Sun Pharmaceuticals agreed to pay $11.75bn (£8.59bn) to acquire New York-listed women's health and biosimilars firm Organon & Co
World
Indian billionaires buy foreign companies as growth slows at home

In late April, India's Sun Pharmaceuticals agreed to pay $11.75bn (£8.59bn) to acquire New York-listed women's health and biosimilars firm Organon & Co. It marked the biggest overseas acquisition by an Indian company in nearly two decades and followed a string of high-profile international deals

1 days ago

<h4>‘Laughed at me, called me stupid’: Founder of AI data collection firm on Pronto CEO Anjali Sardana</h4><h4>Human Archive founder
Latest News
Laughed at me

‘Laughed at me, called me stupid’: Founder of AI data collection firm on Pronto CEO Anjali SardanaHuman Archive founder Rushil Agarwal has taken a swipe at Pronto's Anjali Sardana amid the row around the Bengaluru startup recording inside customers’ homes Updated on: May 25

1 days ago

In the English translation of Franz Kafka’s short story, Metamorphosis, published in 2007, Michel Hofmann translated the famous opening line (which included
Politics
Irrepressible and resilient

In the English translation of Franz Kafka’s short story, Metamorphosis, published in 2007, Michel Hofmann translated the famous opening line (which included the German word “Ungeziefer”, generically meaning insect) in this manner: “When Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from troubled dreams

1 days ago

<h4>Marco Rubio visits Taj Mahal in Agra with wife Jeanette | Video</h4><h4>After the Agra visit, he is scheduled to continue his trip to
Latest News
Marco Rubio visits Taj Mahal in Agra with wife Jeanette

Marco Rubio visits Taj Mahal in Agra with wife Jeanette | VideoAfter the Agra visit, he is scheduled to continue his trip to Jaipur later in the day. Updated on: May 25, 2026 10:46 AM IST By HT News Desk Share via Copy link US secretary of state Marco Rubio visited the Taj Mahal in Agra on Monday

1 days ago

<h4>Full Moon May 2026: Astrologer shares how this intense Blue Moon might impact your zodiac sign</h4><h4>According to astrologer Sidhharrth
Horoscope
Full Moon May 2026

Full Moon May 2026: Astrologer shares how this intense Blue Moon might impact your zodiac signAccording to astrologer Sidhharrth S Kumaar, every zodiac sign could experience this lunar energy differently. Here's what this Blue Moon may mean for you. Updated on: May 25

1 days ago

<h4>Cardiologist reveals the real cause of heart attacks that most people overlook and it’s not just ‘bad cholesterol’</h4><h4>Could
Life Style
Cardiologist reveals real cause of heart attacks and it’s not just cholesterol

Cardiologist reveals the real cause of heart attacks that most people overlook and it’s not just ‘bad cholesterol’Could your gut health be affecting your heart? A cardiologist explains how inflammation, poor sleep, stress, and unhealthy habits may raise heart attack risk. Published on: May 25

1 days ago

Turkish riot police fired tear ‌gas and forced their way into the main opposition party’s headquarters ​to evict its ousted leadership on Sunday (May 24
World
Turkish riot police enter opposition headquarters to evict ousted leadership

Turkish riot police fired tear ‌gas and forced their way into the main opposition party’s headquarters ​to evict its ousted leadership on Sunday (May 24, 2026), deepening a crisis ⁠at the heart of Turkiye’s democracy. Clouds of tear gas billowed within the Republican People’s Party

1 days ago


Sing Up