This girl's powerful message about India, Pakistan will move you to tears

Indian girl realises Pakistan did not kill her father, but war did


News Desk May 05, 2016
If France and Germany can be friends after two world wars, why can't we?

People on both sides of the India, Pakistan border have spent 68 years hating each other. Is it any wonder then that they blame each other for any political wrongdoing?

People are arrested in Pakistan for supporting an Indian cricketer. A Muslim man in India was stripped and beaten publicly for accompanying a Hindu girl. But who is to blame for all these instances?

Indian poet pens tear-jerking message for Pakistanis

An Indian girl whose father, a soldier, was killed in the Kargil war between the two arch-rivals, recently uploaded a video on social media, telling the world how she hated all Pakistanis and Muslims, only to realise that Pakistanis did not kill her father – but war did. Her powerful message will move you to tears.

"My father died in the 1999 Kargil war," she says in the video.

"I remember how much I used to hate Pakistan and Pakistanis because they killed my dad," she adds.

The young girl and a soldier, now fight for peace between Pakistan and India. "If France and Germany can be friends after two world wars, why can't we?"

I'm an Indian. I don't hate Pakistan. I am not alone

Watch the video here:

COMMENTS (16)

Naran Maron | 8 years ago | Reply @Naron Marin I was taught in school that we should make peace with the indians, and we even did projects relating to peace at the border. But I had my own opinions. Do I still have the same opinions? Well to say that here, would be to incur the wrath of the comment section.
Naran Maron | 8 years ago | Reply IMO (in my opinion) it is the music that makes this message what it is. Music can alter our mood and feelings. If you turn the volume down, you see the message for what it truly is: An opinion, with little to no weight to it. As they say one man cannot change the world, and one opinion will certainly not make a difference for our brainwashed youth, who are filled with hatred. Now, the indians didn't kill any of my family that I knew. And, in spite of my living family not expressing hate towards indians on a daily basis(if ever, maybe I misinterpreted their statements as hate), I grew up hating the indians, hoping that Pakistan would just bomb them or something. Do I still hate them, that is irrelevant; the point is: this generation is filled with mindless hate for the other side, and, as mentioned before, an opinion cannot, and will not, change that
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