Tuesday, November 29, 2016

An Open Letter To My Loving Parents On Their Thirty Fourth Anniversary











Dear Mum and Dad,

30th November 1982. Do you know how these numbers have created history in itself? A day that decided my fate? It’s a day when the two most significant lives that make my world go round united in marriage.  It’s been 34 years since then and here I am cherishing every single day of my life by the grace of the Divine. Today marks the 34th wedding anniversary of you two – the two most wonderful souls that have touched my life. Though unlike the last time, I won’t get to raise a toast with you this year in person, I thought of putting down a few words that I have reserved for your special day. 

 


 When it comes to you both, I have never gone by a rule book to address anything to you guys. That’s probably because you both have always believed in going that extra mile and expanded the horizons for me. That is because you both have consistently yet effortlessly extended your friendship to me going beyond the periphery of parenthood. For every child, their parents are the best examples in terms of contributing to them socially, economically, morally and intellectually. But there are very few who can look deep into the little ones’ eyes for a soul search and find something infinite. I am fortunate enough to have been born to two such individuals, whose life principles are navigated by one magic word – TRUST. Trust that is quintessential to every successful relationship on the face of this earth – trust that is probably the utmost ingredient to the recipe of a prosperous marriage and raising a child.  Because you trusted, you could also grant me the liberty to set myself free from all shackles of fear and dilemma, and thus helped me reach out to you both every time I needed you. Because you trusted, I could gather the courage to live life on my own terms and carve out an identity that’s solely my own and not imposed upon by conventional stereotypes of the society or the clichés that are common with a generation up in years. Most importantly, thank you for every bit of the “TRUST” held good and unswerving between you two. TRUST me, this is what keeps me going and feeds my love for life. :)




   Do you know what has planted the seeds of these thirty two years of amazing life journey? It is the love between you both. Besides the shelter above my head, the food on my plate and the love to keep me warm, there is something else that has kept my heart throbbing. It is the gift of your love, companionship and respect for each other that I treasure and take immense pride in. Your relationship has been a magnificent instance of faith, understanding, compassion, steadfastness, romance, compromise, integrity, devotion, respect, submission, commitment and friendship. When the classroom lectures seemed drab or complex, I tried picking up a couple of lessons from these gems that held your bond tight and firm. When someone said something like “Relationships are complicated” or “Marriage is a huge responsibility – a difficult one - the end of friendship” and hinted on the rising divorce rate across the world, one of these above mentioned components MUST have been missing in the bunch – I thought to myself. 




Dad, there would be times when I won’t see you for months and mum would take care of my academics staying away from you. There would be times I would go keen to know when is the next time you are going to help me do the critical analysis of a Bengali poem. But for that, you had to travel all the way to our home state and see us. Then I would go on to ask myself – “Why isn’t he staying with us?” – “Why aren’t mum and dad putting me into some other school so that they can live together?” After a lot of ‘Why’, ‘How’ and ‘When’ it was sometime around the sixth standard that I could decipher the true meaning of “sacrifice”. Growing up I inculcated a lot of values that fortifies the backbone of this family, but one thing that would blow my mind with every passing year was the growing love between you two. Your physical absence got mum more and more involved into the budgeting, maintenance and running of the household. On the other hand, I started identifying you with the qualities of a brave soldier, a provider and a giver who doesn’t budge from his duties towards his family, even at the cost of isolating himself at a faraway land day after day. What left me flabbergasted were mum’s resilience and self-command at the end of all those never failing phone calls that closed with a wait and a dozen of hopes for you to come home. We looked forward to seeing you, so did you from miles away! Mum looked after every minute detail of my report card, health care and co-curricular aptitude, and that way you would always love each other from distance. 

