‘You know when you love someone when you want them to be happy event if their happiness means that you’re not part of it.’
I received love letters from him every week. Yes, he never emails me , he often does that. But what thrills me is the snail mail I receive from him every week. I run barefoot and eyes sparkling, like a child to the mailbox, giddy with anticipation of yet another surprise. His letters, more often than blue, come in a long, pink envelope. His handwriting fascinates me. The strokes of his red pen artfully claim their spaces on the pink stationery.
He sends me postcards. America’s sunrises, captivating and vivid in colors. Hamburg's seaport, ‘cover’ with ships and boats of varying sizes and shapes. Switzerland's snow-capped mountains and white slopes, silently enticing my heart to go backpacking with him.
He can shoots copy of old building like an pic of nature and shares them to me. Billion of stars like motionless but twinkling fireflies against the vast darkness up above. The magnificent lunar eclipse, adoring the America sky. Cherry blossoms in their arresting splendor, as if to welcome me into his own version of spring, a wonderful life with him as new life of me , feeling was second born !
He love to travels quaint towns and old villages and forwards raw selfies to me, seconds after he shoots them. His passion are against church towers and colonial architectures.
He is as old-university as I am. Perfectly weird as I am. Our passion is inseparable, like windows hinges that fit perfectly together. To love him and to be loved by him , that really is wonder of wonder of my life .
After years of civil war, it’s not surprising that a four-year-old Syrian child assumed a photojournalist’s camera was a weapon and surrendered.
The image, believed to have been taken in 2012 by photojournalist Osman Sağırlı, was recently tweeted by Palestinian Nadia Abu Shaban and has earned more than 12,000 retweets over the last week.
The original publication identifies the child as four-year-old Syrian girl Adi Hudea.
“Her name is Hudea… She is only 4 years old. She lost her dad in the bombing of Hama. She took refuge at the Atme camp at the Turkish border with her mom and three siblings,” the caption reads.
The photo, which has captured the hearts of thousands of Twitter users, paints a heartbreaking image of the everyday situation faced by children caught up in Syria’s ongoing civil war.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) says that since March 2011, when the Syrian civil war began, about 10 million Syrians are displaced.