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Book review: Ten Greatest Muslim Scientists – Newspaper
Did you know that, from flying from one place to another in an airplane to solving mathematical problems or creating music, everything we do today is due to a bunch of Muslim scientists who took the first step. In Ten Great Muslim Scientists, you get to meet these great people who are directly responsible for most of the things we love to do in this modern day and age.
Translated from ‘10 Ilmuwan Muslim Terhebat’, this heavily illustrated book introduces readers to those amazing Muslim scientists who invented machines and discovered stuff that still impacts our lives today. If you like to marvel at flying machines, you have Abbas bin Firnas (810 – 887 AD) to thank for creating the first successful flying device. If you are into telescopes and microscopes, you should thank Ibn Al-Haytham (965 – 1039 AD), known as the Father of Modern Optics.
A few more scientists, such as Al-Zahrawi (936 — 1013 AD) and Ibn Sina (980 — 1037 AD), also appear on these pages and are mentioned as the Father of Surgery and the Father of Modern Medicine, respectively.
Just imagine a life without doctors and medicine, and you will realise how important their contributions are. If you don’t know that the ultimate reference book for medical experts was penned by Al-Baitar (1197 — 1248 AD) or that Algebra was developed by Al-Khwarzami (780 – 850 AD), then you are in for a treat.
If without Al-Beruni (973 – 1048 AD) space travel wouldn’t have been possible today, then without Al-Idrisi (1100 – 1165 AD) travelling around the world would have been a task, because it was he who created the first world map.
Then there is Ibn Ismail Al-Jazari (1136 – 1206 AD), whose greatest invention was a hydraulic machine, aka a robot. And lastly, there is a page dedicated to Ishaq Al-Mawsili (767 – 850 AD), who created solmisation, the scale of do-re-me-fa-sol-la-si-do, which made composing music simpler.
Each scientist in this book speaks directly to the readers, which is the best way to capture their attention. He not only introduces himself, but also explains the reasons that led them to their invention or discovery.
Accompanying these pages are activities to lighten the mood and even involve your friends, who might also get to learn something they didn’t know.
So the next time you fly in a plane, consult a doctor or sing a song, think of the great Muslim scientists who made your life easier.
Published in Dawn, Young World, March 14th, 2026
Magazines
STORY TIME: POWERED BY CAFFEINE – Newspaper
Cafés have bloomed on every other corner of the city and are considered small, warm islands of light where the youth gather almost all day, their eyes half open and hands gripping coffee cups like lifelines.
And Talha was one of them.
At 18, he believed that his day couldn’t start until the first sip of coffee slid down his throat — bitter, hot and reassuring.
He didn’t remember when this routine started, but it was sometime during the exam season, when late nights and early mornings were unavoidable. That was when he brewed his first cup and stayed up late studying. As a result, good grades were earned, along with trust in coffee. One cup became two, and two became three, and soon it was a ritual, a sign of productivity and proof that he was hustling.
“Sleep is for later,” his classmates would joke, posting pictures of foamy lattes and dark mugs on their social media, with captions like “Powered by caffeine.” Cafés had become their second classrooms, places to study, complain, dream and, of course, scroll endlessly. They were places where tiredness looked fashionable and stress felt productive.
Talha’s fourth cup came by the evening. And by then, his hands trembled as he wrote notes he didn’t remember. His heart thudded and his thoughts jumped. Talha felt exhausted, but unable to rest. Nights stretched longer and sleep grew lighter. Yet the answer was the same in the morning. Another cup of coffee.
One evening, as Talha was waiting for his usual order, he saw an old man sitting alone, sipping his small cup of black coffee with no rush or haste.
“You drink a lot,” the old man said, nodding towards Talha’s stack of cups.
“Yeah, it keeps me going,” Talha replied. He felt a little guilty. But why? He didn’t know. Talha knew that he drank quite a lot of coffee, but it had now become a habit and he couldn’t resist it.
“Coffee is meant to wake you up, not keep you going. That’s on you, young man!”
The words stayed. That night, Talha took his coffee and looked at it for some time. He remembered the words and asked the mug, “Can I live without you?”
“Why am I so dependent on coffee… why? What if I don’t drink it and see what happens?” he muttered to himself. He put down the mug and lay down on his bed, still thinking about the craving he was having.
After a lot of tossing and turning, he finally slept. In the morning, he had breakfast and took just one cup of coffee. For the rest of the day, he resisted the urge.
He kept this routine for a week, and after that, he felt different, really different. He felt energetic and hungry. He ate properly and realised he was sleeping on time and waking up fresh, not tired.
Talha didn’t quit drinking coffee instantly; instead, he stopped letting it control him.
Published in Dawn, Young World, March 14th, 2026
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