Is war what our hands have won? – National Whisper – ✍️ Dr Tariq Ashary

Before the war, the daily situation warned against the danger and that our behavior and our life have treated things that have angry the Lord of the servants of nudity, immorality, wear and tear and what is happening in the street many practices in the behavior of the Sudanese character and the lack of respect that was propagated in the rising generation, and I am an eyewitness, in particular in universities.
Wars do not flow from a void, but are rather the result of long journeys of human errors, accumulated conflicts and injustice that has been accumulated over the years. The question that many people ask today: what we are experiencing in a war is what our hands have won?
From a religious point of view, the Holy Quran clarifies this fact by the all-powerful saying: “And what happened to you is a calamity. When injustice prevails, justice is lost, corruption is endemic, natural result is division, conflict and perhaps war.
In Sudan, the current war is not an emergency incident, but rather the reflection of a history of marginalization, corruption and conflicts on power, and to neglect to build public institutions on firm foundations. All these accumulations have made a fertile environment for the explosion of conflict, as if it were a harvest of what we planted with our hands.
However, it should not be understood as a penalty only, because war can also be an alert message, an opportunity to review the self and the beginning of a new more coherent path. The great nations have often left the uterus of crises, to make a real rebirth when she made her mistakes and learned from her injuries.
So, yes, war is what our hands have won, but at the same time, it is an invitation to change and reform, and a rare opportunity to build a new homeland based on justice, equality and unity of speech. We must transform this pain into a driving force towards a better future, and not to let it return to the circle of division and destruction.
The war, in substance, is not only a fight between the armies or the armed groups, but rather the reflection of deeper crises in the structure of societies and countries. When wars broke out, people ask: is it an inevitable destiny? Or is it a natural result when our hands won?
If we apply this concept to the reality of Sudan, we note that war did not suddenly come, but rather decades of political and social errors. Corruption has spread in state institutions, and authority has turned into a booty, and the value of the law fell on the logic of power. Development has been neglected, opportunities have been lost and people are left in front of crises of poverty and ignorance, while political elites are fighting with chairs. All of this was our hands, so reality had to explode one day.
But war, despite its cruelty, is not the end of the road. It is also an alarm message and an opportunity to examine. Nations who learn from their crises can rise under the stronger rubble than it was. History is full of peoples who suffered from wars and destruction, then rebuilt their country of origin to become more powerful and more equitable.
Yes, war in Sudan is what our hands have won, but it is not eternal. It is an alarm that calls us all to rethink our path and build a new homeland based on justice, citizenship and unity. If we are aware of the lesson, the martyrs’ blood will not waste and this pain will be the beginning of a new dawn. But if we do not know the facts, we return to the vain of conflict, then history will be more serious than we see today.
Thus, we realize that what we live today did not come from a void, but is rather the harvest of years of errors and negligence, and a natural production when our hands have won. However, the guilt confession is the first path of the reform, and that taking advantage of severe lessons is a way to build a better future. If we are the best party and we have gone beyond the paths of the past with consciousness, unity and sincere will, pain turns into strength and ruins into a new start, we therefore write a different story in which fate is not restored to the same painful scene. And Sudan after the war is stronger and the most beautiful
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