I do not know much about losing a loved one either. I have only lost one person who meant a great deal to me and her funeral was the only one I have teared up at.
I thought it would stay that way. And then December 16, 2014 happened.
The news of the attack came as a shock. The number of bodies, that kept piling continuously, horrified me. When the news reporters started shoving cameras into faces of mourning mothers, I could only feel disgust and anger.
Doctors and amputees talk about phantom limbs. What do parents talk about when they lose their children?
Do they go to their child’s bedroom at night to tuck them into bed, only to be reminded that their child is in a deeper, permanent slumber? Do they keep setting extra plates at the table, calling out for their child till their throats are sore? Do they still wash the uniform their child was supposed to wear the very next day, hoping that they can wash away the day itself?
How do you move on and stop mourning a life that had barely begun?
December 16, 2014 took away one hundred and sixty futures. It robbed us of the nation’s finest doctors, lawyers, engineers and politicians in the making. It blew out one hundred and sixty candles that cannot be rekindled by vigils or statuses on social media or even articles like this one.
Pakistan has been attacked, looted and humiliated in what can only be called the lowest point for all of humanity.
What are we going to do about it? Keep staring at pictures of the bloodstained auditorium till they lose meaning altogether? Keep sharing pictures of the children who have been martyred till we are forced to scroll past them without sparing a glance?
I wish I knew. I wish I could do more than attend vigils, pray and pen my thoughts on paper. I wish there was a way to understand why this attack needed to happen.
How does a man look into a child’s innocent eyes and proceed to rob them of the light that dwells inside them?
I wish I had answers. I wish I could do more.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 22nd, 2014.
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COMMENTS (8)
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@Sarah: Thank you, that truly means a lot.
Sajeer, you have done a great job penning our thoughts on paper. I bet each one of us feel the trauma to the very core of our existence but are at a loss of words to describe exactly how we feel.
As for doing something to help alleviate the helplessness we feel, I think you're on the right track as a medical student on her way to receiving the training to save human lives. You are brave and dauntless and may Allah bless you in your career so as to go on and make a difference in this cruel cruel world.
When you attend vigils, pray and pen your thoughts to paper.....you are doing much more than most......God bless you for doing so.
@bahadur khan: Getting married doesn't mean you cant practice. It all depends on support from your partner and his family. Its seldom the fault of the "female medical graduate"
Do they keep setting extra plates at the table, calling out for their child till their throats are sore? Do they still wash the uniform their child was supposed to wear the very next day, hoping that they can wash away the day itself? i could not help tear to come in my eyes, u writer a crafted sensational piece
You've put what we all feel into such precise, impactful and amazing words man ! Literally, we all yearn to be a little more useful in times like these, than just venting out the frustration on the social media. The most powerful idea from this article, which I think will stay with me forever, is how the parents wish to wash away the day itself. We all do. Kudos !
Very well written. A good writer is someone who can put feelings to words and you did that brilliantly. It truly is the lowest point for us. All of us must do everything we can in our power to change the course of future. Several steps have to be taken, hanging a few is not going to be enough.
in pakistan 50% of female medical graduate get married, leave for US, canada, dont practice. You can change it by practicing medicine.