 


  
 The sense of security and blessedness can’t be explained that came from knowing that YOU both will always choose to honor your vows over any and every adversity of life. I truly and sincerely can’t thank you enough for the prized possession of your marriage and making it a priority. I have certainly and vastly benefited from it and am still trying to incorporate some of the major couple goals that can possibly make my conjugal life as awesome as yours. :)

What makes yours such an inspirational love story is how after all these years and a lot of peaks and valleys, your FONDNESS, COMMITMENT, COMPASSION and ADMIRATION for each other still triumphs over everything else in the world. Through the initial days as newlyweds to the sleepless nights of the most doting parents, through hospital stays to healing and rejuvenation, through family tragedies ad losses to the joys of success and celebration – 34 years of making it work, still going strong and winning the hearts of thousands who come in contact with you both – you have definitely unleashed the mystery of the nuptial stars for me and how some of them are indeed premeditated in heaven. :)


 

 Mum, you have done a great job in taking the initiative to plan and execute on your trip to us in the Unites States recently, which I believe was a much needed break for you guys. I surely feel it was a welcome change for you two to put your feet up for few days and rediscover yourselves in tranquility. I’m glad that it was possible. Uddalok and I – we both got to see you in a renewed way. You both looked fresh and enthusiastic to the core; being far from the madding crowd has enlivened your togetherness in a terrific way! Through every road trip to every photo session, through every movie outing to every dinner date – my mature vision of who you are in a mundane life has altered and nothing could put a smile on my face as a wide as this – to see two 50-somethings truly and madly in love with each other, 34 years down the line. :) :) 




 On this milestone of your marital bliss, I pray to Almighty – that He bestows me with the blessings to see you both together till eternity. May your love that is more powerful than the evil eyes, that is more vibrant than youth, which is pricier than any material asset keep blossoming and amplify in the times to come. I SALUTE your love, that is way above perfection, that can still give you both giggles to see each other decked out on your special days, that can bring back a sea of memories recalling inside jokes decades old, and just sitting side by side as content as can be over a glass of Wine. :)


 


Today, despite being able to be present only in spirits, I would want you both to make me a promise. A promise - that you would continue to safeguard and hold on to that covenant you made 34 years ago today. I wish you would ceaselessly grow in love for each other so that another 34 years down the road; we can stand in awe of an even greater love the two of you share than today.


Last but not the least; I want to thank you both for making my life beautiful in every aspect and not giving up on each other, ever. It’s an ecstasy to see your love coming alive every day. Many happy returns of the day mum and dad! Happy 34th and many more to come. I love you to the moon and back. 

Yours truly,
Mithi


Wednesday, September 21, 2016

It’s Time To Go Pink And Kiss Our Chicken Hearts Goodbye!








The subject of gender equality and empowerment for women has remained a burning issue of this decade. In view of the recent release - ‘Pink’, a court room drama featuring Amitabh Bachchan, Taapsee Pannu, Kirti Kulhari and Andrea Taring in pivotal roles, the issues have been stirred up once again. And I must confess, there are rarely films that give me goose bumps while sitting in the theater. It is very normal with many though. Some weep, some growl and some even hurl the choicest expletives to the screen! I can't recollect when was the last time I experienced something remotely close to all this and I, in an unpremeditated spree uttered those two words in a hushed voice like I just did last evening. And there you go! In colloquial Bengali it is literally ‘Gaye Kaanta’ (Cold shivers).


A lot of people have found “Pink’’ overrated – repetitive – so on and so forth! But I ask – haven’t they in that case missed some of the most important points? Isn’t it exactly the need of the hour? Do we not keep repeating ourselves harping on the same old point until it is established and implemented? Why do the majority shrug off from the bitter truth? Why can’t we be intrepid about accepting the vices that dominate our outlook and the environment we are brought up in? Is it so onerous to receive and comprehend such a powerful message that grips you through and through without making it ear splitting? The girls and their unfortunate circumstances in the narrative are bound to remind every woman about the day to day challenges that she has to perpetually face. She has to get up, get dressed, shine away and conquer her place in a world that still abides by and is blindly submerged in an ocean of unwavering feudal ideologies. "Wahan mat jaao" (Don't go there), "Woh mat karo" (Don't do that), "Us se mat milo" (Do not meet that person), "Yeh mat pehno" (Don't wear this), "Shaadi kar lo" (Get married) – ultimately everything zeroes down to "Log kya kahenge" (What will people say). A woman’s character has been an endless matter of discussion and debate specifically in the light of Indian culture. Culture as we call it, the dynamics are based on a primitive mentality and self loathing commandments, that are palpably man made. Yes man made. Pre-decided and superimposed by an irrational and patriarchal belief system that refuses to open its eyes to any sort of deviation. As the persona of Deepak Sehgal (Mr. Bachchan), defense lawyer for these damsels in distress rightly addresses and echoes the perennial problem of conventionalizing a woman’s character and thus labeling her as either ‘good’ or ‘bad’, one knows how the ticking off the clock ascertains a woman’s character to date.





 ‘Witch’, ‘Rebel’, ‘Whore’, ‘Characterless’ – let me put these in much more audibly dogmatist terms – ‘Dayan’, ‘Baagi’, ‘Veshya’, ‘Manhoos’ (Inauspicious) – the list of name-calling goes on. And the worst part – women, as a race have been defending themselves for long and carrying these so called tags in the market for society to determine their price. Having lived in Delhi, the capital of India as a single working girl for four lonely years, I know what it takes to go out on the streets alone in the night. What it takes to stay out late and cross over those treacherous areas such as Uttam Nagar, Tilak Nagar and Dabri – well known for being registered on cases of sexual violence, abduction, kidnapping and even domestic abuse. I remember my days residing in Dwarka, and I chose this location purely on the basis of minimizing the distance from the airport as I was working with the airline. There were torrid summer nights when the only respite from long hours of load shedding was to step out of the residence and stroll around the streets in lookout for a glass of chilled Mango shake and a bit of fresh air. Covering 200 meters from the working girl’s hostel till the point where our Mango shake bhaiya used to be sitting with his fruit cart, was a test of a lot of things for us girls. There were prying eyes as we walked around in shorts and spaghetti. Once it so happened that our gang of five had to hold each others’ hands tight and run for our lives in the dark as we found a group of loungers were following us. Wary of their possible ulterior motifs, we couldn’t have taken a chance because this is the same area where we had been hearing reports of incidents involving theft, eve teasing and even knifing that were frequently taking place in broad daylight. I’m sure, if we have to go by the misconstrued guidebook apprising us of women’s safety rules according to the Indian mindset, some sunshine should probably reduce the percentage of people raising their brows at women in comparison to those who loiter in and around pubs, discotheques in the dead of night, and consecutively drop “hints” of their availability to the opposite sex! 





I come from a country that is driven by a lobby of half literate leaders, and I do shudder at their misogynist views – “Should rape cases lead to hanging? Boys are boys, they make mistakes.” Well, these sons make mistakes and the wombs of their mothers fret in eternal guilt and shame. Every time we save a rapist, we commit a graver crime. Every time the honorable front runners of our nation pour scorn on how our girls must not board a private bus uninhibitedly at night, we make it tougher for our sisters, mothers and daughters to move around freely. Every time women are chastised for the length of their skirt, we declare how their existence is fraught with danger and their security at stake. But who cares? "Ladki ho." (You're a woman) "Izzatdar gharane se ho." (You're from a respectable family) "Achhi ladkiyan aise kapde nahi pehenti." (Good girls aren't supposed to wear short clothes).

The day we start changing this clichéd theory and grab the bull by its horns instead, our sons shall buckle up no matter where the frills fall – the knees, the mid or the upper thighs! 





It was summer 2013, and I was in no mood for marriage. My heartaches, my career, my freedom, my independence – all this was then latched on to a city that was singled out as the most crime prone and perilous for women. Yet all of this was more precious to me than getting tied down by conjugal duties and a kind of immobility too. It would have probably impounded me as a part and parcel of the whole package – I thought. My parents were definitely ready to ring the wedding bells for their only audacious and disobedient daughter. While I came flying down to my hometown so that I could see my ailing grandmother, the news of me being home bound began spreading like wildfire. I fondly remember a very dear relative of mine spilling some unsolicited advice to my mum on phone about getting me hooked soon as the safety scene for women in Delhi went from bad to worse. No wonder she was one of those overtly concerned "rishtedaar" who would be ever ready to promptly extend her sympathies and persuasively go on to console even if the marriage falls apart in next few hours. Having said that, she will motor mouth her expert opinions which pretty much aligns with that of our former chief minister of Haryana, to whom, the best way to prevent sexual exploitation is to draw inspiration for getting our daughters married early. Hence, we need to “learn from the past.”  “In the Mughal era, people used to then marry their girls to save them from Mughal atrocities”. Perhaps they both (My rishtedaar and the CM) could envision the then political milieu as pitiable enough to take resort to such absurd solutions and call it a truce. 


