Veer-Zaara is iconic for portraying an Indian (Veer) who sacrificed twenty-two years of his life in a jail in Lahore to give Zaara a happy life. Zaara, on the other hand, gave her life to fulfill the dreams of her beloved Veer in his home in India. It is this bond, this love, and this relationship that contemporary India and Pakistan are in dire need of바카라”a relationship that isn바카라™t controlled by suspicion, hatred, enmity, and war. Just like Veer felt, even when Pakistan was not his nation, it still felt like home to him. Or like how, even though India wasn't Zaara's, she made it her own. The two nations must unite again in nostalgia for their shared peace. What Veer and Zaara did years ago continues to reverberate even today. One hopes that the tension these attacks have caused바카라”not just between the two nations but also among the artists of both countries바카라”comes to an end. And once again, there is an exchange of talent, ideas, and cinematic creativity. One wishes to witness artists from both nations coming together바카라”on screen and stage바카라”just like we saw during the Zee Cine Awards 2005, where Pakistani artists Reema Khan and Humayun Saeed joined Preity Zinta and Shah Rukh Khan on stage, dancing to what almost felt like a patriotic song, 바카라śAisa Des Hai Mera바카라ť.