India watched as its heroes celebrated runs on the cricket field, while the shadow of Pahalgam’s massacre lingers—a massacre of innocent lives, a horror that should have united our nation in outrage. Instead, the bcci and the Modi government allowed a cricket match with the very country whose hands are stained with our blood. Sahibzada Farhan’s painful reminder of the killings during his half-century celebration is not just shocking—it’s a call to question our conscience. How did we become a soft state, willing to turn the page on such atrocities for the sake of a game?


The Government’s Silence:
If it were your own family massacred in Pahalgam, would you have allowed pakistan to step on indian soil for a cricket match? Silence is complicity.


BCCI’s Hypocrisy:
Would the board have participated if the victims were their own children, neighbors, or colleagues? Or is it only cricket that matters more than blood?


Players’ Morality Test:
What kind of patriotism allows athletes to play while the memory of slain citizens is desecrated? Could they even face themselves in a mirror?


The Audience’s Blindness:
Every ticket bought, every cheer in the stadium, is an echo of consent. Would you have watched if the victims were your loved ones?


Normalizing the Perpetrator:
Letting pakistan step on our fields sends one clear message: murderers are welcome, atrocities forgiven, and our grief ignored.


Half-Century Celebration Amid Tragedy:
Sahibzada Farhan’s gesture isn’t just a personal story—it’s a dagger into the heart of national pride. We celebrated runs while mourning was due.


Soft State, No Shame:
India’s failure isn’t just political—it’s moral. A nation that ignores such provocations loses more than blood; it loses dignity, respect, and self-worth.

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