Still he remained an incorrigible optimist. And despite the horrors of war, communal hatred and violence and cries for justice, he believed life is beautiful:
"When I see someone feeding pigeons in the morning or a baby smiling in her mother's lap or a full bright moon smiling over Taj Mahal, my faith in humanity gets stronger," he said with a laugh.
Nida, whose wife is Hindu, once wrote in an article for BBC Hindi website, "A bit of Hinduism, Islam, Buddhsim, Sikhism and Christianity is part of the upbringing of my daughter."
Despite having borne the brunt of being outspoken against communalism, divisive politics and social hypocrisy many a times, Nida—who wrote: 'Zuban mili hai magar humzuban nahi milta' (I have language but can't find someone who speaks the same) in a famous ghazal, remained a powerful voice of the voiceless all through his life.
Noted Urdu poet Ibrahim Ashq lamented on his facebook wall after Nida's funeral on February 8: Nida Fazli jaise Shair ko laawaris ki Tarah Qabrastaan main kyun Nahlaya Gaya? Koee Badi shakhsiyat bhi Shamil nahin huee? (Why was a poet like Nida Fazli bathed in the graveyard? Why did no important personality turn up at his funeral?)
Nevertheless, one of his ghazal in Insight—which is a collaborative musical album of Jagjit Singh and Nida Fazli, bears testimony to his conviction: