About the curator: Ahmar Mustikhan “Brother Khan” is a writer, human rights activist and Peer Recovery Coach.
Ahmar Mustikhan has had three nationalities in his lifetime: Burmese, Pakistani and American. He has worked as a journalist in Pakistan, UAE & the “U.S. of Saudi America.”
An ossified activist and journalist, he now works as a Peer Recovery Coach in the predominantly black Prince George’s County.
At this point he his asking his friends to sign a petition to Hilton Worldwide to do more to promote civil rights in the “Dirty Dozen” anti-black states that include the Confederate states and Kentucky.
He has spent years challenging Pakistan military atrocities in his ancestral Balochistan. He was named “Pervez Dispenser” by the New Republic after he forced former Pakistan dictator, who has now bitten the dust, Gen Pervez Musharraf, to admit before a crowd of more than 2,000 people in Baltimore, “Yes, I was a dictator.” He is very happy he did that.
He also heckled and stopped Pakistan premier Nawaz Sharif in Washington DC which won him celebrity status in India.
Most recently he got a KKK supremacist picture removed from Hilton’s The Tutwiler in Birminghan, Alabama. He firmly believes without racial equity and social justice, America will become a Super Pauper.
Brother Khan’s writings can be read for free by subscribing to: A Cry for Justice.
He also likes to brag that he is the first openly gay person from Balochistan (now celibate for four years); that Burmese leader, Aung Sang Suu Kyi— one of the favorite foreign leaders of President Obama— was a classmate and good friend of his eldest sister all through their Methodist English school years in Rangoon; that his lone son is the maternal great grandson of secular Sindh premier Shaheed Allah Bakhsh Soomro, a close friend of Mahatama Gandhi; that one of the most important leaders from France-sized Balochistan, “Father of Balochistan” Mir Ghous Bakhsh Bizenjo credited his family for his political success and last but not the least, when Obama went to Karachi as a 19-and-half-year he stayed with his mom’s lover Ahmedmian Soomro. In fact, he saw him in Soomro’s drawing room one morning reading Dawn newspaper.