We loved Mohammad Kaif’s hard-hitting reply to a troller who asked him to remove Mohammad from his name after he supported the Kulbhushan Jadhav verdict. The cricketer taught him a lesson and posted another hard-hitting tweet showing him that he’s proud of India.
In fact, the troller tried spoiling Kaif’s mood with his derogatory tweet but he knew how to give a be-fitting reply. Kaif shared his “Motto” in life and after reading his post, you too would want to follow his path.
Here is what he tweeted…
1.Nobody is Thekedaar of any religion.
2. No name is copyrighted by the Thekedaars.
3.India is by far the most inclusive & tolerant country.— Mohammad Kaif (@MohammadKaif) May 18, 2017
It read, “1.Nobody is Thekedaar of any religion.
2. No name is copyrighted by the Thekedaars.
3.India is by far the most inclusive & tolerant country.”
What an elaborate and brilliant tweet! Kaif is definitely a champion and his post makes complete sense. We agree with him that India is a tolerant country; all Indians should have the same mindset, isn’t it? After reading his sensible tweet, Twitter couldn’t help but react; check out some tweets…
India is a gift of God!
https://twitter.com/TheJunedAlam/status/865258239654469634
Bold me INDIANS likhte hain!
https://twitter.com/imsalmansam/status/865256691499192320
India is a garden!
India is a Garden there are diffrent kind of flowers like Hindu,Muslim ,Sikh,Christian..
— Mohammad Aijaz Uddin (@IndianAijaz) May 18, 2017
Role model for youngsters of India!
https://twitter.com/DesiOptimystic/status/865255975577690113
We are extremely proud!
We r extremely proud of Indian Muslim, no one has any right to question our name/religion. #IndianKiDahaad
— Shahe Alam (@iAlam75) May 19, 2017
Religion is made by humans!
https://twitter.com/PankajBadola2/status/865289338988281856
It is a fact that the concept of “Religion” is created by humans and not by God. People fight in the name of religion without realizing that its’ wrong.
What are your views on this? Share with us in our comments section below.


