A set of fictional stories protraying how beautiful Islam, our way of life is...

Monday, November 26, 2007

A letter to Allah, from a seven year old

Dearest Allah,

All praise to You, o Lord of the worlds.

May peace and blessings be upon your messenger, Mohammed SAW and his progeny.

Dear Lord, today Ammi made chocolate cake and it was the bestest. She also gave me a glass of milk. I don't like milk. But she says it's good for the body and that I will be able to beat Ashraf on sports day. She told me it was a blessing from You and I should not make faces. I am sorry to make faces... but Lord; I really don't like milk :(

In school I learnt multiplication. Teacher thinks I am fast with numbers. I don't like numbers but I like multiplication. I can multiply three digit numbers and I even taught Zahra how to do it. The best part of school today was break time. Me and Ali and Abdul played football. Abdul's dad got him one from the big shop on Halls street. That mean guy Amar tried to take our football away but we didn't let him. We took the ball and ran. I told Ammi this and she told me that we should not run away like cowards but 'confont' Amar. I don't know what confont is. Is it to give him the ball?

After lunch we went to Madrasa. Mualim aunty has finished teaching us the whole prayer. I can now pray the complete prayer! She has told us to pray everyday. She says it will bring us closer to You. She also says that you love children a lot and especially good children. I hope I am a good child. While we were all practicing how to pray, Amar pushed Ali and he fell down. Abdul got very angry and he hit Amar. Mualim aunty then came and separated them. When we told her Amar had pushed Ali, Amar started lying! He said he had not! Mualim aunty then took him away from our row and to the back.

Abbu has not yet come home. I don't know if he will come today. Yesterday I got up in the night. I wanted to go to the bathroom. When I passed Ammi's room, I saw she was crying. She was sitting by the window as if waiting for Abbu. I went in and I gave her a hug. She hugged me so tight. I might have broken my bone in the chest. Why does Ammi cry in the night Lord? She is always smiling in the day. In the evening she even chased me with the spinach soup. I don't like spinach soup. She is always happy happy with me then why sad sad at night? Please let Abbu come tonight. I want Ammi to be jolly always.

Ammi is calling me for dinner. She doesn't know I write to Lord. It is our secret.

May peace and blessings be upon your messenger, Mohammed SAW and his progeny.

I love you.
Your little servant,
Mansoor

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Alvira

Alvira climbed over the gate and quietly climbed the stairs to her flat. "Damn neighbors, damn neighborhood' she mumbled as she reached for her cell phone. She didn't want to ring the door bell at 3.00 am in the morning in case the neighbors woke up. Her boyfriend Ritesh has dropped her around the corner so that her neighbors wouldn't hear the bike. "Pick up your phone", Alvira sweared beneath her breath.

"Hello" came a sleepy soft voice. "Hey, it's me!! Open the door, I am outside" Alvira whispered to Sakina, her roommate. She could feel Sakina jumping out of her slumber- partly from surprise and partly from shock. "What time is it?” Sakina asked. "First open the door. Quick!" Alvira replied exasperated. Sakina got up and opened the door.

Alvira came in quietly and closed the door. "Thanks and sorry to disturb you" She threw her bag on the sofa and walked to her room removing her jacket. Sakina could smell smoke and perfume and she knew Alvira would be coming from her club parties. "It's three in the morning! You've gone too far now!" She told Alvira in a stern voice.

Alvira turned and laughed, throwing the hair over her shoulder. "Just chill babe. We had a new DJ playing and wooooooo", Alvira twirled around "It was fun. Sad you don't come" Alvira gave Sakina a look of pity.

Alvira and Sakina had met at the University campus on their first day of school. Alvira recognized Sakina as a Muslim because of her scarf and she went and introduced herself. Sakina had become over zealous to know that Alvira was also in her class. Sakina came from a small town somewhere in the middle of India. Alvira was from Dubai. She had come back to India to do her degree studies. At least that is what she told her parents. The fact was, she wanted her freedom away from home and that was why she chose to study away from home. She and Sakina had agreed to be roommates and the best part was; Alvira's parents were happy. They liked Sakina and thought Alvira would be safe with a good Muslim friend.

In the first year itself, Alvira found herself a boyfriend. She was pretty, confident and everyone loved to be around her. When she entered the room, it became fun and everyone wanted to be with her. Sakina on the other hand was quite and a serious student. She went to college, attended the classes and went back home to continue studying. Sakina and Alvira had little in common. Alvira studied fours hours before the exams and scored eighty percent. Sakina studied twelve hours a day and scored ninety and above.

The only common thing which they shared was - they belonged to the same faith. Islam. Alvira never thought about it while Sakina lived it. For Alvira, Sakina was a nice hassle free alibi for her parents. Since she was staying with such a responsible girl, her parents felt at rest.

Sakina had realized within a month that Alvira was a flirt. She saw her in class, the way she would talk to boys and laugh. While Sakina prayed all her prayers, Alvira didn't believe in praying. Sakina had asked her many times to pray, indirectly and politely but Alvira was not interested. At times Sakina saw a guilty look in Alvira's eyes and at times, just darkness. Alvira did fast though during the month of Ramadan but as soon as the month was over, she was back to being the carefree or rather careless teenager. The choice of clothes were designer tank tops, cut jeans, and many revealing dresses. There was no doubt that Alvira was beautiful. She has flawless fair skin, lovely hazel eyes, beautiful hair and she stood out on her five feet six inches. Sakina had seen at least ten guys fall for her within a year of college.

To her dismay, Alvira decided to make Ritesh, a spoilt rich boy her boyfriend. It had been now a year since Alvira had started going out with him, to clubs, parties and at times they'd spend the weekend at vacation spots like Goa and Ooty. Sakina was now beyond shock. She had contemplated many times to tell Alvira's parents and once she did. She called up Alvira's parents and explained that she was going out with a guy.

All hell had broken loose then. Alvira's father came down from Dubai and threatened to take her away if she did not stop. Alvira had given a betrayed look to Sakina and Sakina looked away. She loved Alvira in her strange way. No matter how many times she ignored Sakina and used her for her personal gain, Sakina loved Alvira, her spirit, her intelligence and at the end of the day, no matter how she was, she was her Muslim sister.

Alvira's dad left after two days. Alvira promised him she would break up with her boyfriend and try to 'become like Sakina' as her father mentioned. For the next week, Alvira did not talk to Sakina. Alvira gave Sakina a cold shoulder and her nights out increased even further. "You have no right to interfere in my business. As you say, God gave us a mind to think and a will to choose. I have thought and I have chosen. This is my life so mind your own business".

That night Sakina had cried to sleep. She had gone out to help a friend, a friend who was not realizing what she was doing only to be hurt by her words. She decided then that she would not interfere, advice or say anything to Alvira. She would remain her loyal friend, from heart and from faith but like Alvira said - she had chosen her life and it was her right.

But there was one thing she never stopped doing. She never stopped praying for Alvira. After every Salaat, she would pray to God to help her friend come back to the right path.

Days past after the night Alvira came late. Exams were approaching and as usual Sakina helped Alvira understand all the subjects within a week of the examinations. When the results came out, Alvira had got 85% while Sakina 92%. "You study twelve hours a day and I just four hours before exam yet we have only a difference of 7%" Alvira smirked at her friend. Sakina smiled "Actually, I should thank you. It's by teaching you that I achieve such high marks. Not only do I understand the concepts well but they are reinforced by explaining them to you. You also make me think when you ask your smart questions. I don't think I would have achieved 92% without you." Sakina smiled at Alvira. "So thank you" she said shyly.

Alvira was speechless. She had intended to be mean and her friend was actually thanking her. "That's ok" she said dismissingly and looked away. "I've got to go. Ritesh is taking me for dinner. It's a surprise. I think it's going to be The Leela. I always wanted to go there" she gushed on excitedly. Sakina kept quite. She kept her face neutral. Alvira knew Sakina did not approve but she cared nothing for it. She was happy and her happiness meant everything to her.

That night Sakina decided to read the at least three chapters of the Holy Quran, the book of Allah Taala. Sakina found great peace in reading Quran. She did not understand Arabic so she read the translation in English along with Arabic. That way she understood what her Lord was telling her and many a times she would weep over the love that Allah showed for her through His book. Yes for her. For Sakina. Sakina knew that Allah Taala had sent the book as guidance to mankind and what amazed her was as she read, she felt that God was talking to her personally. Addressing her, guiding her, admonishing her, showing his Signs and narrating about the great prophets of aforetime, May peace be on all of them. Sakina looked forward every evening to read the Holy Quran. She was not a strong woman but rather, through her own niceness which she couldn't see, she was a woman of strength, strength that she derived from the Holy Quran.

"I'm going! I'm taking the keys so I won't disturb you if I come late", Alvira cried out as she ran down the staircase. Sakina was at that time bowing down and said a small prayer to protect Alvira. She finished her prayers and sat down to read the Quran Shariff. She read for over an hour and then felt sleepy. She still wanted to read more so she decided to take a small nap and continue reading. She left her bookmark on the page and lied down on her bed. Before she knew it, she was fast asleep.

Alvira came back at 11.30 p.m. As she had guessed, Ritesh had taken her out to the Leela's and she had loved it. Everything was perfect for her. She never thought of tomorrow or the future. It was foolish to do so. Enjoy the present. That was her motto. When she entered the house, she saw Sakina's room light was on. She went in and saw Sakina peacefully sleeping. Her prayer mat was laid out and the Holy Quran was on the stool on her mat. Alvira went forward to fold the prayer mat. She guessed that Sakina would have slept while reading the Quran. As she was about to pick the Holy Quran, she hesitated. A million thoughts ran over her mind.

