By Syed Shams Uddin Based on our journey on May 11, 2025, from Dublin, California, toward San Francisco—where we passed Caldecott Tunnel but had to return before reaching the Golden Gate Bridge—I’ll highlight the notable tourist spots, lakes, bridges, and other landmarks along our route that are worth mentioning. 🔶 1. Caldecott Tunnel Location: Connects Orinda and Oakland via State Route 24. Significance: This is a key passage through the Berkeley Hills, easing travel between the East Bay and Oakland. It has four bores, with the newest completed in 2013. Experience: It marks a transition from the more suburban landscapes of Contra Costa County into the urban East Bay. 🔶 2. Lake Temescal Location: Just west of the Caldecott Tunnel in Oakland. Significance: A historic reservoir and now a scenic urban lake and park, ideal for picnics, fishing, and walking trails. Noteworthy: One of the first man-made lakes in the East Bay, with trails offering views of Oakland's hills. 🔶 3...
By Syed Shams Uddin Burushaski: The Mysterious Language That Defies Time and Classification In an era where languages vanish at an alarming rate—some disappearing without leaving behind a single speaker—Burushaski stands as a linguistic marvel, a living monument to endurance, mystery, and cultural pride. Spoken in the lofty valleys of Hunza, Nagar, and parts of Yasin in Gilgit-Baltistan, and by a proud tiny diaspora in Indian-occupied Kashmir, Burushaski is one of the world’s most fascinating and least understood languages. What sets Burushaski apart is its classification as a language isolate. This means it has no known linguistic relatives—neither in the neighboring regions nor across the broader linguistic families of Asia or Europe. While most languages of South and Central Asia fall under well-mapped families like Indo-European, Turkic, or Sino-Tibetan, Burushaski appears to have emerged from a linguistic lineage entirely its own, unconnected to any other tongue on Earth. Fo...