The pictures were heartbreaking.
Young boys and girls stood outside NEET examination centres with tears streaming down their faces. Some stared helplessly at closed gates. Others pleaded with folded hands. Parents looked equally shattered. Years of preparation, sleepless nights, coaching classes, sacrifices, and dreams seemed to vanish in a few cruel minutes.
One student had reportedly been delayed because of a political rally that blocked the roads. Another because her father’s motorcycle suffered a puncture on the way to the centre, and then it started raining.
There may have been many other reasons. Some perhaps genuine, some perhaps not. But what struck me was not the reason for the delay. It was the complete absence of compassion once the delay occurred.
The law said they were late. The gates closed. The matter ended. Justice had been served.
Or had it?
There is a difference between justice and mercy. Justice gives people exactly what they deserve. Mercy gives them a little more than they deserve.
A judge who follows the law is just. A judge who considers circumstances and shows compassion exercises mercy. Society survives not merely because of justice but because of mercy.
Imagine if every parent applied only justice. Every child would be punished for every mistake. Imagine if every husband and wife applied only justice. Most marriages would collapse. Imagine if God dealt with us only through justice. We would all be in serious trouble.
Mercy softens the hard edges of life.
What made these scenes even more painful was that the entire country had already witnessed controversy surrounding earlier NEET examinations. Allegations, confusion, cancellations, court cases, and administrative lapses had shaken confidence in the system. Yet the people of India did not storm the streets. They did not demand heads to roll. They did not throw out the authorities responsible.
They exercised restraint. In many ways, they showed mercy.
If a nation can extend mercy to institutions that make mistakes, surely institutions can extend mercy to children whose only crime was being delayed by circumstances beyond their control.
I am not suggesting that rules should be discarded. Rules matter. Discipline matters. Timeliness matters. Without them, chaos follows.
But every rule should leave a small window open for humanity.
A doctor knows that medicine heals, but compassion heals faster. A teacher knows that discipline works, but encouragement works better. An administrator should know that rules create order, but mercy creates trust.
The greatness of a system is not seen in how firmly it shuts doors. It is seen in how wisely it opens them when circumstances demand.
As we apply laws in our homes, offices, schools, courts, and institutions, perhaps we need to remember this simple truth.
Justice is good. But mercy is Godlike…!
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