Real events are worth remembering and touching because they are real

Ubaldo 2022-12-28 04:14:20

Movies based on true events are historical documentaries that everyone should know about. An ordinary day for you may be a day that countless people do not want to look back on. Fortunately, we have paper, pens, and movies, and we can record them, and we can always learn something from them.

When I saw this movie, I suddenly thought of a friend talking to me about Tibet and "Kang Rinpoche" a few days ago. She asked me, how do you feel when you see those worshippers in Tibet? I went to Lhasa three years ago with great longing for Tibet, and of course I was not disappointed. Whether it is the Potala Palace or the Jokhang Temple in the old city, there are devout people everywhere who make three bows. "Kang Rinpoche" was read on the second day after arriving in Lhasa. Lhasa is a very magical place. When you are here, you can see them bathing in the sun at an altitude of 3650, worshipping devoutly, turning the prayer wheel... everything feels peaceful and beautiful. At that time I was in admiration for them having their own beliefs, and I was overwhelmed with emotion because they were faithful to their beliefs. But if you take yourself out and think about what these beliefs have brought them, another voice will emerge.

"Mumbai Hotel" is based on the "9.11" incident that took place in India in November 2008. (Here I only write about my feelings about the movie) The brainwashed Muslims started from the toilets of the train station and went all the way to the Mumbai hotel. The terrorist attack plunged the entire hotel into a state of despair. More than 100 hotel guests and employees were trapped, and many hotel employees were killed in order to protect the guests.

This catastrophe is hard to imagine in peaceful times. Seeing the young terrorists inside, they started this battle for Allah, for faith, or for money. They must fight to regain the territory they occupied before, and to pay for the tyranny of their ancestors here. Here No one has self, they are controlled by religion, by their beliefs, by the "good man" behind the headset who devoutly serves Allah.

I thought everything was for Allah, but they were just pawns for the outlaws. Use their loyalty, innocence and inexperience to poison. The touching scene was in the hostage's room, when the boy heard Sarah recite a chapter from the Koran, he let Sarah betrayed by his devotion to Allah and the protection of Muslims' own nation. I believe he is still the most loyal believer, but he is disappointed in the one who served Allah. In the scene where the boy died, he dragged the leg that was hit and walked to the hotel corridor in confusion, with no desire to survive...

Also impressive are the hotel staff. Every employee, no matter when and where, put the customer's feeling and safety first. They don't live well, maybe in a slum a few blocks away, but at the splendid Mumbai Hotel, they always bring out the best in themselves.

I am a non-believer, or I have reverence for several religions, such as Buddhism, Taoism, Christianity and so on. I don't know Islam and I don't know the Koran, but if friends in Xinjiang, or Muslims see this movie, it may be another feeling. But in any case, this kind of indiscriminate violence and terrorist attacks will be spurned by people no matter where and in what era.

Hope that religion helps people, but not a tool for terrorists; hope that faith gives strength, but does not hurt others. Wishing everyone good health and world peace.

(I think Arjun is handsome, Zahra is beautiful, and the Russian eldest brother is very stylish, but I don't have screenshots)

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Extended Reading

Hotel Mumbai quotes

  • Abdullah: [searching the hotel room] Houssam? Houssam, come here! Look at this. Look, they have a machine to flush their shit. Even shitting is fun.

  • Vasili: Fuck your prayers. That's what started this shit.