đ¸ Hansa Babar: The Little Girl Who Belonged to Love
A childâs smile that teaches us the truest meaning of family and home.

It was an ordinary afternoon when I walked into a familiar courtyard in Shergarh, a town not far from Mardan. The grass was soft beneath my feet, the flowers alive with color. And there, standing between the blossoms, was a little girl who seemed to light up the entire garden.
Her name was Hansa Babar.
Three years and two months old. A tiny whirlwind of joy and innocence.
She wore a frilly turquoise dress layered with tulle, a matching headband that framed her small face, and bright sneakers that made her look both playful and regal at once. On her wrists, tiny bangles clinked like whispers of celebration. But nothing in her attire compared to the radiance of her smile.
It wasnât the kind of smile that comes from being posed for a picture. It was raw, unguarded, and filled with a purity that adults spend their lives chasing and never quite find.
And in that moment, I realizedâHansa was more than just a little girl. She was a story.
Where Love Feels Like Home
Hansaâs parents live in Mardan city. Yet, her heart seems to belong elsewhereâat her maternal grandparentsâ home in Shergarh.
There, in that house, she finds a cocoon of love. Her grandmotherâs lap, her grandfatherâs protective presence, her uncleâs playful affection, and above all, the tireless care of her aunt.
It is here she thrives. Here she forgets the need to call out for her parents. Here she belongs.
It struck me as something profoundly human: children bloom wherever they are watered with love.
The Nature of Children
Watching Hansa made me reflect on the nature of children. They do not cling to possessions, wealth, or status. Instead, they attach themselves to affectionâthe voices that soothe them, the hands that hold them, the eyes that notice them.
Hansa reminded me that children donât calculate where they âshouldâ belong. They simply follow the warmth.
And in Shergarh, in the shelter of her grandmother and aunt, she found her warmth.
A Scene to Remember
That day, her aunt had dressed her up with the kind of care usually reserved for brides. The fabric of her dress glowed in the light, her shoes shone, and her bangles shimmered with every movement.
It wasnât the clothes that made the moment memorable. It was the devotion behind them. Her auntâs love stitched into every detail. Her grandmotherâs blessings surrounding her like an invisible shawl.
I realized thenâfamily is not defined by where you are registered, but by where you are cherished.
More Than a Child
As I watched her tiny hands clutch the edges of her dress, I didnât just see a child.
I saw a mirror.
A mirror reflecting one of lifeâs simplest truths: we are drawn to love, not obligation.
Hansaâs comfort in her grandparentsâ home didnât mean she loved her parents any less. It only meant that the abundance of affection here was enough to anchor her heart.
Isnât that what we all crave? To be seen. To be adored. To be somewhere we donât have to ask for loveâit is given freely.
What Children Teach Us
In our grown-up world, we complicate everything. We measure happiness in careers, cars, bank balances, and likes on a screen.
But Hansa, in her unspoken way, was teaching a lesson.
That joy is not in what we own, but in who holds us.
That belonging is not about documents or addresses, but about where our hearts feel safe.
Children are the purest philosophers, and their lives are the simplest sermons.
My Quiet Reflection
As I clicked her picture that day, I knew I wasnât just capturing an image. I was capturing a truth.
That the essence of life is not about chasing bigger toys or higher milestones. Itâs about the love that wraps itself around us in quiet homes, in small courtyards, in the embrace of people who donât need to be asked to care.
Hansa Babar became my reminder that we never outgrow the need for loveâwe only learn to mask it with other pursuits. But children, unfiltered and honest, show us the truth: love is the only currency that matters.
đ The Beautiful Ending
That evening, as I left her grandparentsâ home, Hansa was still laughing in the garden, chasing petals that had fallen from the flowers. Her bangles jingled, her dress swayed, her smile widened.
I walked away with one thought etched in my heart:
Children are not loyal to walls or citiesâthey are loyal to love. Wherever love is, that place becomes their true home.
⨠Final Line:
In her laughter, I realizedâhome isnât where we live. Home is where we are loved.
About the Creator
Shehzad Anjum
Iâm Shehzad Khan, a proud Pashtun đď¸, living with faith and purpose đ. Guided by the Qur'an & Sunnah đ, I share stories that inspire â¨, uplift đĽ, and spread positivity đą. Join me on this meaningful journey đŁ


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