"You are unclean"
"You are not a good woman. Only the good touch the Holy Book"
"You are an evil woman"

Alvira stepped back. She didn't know where the thoughts came from. She didn't like them. She felt suffocated. She looked at the prayer mat, the Holy Quran; she couldn't leave them there lying open. She got up, went to her room, and changed into one of the decent salwar suits she had which she used only for Eid. She went to the bathroom and did ablution. She didn't remember when she had done it last. She washed her hands, her face, her arms, she wiped her head, her ears, neck and legs. She was surprised to find she had not forgotten the duas to pray. She walked into Sakina's room, put the dupatta, the long scarf around her head and kneeled down to pick the Holy Quran. As she held it in her hands, she sat down and without a thought opened it. Sakina had kept her book mark at Surat-ul-Al-Imran. The chapter on the family of Imran.

She sat... and read... she read the whole Chapter. Her face changed from curiosity to deep thought to fear to regret to hope to amazement. She went through a bundle of emotions. Her heart filled up and she felt her throat becoming clogged. One by one, tears started flowing from her eyes. She didn't know why she was crying. Was it at the truth that was before her eyes, or that she had gone by life without any direction and here she found one or that she had never thought of her Creator and how much He loved her. Yes HER. As bad and as many mistakes as she had done, she did not find condemnation but rather a guiding hand. She had found... a treasure.

After she finished reading the chapter, she held the Quran to her chest and cried and cried.

"Oh my Lord, forgive me. Forgive me. Forgive me. Oh my Lord, I acknowledge you as my God. My one and only God and Mohammed your Messenger. I come to you with regret for what I have done. For all the years I have lived never acknowledging you, for all the evil I have done. I beg forgiveness from you my Lord and I beg of you to guide me to your rightful path, to your promised heaven and protect me from hell. I come to you Lord with hope in my heart that you are the most merciful."

With that prayer on her lips, Alvira bowed down her head and cried for a long time. Her crying woke up Sakina and as she focused her eyes, she could not believe that she was seeing Alvira bowing down to God. She felt her eyes mist as she got up and sat next to Alvira. When Alvira got up, Sakina handed her her handkerchief and they hugged. They were both crying. There was no need of words. The heart of one believer can understand each and every heart beat of another believer.

That night changed Alvira forever. It was not easy for her. But an inner light, strength, a faith she had not anticipated gave her courage. She first broke off with Ritesh. She told him about her experienced and how she realized she was on a lost path. Ritesh did not understand. He thought she had gone mad. After many accusations, pleadings, Ritesh realized that Alvira was firm in her decision. He left and though Alvira felt her heart was breaking, she did not shake from her belief.

The days that came saw Alvira turn from a flirt to a respectful girl, she covered her self, her confidence grew more, she studied more now with Sakina and even enrolled in Islamic studies. She went home and had a heart-to-heart talk with her parents. Her parents were speechless. Partly from disbelief at the sudden change in Alvira and partly from immense happiness.

As for Alvira and Sakina, their friendship grew even stronger. When they parted at the end of their degree studies, Alvira gave Sakina a beautiful prayer mat and a thank you note:

"To my friend, who did not give up on me"



Thursday, August 16, 2007

Two children

Zarrah looked into the mirror and saw the pretty heart shaped face, the lovely hazel eyes lined with kohl. She smiled and the face turned beautiful with a child like quality that would make anyone want to protect its owner. She closed her eyes and remembered the first time.

She had been three. He was four. She was sitting in the sand dune playing with her friends. He came next to her and joined her. She had looked up at him and smiled. He had thick curly hair and long eye lashes. He had looked at her and her golden brown hair. “I’m going to marry you one day” he told her. Zarrah didn’t know what to say. She turned deep red and turned away. His eyes scared her. He then did that one thing that got him yanked by Ms. Ahmed and locked up in the ‘Bad Children Room’. He had ever so gently and silently leaned forward and kissed her on her cheek. All the children had squealed. Ms. Ahmed came rushing and took him away. She had been in a state of shock. She didn’t know whether to be embarrassed or to celebrate the happiness she felt. He had turned back and looked at her. A look that promised he would be back. Back.

However, that was the last day she had seen him. Her parents left the city that day. Zarrah’s father had been promoted and they were moving to the capital city. He would be managing the central office.

Soon years passed and Zarrah blossomed into a beautiful girl. Her beauty was even more precious for she covered it up. She was a jewel. Just like how the most beautiful things in the world are hidden, be it the pearl in the oyster’s protective arms or the diamond deep down the mine. Zarrah often sat and thought who would unearth her, and it was at that time she heard those words: “I’m going to marry you one day” She’d hid her face in the pillow and think of where he was. She knew she was crazy. He had been just four, yet what he said was with so much determination.

Today Zarrah turned eighteen. Today a man was coming to see her, to ask for her hand in marriage. She had overheard her mother telling her aunt. Her parents were friends with the family before Zarrah was born. They had moved to Muscat a few years back and now they were coming with their son was coming to see her. Zarrah’s mom went on to say that she would want Zarrah to marry now. It’s always good to marry early. There is charm and beauty when two who are young come together. They become one more easily and stand by each other at every point of life.

Zarrah had rushed to her room and thrown herself on the bed. Her heart was beating. She was scared. What if the man liked her, and then would that little boy, who had promised to marry her, never marry her? She laughed through her tears because she knew she was being silly. She touched her cheek, fourteen years later she still felt the same tingle.

Her parents told her a day in advance. They asked her if it was alright with her. She nodded silently. What could she say? “No Ammi, I actually am waiting for a four year old who once said he was going to marry me” They would laugh at her. She didn’t even know the name of the boy.
The smile in the mirror quivered. The heart shaped faced turned sad as the hazel eyes carried a far away look. “Zarrah!” her mother called her. It was time, time to go down and meet the man, the man who could be her future and the end of her childhood fantasy.

Adnan sat there waiting nervously. He couldn’t control his heart beat. Would she like him? Would she be ready to marry him? Would she remember his promise- the one he had made in the sand dune. If she didn’t, would she like him now? As the young man he was? His hand shook as he quickly laced his fingers to hide his nervousness.

She came in the room and he thought he had stopped breathing. She was wearing a turquoise salwar suit; the duppatta that covered her head was laced with beads that made her look like a fairy with flower buds framing her face. She kept her head bowed and eyes down. His parents saw her and nodded with approval. They looked at her and nodded to him. He seemed to notice all this from one angle of his eye. He didn’t know when he was more mesmerized: The day he first saw her or today?

His parents were talking to her. She replied still with her eyes cast down. He didn’t know he was staring at her. Until his mother nudged him. Zarrah hadn’t looked at him. “Why don’t you two go in the balcony and talk” her father told him. He nodded shyly and got up. She also got up and moved towards the balcony. It had a lovely view of the lawns- A glass panel that separated it from the living room where their parents sat. They could see them sitting in the balcony. Both seemed to be at a loss of words.

He didn’t know what to say. She still hadn’t looked up. “I did tell you I will marry you one day”. Her head jerked up. Her eyes searching his face: searching for the face of the little boy, the boy with thick curly hair and long eye lashes. Her hazel eyes shone with excitement and disbelief, of shock and relief. It was then he realized, she hadn’t forgotten. He felt a surge of happiness as he smiled into her eyes. She turned the same deep red when he had told her when they were kids. A tiny smile crept at the corners of her mouth. It was unbelievable. It was him. He truly had come.

That's how the two children came together for the rest of their lives.


Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Each one of us can make a difference

Sameer completed his twenty lapses and sat down on the bench panting. As his breath calmed down, he thought about Reshma. Sameer and Reshma studied together. They were Architecture students and would complete their course in a year. “A year and I may never see her again” he thought sadly. He liked Reshma a lot but did not have the courage to propose to her. At twenty three, he was after all a boy. As far as he was concerned, his life revolved around his college, his friends, hanging out at M.G. Road and doing last minute studies to get through. He knew after a year, his college life would come to an end, friends will move away, but he didn’t want to let go of Reshma.

He leaned back on the bench and put his hands behind his head. He closed his eyes and thought of her. She was an intelligent, fun-loving girl. Everyone liked her and everyone wanted to be her friend. Sameer on the other hand was an average guy, the usual bloke on the road. He didn’t think he had anything special. He was not a great public speaker or a leader. He didn’t believe he could ever contribute in a great way to the world. After graduation, he hoped to get a job in one of the construction companies.

As he got up from his bench and walked towards the west gate, he noticed a gathering of people. There was a man talking to them and giving them pamphlets. He joined them to find out what the fuss was all about. “You can also make a difference. Do save our world and let us make sure that the place we leave for our children is better than the one we got” the man was saying.

“What is he talking about?” Sameer asked one of the men in the group.

“Global warming, He is explaining about how global warming has led to the increase in temperatures and claims it’s also the cause of floods and hurricanes that are happening. Can you believe that?!” He exclaimed

Sameer had heard about global warming. Lately it was a topic that was splashed all over the newspapers and magazines. He personally thought it was exaggerated. There had been a recent seminar in his college by a group of environmentalists from a non-profit organization. He had sat there in the seminar half listening to them and half thinking about Reshma. Undoubted, he only remembered Reshma.

As he left the gathering, the man with the pamphlets came up to him and said “Good morning sir would you like to sign up for our campaign. We need volunteers to help us plant native trees around Bangalore.” ‘Not on my life’ Sameer thought. He didn’t want to go round the city planting trees. That was the job of the Municipal! “Umm, no thanks, I don’t have time.” He said as he tried to dodge past him. “Please sir, do think about it. Here, have our pamphlet and in case you change your mind” he said handing him one of the pamphlets. “Ok yeah sure” Sameer replied. He hastily took the pamphlet and hurried on before the guy could say another word.

