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Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Enteromix: A Breakthrough in Organic Life and Cancer Treatment.



Cancer remains one of the most complex and devastating diseases in human history, often demanding aggressive treatments like chemotherapy and radiation. While these therapies have saved countless lives, they are also known for their harsh side effects, which can compromise the quality of life for patients. In response to these challenges, Russia’s experimental mRNA-based cancer vaccine, Enteromix, is emerging as a potential game-changer in the fight against cancer—and a transformative step in aligning medicine with the principles of organic life.



The Promise of Enteromix

Enteromix has shown 100% efficacy and safety in early trials, particularly against colorectal cancer. Unlike conventional cancer treatments that attack both healthy and cancerous cells, this vaccine works by:

  • Shrinking tumours and slowing their growth.

  • Training the immune system to recognise and destroy cancer cells.

  • Minimising toxic side effects, which are often the greatest burden of standard therapies.

This approach represents a shift toward gentler, more natural pathways of healing, where the body’s own defences are strengthened instead of being weakened.



mRNA Technology in a New Role

Messenger RNA (mRNA) technology first gained global attention during the COVID-19 pandemic. Its application in cancer treatment highlights its flexibility: mRNA can be programmed to instruct cells to produce proteins that act as “red flags” for the immune system.

In Enteromix, this technology is personalised—each vaccine is tailored to the genetic profile of a patient’s tumour, making the treatment precise and highly effective.



Organic Life and Healing from Within

The concept of organic life emphasises harmony between human biology and natural systems. Enteromix resonates strongly with this philosophy because it:

  • Supports self-healing: The immune system is empowered to take the lead role.

  • Reduces toxicity: By avoiding the chemical overload of chemotherapy, patients preserve their vitality.

  • Personalizes care: Treatment is adapted to each individual’s biology, acknowledging the uniqueness of every human life.

This represents a paradigm shift in medicine, moving away from invasive interventions and toward treatments that cooperate with the body’s natural intelligence.



Broader Implications for Medicine

If regulatory approval confirms its safety and efficacy, Enteromix could:

  • Redefine cancer care by replacing or complementing harsh therapies.

  • Improve quality of life by reducing suffering during treatment.

  • Open pathways for using mRNA vaccines in treating other cancers or chronic diseases.

This innovation bridges the gap between high-tech science and the philosophy of organic life, where medicine enhances rather than disrupts natural biological processes.



Enteromix begins a new era

Enteromix may mark the beginning of a new era in cancer treatment—one where medicine aligns more closely with the principles of organic life. By harnessing the power of the immune system and avoiding unnecessary harm, it reflects a future in which healing is not only effective but also compassionate.

As the world watches for regulatory approval, Enteromix stands as a beacon of hope: proof that the most advanced science can also honour the most natural processes of life.


MAFHH is an institution that operates as a remote educational network, working under a vision of sustainable development. We are adding value to change the global economy's track towards a Green Evolution. Join us in this journey.


This article is presented under the umbrella of MAFHH An Institution, Management Intelligence, Business Accounting & Finance Resources, Professional Cyber Security Resources, Association of Chartered Certified Accountants, Climate-Resilience, Organic Life, Power of Words, Our Children and Ya Aba Abdillah Alhai Salam.

Thank you for your time with us.

For more details, contact us. 


faisalfinancials@gmail.com

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Syed Faisal Abbas Tirmize

Founder, CEO, Management Consultant & Sustainability Mentor.


MAFHH An Institution

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Monday, September 8, 2025

Our Children: Building a Single, Courageous Standard of Care.




Angelina Jolie reminds us that we can’t be selective about whose pain matters. Toni Cade Bambara calls artists to make justice irresistible. And Ghassan Kanafani’s assertion—that some causes belong to everyone who seeks freedom—points to a deeper truth: when children are in danger anywhere, the moral perimeter of our concern must expand everywhere. This is an article about that expansion—how we talk to, teach, protect, and mobilise for our children, not as an abstraction but as a daily practice that honours every child’s equal worth.


Why a child-centred lens changes everything

Children are not collateral to history; they are its authors in waiting. A child-centred lens insists that:

  • Every child’s life has equal value, without caveats, borders, or politics.

  • Protection comes first. In conflict or peace, children’s safety is a non-negotiable priority of governments, institutions, communities, and families.

  • Trauma echoes. What a child sees today—fear, humiliation, kindness, courage—sculpts the adult they will become. The cost of indifference compounds across generations.

This lens doesn’t only make us gentler; it makes us clearer. When we refuse to rank children by nationality, creed, or geography, policy and practice simplify: protect them all.


Talking to our children about suffering without breaking their hope

Children watch us to learn what words mean. “Compassion,” “justice,” “safety”—these become real only when modelled.

  • Name feelings, then facts. Start with: “What you’re seeing can feel scary or confusing.” Follow with age-appropriate truths about harm, rights, and care.

