More Dangerous Than Acid Is the Mindset Behind It
A morning in Quetta changed forever.
A female doctor, who had spent years studying, sacrificing, and struggling to earn the right to wear a white coat, was simply doing her duty. She was someone's daughter, someone's sister, someone's hope, and a symbol of healing for countless patients. Yet in a single moment, a brutal act changed the course of her life.
The acid was not thrown only at her face—it was thrown at a dream she had carried since childhood.
In Balochistan, a girl's journey to education is often much more than an academic path. Going to school is an achievement. Reaching college is a battle. Entering a university is a victory. And becoming a doctor is nothing less than a silent revolution against centuries of darkness.
Many girls here walk roads lined with poverty, prejudice, outdated traditions, and fear. Every step forward demands courage. Yet they continue because they believe education can transform their future.
That is why when a female doctor becomes the victim of an acid attack, the assault is not directed at one individual alone. It is an attack on education. It is an attack on a woman's independence. It is an attack on the dreams of thousands of girls who aspire to wear the white coat, serve their communities, and build a better future.
Acid does not merely burn skin; it leaves scars on the conscience of society itself. A disfigured face forces us to ask a painful question:
Why are a woman's success, education, and dignity still so unbearable to certain minds?
History, however, teaches us one thing: violence has never been able to defeat dreams.
The women of Balochistan have faced obstacles for generations. Their paths were blocked, yet they continued walking. Their voices were suppressed, yet they continued speaking. Their dreams were challenged, yet they never stopped dreaming.
And that remains true today.
Acid may wound a face, but it cannot extinguish the light of knowledge. It may injure a body, but it cannot burn away the hopes of an entire generation.
Because when a girl receives an education, she does not change only her own life—she helps transform the future of an entire society.
Perhaps that is exactly what darkness fears the most.
Today, the need is not only to condemn such crimes but also to raise a generation that values humanity, respects women, and understands that disagreement can never justify violence. A better society is built not only through laws and punishments, but through character, compassion, and education.
Today, a doctor's face has been scarred, but the heart of Balochistan has been wounded as well. Yet hope remains alive.
Because dreams, knowledge, and courage are lights that no acid can ever destroy.
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