Junior Contributors

The world is at war, and we’re all complicit in it

“Peace isn’t merely the absence of war. It’s the presence of peace.”

Photographer: Tanel

Every day somewhere in the world a bomb falls. A mother screams. A child runs for cover. Another family is rendered homeless. From Palestine to Sudan, Congo to Ukraine, war is devastating lives, dreams, and nations. It feels like every headline heralds another tragedy, another reminder that the world is falling apart.

War is not something that happens off in the distance. It’s not just soldiers and guns. It’s hunger and fear and broken hearts. It’s small kids sleeping on hard floors. It’s parents who can’t put food on the table for their children. It’s schools that are shattered and hospitals without medicine. Folks talk about war as if it’s politics, or power, but behind every blast are human lives, human beings who simply wanted to live their own life in peace.

In Sudan, children starve and run from bombs. In Palestine, entire blocks vanish in the blink of an eye. In Ukraine, towns are ruined and families torn apart. In Congo, thousands flee from war no one even witnesses. These are stories. Stories of pain, of courage, and of people who keep going despite the world forgetting them.

The greatest tragedy of war is that it does not end when the fighting stops. The devastation stays. It stays in the children’s minds who cannot sleep due to the sounds of gunfire still audible to them. It stays in the memories of the mothers who lost their sons. It stays in the ruins of homes that will never be rebuilt. War does not just destroy buildings, it destroys hope.

For what? Power? Space? Vanity? None of those are a price worth one human life, and still, repeatedly, leaders choose war over peace, hatred over love. Billions are spent on guns, but millions go hungry. Imagine all those billions spent on food, on schools, and restoration instead of on bombs. Imagine all those lives saved if peace was sought as a mission rather than an aspiration.

Peace begins with us. It begins with how we act towards each other. It begins when we choose kindness over cruelty, when we speak truth to power, and when we refuse to look away from injustice. Peace begins small: in hearts, in schools, in neighborhoods, and spreads like a virus when individuals care enough to do something about it.

Peace is not weakness. Forgiveness requires more courage than war. It requires more strength to listen than to scream. Genuine peace is built on understanding, empathy, and justice. It’s when individuals make the choice to see each other as human beings, not as enemies.

Nowadays, the world does not need war. It needs hope, compassion, and truth. It needs people to be brave enough to care, people to have the conviction that even a single voice, a single good act, a single moment of courage can be of some use.

Peace isn’t merely the absence of war. It’s the presence of peace, and perhaps, if enough of us make the choice for peace, the world will begin to heal, as well.

Trending

Exit mobile version