He had no intention to join. The first thing he would do is find a dust bin and throw it. He removed his bike keys and absently stuffed the pamphlet in his pocket. Once at home, he got ready fast and left for college. He tried to talk to Reshma but he had no confidence. He smiled and acted cool but he was troubled. Damn! He was afraid of rejection. He couldn’t bear rejection. He like many other boys his age would not do something when they knew they’d hear a no.

That night, after dinner he went out in the balcony and sat on the swing. He could hear the distant sounds of the traffic. Traffic! He had noticed how much the traffic had increased the past few years. Earlier it took him fifteen minutes to reach college and now, almost half an hour. He also didn’t like the pollution. When it used to rain, he would go out with his friends and enjoy the first showers of the monsoon. Now he would do anything but that. The rain that fell mixed with the carbon emissions. They would drop on his shirt like black dirty water!

He closed his eyes and let his mind wander. Soon he dozed off. That’s when he saw the dream. His dream took him into the late century. He saw his great great grand daughter. She looked sixteen resembled Reshma but she had his eyes and like magic, he began to feel as though he was her.

“Asha please close the windows. I see some rays coming in. Make sure you have worn your gloves!” a voice called out from the back ground. “Yes mom” Asha replied. She pulled out the draw and removed her gloves. She wore them and went to the window, closed it tightly and drew the curtains. The temperatures outside must be at least 70°C. She went back to her desk to attend school. The Government had closed all real schools. They had only virtual schools. No one could afford to risk going out of the house. In the news last night, ten people had died of skin cancer. The UV rays had reported gone up by 20%.

Their house had been sealed. They used a cooler but only sparingly. The electricity was on just for an hour a day. It was the same in the whole country. They couldn’t afford to use it more than that else the carbon emissions would rise and that would mean only hotter climate and more cancer.

After submitting her essay, she went to read the newspaper. It the history section, there was an article about a city called Kolkatta. It used to be located west of India. It was known for its literature, art and culture. Millions of people lived there and the sweet Rasagulla was first made in Kolkatta. Today many people take a submarine to go underwater and explore the remains of the city. Asha sighed and put the paper down. Asha’s mother had told her that their family had been from Kolkatta. It’s a pity she would never see Kolkatta.

Asha’s mother came in and asked her to get ready so that they could go and buy the months groceries. Asha went to her room and put on her anti-UV coat, face mask and gloves. She looked at herself in the mirror. At sixteen she should be wearing pretty dresses and look charming. However, in her case, she looked more like a fireman.

They went out of the room and hurried to the car. The car was covered with aluminum foil to reflect the sun rays. That didn’t help much though. When they sat in, the car was as hot as an oven. The shopping plaza was three kilometers away. As they drove past, they couldn’t see a soul on the streets.

They hurriedly did their shopping. Mother asked the shop keeper if they would deliver the next month’s grocery home. “Sorry Behenji, we already lost two delivery boys who died of heat stroke. From now onwards we don’t deliver” Mother was dismayed. Surely life was becoming tough.

When they came back home, they made a lunch of sandwiches. They made a lot of sandwiches lately because they didn’t need to use the gas then. Gas had become very expensive. The Government increased the prices so as to discourage people in using gas. It also rationed the electricity and water.

They sat down to watch the News. “Another tornado has hit the south of India. Tornado Anjali is expected to strike the Andamans and move towards Chennai. It is likely to proceed southwards to Kerala.” The reporter was saying. They showed the pictures of the tornado and the houses being washed away. According to the reporter, it was likely that Andaman and Nicobar Island would disappear. The camera shifted to Chennai to show how millions of people were rushing inland wearing their Anti-UV coats. Babies were wrapped in Anti-UV blankets as their mothers tried to protect them from the sun and rain.

Asha looked at the news indifferently. It wasn’t something new. These calamities had become part of life. Just the other day she had seen the last of Hong Kong. She hopped the scientist would succeed in making Mars habitable. Earth was soon running out of earth.

“Sameer, Sameer, wake up son.” Sameer got up with a jerk. His mother was shaking him. “You will catch a cold out here, why don’t you go in your room and relax” Sameer nodded his head and went to his room. As he closed the door, he stood with his back to it. He was perplexed by what he had just dreamt. The dream had been so real. He had felt Asha’s emotions as though it were his. ‘Oh-my-God, will the earth really become all that in the years to come?!’ he thought panicking.

Suddenly a completely new feeling came in his mind. No, it can’t be. He won’t let it be. He didn’t want his future generation to wear anti-UV coats and live life closed door. He wasn’t going to have his great great grand daughter never know her hometown. He wasn’t going to let Kolkatta or any city go underwater. He had the chance now. He could do something. Even though he was merely a boy and merely one person, but he would contribute to saving the earth.

He remembered the pamphlet he got in Lal bagh and hurriedly checked his jeans. “Oh God please, let me not have thrown it” he muttered as he searched in a frenzy. He found it at last and breathed a sight of relief. He immediately called the number listed and told them he was interested to join their campaign and learn more about what was global warming and how he could help. The volunteer was more than happy to give him the information. “Thank you sir, you don’t know how hard it is for us to get people to realize the seriousness of this.” Thanked the volunteer. Sameer thought to himself “Well neither did I until now”

The next day, Sameer went to the Organization and enrolled as one of their members. He joined them in planting trees around Bangalore and attended the various seminars they conducted. He read as much as he could about global warming and what was causing it. He even watched the documentary movie ‘Inconvenient Truth” by Al-Gore. Soon he joined the ‘Spread-the-awareness’ campaigns and after his morning jogs, he too would give pamphlets to the joggers and ask them to do something.

He couldn’t believe that a few simple steps could help reduce so much of electricity and fuel that was increasing the levels of CO2 and CH4. Both gases had increased to 31% and 149% respectively since 1750. 149%!! No wonder the temperatures had gone up.

He got his friends Akash and Swamy to join the cause too and soon there was a whole group in their college. They gave seminars and organized tree-planting expeditions. Sameer left his bike and started traveling by bus. He would make sure he would recycle papers and encouraged his mother to make a compost pit for their garden out of the vegetable peels. They used electricity modestly, and made meals that required minimum gas usage. Sameer felt a sense of achievement at the end of three months. He began to feel that he had done something worthwhile. While he had gone ahead and done his bit, he had also got people to do the same.

Another good thing that came out of his decision was: he learnt to accept a no. He learnt that people say no a thousand times and it didn’t mean anything personal. A no after all, was just a no. Sameer’s confidence levels rose and he found he was happier and more content. Earlier, he had resolved to the fact that he would join one of the construction companies after he graduated, but now, he knew what he wanted to do. He wanted to go into ‘Environmentally friendly and sustainable Architecture’. He had applied for his internship to a firm that practiced it and he made a promise, throughout his career, he would make buildings that would use the solar rays for light and energy. That would cut down both lights and air conditioning.

Now he had just one more thing to do. He was also ready to ask the one question he had dreaded. During the lunch break, Reshma and he went for lunch. It was there that he told her. He told her he liked her. Reshma was silent for a while. “I thought you would never tell me” she said as she smiled at him. Sameer was sure at that moment that he would have a great great grand daughter named Asha and this Asha will not wear anti-UV coats.

Monday, July 23, 2007

A Proposal

Salma sat in the restaurant waiting for Ali. She had called him because she no longer trusted herself. She was in no position to. She needed to talk to someone, someone who would tell her what was what and what was the right thing to do.

Ali came in through the door, rushing with his bag flinged behind his back. He spotted her and rushed towards her. "Assalam Alaykum" he said, pulling the chair towards him and sitting down. Salma returned his greetings in a subdued voice.

"What happened?" Ali asked anxiously. He had known Salma for the past two years. They had studied together and had been good friends. They were working in different firms but whenever they need each other's help, both were there for their friend.

"He proposed" Salma started. "He told me he wants to marry me in fifteen days"

Ali looked at her shocked and then started laughing. "And you called me all the way here to tell me that. Isn't it good, I mean it's quite romantic even? You like him and he likes you and he finally realized it." Ali leaned back, his tension finally relieved. He had been a little worried when Salma had called. She would never have called if it wasn't something she could handle"

Salma gave him a sad smile. "Don't you want to know why he wants to marry in 15 days?"

"Why?" Ali asked. Come to think about it, that was rather strange

"Well, he told me he wants to marry me before he changes his mind"

"What!" Ali exclaimed. He couldn't believe it. "Is he crazy or are you?! What does he think marriage is? A choice between a hamburger and a sandwich? Buy one before you change your mind!" Ali was fuming; he simply could not believe this.

He looked at Salma and saw the sad glint in her eye. He knew she liked the guy. He had not met him but from what she told him, he was a good man, a righteous man and he was her friend. What he didn't understand was HIM. What sort of man proposes to a woman like this, 'before I change my mind?!'

"So what do I do?" Salma asked him.

"If you dare enter a marriage with a man who thinks he is marrying 'something' he better marry before he changes his mind, you are frankly stupid" Ali knew his words were harsh but he had to wake her up.

Tears started to glitter on Salma's face as she looked away. Ali was instantly sorry. He spoke in a gentle voice to her. "Salma, you are my dear friend, I want the best for you. Think about it, if you go ahead and marry someone who doesn't value you as a person and who is not sure it's you he wants to marry, and you live your whole life knowing that, what happiness will you truly get? The day you marry him, you know, he is not marrying you for YOU but because he has to marry someone so he picked you. That is not the foundation for a happy marriage."

Salma nodded. She knew he was right. She had the same feeling too. Now that Ali had confirmed it, she had decided.

Her answer would be no. She didn't know what future would lie ahead, whether she would meet someone she'd want to marry or whether she won't, may be she never will and that would be fine. She had many goals in life. She had many things to look forward to.

