8 October 2005 | Zalzlay ki Dard Naak Dastaan | 10 Talib E ilm Shaheed حافظ عمر ندیم کی زبانی قیامت خیز منظر
8 October 2005 | Zalzlay ki Dard Naak Dastaan | 10 Talib E ilm Shaheed حافظ عمر ندیم کی زبانی
قیامت خیز منظر
Arang kel | Neelum Valley Kashmir | Madrse Mein Aag lgne ka Afsos nak waqia | وادی نیلم میں آگ
Arang kel | Neelum Valley Kashmir | Madrse Mein Aag lgne ka Afsos nak waqia
دارالعلوم رحمانیہ اڑنگ کیل وادی نیلم آزاد کشمیر میں آگ لگنے کا دالخراش واقعہ
قرآن مجید،درسی کتب اور تمام سامان جل کر راکھ کا ڈھیر بن گیا۔
#دارالعلوم رحمانیہ اڑنگ کیل#
Neelum Valley Tour Vlog | Azad Kashmir | Hidden and Unexplored Tourist places | نیلم ویلی آزاد کشمیر
Welcome to Umer Nadeem Vlogs facebook channel
My first Kashmir Vlog :
Video Detail :
In this vlog we take you through some beautiful hidden tourist places of Neelum Valley, Azad Kashmir. Our journey start from Lahore to Muzaffarabad by Motorway and we travel through areas such as Neelum Jhelum hydropower project Noseri Dam , Bariyya Bazzar , Jabbar village, pakistan india Loc , Lewswa bypass road , Dbbra village, Braa bheek , Moor galli , and purzzi top. We came across some spectacularly beautiful and scenic places while travelling through Neelum Valley. In this video you will see: tourist places in Neelum Valley, architectural design of houses in Neelum and some excerpts of Kashmiri people in Neelum Valley. You will also see magnificent Neelum River flowing between Azad Kashmir and the Indian Occupied Kashmir, serving as the Line of Control.
Neelum District (also spelt as Neelam; Urdu: ضلع نیلم), is the northernmost district of Azad Kashmir, Pakistan. Taking up the larger part of the Neelam Valley, the district has a population of 191,000 (as of 2017). It was badly affected by the 2005 Kashmir earthquake.
The Neelum River was known before Partition as Kishan Ganga and was subsequently renamed after the village of Neelam. It flows down from the Gurez Valley in Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir and roughly follows first a western and then a south-western course until it joins the Jhelum River at Muzaffarabad. The valley is a thickly wooded region with an elevation ranging between 4,000 feet (1,200 m) and 7,500 feet (2,300 m), the mountain peaks on either side reaching 17,000 feet (5,200 m).[5] Neelum Valley is 144 kilometres (89 mi) long.
Several languages are spoken natively in the district. The predominant one is Hindko. It is the language of wider communication in the area and is spoken at a native or near-native level by almost all members of the other language communities, many of whom are abandoning their language and shifting to Hindko.[13]