Monday, December 24, 2012

Ik Sheher Basaana Parta Hai

Dhananjay Parmar
Dhananjay Parmar
Bohat hujoom hai muhabbat ke shehar mein...
Aik baar jo bichar jaey dubara nahin milta...


Hi friend’s
This is just poem and shayari,


Humsafri ka bojh uthana parta hai,
Dil ko duh ke sath chalana parta hai,

Hum jese awaara dil logon ko bhi,
Koi na koi qaul* nibhana parta hai,

Kabhi kabhi ik dard bhari siskaari se,
Khamoshi ko zakham lagana parta hai,

Sanattey mehfooz rakhe hain seeney mein,
Weeraani ka hath battana parta hai,

Pehle karna parta hai ik jungle saaf,
Uss ke baad ik sheher basaana parta hai,

Roz humain yadon ke ghaur samandar mein,
Raat gaye ik deep jalana parrta hai,

Pardon ka ik khail sajaana parta hai,
Aik uthaana aik giraana parta hai,

Tanhai mein bhi rehna majboori hai,
Logon mein bhi aana jana parta hai..

(qaul;promise)


Wo Jo Tere Faqeer Hote Hain,
Aadmi Be’nazeer Hote Hain,

Phool daaman main chand rakh lijiye,
Raaste main faqeer hote hain,

Teri mehfil main bethne waley,
Kitne roshan zameer hote hain,

Woh parindey jo aankh rakhte hain,
Sab se pehle aseer hote hain,

Zindagi ke haseen tarkash mein,
Kitne be’reham teer hote hain,

Aye Adam ehtiyaat logon se,
Log munkar nakeer hote hain..

(be’nazeer;unbuyable,pure)(tarkash;bow)(munkar;evil)


Har kaam bigarrta hai hum jaison ka ho ho ke,
Un ko bhi koi poochey bethe hain jo ro ro ke,

Hum jaagney walon ko zindon main samajhte hain,
Mar jartey hain kitne hi meri tarah so so ke,

Daaman to hai daaman phir, phailana hi parta hai,
Yeh saaf nahi rehta dekha isey dho dho ke,

Jiss cheez se qurbat ho ajati hai doori bhi,
Ik shakhss ko paa hai ik shakhss ko kho kho ke,

Aye Saad chalo chorro kuch dair ko sasstaa* lo,
Yeh bojh hai sochon ka mar jao ge ddho* ddho ke..

(sasstaa;relax, ddho;pick)



Dhananjay Parmar

Friday, December 21, 2012

Teri Har Baat Se Anjaan

Dhananjay Parmar

Hi friend’s
This is just poem and shayari,


Teri har baat se anjaan bhi ho sakta hai,
Dil-e-wehshi, dil-e-nadaan bhi ho sakta hai,

Hum jahan beth ke taaron se teri baat karain,
Woh kisi jism ka dalaa’n bhi ho sakta hai,

Yeh jo ik bherriya* jungle mein hua karta hai,
Kal isi bhaiss* main insaan bhi ho sakta hai,

Ain mumkin hai jisey dil ke bajaye thaamon,
Ab kisi shokh ka damaan bhi ho sakta hai,

Titliyaan nochney* ka jurm kiya hai jis ne,
Woh mere sheher ka sultaan bhi ho sakta hai,

Aaj dil mein teri yadon ke diye jalte hain,
Kal yehi rasta sunsaan bhi ho sakta hai,

Jo tujhe aur kisi ka hone nahin deta,
Yeh mere ishq ka imkaan bhi ho sakta hai,

Yeh jo ik shakhs tujhe dekh kar roshan hai bohat,
Bujh bhi sakta hai yeh veeraan bhi ho sakta hai..

