Magazines
FICTION: IMAGINARY HOMELANDS
The Coin
By Yasmin Zaher
Catapult
ISBN: 978-1646222100
240pp.
Yasmin Zaher is a Palestinian author and her debut novel, The Coin, was awarded the Dylan Thomas Prize 2025. The book is unique in its premise, as it explores themes of identity and homeland.
Zaher’s unnamed narrator is Palestinian, lives in New York, has impeccable taste and meticulous hygiene. She is wealthy but has limited access to her wealth. Her homeland exists exceedingly in her imagination, as she struggles to thrive in America.
She is also a teacher working at a school for underprivileged boys. It is here that she feels the most in control. Her unconventional teaching methods resonate with the seventh graders, as they feel their voices matter the most within the four walls of their classroom.
Throughout the book there is a symbiotic relationship between the narrator and her students — “They were on the margins, and I understand the drive to reclaim American democracy for all, but I think it’s an afterthought.” She is acutely aware of their circumstances and looks beyond their shortcomings, focusing on their intellect and strengths that might not be visible at first glance but which are still there.
The winner of the Dylan Thomas Prize 2025 is a debut novel by a Palestinian author about the complexities that lie at the heart of identity politics and the struggle to reclaim oneself
In turn, the students provide her a semblance of control and stability that she struggles for outside the classroom. They value her presence in their lives and provide meaning to her daily routine. For me, this was one of the most endearing parts of this book.
The Coin reads at a frenetic pace. Like a kaleidoscope, it flits between the various aspects of the narrator’s identity, going back and forth as she grapples with transactional relationships outside of her work. She finds herself searching for something throughout the book. As a reader you can’t place your finger on it. Neither can she. This is the strength of Zaher’s writing, she keeps her reader at par with the narrator, so we go through the motions with her.
She is a Palestinian living in New York trying to reconcile the fractures that exist within her identity. Zaher writes, “I used to think that if people saw the real face of wickedness, not the mask, they would revolt… When Netanyahu and Trump were elected, I thought those were good days, because the truth had come to light. But it seemed not only that the truth was ugly, but also that ugly was beautiful. The people adore the monster, the rich want to look poor.”
It is here you realise that, perhaps, what the narrator is looking for in her relationships and daily interactions is a sense of homeland. In a deeply profound way, Zaher highlights how important it is to have a strong sense of identity and belonging. The narrator finds making connections a tedious business, even though she tries her best but, eventually, every relationship she has reaches a point where her need to belong remains unfulfilled.
The Coin is a study in resistance. One of the most defining features of Zaher’s protagonist is her militant obsession with hygiene, which stems from a childhood trauma when she accidentally swallowed a shekel that she believes is still lodged somewhere in her body. This fixation on an internal impurity is what drives her to scrub, sanitise and control her external world with a ferocity that contributes in alienating her from those around her.
The Coin reads at a frenetic pace. Like a kaleidoscope, it flits between the various aspects of the narrator’s identity, going back and forth as she grapples with transactional relationships outside of her work. She finds herself searching for something throughout the book. As a reader you can’t place your finger on it. Neither can she. This is the strength of Zaher’s writing, she keeps her reader at par with the narrator, so we go through the motions with her.
This struggle for bodily autonomy also puts her at odds with the society that she is a part of. Despite her wealth and expensive taste, she remains an outsider as a stateless Palestinian in America. Her involvement in a Birkin bag pyramid scheme further isolates her. Her rebellion is complex and sheds light on rampant American consumerism and casual racism.
Zaher’s writing is witty, chaotic and stylish, as it compels the reader to be pulled into the narrator’s increasingly unhinged stream of consciousness. The reasons for her bizarre behaviour slowly become easier to understand as you become privy to her every thought and justification.
In the landscape of contemporary writing, Zaher’s novel will remind the reader of Han Kang’s The Vegetarian, in which the protagonist asserts herself through a singular obsessive act that becomes an external manifestation of rebellion against societal norms that seek to imprison. Both Yasmin Zaher and Han Kang explore the harrowing consequences of seeking absolute control over one’s own body in societies that demand conformity, arriving at a similar chilling conclusion: that the struggle for autonomy in a repressive world can lead to alienation from the self and society.
Zaher has a profound control over language. She writes with devastating certainty: “Maybe pretence was all there was. Fashion is pretence, education is pretence, personality, too, is a form of internalised pretence. I wondered what my true essence would be, if I were solitary, in nature, untamed and unconditioned.”
