Human beings bear the duty to seek an answer.
From their primitive life in jungles,
much has changed.
At every stage of evolution,
they were not what they were before.
Sages spoke of peace,
saints sacrificed themselves to bring sanity,
tomes of literature have long upheld
peace and harmony.
Yet wars return,
again and again.
Thousands, hundreds of thousands perish.
Countless others suffer unspeakable agony.
Nuclear blasts have seared entire cities.
Napalm has burned human beings alive.
And yet they are forgotten soon after they occur.
Even when war rages in its full fury,
we do not heed the screams of pain
or the cries of loss.
War games, sovereignty, and economics
remain our chief concerns.
We must ask why people turn aggressive,
what others do
when such designs are in the making.
We must not reduce our answer to reasons alone.
We must ask how we have evolved,
how we see.
what impresses us, and what we fail to see.
how we behave,
what we value, what we cherish.
Have we ever thought of our human self,
or is that the missing link we ignored all along?
Niraj Kumar Jha