The Lighthouse Library

The Lighthouse Library is a growing collection of powerful intercultural stories, visual archives, interviews, poems, and lived experiences from around the world. It brings together voices across borders—children, elders, artists, survivors, and everyday people—capturing the unseen and unspoken.

Each entry in the library is an invitation to empathise across differences, to remember, and to reimagine a better world together.

Getting to know myself

Getting to know myself

Jiya Krishnakumar United Arab Emirates Getting to know myself   It was the middle of the school year when my mom decided she needed to go to Brazil for her job. I was left alone with my dad for the next four weeks. And perfect timing, too! My history teacher just...

The Last goodbye

The Last goodbye

Sidra Pakistan The Last goodbye   This is a story of a young girl Hira and young boy David. Who met with each other on a flight. Both belong to different religions, cultures and countries but still both fell in true love with each other. Both realized in their...

The Horrors of Tribalism

The Horrors of Tribalism

Lucy Mwelu Kenya The Horrors of Tribalism   There is a certain seduction in graduating. The degree in your hand is a leeway to incredible wealth. Finally, years of immersing my feet into chilling water to study would pay off, or so I thought.   In my...

From a boat to an island of hope

From a boat to an island of hope

Jonathan Lam Jackson Heights, NY, United States From a boat to an island of hope   A boat from Vietnam floats in the sea, as a mother cramped on the boat holds her kids waiting for help. Eventually, the boat lands in Malaysia, where the mother and her kids will...

‘Twas the Voice of the Migrant

‘Twas the Voice of the Migrant

Josef Wolanczyk Canada ‘Twas the Voice of the Migrant   ‘Twas the voice of the migrant, I once heard them speak— Just once, for you see, They were awfully meek.   Oh, not without trying To master their fear, And what fears they had conquered To make it to...

A married girl

A married girl

Khadija Noor Mehal Lahore A married girl   This society I belong to, expects a girl to get married young and tender,with no relations to her family or pursuit of dreams. She becomes an object of the husband’s family, expected to serve like a slave. An educated...

Defying the norms

Defying the norms

Anonymous Kenya Defying the norms   The hills protruded to block the light, after doing my form four exam. In our tribe, girls were seen as birds, birds that will fly one day to their matrimonial home. Girls were never counted as the heritage of the family, boys...

Strengths in our Difference

Strengths in our Difference

Syeda Sara Hassan Lahore, Pakistan Strengths in our Difference   “We’re not the same,” I hear the words in the anger of another; the building rush of hatred mirroring my fear. Back then I could not find it within myself to ask “why not?” because some instinctual...

Three Pints of Kindness

Three Pints of Kindness

Emmanuel Chika Eunice Nigeria Three Pints of Kindness   “Ma'am, we need at least three pints of blood to be able to operate on your son,” the doctor told Ahneeka. “Is my son's blood group not available in the hospital's blood bank?” Ahneeka questioned, not willing to...

The girl with the afro

The girl with the afro

Surprise Mary Nyagoha Kenya The girl with the afro   I grew up in an African setting. Around nature and all that it has to offer. Not the stereotypical setting that most Western countries believe we live in; where we get to chase or be chased by lions while...

Don’t Bring A Gun To A Kite Fight

Don’t Bring A Gun To A Kite Fight

Umaima Baig Pakistan Don't Bring A Gun To A Kite Fight   The Summer of Fourth Grade, I was shot at, with the bullet grazing my hand. It was the day of Basant, a now banned holiday in Pakistan. The sole purpose was to enjoy the day flying kites and have a good...

Unspoken Connection

Unspoken Connection

Emaan Aqil Abbasi Lahore, Pakistan Unspoken Connection   The silence of the afternoon was punctuated by sniffles. Our school was barely visible between the branches of the oak as we grieved the loss of our pluckiest. I shuddered at the thought of how close it had...

If we don’t teach them, then who will?

If we don’t teach them, then who will?

Japheth Ayiekow Nairobbi, Kenya If we don't teach them, then who will?   Sex should be done and enjoyed in privacy, I agree. In African homes and specifically in the majority of Kenyan homes, sex is viewed as a taboo subject that can’t be discussed inside our...

My Grey Skin

My Grey Skin

Dilon Bhana South Africa My Grey Skin   Nobody ever told me that when you walk around with your eyes closed, it’s easier to see people. An intonation of their voice or a whiff of their accent. Their language might take you back a generation or two, but you will...