The Coin is a novel that Yasmin Zaher identifies with complexities that lie at the heart of identity politics and the struggle to reclaim oneself. Zaher’s use of tightly controlled yet vivid imagery allows an exploration into themes of privilege, suffering and statelessness. There is no excessive moralising or conclusion, while the novel traces the unravelling of Zaher’s protagonist.
Yasmin Zaher’s writing is intimate and focuses on the sensory nature and physicality of language to convey her narrator’s escalating obsession. The Coin will stay with the reader, for better or for worse, much like life. It is an amalgamation of chaos and calm, where a lot happens over the course of time but, at the same time, nothing happens at all.
The reviewer is a freelance writer with a background in law and literature.
X: @ShehryarSahar
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, March 1st, 2026
Magazines
EXHIBITION: SUBVERTING THE GAZE – Newspaper
Farazeh Syed’s exhibition ‘All the Women in Me’ at Karachi’s Canvas Gallery prosecutes the colonial archive: its camera, its titles, its voracious gaze, while nurturing — patiently and insistently — the lives of women crushed by that record.
The exhibition brings together paintings on canvas and wasli that rework found colonial photographs of South Asian women, set in conversation with intimate personal images drawn from the artist’s familial past. Syed uses photographs of her legendary grandmother, the singer Malika Pukhraj, who spent her later years in Lahore. Syed spent several formative years closely attached to her and says that the photographs “represent a South Asian woman from the same era who was fierce and formidable in her strength and vulnerable and fallible in her humanness. They, thus, serve as a contrast to the denial of individuality, autonomy and agency in the colonial images.”
Syed reads violence in these images — violence through detached reflection, through distortion and erasure, through a gaze that spoke for women while denying them voice. In her paintings, that violence is neither sensationalised nor aestheticised — it is held in tension with a repaired register.
The works on wasli are the most evident attempt to undo this damage. By reimagining it through a South Asian female gaze, Syed loosens the archival grip that once fixed these women in place. Faces gain expression rather than vacancy and bodies shed their performative submission. The women are no longer captives to a controlling eye but conversers within a visual language that recognises them as individuals.
Farazeh Syed’s recent exhibition takes visual documentation of South Asian women by British colonialists and upends their ways of looking
Syed’s long engagement with the female body — shaped by years of rigorous training under the artist Iqbal Hussain who passed away recently, and informed by her immersion in music — rolls here with quiet confidence. The bodies in ‘All the Women in Me’ are not arranged to please. They occupy space with weight and purpose. Even when seated or motionless, they seem internally active, absorbed in private thought or reminiscence. The women are not there to be seen, they are there to be.
Colour and rhythm do much of the work. Flora and fauna appear as carriers of memory. These elements recall the orchards and animals of her grandmother’s Lahore home, and they also function symbolically, suggesting growth, interdependence and the non-human witnesses to women’s lives that archives ignore. While this exhibition is unmistakably political, the paintings do not lecture. The exhibition trusts viewers to feel their way into its arguments, to recognise the unease of the colonial image and the relief of its undoing.
Syed’s interdisciplinary practice, her scholarship, her teaching, her deep relationship to music, all quietly underwrite the exhibition. One feels the discipline of years spent drawing the human form, the patience of research and the lyricism borrowed from raga and rhythm. I imagine that the “me” of the title is not autobiographical but instead expands outwards, encompassing mothers and daughters, known women and unnamed ones, those photographed and those who escaped the lens.
In a wasli painting derived from a colonial ethnographic photograph of a seated woman, the artist pares the scene down to its essentials. The Victorian paraphernalia that once framed the subject, such as long curtains, furniture, architectural prompts, has been stripped away. What remains is the woman, rendered with a gravity that counterattacks submission. Her eyes no longer slip past the viewer in rehearsed vacancy and instead hold a quiet, inward resolve.
The canvases based on photographs of Syed’s grandmother operate as a different chronicle altogether. Her figure fills the frames with unrepentant presence. The brushwork is emphatic but not forceful. Here, distinctiveness emphasises itself through various specifics: the tilt of the head, the compactness of the torso, the unapologetic weight of age and experience. This is not a metaphorical woman but a person whose authority derives from having lived.
Across the exhibition, moments like these accrue importance. The women are no longer frozen in time and are instead allowed to exist within it. In doing so, Syed offers more than a critique of the archive. She models an alternative archival practice that is grounded in empathy, composition and the determination that women’s bodies are not sites of display, but storehouses of lived knowledge.
