Arshad zakaria biography of williams
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Henrik Zetterberg
Wietse A. Wiels, Julie E. Oomens, Sebastiaan Engelborghs, Chris Baeken, Christine A. F. von Arnim, Merce Boada, Mira Didic, Bruno Dubois, Tormod Fladby, Wiesje M. van der Flier, Giovanni B. Meyer, Elisabeth N. Reiman, Juha O. Rinne, Karen M. Rodrigue, Pascual Sanchez-Juan, Isabel Santana, Marie Sarazin, Nikolaos Scarmeas, Ingmar Skoog, Peter J. Snyder, Reisa A. Sperling, Sylvia Villeneuve, Anders Wallin, Jens Wiltfang, Henrik Zetterberg, Rik Ossenkoppele, Frans R. J. Verhey, Stephanie J. B. Vos, Pieter Jelle Visser, Willemijn J. Jansen
JAMA PSYCHIATRY - 2025
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Fareed Zakaria's Post
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It was December 2001. I was at Dr Rafiq Zakaria’s beautiful, book-lined study at Cuffe Parade house in South Mumbai. In that spacious room Allama Iqbal vied for space with William Wordsworth and Mirza Ghalib sat alongside Shakespeare. World religions and their prophets and pundits were there in plenty. So were heroes and heroines of India’s freedom struggle. Present also were a few villains amidst a pantheon of popular leaders. Muhammad Ali Jinnah could not have been absent. He was there too.
In fact, Jinnah those days was in the intellectual air on both sides of the Indo-Pak border. The Outlook magazine had sent Dr Rafiq Zakaria’s book on Jinnah ‘The Man Who Divided India’ to noted Pakistani journalist Najam Sethi for review and he had panned the book. In the review Sethi had also suggested that Dr Zakaria should have heeded advice of his wife Fatma Zakaria who had tried to stop him from wiring the book, suggesting, “I think you should leave Jinnah alone for a while.” Dr Zakaria had written a rejoinder to Sethi’s piece and explained that he could not help but write about a man responsible for not just dividing India but breaking the social cohesion of the subcontinent Muslims. First, Muslims were divided between two countries–India and Pakistan. Subsequently, a part of Pa