Love your enemy

Jarvis 2021-12-23 08:01:44

I am a person with no ambitions, so I recommend a film that may be criticized as "naive and naive" by some people.
The India-Pakistan conflict has been around for a long time, and personnel on both sides suffered casualties. How to deal with it? The political and military circles have their own "magic prescriptions." What do ordinary people think? Apart from military and political solutions, are there other ways? People live in harmony with each other, countries are friendly neighbors, and civilizations no longer use conflict as a means of dialogue. What kind of mindset is needed to support this ideal?
I'm not a political student. Even if I study it, I can't learn it. Even if I learn so-called principles and techniques, I will forget them all when things happen. All judgments and responses are nothing more than It is a natural stress response, mixed with emotions.
An Indian military officer, a well-known Pakistani celebrity, used their love to wait for 22 years without hearing from each other. An Indian was imprisoned in a Pakistani prison in order to protect the peaceful life of his lover, and the Pakistani went to India to realize his love. Ideal love proves to us: ordinary people can completely transcend the state of hostility between countries, a broad mind can tolerate violent struggles, and only a big vision can have a big future. Through the stories of these two individuals, we seem to be able to see other breakthroughs when national diplomacy is in a difficult situation: civil and personal contacts and communication.
Two people, each in a country that was (previously) hostile to their own motherland, dedicate themselves to each other. One is to preserve each other's reputation, and the other is to take care of each other's parents and realize each other's ideals. At the same time, they are all for the unswerving love in their hearts. In the end, they united in Pakistan and walked back to their homeland in India.
Veer said, they said this (Pakistan) is not my country, but how do I think it is? They said she (Pakistan, Veer's defense lawyer) is not my relative, but why is she fighting the world for me? They said it was my country, not her (Zaara), so why would she stay in my home? The antagonisms and conflicts between countries have disappeared in Veer, Zaara, and lawyers. They use their broad minds, magnanimous belly, innocent emotions, and dedication to truth and justice to fight for narrow interests, as if they waved their hands off the cobwebs, and dissolved them into the invisible.
What kind of country is a progressive country, and what kind of civilization is a developed civilization? It is not only economic development, not only the comfort of the environment, but not only political democracy, not only personal freedom, not only the protection of rights, not only judicial rigor and fairness, not only the promotion of international status, but more importantly, The pursuit of truth and justice, forgiveness for mistakes, tolerance for harm, love for the enemy.

View more about Veer-Zaara reviews

Extended Reading

Veer-Zaara quotes

  • [first words]

    Veer Pratap Singh: That's an F-16 flying at the speed of 1200mph. When a plane tears through the skies, playing with the clouds, no one but a pilot can understand that feeling.

  • Zaara Hayaat Khan: Relax, Ammi, I'm cool!