You do realize this is also being used as propaganda against Pakistan, right? The blame game between India and Pakistan is older than many of us, but using a tragedy like this to push an agenda is not just wrong, it’s dangerous. Innocent people pay the price for that kind of hate
I’m a Pakistani Muslim. I’m heartbroken by what happened in Kashmir. Innocent lives were taken in cold blood. No family should have to grieve like this. No one should be killed for simply existing in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Islam has already been vilified enough. Islamophobia has cost lives, silenced voices, and made Muslims afraid to exist. And then, when violence happens, we’re expected to apologize for something we never stood for in the first place.
But let’s also be honest about something else. Kashmir has seen decades of violence, military presence, and deep-rooted pain. That doesn’t excuse what happened. But it is part of the story. We can’t ignore it if we care about peace.
On April 22, 2025, militants affiliated with The Resistance Front, an offshoot of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba, carried out a brutal attack in Baisaran Valley, Pahalgam, killing at least 26 people, including tourists and locals.
In the eyes of the monsters, the success of military operation is measured by the degree of destruction and the number of children killed.
Iran did neither.
If we normalized married couples showing affection, maybe children wouldn't grow up emotionally stunted and thinking that any type of physical affection is dirty and something to be hidden.