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Friday, July 30 2010
By Stephanie Castanie on Friday, July 30 2010, 12:35
M R . U M A R B E K P U L O D O V , T A J I K I S T A Ned from Handicap International on Vimeo.
© Chris Anderson
Monday, December 31 2007
By Patrizia Pompili on Monday, December 31 2007, 09:42
MONDAY 31 DECEMBER 2007. Umarbek Pulodov, Ban Advocate
Dear All,
On behalf of the whole HI team, please allow me to wish you good cheer during the Christmas and New Year season! May the oncoming year bring you and your favorite folks (that is, your near and dear ones) many achievements in life. I wish you all the deepest ocean of happiness, progress, prosperous business and lots and lots of money, and may success always attend you wherever you are and whatever you do!
Friday, November 2 2007
By patrizia pompili on Friday, November 2 2007, 16:13
Umarbek Pulodov, based on an interview in Belgrade, 4 October 2007
Nowadays I’m a student in third year English in Dushanbe. I like to study hard. I grew up in the village of Shul, in Rasht District, Tajikistan. The war began when I was six years old. The planes flew over our house for two or three weeks and nothing happened, so we began to think it was possible they weren’t going to do anything. That morning, some relatives came to our house to visit and the family was sitting around the table. I was just a little boy, and I was playing with my brothers and watching TV. When the cluster bombs fell I was sitting near the door. It seemed to me at that time like everything was exploding. Then all I could see was just my little one-year-old brother, he was crying, but there was no way I could reach him. While running out of the house I also passed my sister, but I was not able to help her, I felt as if I had lost myself, and so I ran straight out into the yard. At that moment I couldn’t even tell that my eyes had been injured, I couldn’t feel that at all, I could only see that my hand had been hurt. When I saw my hand, seeing all that blood, I fell to the ground in shock.