So what if the only man she ever would have married with happiness in her heart didn't want to marry her.

So what if she really searched for his kind of friendship in all the other suitors

So what that she may never find his kind of companionship

So what if she never felt this way for anybody else

She won't marry a man, unless he felt that she was the one he really wanted to spend the rest of his life with her.

She took a deep breath and looked up. Ali was observing her with concern on his face. She smiled at him and asked "Coffee as usual?" and Ali knew, he knew he wouldn't have to worry about her making a wrong choice. He smiled back and signaled the waiter.

"So howz work?"
"Great! I'm working on a new product launch."
"Oh no! you and product launch?! It's going to be a disaster"
"Yeah yeah yeah, who had the silly idea of using a mobile phone as a temperature regulator in our final presentation!"
"Well, hello, that was the closest thing that resembles a remote"
"Of course. That also was the closest thing that made us the laughing stock"
"Oh shut up! At least we won"
"Yeah, we won"

Sunday, June 17, 2007

At times in life...


Farhana boarded the aircraft and found her way to her seat. The immigration process had been smooth and she was glad she didn’t have to wait for so long. Soon the plane would take off and they hope to be in Frankfurt in another ten hours. After she settled down on her seat, she quickly gave a last call before they would be asked to switch off their cell phones. “Mama! Take care mama and bring me lot’s of chocolates!” her youngest squealed over the phone. Farhana laughed. “Sure darling. I will get you lot’s of chocolates” she talked to her husband and explained for the tenth time the number of items in the freezer. “I know darling. You take care of yourself. All the best and come back soon! Allah hafiz.” “Allah Hafiz” Farhana replied back and smiled. Ahmed had always been the silent strong figure whom she could lean on to. If she was the general manager of her company, it was all due to him. He had supported her and guided her throughout her career. Ahmed was a major distributor for a textile company and in spite of being so busy; he had always managed both his and his wife’s career along with their family life.

Farhana glanced at the watch. They would be stopping over at London for an hour. She couldn’t wait to get to Frankfurt. Traveling had never a liking... especially air travel. She closed her eyes as the plane took off and said her prayers. There was something about landings and take offs that scared her to death.

When they landed at London, some passengers disembarked the aircraft. After them the passengers towards Frankfurt boarded. Farhana was busy reading her project report file and did not realize her co passenger had come and sat beside her. A few minutes later she glanced up and caught her breath. Why! It was none other than Saleem. “Assalam Alaykum” he greeted her. “Walaykum salam” she replied back. Both of them seemed to be at a loss of speech. They smiled hesitantly and could hardly make eye contact.

“How have you been?” Saleem asked. “Alhamdullilah, good” Farhana replied. “You disappeared after college” he remarked. “Not really” Farhana countered back. “I went back home”. “Of course, home was never London for you” Saleem remarked. “The place hardly mattered. Home is where you feel loved. It’s the people rather than the place that makes all the difference” Farhana expounded. Saleem smiled. “I see you’ve not lost your cheesiness even now” “Nope. Not now, not ever” Farhana affirmed.

They were silent. What more could one say to a stranger who had twenty years before been a very good friend. A friend you had loved… and lost.

Saleem and Farhana had met at the London School of Economics. Farhana was from Capetown and she had looked forward to do her Masters in such a prestigious business school. Saleem on the other hand was a Londoner. He already had his financially firm running when he enrolled in the program. Saleem had noticed Farhana the first day itself when she walked in properly dressed as a Muslim woman. He could not help but admire that being a lady, she was not only smart but she also maintained her Islamic dress code.

Over the year, they had become good friends and soon best friends. Everyone had thought that they would one day get married. Farhana however, had a traumatic past. A past she was trying to forget. A past of a broken marriage, of a dream shattered and a fear that gripped her constantly. She had come to London not only to get her education but also to get away from the life she had left behind. She never told anyone anything. Nor did people know about her. She did however mention the fact to Saleem and he had been disturbed a great deal. He had reacted as though it was her fault that her marriage had broken and he thought it was proper that she should only get married again as soon as possible.

Farhana had been disappointed. She had not expected such insensitivity. Not from Saleem at least but then, weren’t men always men? Would they ever understand a woman’s heart? What she feels, what she hides and what she shows? No, they never would.

It had been on their graduation when destiny took an unplanned route. Farhana and Saleem had been soul mates. Despite their altercations, they respected one another mainly for the good muslim each of two were. It had been rare to find a good muslim friend in London in such a situation. After the ceremony, Saleem asked Farhana what her plans were. Would she take up the offer she had received in London?

Farhana glanced up. ‘Only if you ask me to stay’ she thought to herself. She didn’t really know what her feelings were. She knew she respected Saleem and she had grown to trust him. He had treated her respectfully which had been so contrasting from where she had been. “I don’t know” she said cautiously. “What do you think I should do?” she had asked him. “I think you should get married.” ‘Oh there he goes again’ Farhana had thought to herself. ‘Let me tease him’ “Sure I would love to but you haven’t really asked me yet” she told him with a mischievous smile. “Really? Well why would you want to marry me?” he had asked seriously. Farhana had not realized that what had started as a joke had turned to something serious. “Well...” she stammered. Then deciding to be honest with herself, she took the bold step and had told him “because I feel safe when I’m with you”. Safe. Yes, that was truly what she felt. She felt at peace, she enjoyed his companionship and there was a commadery between them that had been so rare to find. She felt safe- she knew that with him, she would not have to go through the pain she had been through.

“I think you want to marry just because you want to feel safe and protected.” He had replied.

Farhana looked at him confused. She hadn’t meant only that. It was just a feeling she felt… among the other feelings. He was looking at her intensely and then casually remarked, “You know if you would have told me you wanted to marry me because you loved me, I would have married you”.

Farhana had stood still. He was waiting. Waiting for her to say something. “Well then it’s really sad that one has to say the words “I love you” explicitly for the other person to know that they love you.”

With that she had gotten up and walked away. He had not come after her and she had sat the whole night in her room. She didn’t understand what the feelings she was feeling were. Was it anger? Was it sadness? Was it regret? Regret? Regret of what? Of loving a friend for the sake of Allah only to be told that she didn’t love him?

She had caught the last flight to Johannesburg that night. That had been the last time she had seen him. When she reached home, she met Ahmed through a family friend who was over zealous in getting them together and whose life’s mission was to get them married. They had married. They were now married for eighteen years and had three wonderful children. She had worked her way up the company’s ladder and life had been good for her. Faith however, has its own fancies and whims. Today, twenty years later, she now had to face the man whose few words had questioned her very essence.

“So what do you do now?” Farhana asked Saleem. “I run my own firm.” He replied. “How about your family. Your wife and kids?” she asked him. He must have married immediately after graduation. She was sure about that. He had after all been a strong vocalist on the importance of marriage. “I’m not married” he replied. Farhana was shocked. Surely that could not be possible. “How come? Surely you were ever so verbal on how wonderful marriage is” she asked him surprised.

Saleem was silent. A few moments later he told her so silently that her flesh stood out.
“A few months down the lane, I realized that I had failed to understand the one person I truly cared for. I failed to understand her feelings and I had lost her. After her, I never did find someone whom I could understand or who could understand me. I couldn’t find someone whom I could trust and who could trust me. I guess I never did find someone with whom I could feel … safe.”

Farhana felt her heart beat faster. She looked away and tried to blink back her tears. Needless to say she knew who was his friend and a surge of emotion choked her to know that he had at last understood her albeit, too late: very late.

They sat in silence not knowing what more to say and when they reached their destination, they parted in silence.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

The wisdom of a grandmother


Husna gazed out of the window and saw the sun was setting. She glanced up at the living room clock and saw it was time for prayers. She rose from the chair. It was rather difficult for her. Her bony fingers clutched the arms of the sofa as she forced all her energy on getting up. Quickly she removed them and grasped the walking frame. She moved one leg forward and moved towards the washroom. She was covered in warm clothes always. Wearing a sweater and a shawl wrapped around. She wore socks in her legs at all time yet she remained cold. The last time she was warm was ten years back. She had been out with her children on a picnic. How she wished she could feel a moment of that time.

Her daughter-in-law came in from the kitchen and helped her. She was a kind soul. She took care of Husna and tried to foresee whatever she would want. Whenever it was time for prayers, she’d help her mother-in-law in performing ablution and laying down her prayer mat, adjusting the chair just before it and making sure that the side table had all her prayer books, the Quran Shariff and prayer beads. Husna had lost mobility over time. Her arthritis had won. She had maintained herself till seventy but now, ten years later, she had became weak.

After finishing her namaz and reading Quran Shariff, she rang the bell. Her son had told her to ring the bell whenever she was done. This way the children let her alone and did not disturb her and once she had finished her prayer, they would come in and sit with her. She thanked God everyday that she got a loving son and a good daughter-in-law. They had four children; two girls and two boys. The girls were married and were starting their new lives with their husbands. Husna was glad she got the chance to see them wedded off. It is quite rare for one to see their grandchildren’s marriage. As for the boys, they were just too much for her. Always up to pranks and mischief especially the younger one. He hugged her too much for her liking. He had always been like that since a child. Now he was sixteen. Husna smiled, he would turn out to be as handsome as his grandfather.

Her daughter-in-law came in with some hot soup. Really! All she would like is some hot potato patties with sour chutney and a glass of cold sherbet. That was however not to be. The doctor has strictly said no oily food and control over sugar. Being old was no fun and especially with kids who were adamant to follow whatever that five feet doctor told them. She finished her soup like a good girl. “Where is Ali?” she asked her daughter-in-law. “He is yet to come from school ammi” she told her. “Why so late? It’s after sunset. Don’t tell me that crazy headmaster is again punishing my boy!” she huffed. She had met the headmaster and she did not like him. He punished the children too much for her liking. “Well Ammi, don’t forget Ali is not exactly the golden student” she replied with a smile. Husna nodded. She was amused. She knew Ali would have done something naughty. One day he mixed a water colors in a glass of water and added some red chili powder. He had then asked the peon to take it in to the headmaster. The headmaster had choked on the drink. Ali was not mean. He was just so naughty and up to pranks and he was the heart of his family and friends and the apple of the eye of his grandmother.