(bherriya;wolf)(bhaiss;appearance)(nochney;plucking)



Sara din main aik chehra sochta rehta hoon,
Jis ko dekha nahin hai, us ko dekhta rehta hoon,

Aankhain rehen parri hain jis ke hijer mein sadiyon se,
Aayinon mein ussi ka akss choomta rehta hoon,

Sabzz parindon waley saahil ki tabeer ki khatir,
Main ik khawb ko apne khawb sunaata rehta hoon,

Wasl ke rang, shanaasha khushbu, phaillay chaaron aur,
Shaam sawerey un ke peechey chalta rehta hoon,

Dil ka dard jaganey wali aik sadaa aur main,
Apne hath mein aik lakeer si dhoondta rehta hoon,

Ik awaaz main shaamil kesi awaazain hain Ataa,
Kya kuch yaad aata hai, kya kuch bhoolta rehta hoon..



Payaam Aaye Hain Os Yaar-e-Bewafa Ke Mujhe
Jisay Qaraar Na Aaya Kaheen Bhula Ke Mujhe

Judaayiaan Hon Tou Aisi Ke Umer Bhar Na Milain
Faraib Do Tou Zara Silsilay Barha Ke Mujhe

Nashay Se Kam Tou Nahi Yaad-e-Yaar Ka Aalam
Ke Le Urra Hai Koi Dosh Per Hawa Ke Mujhe

Mein Khud Ko Bhool Chuka Tha Magar Jahan Waalay
Udaas Chorh Gaye Aaina Dikha Ke Mujhe

Tumhaaray Baam Se Ab Kam Nahi Rifat-e-Daar
Jo Dekhna Ho Tou Dekho Nazar Utha Ke Mujhe

Khinchi Howi Hai Mere Aansooun Mein Ek Tasveer
“Faraz” Dekh Raha Hai Wo Muskura Ke Mujhe



Mohabbat ki Kahani me koi Tarmeem Mat Krna,
Mujhe Tm Torr Dena pr Mujhe Taqseem Mat Krna,

Boht Honge Humaray Baad Daawa-e-Mohabbat krne Wale,
Yaad-e-Wafa Rakhna Ksi ko Tasleem Mat Krna,

Agar Lafzon me Aae Nazar Chehra Mera,
Chupke se Choo Lena Magr Toheen Mat Krna….



Yeh mojza bhi muhabbat kabhi dikhaye mujhe..

Kay sang tujh pe girain aur zakham aye mujhe..

Main ghar se teri tamanna jub pehan k niklun..

Barhana shehr main koe nazar na aye mujhe..

Wo mera dost hai saray jahan ko hai maloom..

Dagha karay wo kisi se to sharm aye mujhe..

Wo mehrbaan hai to iqraar kyu nahi kerta..

Wo bdguman hai to so bar azmaye mujhe..

Main apni zaat main neelam horaha hun QATEEL,

Gham-e-hayaat se keh do k kharid laye mujhe..




Dhananjay Parmar

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Wish Come True

Dhananjay Parmar

Hi friend’s
This is Extreme World Info,



Soldiers Make Terminally Ill Boy's Wish Come True
10-year old Khalil Quarles is able to live his military dream...

Khalil Quarles, 10, raises his right hand during his honorary enlistment into the Army Reserve as his father, Damon, watches the ceremony held in Baltimore, Md. Maj. Gen Sanford Holman, 200th Military Police Command's commanding general, read the special Oath of Enlistment for Quarles, who suffers from a rare form of cancer that affects less than 1 percent of all people who have been diagnosed cancer. Quarles, who is terminally ill, said it would be his dream to enlist in the Army. Through friends of friends and the power of social media, the 200th MPCOM partnered with deployed soldiers in Kuwait who are assigned to the 12th Public Affairs Detachment and Third Army to ensure Quarles' wish came true. More than two-dozen soldiers assigned to the 200th MPCOM and the Office of the Chief, Army Reserve stood shoulder-to-shoulder during the enlistment ceremony. The 200th Military Police Command is based out of Fort Meade, Md., and commands and controls more than 13,000 soldiers in 44 states.
Sgt. 1st Class Mark Bell
200th Military Police Command 
(20 - December - 2012)

