There’s a strange silence that creeps in when your heart is breaking – not from rockets or protests or flags or chants, but from the realization that your fellow humans have stopped listening to each other. What is the price of peace?
I’m not here to be right. I’m here to beg that we stop being wrong, together.
When I said, “Help me understand what the Iranians were expecting instead,” it wasn’t sarcasm. It was grief masked as a question.
And what followed, from some quarters, was a familiar tidal wave of rage: accusations of genocide support, historical illiteracy, blind loyalty, selective memory.
So let me reply, clearly, respectfully, and with the love and courage that my parents – two scholars from Karachi – raised me with.
The Price Of Peace
Petra Bühler, you said I support genocide and lie about the Nakba. Shame, you declared. But let’s hold that mirror up with clean hands. The Nakba was real, painful, unjust. But so was the expulsion of 850,000 Mizrahi Jews from Arab lands.
Were both not tragedies? Or does only one narrative qualify for your justice? When I say the Nakba wasn’t genocide, I’m not erasing pain – I’m refusing to rewrite facts for emotional effect. That’s not dishonor. That’s responsibility.
Partition, Suffering
Aay Kay, you invoked Ireland, and I hear you. Partition, suffering, British negligence, and the long, bitter road to reconciliation – I understand these stories intimately, for they’re etched in the soul of my subcontinent.
Peace Rebuffed
But you mentioned the 1967 borders as if they were a silver bullet. Israel withdrew from Gaza. What did it get in return? Rockets, tunnels, hatred – and no peace.
The world watched Jews removed by force from their own settlements in 2005. That, too, was historic. You forgot that part.
Carol, Deirdre, Don – thank you for your passionate replies. But when slogans replace thought and shouting replaces listening, it’s the truth that dies first. I’m not defending governments. I am critiquing all of them. Whether it’s Netanyahu or Khamenei, Biden or Modi, Putin or Zelenskyy – power without accountability is dangerous.
Military Industrial Complex
The military-industrial complex doesn’t wear a kippah or a keffiyeh – it wears a suit and signs arms deals while you and I argue over ancient maps.
Let’s talk about justice. Let’s talk about balance.
You want to call Israel an apartheid state? Fine. But also call out Hamas for using civilians as shields. You want to condemn U.S. interventionism? Do it. But also ask why Iranian dissidents are tortured in Evin Prison.
Be honest enough to weep for Israeli children hiding in shelters and Palestinian children buried under rubble. Don’t pick graves based on politics.
Conflict
This isn’t a conflict of religion – it’s a conflict of righteousness. Of people so convinced that their side is morally superior that they forget morality altogether.
I’ve written for years against corruption in my own homeland. I’ve criticized the Pakistani and Indian establishment, the Mullahs and Pundits promoting hate, the misogynists in our families, the fake and corrupt to the teeth so called democrats in our parliaments.
I’ve written in favor of women’s rights, minority rights, and the right to simply not be hated for existing. I stood up for Christians being lynched in Pakistan, just as I stand for Muslims being bombed in Gaza, and for Jews being stabbed in France.
My platform, movethestoryofyourlife.wordpress.com, isn’t about defending a side. It’s about defending sanity. Humanity. The bare bones of decency that used to unite us before hashtags replaced hearts.
Precipice
We are at a precipice in history. The far right is rising across Europe and the United States. Why? Because the far left abandoned truth for trends.
Because yelling “colonizer” at everyone who disagrees with you is not a foreign policy. Because screaming “resistance” while burning books, canceling voices, and excusing terror is not activism – it’s authoritarianism in disguise.
And yet – I remain hopeful.
Hopeful that Jews and Muslims will remember they share prophets, pain, and poetry. That America will remember its Constitution. That Iran will remember its poets. That Pakistan will remember its promise. That Israel will remember its neighbors are human too.
Peace comes with truth. Justice comes with honesty. And freedom comes with courage. If you must rage, rage against the manipulators – those in pulpits and podiums and pressrooms who profit from our hate.
If you must fight, fight for the child in Gaza and the child in Sderot. Fight for the Uyghur girl and the Israeli hostage. Fight for the veiled Iranian student and the Ukrainian grandmother.
And if you must cancel someone – cancel apathy. Cancel silence. Cancel the urge to throw your humanity away in the name of a cause that forgot what it was supposed to be about.
I’m not here to run from arguments. I’m here to run toward peace.
Not peace without justice. Not justice without truth. And never truth without love.