‘All the Women in Me’ was on display at Canvas Gallery, Karachi from January 20-29, 2026
Rumana Husain is a writer, artist and educator. She is the author of two coffee-table books on Karachi, and has authored and illustrated 90 children’s books
Published in Dawn, EOS, March 1st, 2026
Magazines
PROFILE: THE RESTLESS ENTREPRENEUR
One thing is certain: Umair Masoom knows how to spot a trend early. He is also not averse to risk; some would say he courts it.
The instinct seems rooted in a curious restlessness that his outward calm does not betray. The same restlessness carried him through 12 jobs in as many years; it also secured him $3 million in seed funding within two weeks of his pitch.
That idea, now myco, is a Web3 streaming platform where users can co-own content. By 2024, the company was valued at $80 million, following a $10 million Series A round. It has also secured multi-million dollar deals for territorial streaming rights to ICC events and the English Premier League in Pakistan.
Twelve jobs, one failed start-up and a move to Dubai later, Umair Masoom is betting Pakistan’s streaming future on myco — and on his own inability to sit still
LEARNING THE HUSTLE
Born and raised in the measured quiet of Islamabad, Masoom moved with his family to frenetic Karachi in 2003. After missing the admission deadline for his first-choice university, he enrolled at the College of Business Management (CBM, now the Institute of Business Management). He scored a 4.0 GPA in his first semester and remained a high achiever throughout his four-year degree. He was also on the college football team.
In his fourth semester, Umair joined an automotive industry magazine, visiting showrooms and even mechanic workshops to secure advertisements. By graduation in 2007, he had spent 18 months at the ARY Group. “Juggling classes with work while managing grades was very tough,” he recalls. “But at the end of it, I was interviewing people, including my batchmates, as they applied for jobs.”
This practical experience, says Umair, not only gave him an edge over his peers but also taught him the art of the hustle.
NO STRAIGHT LINES
Masoom completed his MBA over weekends while working for marketing and sales at major TV channels. “But there was no digital media at that time, only broadcast, so it became boring,” he tells Eos.
He spent stints in banking and broadcasting across nearly a decade, moving between institutions including Faysal Bank, PTV, and Burj Bank. “It wasn’t the traditional career trajectory,” Masoom acknowledges, possible only because his former employers were keen to regain his services.
In 2017, he launched his first start-up idea, Cricket Junooni, ahead of the Pakistan Super League. It included fan packages to travel with teams and dine and interact with players. It went belly up within eight months. “I learned a lot from the failure. I realised it’s not just about a great idea,” he says. “There were mistakes — financial ones, structural issues and errors in hiring the team…”
EVERYTHING IN PLACE
At the end of 2019, he received a call from his former boss at Burj Bank, Ahmed Khizar Khan, who was now with the Gargash Group — a major conglomerate in the United Arab Emirates. The head of that group had also served on the board of Burj Bank and was acquainted with Masoom.
Khan offered Masoom a marketing role at Daman Services, the group’s financial services arm. This was a pivotal moment, reveals Umair, as he was professionally successful and well-known in the local broadcasting industry, with key relationships in place.
Masoom’s two siblings were already in the UAE. His mother wanted her three children to be in the same city, especially after the passing of Masoom’s father — venerated broadcast journalist Masoom Usmani — in 2017.
His move to Dubai was followed by the coronavirus, but he remained a stellar performer and was soon elevated to the position of chief marketing officer for the entire group. “I was making great money, driving the best car, and everything seemed ideal, but then the restlessness reared its head,” he says.
ALL IN
During this time, Masoom kept a keen eye on the evolution of media platforms, particularly over-the-top (OTT) platforms in India and Turkey. “I saw a huge opportunity to build a large-scale video streaming platform, which I know will be the cable-cord cutter,” he says. “TV consumption is shifting from cable to OTT,” he adds.
Masoom started discussing the idea with colleagues and friends, including Sumair Rizvi — his college friend and a leader in the local advertising industry. They focused on the intersection of technology, media and e-commerce, and also launched a token for content creators.
The initial success convinced Masoom to go all in. In December 2023, he shared his plans with his employers. To his surprise, they decided to back him. But the investment also brought with it the pressure of delivering results, says Masoom. “We had to repay their trust.”
It resulted in extreme highs and major lows, including days when deals fell through or investors backtracked. “For instance, weeks after cracking the biggest deal of your career, you find out you don’t even have enough money for salaries,” says Umair.
