India, June 19 -- Contd from main page While Imtiaz Ali has made romances across decades, he claims that he "doesn't come from a point of understanding love". "In Socha Na Tha (2005), the confusion of Viren (played by actor Abhay Deol) was actually my confusion of committing in a direction but your heart pulling you in another. I didn't have an answer for that but I made a movie on it. Jab We Met (2007), in my mind, was not even a love story. It is about two people who meet as strangers and eventually become like the other. They complete each other and realise that [they are in love] later," he says. Similarly, Main Vaapas Aaunga (MVA) is set up as a love story, but also showcases the ordeal faced by the people of Punjab during the 1947 Partition. Does Ali feel that the film should be made tax free, especially in Punjab? "A lot of people have said that this is a story of Punjab, and also in a way of Bengal and other parts of India. If people feel that way genuinely and if that comment of national interest is out, then there must be a process in these states to see if the film can be made tax free and we'd be looking into it," he says. The filmmaker also asserts on the universality of the story, insisting that tragic incidents like the Partition are happening even today, something he brought out with the video of Kya Kamaal Hai in MVA's end credits. And it was Diljit who pushed for it. "I must thank him and Irshad (Kamil, lyricist) for encouraging me to make the video. I had never done or seen anything of this sort, but Diljit said, 'Ye to karna hi hai kyunki ye phir isko sabki film bana dega'," he shares....