Find Focus Films

Find Focus Films We are a film company dedicated to make our only Planet more beautiful and sustainable. We make fil We make films for awareness about nature and environment.

🌍 Beyond Disaster: Women on the Frontlines of Climate ResilienceWhen the floods disappear from headlines…the real storie...
10/04/2026

🌍 Beyond Disaster: Women on the Frontlines of Climate Resilience

When the floods disappear from headlines…
the real stories begin.

We are bringing together an extraordinary group of women—leaders, storytellers, researchers, and advocates—who have worked directly with communities on the frontlines of climate disasters.

🎤 Meet Our Speakers:

✨ Akanksha Sood Singh
Award-winning filmmaker shaping global narratives on nature, conservation, and storytelling.

✨ Syed Kashmala
Media producer and festival manager amplifying underrepresented voices through storytelling and visual advocacy.

✨ Dr. Bismah Nayyer
Public health practitioner working at the intersection of menstrual health, SRHR, and climate justice.

✨ Ramsha Siddiqua
Artivist and storyteller amplifying women’s voices through visual narratives and community work.

✨ Iswa Anjum
Climate and gender advocate focused on research, policy, and making women visible in climate data.

✨ Dr. Zainab Aman (Co-Host)
Activist and founder working on menstrual health, climate, and community-led solutions.

These are not just conversations.
These are lived experiences.
These are voices that demand to be heard.

📍 Virtual Event
🎟️ Scan the QR code to register

Join us as we move beyond disaster—towards dignity, resilience, and climate justice.

🌍 Beyond Disaster: Women on the Frontlines of Climate ResilienceWhat happens after the floodwaters recede?Whose stories ...
09/04/2026

🌍 Beyond Disaster: Women on the Frontlines of Climate Resilience

What happens after the floodwaters recede?
Whose stories are remembered — and whose are left behind?

As part of LA Climate Week, we’re bringing together powerful voices of women working directly with flood-affected communities in Pakistan — from grassroots leaders to activists and health advocates.

This 90-minute virtual conversation goes beyond disaster response to explore: ✨ Women’s lived experiences during climate crises
✨ Hidden challenges around health, dignity & access
✨ Community-led resilience and leadership
✨ The power of storytelling in climate justice

These are not just stories of survival — they are stories of strength, leadership, and change.

🎤 Hosted by: Syed Hasnain Raza & Dr. Zainab Aman
📍 Virtual Event
🎟️ Scan the QR code to register

Let’s listen, learn, and amplify voices that truly matter.

Eid Mubarak 🌙✨As Ramadan comes to an end, it leaves behind a softness in our hearts — a reminder of patience, gratitude,...
20/03/2026

Eid Mubarak 🌙✨
As Ramadan comes to an end, it leaves behind a softness in our hearts — a reminder of patience, gratitude, and compassion.
This Eid, while we celebrate with joy, food, and loved ones, let’s not forget the silent world around us — the forests, the rivers, the wildlife, and the skies that sustain us every day.
Ramadan teaches us to care. Eid is our chance to carry that care forward.

🌱 Be gentle with the Earth
🦋 Protect wildlife
🌍 Live with intention

Because true celebration is not just in what we receive, but in how we give back — to people and to nature.
Let this Eid be a promise: To love more deeply
To act more responsibly
To protect the beauty of our planet
Eid Mubarak to you and your loved ones 💚🌙

Birds of بہار — Spring in the Margalla HillsWith the arrival of spring in the Margalla Hills, Islamabad, the forest slow...
15/03/2026