Meanwhile, with tokenisation still awaiting regulatory approval in the UAE — Masoom expects it to happen over the next two to five years — myco had to pivot. Currently, myco is focusing on the freemium model, blending SVOD (subscription video on demand) and AVOD (ad-supported video on demand); some content is free with ads, while premium content is ad-free behind a paywall.
Umair believes that such a service will be Pakistan’s next unicorn and myco could lead the way. “But it will be an aggregation and consolidation of multiple entities, believing in the vision of having a billion-dollar plus video streaming entity,” he says. “That’s the Pakistani vision.”
At the same time, myco is building audiences in the MENA region, having offices in Egypt and UAE along with penetration across the globe. Their Pakistan team has grown to 120 people from a handful three years ago. In January, it moved the team to their new office in a state-of-the-art building.
BUILDING THE MOAT
When I met Masoom on Christmas day, he told me that myco had 40 million registered users and over 10 million active users monthly — a number set to rise during the ongoing ICC T20 World Cup, for which myco has exclusive Pakistan rights.
At the same time, it has mastered the art of creating synergy with their competitors, such as the Tamasha app, convincing them on collective bids for streaming rights, bringing down their individual costs and averting pricey bidding wars. Ad revenue is similarly divided, with the same ads running across platforms.
Some major challenges remain, adds Masoom, such as piracy, where local cable providers illegally show channels airing EPL matches or ICC events. “We pay millions of dollars for a marquee asset, while cable operators land an illegal feed and distribute it, he says, adding that the regulator, Pemra, does support them from time to time. This explains why popular international sports channels go missing from local cable during high-profile events.
THE NEXT BET
Masoom’s days remain hectic — calls, investor updates for backers in Silicon Valley and New York, and projects spanning multiple countries — but he has made deliberate room for what he once neglected.
Mornings begin with his seven-month-old. An hour goes to the gym. He has elevated five team members to co-founder status and is actively stepping back from the micromanagement that defined his earlier years.
The restlessness, though, hasn’t gone anywhere. He is already an angel investor in a number of new start-ups, and a new e-commerce venture he is co-founder in, BuyPass, has secured its first funding. For someone who once cycled through 12 jobs before finding his footing, that probably isn’t surprising.
“Keep exploring,” he says. “The right idea reveals itself along the way.”
The writer is a member of staff.
X: @hydada83
Published in Dawn, EOS, March 1st, 2026
Magazines
AQUASPORTS: FROM ZERO TO HERO – Newspaper
“We were a bunch of students picnicking at [Karachi’s coastal] Mubarak Village. We spent the entire day there trying to catch fish by lowering a string into the water from the rocks, but we caught nothing. By evening, we were not just empty-handed and hungry but sunburnt as well.” Deep sea freediver and spearfishing instructor Akif Raj laughs at the memory from 20 years ago. “What a waste of time and effort it was.”
Akif found himself watching a freediving video on YouTube one day. He says he had always felt a pull towards adventure sports. “I did not play cricket or football, neither did I ride bicycles as a kid. I did think about scuba diving but its equipment was too expensive. But the YouTube video got me thinking. I realised that one doesn’t need any equipment except for a spear, maybe. I built a spear from an aluminium rod for myself,” he says.
“I knew swimming already and, after watching more freediving videos on Youtube, I started practising on my own. Honestly, it feels like you are floating in space with zero gravity when you are under water. That spear I had built came in handy after two years, when I managed to hunt my first fish, a 200g yellowfin bream.”
Akif waxes on about his first catch. “It wasn’t easy, as it required going very near the prey,” he says. “I was so proud of my accomplishment that I did not let anyone touch my catch after bringing it home, though my mother wanted to cook it. I kept it in the freezer, so I could take it out and admire it whenever I wanted. I did that often until, one day, when a cat ran off with my prized possession.” He laughs.
Pakistan’s first deep sea freediver and spearfishing instructor learnt his trade from YouTube videos. But he’s now trained thousands of others and dreams of representing the country in international competitions
Looking to improve on his weaponry, Akif frequented the junk and scrap market in Karachi’s Shershah, where he was lucky to come across an underwater gun. “But it needed repairs. The stretchable rubber part in it, which created its slingshot effect, broke after only one use. I had to mend it somehow. I tried to replace the part using the air bladder inside a football and rubber sheets, but it was not working. Then, one day, while lending support to a friend whose uncle was on his deathbed in a hospital, I found exactly what I was looking for in the tubing of a blood pressure checking device. I wished the uncle well and left in a hurry to rush to the medical supply shops, where I asked for the tubing,” he says.
