1. @ThoughtAnalyst This might be a little insight. In 2015, we assisted Qambar IDP Camp in Kabul. 300 kids froze to death in the years before. We lost one two year old a few days before we got in there. In 2016, I faced 3-5 years in prison for raising awareness of Qambar.
2. I lay on that prison bed, 300 kids alive and I might not see mine for 3-5 years. That's a fair deal. My child is not worth more than anyone else's. The NGOs running the camp refused to provide what they needed, the conditions were horrific.
3. The tragedy is that we would have been there every year had I not been detained, I am told nowadays Qambar is worse than ever. It's dangerous, people are dying, and it's miserable. It's a place without hope or the possibility of a future. (By insight, I meant into my thinking)
4. If we can't conduct ourselves with compassion especially at war, and respect the children of our enemies, we have no business perceiving our side (whichever it may be), as just or good.
5. I've never talked about this before, at least publicly.