Maureen Lines

Maureen Patricia Lines (23 October 1937 – 17 March 2017), locally known as Bibi Dow of Kalash, was a British author, photographer, social worker and environmentalist who was known for her work on the Kalasha people.[2][3][4][5]

Maureen P. Lines
Born23 October 1937
Died17 March 2017
OccupationSocial worker
Environmentalist

Biography

Maureen Lines first visited Pakistan in 1980 and from then on spent her whole life in the preservation and promotion of Kalasha culture for which she was awarded the Tamgha-i-Imtiaz in 2008.[4][1] She was co-founder of the Hindu Kush Conservation Association with Nicholas Barrington, the then British High Commissioner to Pakistan.[6][7] She died in Peshawar at the age of 79 and was buried in the British cemetery.[1][8][4]

Books

She wrote the following books:[1]

  • Beyond the North-West Frontier: Travels in the Hindu Kush and Karakorams
  • Journey through Jalalabad
  • The Kalasha people of North-Western Pakistan
  • The Last Eden
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gollark: You don't actually need photonics, GTech™ has very high throughout sonic communication systems thanks to modern compression/FEC algorithms.
gollark: The first one, but with two layers of brackets for safety.
gollark: This probably maybe implies that the real bottleneck is human processing.
gollark: Interestingly enough, despite different languages having a different syllable rate and information per syllable, they apparently all have about the same information transfer per second.

References


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