Among the Kuki–Zo peoples, history is not merely recorded in books - it is carried in memory, song, clan ties, and shared suffering. We are not strangers to one another; we are branches of the same ancestral tree. Yet, over time, dialect differences, geographical separation, and recent tensions have sometimes obscured this deeper truth. In such a moment, the call for Christian youths to organise regular interaction and joint worship across dialect groups is not just a good idea - it is a spiritual necessity and a pathway to healing.