At 9 o’clock Ali came back. It had been raining and he came back drenched like a drowned kitten. He gave his sheepish smile to his mom, went into his room and changed. He then went to meet his grand mom. He was closest to her. She shared his streak of naughtiness and Ali was sure he got it from her. He narrated to her what he had done that day. When the principal was out on his rounds, Ali and his friend Junaid had sneaked in to his office and wiped oil over his seat. That evening when he came out to go home, his pant was looked wet. That had set the whole school laughing. Husna laughed heartily. She knew it was bad but she couldn’t help it. That man deserved it. He was a cruel dictator. However, after they had laughed their hearts out, Husna told Ali that he now had to leave the pranks. The man would remain as stubborn and dumb witted. Ali conjured with her. He was now done with the headmaster.

He was silent. As though contemplating something, whether to tell his grand mom or not. Husna looked at him with her beaded eyes. She smiled. Children never do come to know that their parents bore them. They know them in and out, when they are happy, when they are sad, when they are lying or when they are hiding something. They knew their children before they could even speak. She knew there was something on Ali’s mind. Something she recognized.

“Who’s the girl?” she asked. Ali looked up. He was shocked. How did grandma know he was thinking about a girl? Husna smiled at him knowingly. Ali smiled back. “Zahira, she is in my science club. I don’t know grandma but I feel very strange when she is around” he told her shyly. “Oh. You mean you feel shy and you find your heart beating faster” Husna said teasingly. Ali turned crimson and nodded. Husna laughed. The confusions of a young heart. Hadn’t she gone through it… for that matter, everyone?

“Do you like her?” She asked him. “Yes”, Ali replied. “She is kind and she is shy but she is very smart and she is one of the good students.” “What do you plan to do?” Husna asked him. “I don’t know” Ali replied. Was he supposed to do something? “Do you think this Zahira likes you?” She asked him. “I think so. She always smiles at me. She smiles at me rather shyly. She hardly talks to me. At times I feel she avoids me. I want to talk to her, grandma, like you know, be her friend and get to know her but somehow she always distances herself. I think that makes me even more restless. Why does she do that?” he asked her.

‘Oh ho!’ Husna thought. ‘The traffic is two way. Hmmm’ “What kind of a girl is she? Is she very friendly with everyone or does she keeps to her set of friends?” she asked him. “She is a confident girl grandma. She can go and talk to anybody and often is on the committee of every club. Her close friend is Mariam and they two are always together. They come to school together and apart from her she keeps to her girls group. She is however not timid or shy. She can talk to any boy regarding school work and projects. I have been observing her for the past one month.”

Husna was happy to hear this. She was glad that the girl who had won her grandson’s heart was a good and smart girl. She sounded perfect. Only her little grandson didn’t know that he had fallen in love. Love was strange. It creeps in when one least expects. She was sure that the girl was also smitten by Ali. After all, who would not be? Ali had the personality, the looks, and the intelligence. She was so proud of her grandson.

“The fact of the matter is son, that both you and Zahira like each other. Usually a woman, and a good woman, I am not talking of those girls who openly flirt and are shameless, but one whose heart is won by a man- hides her feelings. She maintains her distance. Partly because it makes her nervous just like it makes you and partly because she doesn’t trust herself as to what she may do. People do crazy stuff in love. At such times, it’s always best to keep away.” Husna explained.

“Really grandma? Do you think she likes me too? That she feels the same way as I do? That she is just as confused as me?” Ali asked unbelieving.

“Really” Husna affirmed smilingly.

“What shall I do?” He asked her. He trusted his grand mom. He would follow her advice always. Whether it came to his spiritual matters, his school work or now, that he was a young man, his heart matters.

“Leave her alone”. She replied

“What?” Ali could not believe his ears. If grandma believed that Zahira also liked him then shouldn’t he do something? Shouldn’t he tell her he liked her? Shouldn’t they become friends?

“Yes son. Leave her alone. Become busy in your life. Divert your mind. Concentrate on your studies and your future. At this point son, you are just sixteen. Both of you are still children. I would not advice friendship also because I know both of you have feelings for each other. Where these feelings would lead you, I don’t know. It’s like playing with fire. Therefore, I think it’s best you avoid fire.”

“But grandma, what about our feelings? Are they really not worth contemplating on? I mean this urge to know the other, to be her special someone?”

“Your heart son will one day hold someone special. I want that someone to be your wife. I do like Zahira. From what you have told me, I think she is a good girl and she would be good partner for you. Yet you two are too young and friendship is not possible when the line is crossed. You have admitted your feelings that it is beyond friendship. It is love my son.”

“I’m confused grandma. At one point you ask me to keep away from her and on other hand you say she is the perfect girl for me.” Ali tried to make out what his grandmother was trying to say.

“What I’m saying son is that keep your feelings covered up. Live your life as a student, finish your studies and when you have graduated, if you still like Zahira and you feel she likes you too, I will personally go to her family and ask her hand for you. At this point son, it’s too early. In my days it was not. Girls used to be betrothed by fourteen, fifteen but today’s generation wait till they are eighteen and in their twenties.”

The message dawned on Ali. Grandma was not against his or Zahira’s feelings. She was thinking about their future together. She was thinking of how they could be together forever and for that, a little sacrifice of maintaining their distance. They were after all young and God knows how impossible it can be not to fall in error. The respect for his grand mom grew even more and he got up and hugged her.

‘Oh here he goes again’ Husna thought. ‘This boy never gets tired of hugging’. She hugged him back and felt the grandmotherly love flow to him. She loved this boy. A boy who was now turning into a man.

“You are so right grandma. Yet I have a fear what if someone else takes her away from me?” He asked her with his eyes filled with fear. Husna laughed. “If she is in your destiny, no man will ever take her away from you. From what you said, I think it’s unlikely. She likes you.”

“All right grandma. I will do as you say. I will go to school and study and finish my studies well. When will you talk to her family?” he asked her anxiously.

“When you get into college. I will go and talk to them and fix up your engagement. At that time we shall see what to do. Whether to get you two married and both of you go off to college or you two finish college and then get married.” She replied.

“Oh I rather we both get married and then go off to college.” He replied earnestly. Husna laughed. The woes of the restless heart. “Ok, Ok, we will see then. Now you get away from me and go have your food and work on your homework. What we discussed will be our little secret” she winked at him.

Ali smiled. He felt so happy. He wanted to pick her up and dance with joy. He kissed her on her cheek and went away. Husna wiped her cheek once he had left the room. Really that boy loved her too much for her liking. She got up and walked feebly to her drawing table. She removed her diary painstakingly and opened the pages of her will. She kept her will ready for she didn’t know when Allah Taala would call her back. She wrote with great difficulty her wish to get her grandson married to Zahira should she not live before their engagement. She then wrote a letter addressed to Zahira’s parents asking for the hand of their daughter for her grandson. She sealed it and kept it back in her dairy. She was tired now. It had been a tiring day.

She said two rakats of prayer for her grandson. She begged Allah Taala to protect him especially now that he was vulnerably in love. Her daughter-in-law came in and helped her get ready for bed. She sat on her bed while her daughter-in-law propped up the pillows for her. She opened her Quran Shariff and read a chapter. At ten o’clock she had finished her reading and switched off the lights. As she lay down her bed and closed her eyes, her memories came back to her.

He had been her neighbor. They had shifted in when she was sixteen. He had been four years elder to her. When they first saw each other she had looked away. They both had avoided each other. She used to feel shy when he was around. They both knew they liked each other. Two years later when she had finished her schooling, his mother had come to ask her for her hand. They both had known since the day they saw each other, they were going to be together. He had left this world fifteen years before. As she turned towards her right, her eyes felt moist. She missed her companion of forty seven years.

Thinking of Ali, Husna smiled. History was repeating itself.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Asha: From being fat to being blessed.


Asha walked on the sandy beach, twirling her toes in the white sand. She seemed to merge with the sea in her long blue gown and sky blue scarf. Her family had taken the cottage on the beach for a weekend for the family get together so that all the parents and children could come together and have fun. She looked up and saw her younger siblings and cousins jumping with joy as the wave came in. They loved the sea and sunshine. Every month they would come to the cottage and reunite their bond.

Asha was twenty eight. She was overweight and no matter how much she tried to loose weight, she couldn’t. One could say she was fat. She had been like this since she was a child. It wasn’t because she ate so much but rather, she had inherited it from her parents. The fat gene ran in the family.

At eighteen, Asha had looked forward to getting married. All her friends were being proposed too, they got engaged, and they got married. Now, they had a child or two and when she’d meet them, she couldn’t help but yearn for her own husband, her own children… her own family.

Her family had tried many times to get her married. Lots of men had also come to see her. Some were too old or were divorced and looking for a new wife. One had been a drunkard and another, a wife beater. She didn’t understand what these men thought of her. Just because she was fat did not mean she would settle for losers. After a while she got frustrated. People started talking that she had grown horns and was not accepting anyone’s proposals. What? Accept the proposal of a drunkard? She’d rather have horns than a husband reeking of alcohol.

Here she was, ten years later, still single. Her dreams however did not die. She still looked forward to meeting someone who would like her enough to want to marry her. She was a good daughter, sister and friend. Her friends adored her and she was always there for them. Whether it was their graduation, their engagement or their failed relationships. She held their hands and was their support during their tough times.