The heated argument in the court over girls partying and drinking that engages the post intermission sequences from the movie pops up several questions that still remain unresolved. Just like these girls in the movie, many of my friends, their friends and their sisters who are open minded, friendly and prefer living life in their own terms, are misunderstood for being “available” to random men as an object of sexual pleasure. Sharing a drink, a dance floor or having dinner together doesn’t necessarily mean a woman is ready to let go off her dignity. Even with her smile and a casual pat on a male friend’s back it doesn’t imply that she is inviting a pack of wolves to plow between her thighs wide open! 





 But alas! We live in a society that still condemns women for picking up the glass in front her father since she can NOT afford to become a “bad girl’’ but these doomed male chauvinists of the house can unhesitatingly keep up the rituals of ceaseless deprivation, chronic oppression and unrelenting abuse of their female counterparts in the family, as they are the “good” ones with all the virtues intact in them despite such irreparable damages. It must be fetching them the supreme power to withstand all forms of subjugation, bigotry yet maintain the brand name of a piece of priced property possessed by these monsters and masters of orthodoxy. There is a superabundance of such instances that mirrors the image of our women in contemporary India. Every day is a lightning bolt of what one “should” and “shouldn’t” be doing. Ironically, certain pre-conceived notions run in our system that defies all logic and justification. I have left India two years back, so the faintest of moderation in the thinking process isn’t something that is going to catch my sight (I doubt, in reality, there will be hardly any.). But there was a time many of my female friends who worked at night shifts in the beginning of their career and were thus looked down upon as promiscuous. I was even warned by respectable elders of the society to stay away from such girls of “questionable” character. They worked in Call Centers – some of them did so to support their families financially, some simply craved the taste of independence. What I could never decipher was the trumped up discourse on morality that these preachers of considerable sanctimony claimed that my friends were lacking. Sadly, these self-appointed role models of our generation are like inchworms, infesting us slowly and gradually with their garbled and remorseless doctrines of what an ideal woman of unsullied modesty must behave like. Needless to say, that includes not touching alcohol, veiling oneself head to toe, avoid any physical contact with the opposite sex so that it doesn’t appear as a “license” to the male hegemony of the community to take her for a ride. Her chastity, her consent and her body parts may then very well become mere commodities waiting to be ravaged - scarring her soul and making her ugly for life. 






 I can’t resist myself from letting a couple of more cats out of the bag as I have been no exception, but barely a perishable constitution of flesh and blood – susceptible to these radical and lopsided societal pressures and judgments prevailing far and wide. Once I met a guy at the Café Coffee Day in Delhi for the purpose of matrimonial alliance. Arranged by the families of course, we were supposed to interact with each other in order to figure out the most essential aspect – if the idea of coming together is at all going to work. Little did I know – Mr. Right with a moderately good personality, enviable degrees and commendable achievements in his profession of an academician was coming to see me with an already prefixed mind to tie the knot. As opposed to him, quite skeptical about how this meet was going to turn out, I wanted to keep it discreet. Over a cup of coffee he wanted to know if I drink and if I party out late with my friends. Also, if I had boyfriends! My replies were unapologetically thrown at him in affirmative. I was 27 and I wasn’t what he was expecting me to be! TA-DA! Looking at his washed out reactions I only asked him two questions that were left in my kitty. First – What is he looking for in his prospective life partner and second – who all are there in his family. To which, he conceivably chose not to respond to the former and straightway plunged in to the latter. He told me about his elder brother, who had to file a divorce from his “unscrupulous” wife. On being asked how her scruples weren’t right, he enlightened me with some of her character traits that the husband could unmask only after marriage. There was a charter of strict ‘NO’s that came in to view and assuredly, this anonymous woman was my savior – 






