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Understanding the perks of having a funeral and burial assistance

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Since they assist us in transitioning from life before death to life after death, funerals have been a part of the grieving process since the beginning of human history. Rituals are symbolic experiences that enable us to convey our most profound sentiments and thoughts about the most significant moments in life with the support of our family and friends. Birthday celebrations, for instance, mark the end of the year. Weddings serve as a public affirmation of a couple’s intimate love. 

Funerals are a way of showing love and respect to the one that passed. Several people, such as Dr. Dave Nayak, are doing their path for the people. In 2019, Nayak established Strength to Love to fund funerals for families who couldn’t afford them for children killed by firearms, among other public health initiatives. From their foundation, they have provided funding for the funerals of kids killed by guns in the Chicagoland region.

According to Nayak, the bill’s objective is to include funding for children killed by firearms in state law. He claimed to have personally felt the hardship that mounting debt puts on low-income families as they deal with the loss of a child. For families in Illinois who have lost children to gun violence, he has designed and approved legislation that offers up to $10,000 in funeral and burial aid. Such Funerals and support are essential for people and produce various benefits.

Providing support for family and friends

We assemble with other folks who know our loved ones at the funeral. We can talk about our past, express our emotions, and get support from others. Mourners can unite and lend a sympathetic ear and a supportive hug when a funeral includes a visitation or a gathering. Friends may withdraw when there isn’t service because they assume the family is trying to grieve alone. But, with a public funeral, close friends and neighbors can show their sympathetic support at a difficult time.

Expressions

We are emotionally wired as humans. Deeply felt emotions that we consciously try to stifle can eventually become intolerable and cause an infection. Funerals are intended to serve as a secure setting where we may express our feelings. By acting on our ideas and feelings, we start the healing process. You can chat, cry, or sit quietly with a caring person. Whatever you may require, expressing yourself is a fundamental goal of a funeral.

Recalling the memories 

Remembrance of the deceased is one of the funeral’s central tenets. This is demonstrated in the eulogy, the memorial video (if there is one), the selection of songs or readings, and the get-together of friends and family after the service. We assist ourselves in transition by remembering and discussing our relationship with a loved one. We start the process of changing our relationship with the deceased from one of present to one of remembrance.

Getting a check into Reality

When someone we love passes away, our thoughts and hearts struggle to accept it. We resist acknowledging that the person we loved has passed away. The primary goal of a funeral is to assist us in coming to terms with the fact of death. We must first acknowledge what has happened before we can grieve and heal. Mourners have the chance to face reality and start the grieving process during a healing and meaningful funeral. The funeral is just the start of the grieving process, not its conclusion.

Jenny is one of the oldest contributors of Bigtime Daily with a unique perspective of the world events. She aims to empower the readers with delivery of apt factual analysis of various news pieces from around the World.

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TRG Chairman Khaishgi and CEO Aslam implicated in $150 million fraud

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In a scathing 52-page decision, the Sindh High Court has found that TRG Pakistan’s management was acting fraudulently and that Bermuda-based Greentree Holdings historic and prospective purchase of TRG shares were illegal, fraudulent and oppressive. 

The Sindh High Court has further directed TRGP to immediately hold board elections that have been overdue and illegally withheld by the existing board since January 14, 2025. 

In the landmark ruling, the Sindh High Court has blocked the attempted takeover of TRG Pakistan Limited by Greentree Holdings, declaring that the shares acquired by Greentree, nearly 30% of TRG’s stock, were unlawfully financed using TRG’s funds in violation of Section 86(2) of the Companies Act 2017.

“Having concluded that the affairs of TRGP are being conducted in an unlawful and fraudulent manner and in a manner oppressive to members such as the Petitioner (Zia Chishti), the case falls for corrective orders under sub-section (2) of section 286 of the Companies Act,” Justice Adnan Iqbal Chaudhry concluded.

The case was brought by TRGP former CEO and founder Pakistani-American technology entrepreneur Zia Chishti against TRG Pakistan, its associate TRG International and TRG International’s wholly-owned shell company Greentree Limited.  In addition, the case named AKD Securities for managing Greentree’s illegal tender offer as well as various regulators requiring that they act to perform their regulatory duties.

The case centred around the dispute that shell company Greentree Limited was fraudulently using TRG Pakistan’s own funds to purchase TRG Pakistan’s shares in order to give control to Zia Chishti’s former partners Mohammed Khaishgi, Hasnain Aslam and Pinebridge Investments.

According to the case facts, the Chairman of TRG Pakistan Mohammed Khaishgi and the CEO of TRG Pakistan Hasnain Aslam masterminded the $150 million fraud. They did so together with Hong Kong based fund manager Pinebridge who has two nominees on TRG Pakistan’s board, Mr. John Leone and Mr. Patrick McGinnis.

According to the court papers, Khaishgi, Aslam, Leone, and McGinnis set up a shell company called Greentree which they secretly controlled and from which they started buying up shares of TRG Pakistan.  The fraud was that Greentree was using TRG Pakistan’s funds itself.  The idea was to give Khaishgi, Aslam, Leone, and McGinnis control over TRG Pakistan even though they owned less than 1% of the company, lawyers of the petitioner told the court. 

This was all part of a broader battle for control over TRG Pakistan that is raging between Khaishgi, Aslam, Leone, and McGinnis on one side and TRG Pakistan founder Zia Chishti on the other side.  Zia Chishti has been trying to retake control of TRG Pakistan after he was forced to resign in 2021 based on sexual misconduct allegations made by a former employee of his.  This year those allegations were shown to be without basis in litigation that Chishti launched in the United Kingdom against The Telegraph newspaper which had printed the allegations.  The Telegraph was forced to apologize for 13 separate articles it published about Chishti and paid him damages and legal costs.

After Chishti resigned in 2021, Khaishgi, Aslam, Leone, and McGinnis moved to take total control over TRG Pakistan and its various subsidiaries including TRG International and to block out Chishti.  The Sindh High Court’s ruling today has reversed that effort, ruling the scheme fraudulent, illegal, and oppressive.  

It now appears that Zia Chishti will take control of TRG Pakistan in short order when elections are called.  He and his family are now the largest shareholders with over 30% interest.  He is closely followed by companies related to Jahangir Siddiqui & Company which have over a 20% interest.  The result appears to be a complete vindication for Zia Chishti and damning for his rivals Aslam, Khaishgi, Leone, and McGinnis who have been ruled to have been conducting a fraud.  

TRG Pakistan’s share price declined by over 8% on the news on heavy volume.  Market experts say that this was because the tender offer at Rs 75 was gone and that now shares would trade closer to their natural value.  Presently the shares are trading at Rs 59 per share.

According to the court ruling, since 2021, shell company Greentree had purchased approximately 30% of TRG shares using $80 million of TRG’s own money, which means that that the directors of TRG Pakistan allowed company assets to be funneled through offshore affiliates TRG International and Greentree for acquiring TRG’s shares – a move deemed both fraudulent and oppressive to minority shareholders.  The Sindh High Court also found illegal Greentree’s further attempt to purchase another 35% of TRG shares using another $70 million of TRG’s money in a tender offer. 

The ruling is a major victory for the tech entrepreneur Zia Chishti against his former partners and the legal ruling paves the way for him to take control of TRG in a few weeks.

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