Maj. Gen. Sanford Holman presents and American flag to Khalil Quarles, 10, at his home in Baltimore, Md., during a surprise visit from members of the 200th Military Police Command and the Office of the Chief for his honorary Oath of Enlistment ceremony held Dec. 19. Holman is the commanding general of the 200th MPCOM. Quarles suffers from a rare form of cancer that affects less than 1 percent of all people who have been diagnosed cancer. Quarles, who is terminally ill, said it would be his dream to enlist in the Army. Through friends of friends and the power of social media, the 200th MPCOM partnered with deployed soldiers in Kuwait who are assigned to the 12th Public Affairs Detachment and Third Army to ensure Quarles' wish came true. More than two-dozen soldiers assigned to the 200th MPCOM and the Office of the Chief, Army Reserve stood shoulder-to-shoulder during the enlistment ceremony. The 200th Military Police Command is based out of Fort Meade, Md., and commands and controls more than 13,000 soldiers in 44 states.
Sgt. 1st Class Mark Bell
200th Military Police Command 
(20 - December - 2012)

Khalil Quarles, 10, raises his right hand during his honorary enlistment into the Army Reserve as his father, Damon, watches the ceremony held in Baltimore, Md. Maj. Gen Sanford Holman, 200th Military Police Command’s commanding general read the special Oath of Enlistment for Quarles who suffers from a rare form of cancer that affects less than one percent of all people who have been diagnosed cancer.
Sgt. 1st Class Mark Bell
200th Military Police Command 
(20 - December - 2012)

Army Reserve captains John Barbee and Sherman Pittman assist Khalil Quarles, 10, down the sidewalk outside his home during a surprise visit from members of the 200th Military Police Command and the Office of the Chief, Army Reserve.
Sgt. 1st Class Mark Bell
200th Military Police Command (20 - December - 2012)


Dhananjay Parmar

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Nahin Hai Yaad

Dhananjay Parmar

Hi friend’s
This is just poem and shayari,


Uss ki majbori ka mujh ko ehsas bahot hai
Judai ki aziyat me bhi lutaf bahot hai

Koshish bahot ki k mata sakon un ko
Tere mere bech phir bhi fasala bahot hai

Zarori nahin hai kisi talwar se zeer karne ki
Mere dushman ki haar k lie meri jeet hi bahot hai

Chor dia hath uss ka bus yahi keh kar
Teri har khoshi mujh ko anmol bahot hai

Na samajh yon k kahen mur jaen ge tere Bin
Tere intazar k lie meri sans bahot hai

Hath nahin phelata abb kahen bhi ja k
Nawazne k lie aik hi zaat bahot hai

Karta hon bus me hi tujh ko mohabbat
To bhi mujh ko chahe ye hasrat bahot hai

Zarori nahin hai kisi ko noha sunane ki
Annso girane k lie meri dastan hi bahot hai

Chor de abb har kisi ka hath thamana
Tujhe chahne k lie HUSSNAIN bahot hai

Yakeen aa gea hai HUSSNAIN abb hum ko bhi
Mohabbat k raste par chalana dushwar bahot hai



Sar-e-mehfil eman ka soda hote hoe daikha
Insan ko hewan bante hoe daikha

Nahin hai yaad abb hum ko kahen bhi khof-e-Khoda
Jhooti gawahi jab Quran par laite hoe daikha

Abb Khoda ! kia uss se bhi bari gumrahi hogi
Zor-e-bazo se bint-e-Hawa ko nachate hoe daikha

Jo orakh rakhate hain labada parheez gari ka
Raton ko me-khane se inhain nikalte hoe daikha

Agar sunta hai to hi har kisi ki dua ko
Kion phir logon ko aoron se mangate hoe daikha hai

HUSSNAIN aoqat kia hai teri uss zaat k age
Uss dar pe to shehan-shahon ko jhokate daikha hai




