In the 19 nineties, this community was targeted by islamist extremists backed by pakistan during a particularly cataclysmic surge in violence. The film tells the story through the story of one family that's kind of broadened out. But basically, it tells it with a lot of violence. Within the first 15 minutes of the film, we have muslem badgys betraying their neighbors, muslem kids beating up hindoo kids and muslem mobs chanting, convert or die. There are just no good moslems in this movie at all.
In Yemen, fighting between Houthi rebels and a Saudi-led coalition has led to hundreds of thousands of deaths. Recently, a ceasefire has taken hold — but whether it presages the war’s end or further fighting remains unclear. A new film about Kashmir has proven popular among Indian politicians, largely because it supports their Hindu-nationalist narrative. And why cricket is taking off in Brazil.
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