The repairs to the gun helped Akif catch many fish underwater. But while he would bring all his catch home with him, Akif wouldn’t let anyone cook the fish. “They were too beautiful to eat,” he explains wistfully.
Meanwhile, his mother was getting very sick and tired of all the fish. “It came to this that, when I returned home, she would only let me inside if I were empty-handed. If I came with a catch, she would tell me to go back to where I found it,” he chuckles.
“Her attitude forced me to sell my catches. The first time I sold a fish I had hunted, I sold it for nine thousand rupees. It was good money, 17 to 18 years ago,” he shares. It gave Akif encouragement to hunt more fish and sell them. Once, he didn’t come home for two days because he was hunting for fish. That is how he made Rs30,000 by selling those two days’ catch.
More money started coming in this way, enabling him to improve on his equipment. First, he ordered for himself a pair of swim fins from Lebanon. Later, he was approached by a brand, Triton, from Ukraine. They had heard about him and offered him sponsored equipment, which included better diving gear and hunting equipment.
“I also started educating people about freediving through social media. It also got me more fame and more sponsors. I am a brand ambassador for seven companies now that produce high-quality gear for freediving and spearfishing, besides being their freediving product tester,” he tells me.
A few years ago, Akif also thought of teaching others what he had taught himself. “I wish swimming was made compulsory in our schools,” he says. Starting by teaching his friends for free, he started taking on other students who paid him fees for the classes.
“Today, I have over 2,500 students,” he beams with pride. “I call my course, in which I teach my students to dive as deep as 30 to 40 feet, ‘Zero to Hero’.”
The biggest issue faced by Akif while teaching freediving is getting access to swimming pools. His course spans only four to five days, for which he rents out the pools. The clubs where he conducts his courses want his students to acquire membership, however.
He says there are big international freediving championships taking place in the world all the time, in which he would like to compete. The 2025 CMAS World Championship Freediving Depth took place in Greece, where the top diver hunted a 7kg grouper. “And here we are hunting 30 to 40kg groupers all the time, thanks to Pakistan’s rich marine life,” he says, adding that Pakistani waters have 38 of the world’s best table fish.
Coming back to international freediving championships, he says that he has an invitation to participate in the next one but can’t because of our country’s lack of understanding about this sport.
“I emailed our sports minister to allow me to represent my country in international freediving competitions, but I was asked why I don’t dive with a ‘batli’. Yes, he called the diving oxygen cylinders ‘batli’! I tried explaining about freediving to him but he didn’t get it,” he says sadly.
He also informs me that neighbouring India has no freediver but he has trained so many here in Pakistan. Still, he admits, we have no female freediver till now. “That seat is vacant,” he smiles.
In the meanwhile, Akif keeps himself busy in his own freediving adventures. He says that freediving also promotes sustainable and selective fishing. “Otherwise our fishing practices, where our fishermen often use illegal mesh, catch the smaller fish or eggs too, which is devastating for marine life,” he says.
Akif shares an incident where he found a bottlenose dolphin calf tangled in such a net. “It was crying. I approached it with the intention of freeing it, and its mother came too. I swear, she looked like she was praying as she watched me cut away the net.
“It took me half an hour to release it but, in doing so, I gained the friendship of the dolphins. The mother, in particular, recognises my boat. Whenever I go out to sea, in the winter mostly, she comes. And she brings me her new babies, too, along with gifts. Once she brought me an empty cold drink bottle. At another time, she brought me a pink shopper,” he laughs.
The writer is a member of staff. X: @HasanShazia
Published in Dawn, EOS, March 1st, 2026
-
Entertainment1 week ago
Atiqa Odho’s Surprising Opinion on Aurat March
-
Tech2 weeks ago
Final Expands Line-Up Of Gaming Earphones By Launching Two New Models
-
Tech2 weeks ago
Samsung Promotes New Feature Ahead Of Galaxy S26 Ultra Launch
-
Today News2 weeks ago
عمران خان سے ملاقات ہوتی تو صرتحال اتنی سنجیدہ نہ ہوتی، بیرسٹر گوہر
-
Today News2 weeks ago
prime minister visit austria focus trade investment economic cooperation
-
Today News2 weeks ago
اسرائیل کی ویسٹ بینک پر قبضے کیلئے قانونی سازی، اقوام متحدہ کا سخت ردعمل سامنے آگیا
-
Tech6 days ago
Streamlining Operations and Minimizing OpEx with AI Agents
-
Today News2 weeks ago
پاکستان ٹیم کے دورہ بنگلادیش شیڈول سامنے آگیا