  • Answers over images. Young minds don’t need graphic content to develop empathy. They need space to ask questions and hear calm, honest answers.

  • Agency heals. Pair hard news with doable actions: writing a card to a child in crisis, donating a toy, helping assemble relief packages, or joining a local kindness drive. Action shrinks helplessness.



The role of educators and caregivers: normalise universal compassion

In schools and homes, we can anchor a single standard:

  • Right language early. Teach the basics of the child’s right to safety, education, healthcare, and family life. Rights-based vocabulary gives children a sturdy moral map.

  • Mirror fairness. Apply the same rules of respect to everyone in the classroom or household—no favourites. Children internalise fairness by seeing it practised.

  • Story choice matters. Curate books and media that highlight children from different places and traditions working together, solving problems, and protecting one another.


Artists as first responders of the heart

Bambara’s call is practical: art lowers the threshold for entering the conversation. Music, illustration, film, theatre, comics, and dance can carry complex truths in gentle ways that children can hold.

  • Make safety beautiful. Create art projects centred on refuge, belonging, and repair. Invite kids to design “cities of care,” draw “maps to safety,” or script plays about resolving conflicts.

  • Turn witnessing into making. Encourage teens to storyboard short videos on bystander courage, produce podcasts that interview elders about protecting children, or compose songs for peace assemblies. The act of making metabolises grief into purpose.


What children need during and after a crisis

Wherever they live, children under stress need the same four shields:

  1. Immediate protection from harm and family separation.

  2. Stability—predictable routines, schooling, safe places to play.

  3. Connection—reunification with caregivers; trusted adults who listen.

  4. Restoration—trauma-informed care, arts, sports, and community rituals that normalise healing.

Communities can prepare by maintaining child-safe shelters, rapid family tracing protocols, school continuity plans, and youth-led peer support clubs with adult oversight.


A family and classroom code of compassion

Use or adapt this as a simple charter:

  • We believe all children deserve safety, dignity, and joy.

  • We refuse to celebrate harm against any child, anywhere.

  • We speak truthfully and kindly, even when we disagree.

  • We act when we can—giving, volunteering, advocating.

  • We repair when we’re wrong—apologise, learn, and try again.

  • We imagine better—and make it together.

Print it. Sign it. Post it where little eyes can see it.


Practical steps for communities

  • Child-safe spaces: Equip community centres, libraries, and mosques/churches/temples as emergency learning and play hubs—backup Wi-Fi, books, art kits, first-aid, and quiet rooms.

  • Parent circles: Regular gatherings for caregivers to share tools on digital safety, stress regulation, and trauma-sensitive parenting.

  • Buddy schools: Pair classrooms across cities or countries to exchange letters, artwork, and culture boxes. Humanising “the other” immunises against hate.

  • Youth councils: Give teenagers real roles in designing service projects, safety campaigns, and peer mentoring. Ownership builds resilience.


Advocacy without dehumanisation

Stand clearly for children’s rights and safety without slipping into language that erodes someone else’s humanity. The discipline is simple:

  • Describe actions and impacts, not identities.

  • Demand protections and aid, not revenge.

  • Centre children’s needs and lawful safeguards—safe corridors, medical access, reunification, education continuity—wherever children are at risk.

  • Measure success by reduced harm to children, not by victory narratives.


What we ask of leaders and institutions

From school boards to parliaments to international bodies, a child-first standard looks like:

  • Cease the targeting and endangerment of children. No equivocation.

  • Guarantee humanitarian access. Food, water, medicine, and evacuation routes.

  • Protect schools and hospitals. These are lifelines, not leverage.

  • Fund child-focused recovery. Mental health services, accelerated learning, and family livelihood support to prevent the secondary harms of poverty and displacement.

  • Track and report child harm transparently. Let data guide prevention and accountability.



A note on language when we speak to children

Words like “enemy,” “they,” and “always” tend to make the world too small for the truth. Try:

  • “Some leaders made harmful choices. Many ordinary people on all sides want safety for their children—just like us.”

  • “Our job is to help protect kids and support the helpers.”

  • “Justice means stopping harm, helping heal, and making better rules so it doesn’t happen again.”


A closing promise

Let us be the adults who make compassion contagious: parents who tell hard truths softly, teachers who add a chair at every table, journalists who foreground children’s stories, artists who turn care into culture, faith leaders who widen the circle, and lawmakers who put protections for children beyond debate.

The lives of civilian victims, wherever they may be, have the same value.
Everyone deserves the same compassion.

If our children learn that from us—not just in words but in how we allocate time, attention, money, and courage—they will build a world where no child is expendable and every child is expected to flourish. That world begins now, in the choices we make today.


MAFHH is an institution that operates as a remote educational network, working under a vision of sustainable development. We are adding value to change the global economy's track towards a Green Evolution. Join us in this journey.


This article is presented under the umbrella of MAFHH An Institution, Management Intelligence, Business Accounting & Finance Resources, Professional Cyber Security Resources, Association of Chartered Certified Accountants, Climate-Resilience, Organic Life, Power of Words, Our Children and Ya Aba Abdillah Alhai Salam.