Birds of بہار — Spring in the Margalla Hills

With the arrival of spring in the Margalla Hills, Islamabad, the forest slowly comes alive. The air fills with birdsong as many species begin courtship, mating, and nesting, marking the start of another cycle of life in this incredibly rich ecosystem.
These images capture just a few of the remarkable species found in Margalla:
• Blue Whistling Thrush – often seen near streams, known for its powerful melodious calls.
• Red-breasted Flycatcher (female) – a tiny migrant insect hunter that helps control insect populations.
• White-throated Fantail – an energetic forest dancer constantly fanning its tail while chasing insects.
• Himalayan Bluetail – a shy but striking visitor of forest undergrowth.
• Grey-hooded Warbler – a vibrant forest warbler feeding on insects among foliage.
• Kalij Pheasant – one of the iconic ground birds of Himalayan foothill forests.
• Grey-winged Blackbird – a beautiful forest thrush often found near streams.
• White-capped Bunting – a striking bunting of rocky slopes and open forest edges.
• Indian White-eye – a tiny but important pollinator and insect eater.
• Red-billed Leiothrix – a colorful Himalayan forest bird often moving in small flocks, feeding on insects, fruits, and nectar.
• Asian Tit – a small but active woodland bird that helps control forest insects and plays an important role in maintaining ecological balance.
• Black Bulbul – a striking mountain bulbul known for its distinctive call and bright red bill, commonly found in forest canopies of the Himalayan foothills.

Birds are vital indicators of ecosystem health. They disperse seeds, control insect populations, and help maintain the balance of forests
The Margalla Hills are one of Pakistan’s richest biodiversity hotspots, home to hundreds of bird species, mammals like leopards and barking deer, and an incredible variety of plants and insects. Protecting this landscape means protecting a living classroom of nature right beside Islamabad.
Captured at the beginning of spring in the Margalla Hills using Canon R7 + RF 600mm f/11, Sony RX10iv

Orangutans — whose name literally means “person of the forest” — are among our closest relatives in the wild, sharing ne...
12/03/2026

Orangutans — whose name literally means “person of the forest” — are among our closest relatives in the wild, sharing nearly 97% of their DNA with humans.
These gentle giants play a vital role in keeping tropical forests alive. By spreading seeds across vast distances, they act as the “gardeners of the rainforest.” When orangutans disappear, entire ecosystems begin to collapse.
Yet today, orangutans are Critically Endangered. Rapid deforestation, palm oil expansion, illegal wildlife trade, and forest fires are pushing them closer to extinction.
Protecting orangutans means protecting rainforests, biodiversity, and the future of our planet.
🌏 Save the forest. Save orangutans.

03/03/2026

12 years behind the lens…
Filming wildlife across rainforests, oceans, deserts, and continents.
From Borneo’s ancient jungles to Europe and beyond —
the mission has always been the same:
To document what we are losing.
Nearly 40% of wildlife populations have declined in the past few decades.
Less than 4,000 tigers remain in the wild.
Around 6,000 cheetahs.
Lions, rhinos, elephants — all fighting for survival.
96% of the world’s mammals are humans and livestock.
Only 4% is truly wild.
Nature once determined how we survive.
Now we determine how nature survives.
This World Wildlife Day is not about celebration.
It’s about responsibility.
If they fall… we fall.

Since everyone loved the previous in-flight bird shots… here are more.This time — a Little Egret in full hunting mode.Th...
23/02/2026

Since everyone loved the previous in-flight bird shots… here are more.
This time — a Little Egret in full hunting mode.
The elegance you see here isn’t random beauty. It’s precision.
The Little Egret (Egretta garzetta) uses a fascinating feeding technique:
It catches a fish, tosses it into the air, repositions it mid-flight, then swallows it headfirst after landing.
Why the toss?
🐟 To align the fish properly
🐟 To prevent spines from getting stuck
🐟 To ensure a smooth swallow
🐟 To avoid losing grip in shallow water
This aerial “stunt” is actually survival intelligence refined over thousands of years.
Watching this reminded me again — wildlife is not just beautiful, it is deeply strategic.
In a world where wetlands are shrinking and urban expansion keeps swallowing natural habitats, these moments feel even more precious.
Grace. Focus. Instinct.
Nature’s choreography in motion.