“Safia! Don’t go too far!” she cried out. Her sister Safia was rather adventurous. Asha could swim but she was in no mood to rescue any tiny mitten. She sat down and started drooling on the sand. She drew a heart with an arrow across. On one end she wrote ‘A’ for Asha and on the other a question mark. Who would it be? A few drops of loneliness fell from her eyes. She wished she was pretty, she wished she wasn’t fat and she wished she was smarter, and then may be someone would also like her.

That evening they returned back to the city. She went into her room and switched on her PC. As she signed into the messenger, she saw her friend Barkha was online. Barkha and she had been in school since 1st standard. They had remained friends till the time they finished high school. Barkha moved to USA to pursue her medical studies. Right now she was doing her MD. She was married to Aziz who was also a doctor. Theirs had been a friendship turned marriage story. She had been so touched by it. Asha had attended their wedding in the States.

“Assalam Alaykum” Asha typed. “Walaykum Salam!” Barkha replied .They both chatted about what was the latest happenings. Barkha gave the good news that she was expecting. “Alhamdullilah!” Asha typed back. She was very happy for her friend. She would make a good mother. Time had passed by so fast. It felt just the other day that they had been kids playing seven boxes in the school playground.

“How are you doing?” Barkha asked. Asha wanted to write fine. Yet she wasn’t. She was a controlled person but today she felt like unloading herself. She told Barkha about how lonely she felt. She saw all their friends with their family and she realized she didn’t have one. She saw how beautiful and slim the other girls were and when she saw herself in the mirror, she couldn’t help but feel ugly. She saw all the others having achieved so much, they were either engineers or managers or doctors and she was just a book keeper. She cried as she let Barkha know her deep feelings, her inhibitions and low self-esteem. How she wished she could changed who she was, what she was.

Barkha was quite at her end. She let Asha speak her heart out. At times someone just needs to listen and that’s all it takes to help the other person. When Asha had finished venting, she smiled sadly and told Asha “My dear friend, I am quite sad to hear that you are feeling all these. I have always admired you for your simplicity and how content you are in life. I guess the grass is always greener on the other side. You wish to be in someone else’s shoes because they are either prettier or more successful or have a family. Yet go into their thoughts and you will see they want to be in your shoes. To be free, to have no responsibilities, to be given only a book or an account to handle and not to be held liable for the company’s performance.”

Asha’s eyes were fixed to the computer’s screen as she took in every word that Barkha said.
“I have known you since we were kids. I know you weren’t the smartest girl in class, but you were the kindest and most generous. You would put our needs before yours. I have seen the way you love your brothers and sisters. The way you treat your parents. You are a wonderful person. Look at yourself through my eyes, and you will know what I see.”

Asha was so deeply touched by Barkha’s words that she felt her eyes moist. The screen got blurred. She wiped her eyes and gulped down the choke that came to her throat. “I know that you are sad about your weight. I wish I could do something about it. But dear, it’s destiny. You were born with a fat gene as you can see it runs in your family. That should not make you feel you are lesser than anybody else. Think of all those people who have been born crippled. Those who don’t have sight or hearing or are mentally handicapped. Don’t you and I feel blessed that Allah Taala did not choose us to have a defect?”

Asha was struck. She had never thought of it that way. Yes, she had seen how difficult the lives of handicaps were. She did volunteering service at the Government hospital down town and it had saddened her to see their trials. She thanked Allah that she had been spared from such a fate.

“Therefore, my dear, I don’t want you to ever think low of yourself. I repeat you are a great person. We all love you. Right from Zaida to Farida to Asma to Munira to that silly Nisa and me :-)!”

Asha laughed. Nisa had been in school with them. She was such a pain that everyone would scuttle when she came.

“I just want you to be happy dear. For now, be content that you have a family – you are not an orphan. Be content you have a job – You are not unemployed. Be content you have people who love you – You are not unloved. InshaAllah you will get a wonderful man to be your husband and ten kids that you’d give anything to get this singleton moment back in your life :-)”

Asha laughed. Oh Barkha. She always had a way of bringing a smile to her face.

“I’ll pray for you dear, but you got to promise me that you will not be saddened. Be happy for all the bounties you have. Promise me?” Barkha asked.

“I promise” Asha typed back. Her heart was at peace. She realized the truth in her friend’s words. Why, she was blessed with so many things that she had overlooked them for just one thing. “Thank you dear. I feel so much better. You are right in all you say. I will remember this everyday”

“That’s my girl!” Barkha was happy. She never wanted to see Asha down. “Okay dear, have to go. Your brother has been calling me for a long time and you simply don’t know his demands. That’s why I say... Enjoy your bachelorhood ;-). Love you… Take care... Allah Hafiz.” “:-) Allah Hafiz” Asha typed back.

She leaned back on her chair and smiled. Barkha had always been one who said a lot in just a few words. If one would go on and on for ten pages on how gloomy the weather was, she’d changed the mood by simply saying “Paint some sunshine” Nodding her head smilingly, she switched off her P.C and prayed two rakats of prayers. She thanked God for all He had given her and asked forgiveness that for a few moments she had turned ungrateful. She prayed for her friend and for the safety of the unborn child and finally she got up and folded her praying mat. Yes, Life was beautiful and she was truly blessed with so much love and friendship.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

A lost love...


I finished my prayers and got ready. I was going to meet an old college friend after four years. I must admit that I have been rather poor in maintaining communication with my friends and family. Therefore, I made a resolution I’d set aside time no matter how busy I was.

Abbas: What can I say about him? I had met him outside the library while waiting to use the computer. I saw a fair guy wearing spectacles and said “Hi! I am Maimuna,” “Hello, I’m Abbas” he replied. “Oh you’re a Muslim?” I had asked excitedly, “Yes” he replied. That had been the beginning of our friendship or acquaintance one could say. Many times we would meet outside the library. He was doing Science while I studied Architecture. He helped me out with how to use the computer and gave me lots of tips on emails and chat messengers. In our graduation too, we were together and were we so happy to graduate!

During a college function he had introduced me to Ilham, his school friend. She was the sweetest girl I had met and they both intended to get married after Abbas graduated and got himself a job. I thought they were made for each other and I was very happy for them. However, deep inside I had a premonition that it might be tough to convince their parents. You see Abbas was a Shia while Ilham a Sunni.

We lost touch after graduation. Occasional when we’d come online, we’d catch up on our master’s studies or work. Two years back Abbas gave me the sad news that both his and Ilham’s parents had refused their match and her dad had married her off. I felt very sad for him. He was a wonderful person and MashaAllah a good Muslim. I knew it must have been the sectarian division that would have caused this fate. It had been long since we had met although we stayed in the same city. Well as you all know, a city could be a continent for all we cared. So today I had decided, I would go and meet my friend.

We met at a coffee shop just like good old college days. Abbas had not changed at all. He did seem tired. He works twelve hours a day talking to various clients. I did notice that he was now more confident and talkative than when he was in college. “Meeting various people gives you that confidence” he told me. We caught up on all the good old college days, laughed on the funny way the professors would call out our names and what our friends were doing now.

I wanted to ask him about Ilham but I didn’t want to bring the old memories back. However, I guess he wanted to share it with me and he told me the whole story.

“I didn’t really tell you how I met Ilham. We were together in pre-university. I was just sixteen at that time. The first day I went to class, I sat by myself as I didn’t know anyone. She came a few days later. When she entered the room I couldn’t help but think she was beautiful. During our first year, we became friends and soon I liked her even more. She was kind and gentle and I could talk to her about anything and everything. I knew she was my soul mate.

One day I got the courage and told her I liked her a lot. I couldn’t tell her personally so I wrote her a letter. I asked her to be honest with me and tell me what she felt. Whatever was her decision I would accept it and our friendship would always remain. For the next few days she avoided me. I couldn’t bear that. I didn’t understand why. I asked her if she had read my letter. She said she hadn’t but I knew. I knew she had read it because I saw she was nervous.

Our college principal was eccentric. He did not like the girls and boys talking to each other and in case he caught any boy or girl conversing, he would shake with anger, get their parents to school and proclaim that they had committed the most horrible crime: “I caught your children talking to each other!!!” Oh my God, he was one crazy principal. I didn’t want to risk talking outside class incase he became the supreme justice and called our parents. So one day I followed her as she walked home. In the mid way I caught up with her and asked her frankly. “I know you read my letter. Please give me an answer. I don’t care whether it’s a yes or a no, but I need to know” Ilham had hesitated for sometime but then she finally said yes to me.

That day was probably the happiest day of my life. We continued to be best of friends and I knew that one day I was going to marry her. We graduated pre-university and she joined a girl’s college for her Arts while I went into Science. We kept in touch over the phone. She got a cell phone from her friend and her parents never knew about it for two years. Whenever she wanted to talk to me, she would give me a ring and I would call her back. We carried this on for three years.

After graduation, we got engaged. As you know we both had not yet told our parents. I was scared that they would refuse me because of the shia-sunni difference. She started getting lots of proposals which she rejected but one day she called me and told me that it was serious this time and that I had to talk to her parents.

I decided it was time. We had been waiting for the time I would finish my studies, have a job and go to her parents to ask for her hand. I left my masters midway and got a job. I then talked to my parents that I liked a girl; I knew her for the past six years and wanted to marry her. When they found out that she was a Sunni Muslim, they refused totally. I told them that it did not matter to me and that we both were Muslims and that is all I cared. They refused. They said what will the relatives think? What all the people will talk and so on.