Dhananjay Parmar

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Humanitarian Assistance

Dhananjay Parmar

Hi friend’s
This is Extreme World Info,



Navy and Marines bridge Haitian divide from government

Haitian volunteers help unload supplies from a U.S. Army landing craft at a Haitian Coast Guard station in Carrefour, Haiti, Jan. 19. Photo by Cpl. Bobbie Curtis ( February 19, 2010 )

Since the beginning of Operation Unified Response, one of the primary missions of the Navy and Marine Corps civil affairs teams attached to the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit and the Bataan Amphibious Ready Group is to unite the people and governments of earthquake menaced Haiti together with non-governmental organizations and international aid workers.

Children from Carrefour, Haiti, gather as local leaders conduct a humanitarian aid distribution in the city, Feb. 18. The Marines and sailors of the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit transferred primary responsibility for humanitarian aid distribution to the local and national Haitian government throughout the month of February. Photo by Cpl. Bobbie Curtis ( February 19, 2010 )

Using a facility called a civil military operations center, Marines from 4th Civil Affairs Group, attached to the 22nd MEU and sailors from Maritime Civil Affairs Team 207, worked diligently to bring all these factors together to help organize a combined local and international effort to stabilize the Caribbean nation.

“The mission of the CMOC was to act as a bridge between the people and the local government,” said Staff Sgt. Jerrick D. Croston, a civil affairs team chief with 4th CAG and the 22nd MEU.
The CMOC is located in the town of Carrefour, just outside the nation’s capital city of Port-au-Prince, on Landing Zone Argonaut, a small encampment operated by the Marines and sailors of Battalion Landing Team, 3rd Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, 22nd MEU.
At the facility, civil affairs personnel met with town leaders and NGO officials to plan distributions and combined operations for the people of the local area.
“As local Haitians and organizations had needs, they brought them up to the CMOC,” Croston, a Philadelphia native, continued. “The major achievement of the CMOC was getting the mayors [of Carrefour] and the local government to work with the community leaders of Carrefour.”
Croston explained that many of the one million strong population of Carrefour have strong loyalty to a few key leaders in the community, who are mostly pastors from local religious organizations.
“After the earthquake people looked to them,” he added. “So we brought the local leaders and the local government together.”
Bringing the local leaders and their followers together with the Haitian government and several NGOs, the Marines and sailors of the CMOC streamlined the aid process for the people of Carrefour, transferring the primary role of providing humanitarian aid, from the U.S. Military to the Haitian local and national governments.
The civil affairs personnel conducted the operation in multiple-steps, beginning with an assessment phase where the Marines and sailors found out what problems were occurring in the area. Once problems were identified, the personnel worked with Haitian leaders and NGOs to solve the issues.
“At this point we have transitioned the role of the CMOC to the Haitian government and are back in the assessment phase,” Croston explained. “We are making sure the needs are being taken care of.”


Chief Petty Officer Charlotte Reijo, a team leader with Maritime Civil Affairs Team 207, meets with children from Carrefour, Haiti, Jan. 18. Sailors with MCAT-207 and Marine civil affairs specialists with the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit conduct operations from a Civil Military Operations Center in Carrefour, aimed at uniting the people of Haiti and the Haitian Government with non-governmental organizations to transfer primary humanitarian aid responsibilities in the area from the U.S. to the local government. Photo by Cpl. Bobbie Curtis ( February 19, 2010 )


Captain Rebecca A. Popleiski, a civil affairs team leader with 4th CAG and the 22nd MEU, said the group of civil affairs specialists have come a long way in the month they have worked in Haiti.
The Marines began their operations in the towns of Petite Goave, Grand Goave and Leogone before moving to Carrefour. Those three areas had less involvement with community leaders and worked more specifically with NGOs, where as the Carrefour area of operations had a lot more grass-roots involvement, she explained.
“When we pull out of here, all the cities are going to be able to stand on their own,” Popleiski, a Washington D.C. native, explained. “Whether that’s local government or national government … they have stepped up and taken charge.”
With the aid of the Navy-Marine Corps civil affairs teams from the 22nd MEU and Bataan Amphibious Ready Group, the government of Haiti has taken primary responsibility for humanitarian aid distributions in the Carrefour area. Marines and sailors from the 22nd MEU have become a supplementary force as the Haitian Coast Guard and international NGOs take over.


