Pakistani actor and director Mirza Gohar Rashid, in a scathing response to Israeli-backed Zionist Hollywood actress Gal Gadot, who attacked unarmed Palestinians, said his country imposed the war.
Gal Gadot, an Israeli-Jewish actress who starred in films such as Wonder Woman, backed her country, Israel, a few days ago instead of regretting the attack on the Palestinians.
Gal Gadot, who has also served in the Israeli Defense Forces in the past, wrote in his tweet: "His heart is crying, his country is at war, he is with his family and friends. People are worried.
The Jewish actress wrote, "This cycle of evil has been going on for a long time. Israel also has the right to live as a free and secure nation." @GalGadot your country is not at war, It has created a war. No patriotism is bigger than innocent people lives and humanity and if you can’t be mind full of that being an Israeli then it’s very evident that where the problem lies. Hope you realise it soon.
#IStandWithPalestine https://t.co/CucsxadlsI
"Israel's neighbors have the same right, I pray for the victims and their families," Gaddafi wrote. "I pray for an end to this unimaginable animosity," he wrote.
While the Jewish actress was criticized by many for her tweet, showbiz personalities also reminded her that the oppressed is not Israel but Palestine.
And now Pakistani director and actor Mirza Gohar Rashid has retweeted his tweet and reminded him that his country is not in a state of war but his country has imposed war.
Mirza Gohar Rashid mentioned in a tweet that Israel imposed war on Palestine and that patriotism does not go beyond the lives and human rights of innocent people.
The Pakistani director and actor told Gal Gadot that if he, being an Israeli, could not see all the flaws properly, it was clear where the flaws were.
At the same time, Gohar Rashid expressed the hope that Gal Gadot would soon realize that his country had imposed the war.
Recent Israeli attacks on Palestinians have been ongoing since May 7, and as of the morning of May 17, 188 people, including 58 children and women, had been killed.