Thank you for your time with us.

For more details, contact us. 


faisalfinancials@gmail.com

faisalfinancials@outlook.com 


Syed Faisal Abbas Tirmize

Founder, CEO, Management Consultant & Sustainability Mentor.


MAFHH An Institution

Our Social media links below to join us:


https://www.linkedin.com/in/syed-faisal-abbas-tirmize-319806214/

https://www.facebook.com/mafhhaninstitution

https://patiencewisdomsuccess.blogspot.com/

https://mafhhaninstitution.blogspot.com/

https://www.instagram.com/mafhhinstitution

https://x.com/mafhhinstitute




Saturday, September 6, 2025

What an Iraqi Girl’s Chalk Drawing Teaches Us About Love, Loss, and the Future of Our Children.


The Silent Language of a Child’s Heart

In a quiet orphanage in Iraq, a young girl found herself overwhelmed with longing for her late mother. With no words strong enough to bridge the gap between memory and reality, she picked up a piece of chalk. On the cold floor, she traced the outline of a mother’s figure, a protective space where arms curved open in eternal embrace. When her drawing was complete, she lay down gently inside it, curled up as if held, and drifted into sleep.

This moment—simple yet profound—reminds us of the unspoken depth of children’s emotional worlds. It speaks to the resilience of the human heart, the irreplaceable nature of parental love, and the responsibility we share in nurturing and protecting the youngest among us.


The Power of a Child’s Imagination

Children express what they cannot say in ways adults often overlook. For the Iraqi girl, chalk became her medium of healing and imagination her bridge to love. In the absence of her mother’s physical presence, she created her own comfort through art.

This is not an isolated story. Across cultures, children find symbolic ways to cope with grief, loss, or loneliness. It reveals not only their vulnerability but also their incredible strength: the ability to transform pain into creativity.


The Unseen Needs of Children

The story is heartbreaking because it reveals a deeper truth: children in orphanages, refugee camps, and vulnerable communities often grow up without consistent love and protection. While their physical needs—food, shelter, clothing—are critical, their emotional needs are just as vital. Without nurturing bonds, children may struggle with trust, identity, and resilience later in life.

The girl’s chalk drawing was not merely play; it was an unspoken plea for comfort, belonging, and connection.



Why Family and Community Matter

Psychologists affirm that a child’s healthy development is rooted in stable, loving relationships. Even when families are broken by conflict, poverty, or loss, the wider community has a role to play. Teachers, caregivers, relatives, and neighbors can become extensions of that missing embrace.

By recognizing every child’s inherent worth, we can create environments where they feel seen, heard, and valued. Whether through mentorship, education, or simple acts of kindness, we have the power to help children feel safe and loved.



Lessons for Us All

The Iraqi girl’s story is both a tragedy and a call to action. It teaches us:

  • The bond of love is eternal. Even absence cannot erase it.

  • Children are remarkably expressive. We must pay attention to their art, words, and actions.

  • Our role as guardians extends beyond parenthood. Society at large has a responsibility to nurture its youngest members.

  • Love is the foundation of resilience. A child who feels loved grows stronger, even in hardship.


Holding Our Children Closer

As we reflect on this story, let it remind us not to take family, love, or human connection for granted. Many children worldwide long for the security of an embrace they may never feel again. While we cannot replace lost parents, we can ensure that no child grows up feeling invisible.

Our children are the future. By providing them with love, safety, and opportunities, we not only heal their hearts but also build a more compassionate world.

Because sometimes, all a child needs is to know that someone cares enough to draw the outline—and to be there when they lie down inside it.



MAFHH is an institution that operates as a remote educational network, working under a vision of sustainable development. We are adding value to change the global economy's track towards a Green Evolution. Join us in this journey.


This article is presented under the umbrella of MAFHH An Institution, Management Intelligence, Business Accounting & Finance Resources, Professional Cyber Security Resources, PM ACCA, Climate-Resilience, Organic Life, Power of Words, Our Children and Ya Aba Abdillah Alhai Salam.


Thank you for your time with us.

For more details, contact us. 


faisalfinancials@gmail.com

faisalfinancials@outlook.com 


Syed Faisal Abbas Tirmize

Founder, CEO, Management Consultant & Sustainability Mentor.


MAFHH An Institution

Our Social media links below to join us:


https://www.linkedin.com/in/syed-faisal-abbas-tirmize-319806214/

https://www.facebook.com/mafhhaninstitution

https://patiencewisdomsuccess.blogspot.com/

https://mafhhaninstitution.blogspot.com/

https://www.instagram.com/mafhhinstitution

https://x.com/mafhhinstitute



Sustainable Development

Enteromix: A Breakthrough in Organic Life and Cancer Treatment.

Cancer remains one of the most complex and devastating diseases in human history, often demanding aggressive treatments like chemotherapy an...

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