Waganda as the protagonist is of course a typical example of resistance, and the pair of Lala classmates in the school, Aunt Laila who works in the hospital, Abdul who praised Waganda for buying a bicycle, and the shop owner are also challenging conservatives. Thought. When the father decided to marry a second wife in order to add his son, the mother bought the beloved bicycle for Waganda with the money she originally wanted to buy a skirt to please her father--I cried at this point. The mother who has always been a conservative and traditionalist finally understood. and recognized Waganda's courage.
The headmistress naturally became the representative of hypocrisy, not only having a late-night rendezvous with her lover, but also arbitrarily deciding to donate Wajda's competition prize money to Palestine - just to prevent Wajda from using the prize money to buy a bicycle. Waganda is such a great girl, she did everything she could to buy a bicycle, and even won a competition to learn the Quran from scratch - using the prize money of the Quran quiz to buy a bicycle that women are not allowed to ride - she was so thoughtful.
The film is still trying to find some balance, or it can be said to be a fair attitude, that is, the recitation of the Quran is really beautiful and beautiful, and at the same time, it talks about the absurdity of human bombs who dedicate themselves to Allah in a playful tone of two children.
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