This Story by : Cpl. Bobbie Curtis
Thank you : Cpl. Bobbie Curtis




Dhananjay Parmar

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Humanitarian Assistance

Dhananjay Parmar

Hi friend’s
This is Extreme World Info,

Physician, Lt. Jennifer Eng-Kulawy checks the health of a local child during a medical civic action project (MEDCAP) in Samar, Philippines in support of Pacific Partnership 2012, 22 June. While in the Philippines a total of six MEDCAPs are scheduled to take place and provide a variety of medical, dental and optometry patient centered care. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Clay M. Whaley, (Wednesday, July 11th, 2012)

Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy sails through the remote islands to the Northeast of North Sulawesi, Indonesia, on June 12.The Mercy had just left Sangihe i, one of several islands in North Sulawesi that Pacific Partnership 2012 visited. Photo by Kristopher Radder, (Monday, June 18th, 2012)

A Cambodian child plays jump rope with a Sailor from the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy during a Pacific Partnership 2010 community service event at the Goodwill School. Mercy is deployed as part of Pacific Partnership 2010, the fifth in a series of annual U.S. Pacific Fleet humanitarian and civic assistance endeavors to strengthen regional partnerships. Photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Jonathan Husman, (Saturday, June 19th, 2010)

Mannhu Bui, a dental hygienist from the Pre-Dental Society at the University of California, San Diego, embarked aboard the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy, gives a piggy-back ride to a Cambodian child during a Pacific Partnership 2010 community service event at the Goodwill School. Photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Jonathan Husman, (Saturday, June 19th, 2010)

Sailors from the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy play with children during a Pacific Partnership 2010 community service event at the Goodwill School. Mercy is deployed as part of Pacific Partnership 2010, the fifth in a series of annual U.S. Pacific Fleet humanitarian and civic assistance endeavors to strengthen regional partnerships. Photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Jonathan Husman, (Saturday, June 19th, 2010)

Lt. Cmdr. Kathleen M. O’mara, assigned to the pediatrics ward, conducts a medical check-up on an 8-month old Timorese patient aboard the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy (T-AH 19). Mercy is anchored off the coast of East Timor supporting the Pacific Partnership 2008 mission. acific Partnership is a four-month deployment by Mercy to assist the governments of participating nations with medical, dental and construction civic assistance programs. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class A. Nick De La Cruz, (Monday, July 21st, 2008)

Chae Kim, a University of California-San Diego Pre-Dental Society sophomore student, shares a moment with a young Timorese patient in the pediatrics ward aboard the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy (T-AH 19). Kim is one of 40 students volunteering during their summer break to support Pacific Partnership 2008., (Monday, July 21st, 2008)

Cmdr. Rosemarie Tan weighs a patient at a Pacific Partnership medical civic action program at Nularn 1 Elementary School. Pacific Partnership is a four-month deployment by the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy (T-AH-19) to assist the governments of participating nations with medical, dental and construction civic assistance programs. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Joshua Martin, (Monday, July 21st, 2008)

PHILIPPINES (June 6, 2008) Capt. Kathy Goldberg, a physical therapist aboard the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Mercy (T-AH 19), assists Romeo Bintoy with taking his first steps in eight years after having corrective plastic surgery. Pacific Partnership program assists the government of the Philippines in providing local communities with medical, dental and engineering civic action programs providing focused humanitarian assistance. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Joseph Seavey, (Tuesday, June 10th, 2008)


Dhananjay Parmar