That night I called Ilham and told her what happened. She started crying. She said she couldn’t see herself without me and I told her the same. We were both lost. We didn’t know what to do. I thought I would talk to her father and get his approval. Ilham gave me his number and I called him. I told him who I was and that I wanted to meet him for ten minutes. He asked Ilham what this was about and she told him who I was, How had we met in school and our intention to get married. His father had fumed when he heard I was a Shia. He said he would never give her hand to me and refused to meet me.

Ilham had begged, pleaded and even threatened to kill herself. That had no effect on him. He locked her in her room and made sure she did not leave the house. That evening out of frustration, she took sleeping pills with Pepsi. Her sister knocked at the door but she did not open. When she peeped through the window she saw Ilham lying on the bed as though she was dead. She got so nervous and she called me up. “Abbas, I don’t know what she has done. Her room is locked. I am so scared.” She was crying. I calmed her down while my own heart was racing. I told her to wake Ilham and get her to open the door. She did that and got Ilham to talk to me over the phone.

“What did you do?!” I asked her anxiously. “I took some sleeping pills”. My world had stilled. What if something would have happened to her? I could not bear the thought of loosing her. I talked to her at length and told her we had to be strong. Taking sleeping pills would not help. We had to convince our parents and look forward to our future. She promised me she won’t do it again.

We were running out of time. Her father was adamant to get her married elsewhere. She got her brother-in-law on her side and asked him to help us. Her brother-in-law was influential in the family. He called me once and asked me about my intentions. I told him that I wanted to marry Ilham and my intentions were pure. He tried to convince me otherwise that it was just a crush and I was a flirt and was trying to delude his sister. I told him that I was not that kind of a man and when I committed, I committed. He seemed convinced about me and actually promised that he would help us out.

However, at night when I called Ilham, she told me he had changed his face. He told Ilham’s dad that I was a no-good person and I wasn’t serious about marrying his daughter. He suggested another man for Ilham. When I heard that, my blood boiled. How dare him! How dare he do that to us after he promised he would help us!

We thought we had a helper but he turned out to be a villain. Ilham’s marriage was fixed to Javed, a salesman. He was two years younger to her. When he met Ilham, she told him indirectly that she was not interested and even implied that she was not of good character. I know it sounds illogical. In such situation logic does not work. Javed did not care. Ilham as you know has a beautiful heart which anyone could see. He agreed to marry her.”

“Why didn’t Ilham tell him about you and her? That would have deterred him.” I told Abbas

“We weren’t thinking right. She said the first thing that came to her mind and I was desperate. I didn’t want to loose my Ilham. I asked a friend for help and we dug up his work address and how he looked like. I went with my friend to his work place to seek for a person with his description. He was short and he had curly hair. When I didn’t find one, I asked one of the salesmen, “Where is Javed?” “He has left the job sir” Again I had met with a road block. I took Javed’s number from the salesman and went to a telephone booth to call him.

I told him I was his well wisher and that Ilham was not a good match for him. He asked me who I was and where I was calling from. I refused to give my details. He said “Alright fine” and put down the phone. That evening he reported this incident to Ilham’s father. Her father got the address of the telephone booth from the telephone company and went to investigate who had called at such and such a time. However, the address registered was wrong and anyways he would have known it was me.”

“Abbas, when you both had the strong intention to marry and if her father was refusing why you didn’t just get married to her?” I asked. I didn’t know why Abbas and Ilham were going through so much unnecessarily.

“We would have, but you know in Islam, the nikah of a girl is not valid without her wali, her guardian who is her father” he replied

“Yes I do know that my friend but surely you would also be knowing that if the wali refuses to marry his ward for no legitimate reason, the guardianship goes to the next male relative until finally the Kazi, imam i.e. the judge and he can act as the guardian and marry the girl” I told him.

“What!” Abbas looked at me in shock. “Is that possible?” he asked holding his forehead.

“Yes, of course. I thought you knew this. There are so many cases where the men due to their pride and false honor or beliefs refuse to marry their wards: daughters and those under their guard ship. These women have the right to go to the Judge and he would act as the guardian and get her married” I explained.

“Oh my God! We did not know this. All the while we were thinking our nikah would not have been valid without her father’s permission” Abbas was crestfallen. He realized that he lost the one girl in his life through a matter of ignorance.

I tried to console him. “It’s kismet Abbas. It was written from before. Otherwise during all this time you could have told me what was happening and I could have let you know but her faith was written before she met you”

“Yes” Abbas agreed. Still in shock. “Well to conclude our story, her wedding approached. We had failed. We couldn’t convince our parents. The night before her wedding we talked over the phone the whole night. Yet it felt as it if were just minutes. We remembered all the great years of our friendship. Finally I could hear the Fajr Adhan at her end. “Goodbye Ilham. Take care of yourself. Be a good wife and keep your husband happy” We both cried. This was it. This was our final goodbye.

My heart ached listening to Abbas. I could see his emotions clearly on his face. Which man could love a woman like this? I knew many of my friends who cried because their men were not strong enough to hold on to a relationship and here, my friend was crying because he lost the girl he had loved for six years. I felt like kicking myself. Why had I not been there for him? Why had I not told him about the guardianship? Why? For that I had no reply. Kismet was all I could think of.

“How is she?” I asked him gently. “I don’t know. After her marriage, we never contacted. I understood that she was now someone else’s. Last I heard from a few friends that she gave birth to a baby girl. All I can do is pray for her that she remains happy and her husband treats her well” he said.

“Yes, that is all we can do now. InshaAllah may be in this world she was meant to be for her husband and who knows, in the next world, you two will find each other… for eternity” I prayed.

“Yes, InshaAllah. That is all I can pray for too” he replied. “In the meantime I will move on, I hope to marry a pious lady and fulfill my duties”

“Yes, do that” I agreed with him. I wanted to see him happy. I hated to see him lonely and heartbroken. It had been two years and his pain might have reduced, but it was still there and so was the love. “I will pray you get a wonderful girl” I smiled at him. He smiled back yet his smile didn’t reach his eyes. Hidden deep within, I still could see his pain.

We finished our coffee in silence. There was nothing more we could say…

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Sharique



Its 6 o’clock. Sharique always dreaded 6 o’clock because he realizes everyday that he had to go home. Home... Or was it a house? It sure felt like a prison even if it didn’t have four walls and a tiny window. He closed his file, arranged his table and went to his boss’s office to sign out. He worked in a freight and transport office. He was currently the head supervisor. He had started working when he was a mere boy of seventeen. His uncle had got him the job at the Seth’s office. Today he was fifty five. His once lean body had become hefty and his youthful boyish look; dull and deep. He was a father of three children; two boys and a girl. The boys were married and settled down with their families and his daughter had written her last A level last week. He knew he now had to look for a good husband for her. It was his duty as a father. And then… there was his wife.

Zareena: It was such a beautiful name but unfortunately did not transfer to his wife’s nature. He had been eighteen when his grandmother, aunts and mother decided he had a well paying job of three hundred shillings to support a wife. Sharique had come from a strict extended family. All the decisions were made by the elders- Men of the family. That meant his grandfather, uncles and father. Uncle Aamir was the eldest and he was rather dominating. He controlled the thoughts of both his father and brothers. He did not like anyone answering him back and disobeying him. Sharique had feared him as a child.

When he was eight, he wanted to fly a kite. All his friends in the neighborhood were flying their kites over the harbor as the sea breeze blew them higher and higher. “I wish I had a kite” Sharique confided to his best friend, Imran. Imran stayed next to Sharique and they both went to the same school, sat on the same bench and were inseparable. “Why don’t you make one? We can get a nice colorful clothe, tie a few sticks and join them both with thread. I will get my mother’s sewing thread and you can used it as a string” Imran replied. “Really!” said Sharique, his eyes large with excitement. The little boy had not realized it was so easy to make a kite.

He rushed home and saw a bright yellow shirt lying in the laundry basket. He took it; his mother’s sewing scissors and a rope from the store room. He ran all the way back to the harbor where the children were playing. With full enthusiasm, Imran and he started to make the kite. That had been the happiest day of his life. He saw his yellow kite fly higher and higher and he squealed with joy as he ran up and down the harbor. “Look! Look! Imran, My kite is flying! It’s flying!” Both boys felt a deep satisfaction seeing their creation high up in the sky.

It wasn’t until Sharique returned home that he realized it was going to be his most hated experience. The yellow shirt he had so innocently taken was his uncle’s. His uncle had fumed when he saw the kite. He took hold of Sharique by the collar and lifted him in the air in full rage. “How dare you little scoundrel! How dare you use my shirt? You are a thief and you will be punished.” He howled at him. His uncle then took out his belt and slashed the little boy. He slashed him so badly that blood started oozing from his wounds. If his mother had not come running in and covered him, he was sure he would have died. At one point he believed he had seen the angel of death. He remembered the feeling. But now he was too old to remember how the angel looked like. He had fainted and for a week, he was in his bed recovering. Imran was not allowed to see him when he came looking for him. Everyday Imran would come home on the way to school and they both would walk to school. Imran didn’t know what had happened and he never got to know. Sharique as a boy always hid his pain and never expressed it. He thought his uncle would be thought badly of if he said anything about what happened. He had been taught in madrasa that he was to respect his parents, his relatives and neighbors. Maintaining relationships was of high regard. At such a young age, the little boy followed it from his heart. He was there to help his mother, his aunts, he would carry the ‘market’ i.e. groceries from the market and run here and there to do their bided chores. He was the dream son people dreamt of.

Therefore, not a word did he speak badly about his uncle. After that incident, the fear of his uncle was deep rooted. He did not hate him. Somehow hating something was not in Sharique’s nature. He had been a lovely child. The one who would rescue a bird from its entanglement or bring home a stray animal to give it food and water. He had his mother’s kindness and his fathers look. When he would smile, the world around him would be lit.

