Mohra, starring Laiba Khan, Aagha Ali, Mikaal Zulfiqar, and Syeda Tuba Anwar, has done more than just entertain – it’s spoken to young girls, families, and society as a whole with strong and emotional messages. The drama isn’t afraid to hold up a mirror to how we think, how we judge, and how we treat the vulnerable when they’re at their weakest.

The turning point in the story comes when Anooshay falls sick and discovers that she is pregnant. Frightened and confused, she tries to reach out to Sikandar and tell him the truth – that she is carrying his child. But Sikandar, influenced by Areesha, believes she’s making it all up to trap him or get money. Still, somewhere in the back of his mind, Sikandar questions himself: What if she’s telling the truth?
Meanwhile, Anooshay and Alizay’s mother, Kaneez, is busy preparing for their weddings. Alizay finds out that Anooshay had been secretly seeing someone and lied about a friend’s house visit – but even she doesn’t yet know the whole truth. Eventually, Alizay stumbles upon Anooshay’s pregnancy report. The shock leads to a confrontation between the sisters, and now both are burdened with a secret too heavy to share with their already struggling mother.
Then comes the Mayun ceremony – and everything changes. The same doctor who examined Anooshay shows up at the event, only to reveal in front of everyone that Anooshay is pregnant. The wedding is cancelled on the spot. Guests leave in whispers and judgment, leaving behind a broken family.
What Mohra Gets So Right About Society
This drama didn’t just give us a sad story – it gave us truths, bitter and hard to digest, but real. Here’s what stood out:
1. People Assume Without Knowing The Whole Story
The moment the news of Anooshay’s pregnancy came out, no one paused to ask questions. No one considered whether she might have gotten married in secret or what her side of the story was. Instead of listening, people demanded a simple “yes or no,” as if her whole truth could be reduced to one word. And before she could even speak, the labels had already landed – “characterless,” “shameless,” “immoral.”
Why are we always so quick to judge, without knowing what really happened?
2. When You Need People The Most, They Vanish
One of the most heartbreaking truths the drama reveals is this: when the world turns against you, even the people you once trusted the most can walk away. Shaista was once a well-wisher of Kaneez and her daughters – kind, supportive, always around. But the moment things got difficult, she cut all ties.
They say, “It doesn’t matter who stands by you in your good times. You find out who’s truly with you when everything falls apart.”
Mohra showed us exactly how true that is.
3. Guilt And Grief Can Be Too Heavy To Carry
Anooshay couldn’t survive the storm. She took her own life, crushed under the weight of judgment, shame, and heartbreak. What’s even sadder is that even in death, society didn’t stop taunting her or her family. We don’t let children – especially young girls – make mistakes. We don’t give them space to learn, to heal, or to be human. The moment they falter, we pounce. We label. We argue. And if they make a mistake, we don’t let them live..
4. We Judge Mothers For Everything – Especially Single Mothers
Instead of asking how the system failed Anooshay, or why no one supported her, society instantly blames Kaneez.
“You didn’t raise them right.”
“You gave them too much freedom.”
“You should’ve kept an eye on them.”
These are the kinds of taunts single mothers hear. All of a sudden, one mistake from a daughter becomes a full-blown attack on her mother’s entire character and upbringing. Why do we always hold mothers responsible for everything that goes wrong in a daughter’s life?
5. No One Questions The Man
If a girl is judged for getting pregnant after being married, trapped, divorced, and left to suffer alone – then what is the man?
Sikandar didn’t just trap Anooshay – he married her secretly, used her, abandoned her, and moved on to another engagement, all while flirting with his office colleague.
But society stays silent. He walks free. No one questions his character. No one taunts his family.
Why is a woman’s mistake unforgivable, but a man’s wrongs invisible?
6. Guilt By Association Is Still Real
People didn’t stop at Anooshay. They extended the blame to Alizay too. “If one sister can do this, the other must be like her,” they whispered. This mindset is toxic, unfair, and sadly, still very common.
Alizay is left to face one trial after another. Shaista ended Alizay and Hannan’s engagement. Kaneez has fallen sick, the family is being socially sidelined, and pain keeps piling up from every direction. Yet, there’s a sense of strength in Alizay. Her interactions with Hamza are intense, full of unspoken feelings and emotional push-pull. Right now, she’s too overwhelmed to think of revenge – but sooner or later, she will. And how she takes revenge for her sister is what we’re eager to see next.
To find out what Alizay will do next, don’t miss Mohra, airing every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at 8:00 PM, only on Geo Entertainment.
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Written by Tahir Nazeer and directed by Mohsin Mirza. It is produced by Abdullah Kadwani and Asad Qureshi under the banner of 7th Sky Entertainment. The cast features Mikaal Zulfiqar, Laiba Khan, Aagha Ali, Syeda Tuba Anwar, Azra Mohyeddin, Behroz Sabzwari, Nida Mumtaz, and more.

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