  • In the first place, she wasn’t a virgin and lost it to her teenage boyfriend in school which was well concealed from the husband. 
  • She was working in a bank and had to often attend parties with her boss and colleagues. Once she was spotted alone in a car with one of her male colleagues who was dropping her off home safely. Interestingly, it was just two of them in the car and they weren’t caught kissing or doing anything “unscrupulous” for that matter.
  • She occasionally drank and wore "low neck blouses" when she attended these parties. This was taken to mean that she was open to other men for relationships outside wedlock and that pretty much sums up her immoral actions and impurity so to say.
  • Last but not the least, she had the grit and candidness to say “NO’’ at times to sexual intercourse on being exhausted after a long day’s work, which her husband took to be an unpretentious indication of her floozy character and multiple ongoing affairs that presumably made her lose interest in the marriage.


Well, we winded up in another ten minutes as I knew it wasn’t going anywhere. We were different, so were our perspectives. Period. But that didn’t solve the problem. On the hind side, I became more reluctant to explore alliances and talk to people to find the right match for myself. I could never understand who selects the parameters of what a woman should wear, eat or drink and what category she falls in according to her acts and deeds – a demure and angelic homemaker or a reprehensible hooker! Regardless of what your identity is and how the society perceives you, you still remain a woman. And yes, under and below the virile. Who cares at the end of the day all of your spirits are caged in the same skeleton but while sheathed in your beautiful skin – sometimes White, sometimes Pink, sometimes Yellow, sometimes Brown and sometimes Black – you are carved with slightly unique features. That separates you from the rest of the tribe and empowers you to recreate and bring life on earth. Until we realize this, the road is bumpy. Like it has been for someone I know very closely. 


 She wasn’t aware that she, like many, didn't have the right to say “NO” as well. She was only seventeen – happy-go-lucky, smiling, polite and ambitious about life. Her amiability and smile was misinterpreted as her gullibility, therefore exploitation was easy. She was abused by her thirty three year old private teacher. As she shared stories about her school and classmates with him, sometimes how the competition over grades took a toll on her, he thought she willingly confided in him, which she did. But she was completely alien to what was in store. He started touching her inappropriately and one day she expressed her disgust. Though she had the conviction to fathom this was wrong and mustered courage to say “NO” – she was not only exploited time and again, but also threatened that her results shall be unsatisfactory in the absence of his guidance. This, obviously shook her up as the final exams were knocking on the doors. This went on for quite a while but one day, she made up her mind to share her plight with her granny, whom she was very attached to. 





Goes without saying, she was apprehensive of disclosing anything to her parents, who, she assumed might hold her responsible for all this – why she delayed informing this or her friendliness was the cause behind the trouble she had got in. And the worst – what if she doesn’t get hold of another equally accomplished and efficient guide to help her sail through the next few years? The evening she had planned to unravel this horrible state of affairs to her granny, she was forcefully kissed by her way heftier, stronger, and intimidating mentor, who didn’t dither from pressing himself hard against her and it choked her to death. She had only kissed her first boyfriend the previous Valentine’s month and nothing could have been more terrible than this. She has been carrying the burden of this unpleasant memory all this while and her parents do not know anything more than this man going absconding after this incident. She had to change her tuition and came out clean with flying colors in her finals. Having known her personally, I can say she’s doing brilliant today. But the shock and trauma of being compelled into something she clearly said “NO” to haunts her even now. 

