Nana Patekar takes the terrorist, Kasab, into a room filled with dead bodies

 


Nana Patekar takes the terrorist, Kasab, into a room filled with dead bodies. He doesn't beat him up—he just talks to him like a fed-up dad dealing with someone who's made a terrible mistake. He tells Kasab to breathe in—there's no "smell of heaven," just the stink of death. He points out that Kasab was promised paradise, but really, he's just a confused young lad who's been used and dumped.


The main point is about exposing a lie. Kasab was told he was a "holy warrior fighting for God." Nana explains that if God made the entire universe, He hardly needs a 21-year-old with a rifle to "defend" Him. He strips away all the supposed "glory" and shows it for what it really is: sad, messy, senseless killing.


The Moral (What the "Big Shots" Don't Get)


The "big shots"—the handlers and masterminds sitting safely across the border—completely miss the most basic human truth:


Cowardice vs Bravery

The leaders talk about "sacrifice" but never put themselves at risk. They sit comfortably eating nice meals whilst sending poor young lads off to die in a morgue.


The "Con" of Hatred: The real lesson is that hate is a business. The handlers sell a twisted version of God—one who's weak and vengeful—when the actual truth is that being human is what matters most. If you have to kill people to prove your faith, you haven't found God; you've just joined a dangerous gang.


The Bottom Line: Real strength doesn't come from a gun; it comes from telling the truth. The "big shots" are just cowards selling lies to desperate people.

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