In 2019, I photographed this majestic tiger at Zoo Negara in .🐅🐯Less than 4,000 tigers remain in the wild today.They are...
21/02/2026

In 2019, I photographed this majestic tiger at Zoo Negara in .
🐅🐯
Less than 4,000 tigers remain in the wild today.

They are power, grace, silence, and fire — all in one body. The way they walk… the intensity in their eyes… the quiet confidence of an apex predator. Tigers are not just animals; they are entire ecosystems breathing through stripes.

But as beautiful as they look in photographs, zoos are not where they truly belong.
A tiger belongs in dense forests, tall grasses, riverbanks — not behind barriers.

And here’s something many people don’t know:
In the late 1800s, tigers roamed parts of what is now Pakistan. Historical records show sightings in Malir, Karachi, and across regions of Punjab. Today, they are gone — erased by hunting, habitat destruction, urban expansion, and human greed.

Tigers are killed not only for sport or habitat expansion — but for the illegal wildlife trade.
Their bones are boiled into “tiger bone wine.”
Their skin becomes décor.
Their teeth and claws are sold as status symbols.
Different parts of their bodies are trafficked for traditional medicine markets and luxury consumption.

We didn’t just lose animals.
We lost wilderness.
We lost balance.

The tiger survives — but barely.
The question is: will we allow it to remain wild, or only remember it in cages and history books?

Ramadan Kareem 🌙✨As the crescent moon graces the sky, we begin a journey back to ourselves — a journey of reflection, pa...
18/02/2026

Ramadan Kareem 🌙✨
As the crescent moon graces the sky, we begin a journey back to ourselves — a journey of reflection, patience, and inner peace.
This beautiful Spotted Dove reminds me that peace is not something we chase outside… it is something we nurture within. 🕊️
Doves have long symbolized harmony and hope, and during Ramadan, we are invited to embody these qualities — through kindness, forgiveness, and compassion.
The Spotted Dove (Spilopelia chinensis), with its gentle nature and soft cooing call, thrives quietly among us — a reminder that strength can be gentle and faith can be calm.
May this Ramadan soften our hearts, strengthen our intentions, and bring peace to our homes, our communities, and our world.
🌿 Let your soul find its stillness.
🌙 Let your heart find its peace.

Stepping into the Year of the Fire Horse 🐎🔥  A time of passion, transformation, and fearless energy. May this year inspi...
17/02/2026

Stepping into the Year of the Fire Horse 🐎🔥
A time of passion, transformation, and fearless energy. May this year inspire us to gallop toward new horizons, embrace creativity, and strengthen our bond with nature. 🌿🌍

Wishing you joy, prosperity, and renewal in 2026. 🧧✨

About this picture I took it in 2012 at "Lake Saif ul Malook" in North of Pakistan, with my Canon 60D, this brings back a lot of memories for me when I was working on my first documentary project.

Indian Ringneck Parakeet | Rose-ringed ParakeetVibrant, intelligent, and full of personality — the Indian Ringneck (also...
11/02/2026

Indian Ringneck Parakeet | Rose-ringed Parakeet
Vibrant, intelligent, and full of personality — the Indian Ringneck (also known as the Rose-ringed Parakeet) is one of the most charismatic parrots found across South Asia.

With its bright green plumage, long elegant tail, and the striking rose-colored ring around the male’s neck, this bird is impossible to miss. They are highly social, often seen in noisy flocks, flying swiftly across farmlands, wetlands, and urban landscapes.
What fascinates me most is their intelligence — they are known for their strong memory, ability to mimic sounds, and complex social behavior. At dusk, hundreds gather in communal roosts, filling the sky with energy and sound.

In Pakistan, they are part of our ecological and cultural landscape — yet habitat loss and illegal pet trade continue to threaten wild populations.
From tree hollows to city parks, their adaptability is remarkable — but wild birds belong in the wild.

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