This is the story of every girl today and we can’t do much about it. Every other girl child is abused behind closed doors during her adolescence, teens, sometimes even during her infancy which she can’t remember at times. One needs to reconsider this entire anatomy of gender bias, social imbalance and prejudices that are predetermined immediately at the time a female child is born. She is thereafter subjected to bear with and carry out the norms and ethos laid down by her neighborhood, her village, her state, her nation and even her folks. Nobody bothers if she’s approached by a serial killer, a terrorist, a thug, a drug lord, the CEO of a multinational company or the most duplicitous dharmik baba (religious leader) of the era. What disturbs everyone is from where she gathers the strength to refuse being victimized and how is she going to exercise that unseen and inestimable force to fight the evil out once and for all. This is the riddle we need to unscramble for ourselves and that’s what makes us who we are. It’s not the shade of our lipstick, but the verbal assertiveness, it’s not the designer purse hanging from our wrists but the invisible sword in our hands. It’s not our high heels but the standards we set for ourselves to walk freely, proudly and unfalteringly. It’s time to have eyes front, heads up and shine away. It’s time to go Pink and kiss our chicken-hearts goodbye.   




Tuesday, June 14, 2016

An Open Letter To Someone I Do Not Hate, But Take Absolute Pity On - Omar Mateen.








Omar, you don’t know me. And I am definitely not one of those victims of your firearm. I am not one of those blessed survivors either, who narrowly escaped your detestation on the jinxed day of Orlando mass shooting last weekend. And to conclude, I am not a lesbian. My husband is not a gay. However, we do have friends whose sexual orientations are different from ours. Our brothers, sisters, mothers, sons and partners have bitten the dust prematurely and some of them have managed to make a run for it during the rampage. But does it really matter? Does it really make sense to ponder over which community, religion, race and color they came from? Not really. What matters is the heartbreaking fact that they are gone. What keeps tormenting are the flashes of bullets sniped into bodies and the dance floor smeared in a pool of blood. Do you know those who entered the pub that night in a celebratory spirit, danced Salsa to the tunes of a strange destiny? Do you know how nobody had a clue that they wouldn’t be able to meet their plans for the coming week? And for those, who made it only till the ambulance, were unaware that they were granted hardly a few more minutes of breath after losing their friends in the face of your sig sauer mcx, the deadly weapon. 




 Be it a domestic crime, or a well plotted terror attack – every time an evil occurs, it’s a pound of flesh that is excavated from mankind. Every time we see and hear stories of deaths and destruction due to genocide surfacing on the media, we lose a tiny piece of faith in humanity. The degree of brutality and psychopathy that you have given yourself a free rein to through your actions simply throttles me. Neither you were a lone wolf lunging inside your caged up insanity nor was the attack an isolated event pointing at the manifestations of your abomination towards the gay pride. Your attack was a fierce blow on humanity as a whole and a reflection of your own egoistical insecurities about how the power of love and equality can not only imperil but also wipe out all roots of hatred and terror. 


 


 For last couple of nights, I have been sleep deprived, I keep getting panic attacks of someone breaking inside our house and gunning me down pointblank. I am mostly dazed, keep visiting the restroom like a zombie, splash some water on my face, only to reaffirm that I do exist and that your lethal shots haven’t left the mirror cracked as yet. The visualizations of those panic stricken innocent lives rushing hither and thither, the vivid images of your unimaginable and unsparing slaughter, the gory scenes of bodies piled up of the dead and the injured – all of it nauseates me in a binge of anger and frustration that it could be any one of us. It could be any of our loved ones. 




But today Omar, I shall not let my conscience respond to your unbounded hate with equivalent hate. I would gather all my strength to reassure my shaken up trust in love and compassion. It’s time to unite as people, as a nation and the entire human race. It's time to reinforce our trust in Good Lord’s Mercy and pledge to restore the lost harmony. 
 
As one of the fortunate survivors has shared his horrific account, I quote him saying – “Saturday night was Latin night, and it was a party vibe because of the Puerto Rican Day Parade. It was a hot night, and the club was filled with life and love and dancing and — until you arrived — pure joy.” The very reference to the holocaust you have caused sends shivers down the spine and I can’t even put my mind to envision the gravity of shock and grief this young boy must have been through owing to your radical zealotry! It cuts me deep to even think of how helpless Eddie, one of the victims of your barbaric stunt must have been, while locked up inside the bathroom as you went on to open fire and kill one life after another. Those text messages written by Eddie to his bereaved mother is a testimony of what we have grown up perceiving in movies can also turn true. We have known films like “Kurbaan” (2009) and “New York” (2009) being made to convey a message that portrays Islam and terrorism in a poor light, but little did we know that such incredibly frenzied people like you actually subsist on the international soil to exploit it as a seedbed for fear psychosis and these series of heinous crimes. 

