I have to say that if the director's setting of the plot is not thoughtful, he will think that it is too much of a routine. It is designed in order to create incomprehensible ethical issues, but I don't know if this is the biggest rebellion against war and religion. Putting the most unreasonable situation in front of everyone can show the huge contradictions among them.
In this way, you can't make yourself happy by going back and forth with each other. One plus one equals two, and hatred will only be imposed. In a narrow religious belief, an either-or world, war is imminent, the strong and the weak return to each other, no matter how deep the love is. The mother looked for her son regardless of the war, saw the cruelty of Christians and chose to stand in the Muslim camp as the Assassinations by killers, sons being used as tools in Christian prisons in order to let their mothers see themselves, will all be used by war as tools to vent their anger. In this way, there is no victory in this farce. It is just a game of mutual knife. There is a growing interest in Gandhi's revolutionary approach to nonviolence and noncooperation.
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