We see differently

We see differently

Shannan Browne South Africa We see differently   As a woman who has taught in classrooms around the world, I have learned a truth: We see differently. In Taiwan, I was teaching a class in a city and a cockroach decided to venture out and scuttle across my...

Divided By Borders, Connected By Hearts

Divided By Borders, Connected By Hearts

Manal Khawar Pakistan Divided By Borders, Connected By Hearts   With bundles of nervousness and a pinch of excitement, I hopped on the plane from Pakistan on a scholarship program to the USA. As I landed, the horrifying stories of racism and Islamophobia started...

Never Too Much for Anything

Never Too Much for Anything

Anne-Sharlene Murapa Johannesburg, South Africa Never Too Much for Anything   I have lost count of the number of times that I have read up on the history of my people (the Shona and Ndebele of Zimbabwe), to further understand what my supposed culture could...

Arzu

Arzu

Lalitha AR Bengaluru, India Arzu   It was the first time eight-year-old Arzu was on an airplane. She had dreamt about taking her first flight with Baba for a long time, but this journey was nothing as her dream. Her Baba wasn't with her. He had been killed by...

Through this, together

Through this, together

Habiba Gicheru Nairobi, Kenya  Through this, together   The whole season had been tough and nothing seemed to be looking up for the small family. It was the sixth week since the entire country had gone on a lockdown. Gakenia and her friends had been out of their...

Mama’s Wonder Son 

Mama’s Wonder Son 

Emma Wangari Maina Nairobi Mama’s Wonder Son    January 16, 1999, It would help if I began from the beginning. On March 12th, 1986, a bouncing boy opened his eyes, hardly crying. He didn't notice the jolly faces of the onlookers above him, who held him and...

You only know what others show

You only know what others show

Nubaira Ahmer Khan Pakistan You only know what others show   I was sitting with my friend in the cafeteria of our university. Suddenly we saw a Chinese girl with crystal clear skin eating an oily spring roll. My friend said, in Urdu, “Look at her! How is she...

They and Them

They and Them

Blessing Temi Jegede Lagos, Nigeria They and Them   "Is this how I die?" Ibrahim crouched under the chair at the back of the bus, contemplating this question. He wanted to scream out "Auzubillah!" but was afraid to even breathe for fear that he would be heard. He...

What Makes Us Different?

What Makes Us Different?

Shranya Shrivastava India What Makes Us Different?   "Are you learning this for someone?", my great-grandfather, Bade Dadu, would ask my father when he found him studying English. As if language wasn’t for understanding the world, but a friend. I was five years...

You never know

You never know

Utere Naomi Vincent Nigeria You never know   Idara was at the bar, drinking away the humiliation of being sent out of her best friend’s wedding, when someone tapped her on the shoulder. She glared, turning only to find her best friend looking down at her with...

Becoming tonga

Becoming tonga

Precious Chidinma Genuine Nigeria Becoming tonga   My name is Diongo, and I’m from Dante, a little village where I live with my parents and little sister, Ubibia. Life in my village is not really interesting. We don’t have any fanciful places to visit, and the...

Bridging the Gap with Humanity

Bridging the Gap with Humanity

Akshita Kanna United Arab Emirates Bridging the Gap with Humanity   This is a story of the times when the only language of humans was kindness and honesty, when people identified each other only as humans and fellow individuals. When there were no lines of...

Aurora: The Dawn of a New Life

Aurora: The Dawn of a New Life

Tilottama Chowdhury India Aurora: The Dawn of a New Life   She stopped and looked at the glass window of the clothes store. To anyone, she would seem to be just another girl looking at the holiday sale prices. But they were wrong. She stood there looking at her...

The 7 Train

The 7 Train

Xi Richard Chen New York City, New York, United States of America The 7 Train   I walk down the steps into the subway station, looking for the 7 train. Commuters push past me in a fury of elbows and shoulders. A waterfall of languages clangs in my ears. The 7...

Finding it

Finding it

Omotayo Olayinka Aremu Nigeria Finding it   The rain poured on Tricania for two hours. The ground was marshy, and vendors lining the train- track wrapped up to keep warm. Beyond the cold was a piercing chill; the presence of soldiers, guns and amour tanks. A...

Yellow lilies.

Yellow lilies.

Antonia Patricia Herrera Veas. Lampa, Chile Yellow lilies.   My brother tells me he wants to fly: all kinds of futuristic cities, robots, flying cars, cross my mind as I lay on my soft, cozy bed. Then I look around and find myself surrounded by buildings full of...