Now, everyone is talking about what triggered you to massacre so many beautiful lives. Everyone is trying to find out a reason why did you have your heart filled with so much abhorrence? Is it that your ideals are an absolute discord with what makes us strong? This country and its backbone firm? Is it that love among people intimidates you or simply that you never possessed it on your own while your basic values and fundamentals were embedding? Yes, that’s the whole point. You must not have found acceptance for yourself and have possibly been denuded of the tremendous amount of love and empathy that calls for eradicating aversion and consequent vengeance of this extent. 



May I ask you exactly which aspect about these people in love with each other was bothering you? What was it that had to be dealt with arms and not understanding or a peaceful coexistence of two drastically opposite ethnic groups? But you know what, you haven’t conquered at all. You have been a complete failure in inciting discrimination among us. You may have slain Forty-nine lives (excluding your own, as your departure analytically doesn’t matter to those who are suffering so deeply, but surely it does to your family, as they have no other choice but to take you for who you were) and fifty more may have been left with their inner scar for the rest of their lives that will be haunted by the horror of this aftermath, but you certainly haven’t succeeded in annihilating what you had predominantly targeted at. To diminish love. To permanently ravish our pride and joy. That is the only saving grace which is going to immortalize these endearing souls. What makes them distinct from and more human than you are that their saving grace has never touched you. Or maybe, it did, but your personal battles with those ungoverned emotions superseded everything. Your case is a miserable one, one of another disgruntled soul deprived of acceptance and tolerance who just couldn’t receive and treasure such precious gift of love. You just couldn’t break free from the dark and gloomy barriers of dejection and despondency that is slowly unfurling itself and marks your identity now. Your attempts to destroy what makes humanity most powerful and giving are futile and that’s what makes you a coward. When you professed allegiance with ISIS and various other Islamic militant groups to the police, when they shot you down – all through this chaotic phase you must have been seeking gratification that you have accomplished in your mission to spread hate all over, but in reality, you have made more room for love and kindness. 



 
As a survivor puts it together wonderfully, “Eddie did not survive. Stanley did not survive. Edward did not survive. Luis did not survive. Akyra did not survive. Luis did not survive. Juan did not survive. Eric did not survive. Peter did not survive. Kimberly did not survive. Eddie did not survive. Enrique did not survive. Anthony did not survive. Jonathan did not survive. Yilmary did not survive. Cory did not survive. Mercedez did not survive. Deonka did not survive. Miguel did not survive. Jason did not survive. Darryl did not survive. Jean did not survive. Carlos and Luis Daniel did not survive. Oscar and Simon did not survive. Shane did not survive. Amanda did not survive. Martin did not survive. Gilberto did not survive. Javier did not survive. Tevin did not survive. Alejandro did not survive. Franky did not survive. Xavier did not survive. Joel did not survive. Juan did not survive. Luis did not survive. Juan did not survive. Jerald did not survive. Leroy did not survive. Jean did not survive. Rodolfo did not survive. Brenda did not survive. Christopher did not survive. Angel did not survive. Frank did not survive. Paul did not survive. Antonio did not survive. Christopher did not survive. Geraldo did not survive...


But love did. In fact, it just grew stronger.” 

Thanks for reminding us once again that life is beautiful. Thanks for showing us how transitory these moments of happiness and celebration could be. Thanks for letting us know that everything can change in a blink of an eye, hence loving with all our heart is the only way to make the best of it. Thank you for binding us together Omar. You have no idea how purposeful this life feels. Being alive is a privilege and we continue to live on with dignity as long as God shines his light upon us. May there be love, love and love abundant! AMEN.