Sana Yousuf has been killed. But the grief of this innocent 17-year-old girl’s death still haunts us. This is not just a one-off incident—it reflects the moral decay of a society where humanity is gasping for air while we remain silent spectators.
The Race for Money and the Reality-Show Culture of Personal Lives
In today’s world, the race for money has trapped us so deeply that we’ve forgotten ethics. Under the banner of “entrepreneurship,” everyone is busy selling their talent. But has this talent trade crossed all boundaries?
TikTok and Facebook culture have turned personal life into a public reality show. Every emotional up-and-down, every ego clash, every family drama is packaged and presented as “content.”
There are no boundaries anymore—just grab attention.
No Morality in Content Creation
Content creators have no ethical filter. To grow fan following, modesty is thrown away. Conversations, interactions, even the sanctity of relationships, are sacrificed at the altar of “what’s trending.”
And when young girls flaunt their beauty, it is considered an “achievement.”
But then, something unexpected happens—
“I didn’t give him hope… so how did he get so serious?”
Revenge for Heartbreak: The Beast Called Honour
But the story doesn’t end with flirtation. When a “heartbroken lover” turns serious, it becomes a matter of life and death.
He feels humiliated in front of friends—so he takes a life.
Then it’s dressed up as “honour.”
Murder becomes revenge.
Surrendering to the police is seen as bravery.
But is this really honour? Is killing a girl really justice?
Lack of True Religious Education
In our society, religious education has become memorization without meaning. We teach children the words “halal and haram” but never reach their hearts.
Teachers don’t know which emotional nerve to press.
The result? The lines between right and wrong blur.
And whether it’s the Punjab University incident or Sana Yousuf’s murder—every time, we’re left in shock.
Is Only the Killer to Blame?
Is the mother not responsible, who didn’t notice her son going astray?
Are the institutions not to blame, who knew about Noor Muqaddam spending four days with someone but did nothing?
Is the society not guilty, that always blames “fate” but never takes accountability?
Sana Yousuf is dead.
For a few days, there will be headlines, outrage, protests, and social media posts.
Then silence. Until the next victim.
Will we wait for another girl to die?
Or will we start fixing our homes, our children, our society?
Because after every murder, crying alone won’t change anything.