By seventeen, he had finished his 10th Standard. He wanted to study further but he was an average student. He didn’t have the capacity or intellect to be a barrister or a doctor. Imran on the other hand went ahead with his studies. He left for the capital city to pursue his A levels and from there, he would fly off to London. London, that was a place Sharique wanted to visit. He had heard about the way the British dressed and talked and had been intrigued by them. Alas for him, he never did get to see London.

Immediately after school, his uncle decided he was to work at his Seth’s office as they needed an office boy. One who would deliver messages and goods around town and if Sharique worked hard, he might soon get to work under him. Sharique did as he was told. He went for the interview wearing a borrowed coat from a cousin and his father had tied his tie for him. He had looked like a child in a grown up’s clothes. The Seth was a kind man. He was strict and disciplined but he wasn’t cruel like Sharique’s uncle. When he had asked Sharique his name, Sharique got up and answered “Sharique sir”. “Sit down, sit down” Seth had said. Seth had been amused with his school boy manners. “Sharique, that’s a beautiful name. What does it mean?” Sharique stood up again and answered “It means early morning sunlight sir” “Sit down, sit down.” Seth waved his hand to him. “You have a wonderful name. Do you comprehend what it means” Sharique had nodded no. He didn’t know. “You mentioned early morning sunlight, that means the first rays of light that hit each day, with a new beginning, a new hope. It removes the darkness of the previous night and beautifies the world by giving it color” Sharique had listened in awe. He liked his name but he didn’t know it meant so much. Seth had died years ago, but his words had remained with him. Everyday when Sharique got up, he smile thinking of what he meant – hope, beauty, color, a new beginning. He wanted to be that to all the people around him.

Sharique had worked hard and sincerely. Seth had been very impressed and he liked the young boy. He had the charm and innocence to win everyone’s heart. At eighteen, after working for a year, his uncle decided he was to get married. He had in mind a friend’s daughter. She was sixteen and he had already spoken to his friend. They had agreed to the relationship. Sharique came home one day from work and a family meeting was called. His grandfather who was now ailing and weak had told him about the family’s decision. Sharique had known it wasn’t the family’s decision but rather his uncle’s. He didn’t want to refute. He knew if he would do that, it would just cause problems in the relations.

That is how, he got married to Zareena. When he went to see her, he had not really liked her. However, he knew no one would listen to him. Especially since everyone feared his uncle who had chosen the girl. She didn’t look beautiful, or pretty or cute. He was quite disappointed. He told his mother and father he didn’t like her when they were alone in their room. His mother simply cried because she knew she didn’t have the power to do anything and his father had just stared in the air. Sharique liked another girl. She was with him in school, her name was Fatimah and she lived on the other side of the harbor. Fatimah was small, petite and had the sweetest smile. Had he been given a choice, he would have wanted to marry her. Zareena on the other hand was not bad looking but she evoked no emotions from him.

He got to know her as the days passed after their marriage. She was very superstitious. She would tell him to throw his nails in the water and not in the dust bin, she didn’t mingle with his family, she didn’t get along with his mother, she would talk about the neighbors in a demeaning way and once she even picked up a fight in the middle of the market. It had been a great embarrassment for him. He had tried to reason with her, explaining it was not the proper way to behave. She had striked back with ugly words “What do you know on how to behave?! You are just some delivery boy whom I had the misfortune to marry. Do you know my father would give me money everyday the equivalent of what you give me for a weeks spending. Oh God, where did I land up?!” she lamented.

Sharique had left the house that moment itself for he feared he would strike her. He didn’t want to hurt her. He didn’t love her, but he would never hurt her. He didn’t want to become like his uncle. He had sat the entire evening on the harbor watching the waves hit the rocks. He wished he were a child again. Reality however, was not to elude him. He had to return home. Zareena had not cared that he had left the home and had come so late. She did not realize that her sharp tongue had hurt her husband. She turned her face away when he arrived and went into the kitchen.

When she turned eighteen, she became pregnant. She had been very difficult; always moody and using foul language. She picked up many fights with Sharique’s mother who was as gentle as him. She was shrewd too. In front of his uncle, she maintained such a demure, angle like behavior and his uncle had liked her from the first.

Each day of his marriage had been a trial for him. He would wake up next to a lady with whom he could not even be friends. As a husband, he gave her all he could, but she was never satisfied. She compared him with other men, how rich they were, how much gold they gave to their wives and how hopeless he was. She found faults in the way he walked and talked. She would even back bite him with her friends. “My husband is simply useless. He is so honest and charitable that he would give all his clothes to a beggar if I didn’t intervene”. Sharique bore it. It was his prayers and Quran Shariff that got him through all his days. At night he would wake up and read the Quran Shariff when everyone would be asleep. He would cry to his Lord “Dear Lord, hold me, please hold me, I am falling, I am weak. Give me strength to bear my condition. I know this life is temporary and it will be over soon, help me pass the test of this world. I am your weak servant and without your guidance and strength, I am nothing”

They had three children. One would have thought that he would have at least good children in whom he would find happiness. Unfortunately, the test of his patience was not over. Both his son’s followed their mother’s footsteps. Ashamed as he was in admitting it, his sons were greedy and full of spite. He had tried his best to mould them, but they simply didn’t listen. They would answer back at him, take money from his pockets, go out late in the night to clubs and come early in the morning. They had married without consulting him. Not that he would have ever refused their choices, he had his own experience to justify that but they had not even bothered to ask his opinion leave alone permission. If one sad relationship was not enough, he got two more. Usually fathers take pride in their sons, but for Sharique, his backbone just bended more with sorrow when he looked at them.

His daughter on the other hand had turned out well. She prayed regularly unlike her mother. She was trustworthy and she feared God. He had a close relationship with her and she was a loving daughter. For that Sharique always thanked his Lord.

And so here he was, fifty five. He was healthy by the grace of God. He had kept his body well because he wanted to work hard and be in a position to stand up in the night and pray even when he attained old age. His wife had grown more bitter and vicious; his sons did not care about him. They sneered at him and called him an old fool. His only comfort was his daughter.

His mother had died when he had been forty. He remembered that day well. While standing in the janaza prayer, tears had fallen from his eyes like rain drops. As he laid his mother in her grave, his heart had been overcomed with grief. He knew only of one kind lady who had loved him: his mother. “Oh my mother, goodbye my mother, till Qiyamah, till I meet you again sweet mother” .He cried as he threw the first fist of dust. Innallilahe wainna ilayhe rajiun. Verily we belong to God, and to Him we shall return. His father joined her soon. She had been a good woman. His father had missed her tremendously and had become delusional. He said he saw her sitting next to him or cooking his favorite dish in the kitchen. Within a year, he lay to rest in the grave next to her. His father might have been a weak man, but he had loved his wife very much.

As for his uncle, he had died at sea. The ferry had malfunctioned and a thousand people had drowned that day. His uncle had been one of them. Sharique was happy that may be Allah Taala wanted to forgive him, which is why He took away his uncle by drowning him. The person who drowned to death is a Martyr, a Shaheed, Who get much rewards. Whenever he thought of his uncle, he felt sad. Sad that due to his pride, he made his brothers and sisters suffer, he had made Sharique suffer and inflicted scars that would never be wiped away. Yet, Sharique always prayed for him. He would say in his heart “I forgive you uncle, for how then can I expect my Lord to forgive me for the innumerable sins I would have done if I can’t forgive you? I forgive you. I forgive you. I forgive you.”

It was 6 o’clock, time to go home. He wore his coat and took his umbrella. As he walked towards his house, he wondered, when death would come to him. He had bore an unhappy thirty seven years of marriage. He knew he wanted to finish his last obligation as a father to marry his daughter. As he crossed the road, someone called him from behind. “Sharique!” he turned. The man looked familiar. He must be around the same age as him and as the man came closer, Sharique suddenly recognized him and gave a squeal of delight “Imran! My dearest friend! Oh, my dearest friend!” Both men hugged one another as they cried out of happiness. They had been apart for more than thirty years yet their friendship was as strong as when used to walk together to school. “How are you?” Imran asked his friend, wiping his tears away. “Alhamdullilah. I am fine. How are you? When did you come from London?” Sharique enquired “This afternoon. I went to my brother’s home and freshened up before coming in search for you. I went to your ancestral home but found out you had sold it and moved away. I was just walking about thinking how to find you when God graciously let me spot you right here, crossing the road.” Imran replied.

Both friends went on talking on the pavement. It felt as though they were young boys again. Sharique wanted to take Imran home but he was scared. What if his wife did not give Imran a warm welcome? He could not bear to see Imran uncomfortable. It was nearing sunset so he asked Imran to join him for prayers in the masjid. Both friends went off together, just like they had in their youth. After namaz, they sat on the bench outside masjid and caught up with all their news. Imran had a daughter and a son. His daughter was married and had two children. His son had just completed his medical studies and would start practicing soon. “I am looking out for a wife for my son. I think now is the right time for him to get married and settle down.” Imran told Sharique. Sharique was speechless. He too was looking for a husband for his daughter. Could he put the proposal to Imran? However, Imran was wealthy, he sat among the intelligent lot, may be he would not like a girl from a humble family. “What about your daughter Sharique? Do you think you would be interested in looking at my son for her?” Imran cut through Sharique’s thoughts. The love for his friend Imran grew more in Sharique’s heart. Really, how could he have thought his friend would have changed? “I am humbled that you ask me Imran. I thought my daughter might not meet to your standards.” He replied. “What rubbish! She is your daughter and that is the greatest testimonial I ever need” Sharique sighed inwardly. He was happy his daughter was a good girl. He couldn’t say the same for his sons but as was his nature, he never spoke bad of anyone, leave alone his children. No, Not even to his best friend.

Imran’s family had also come down so they decided they would come the next day to see Sharique’s family. Sharique went home and told his wife about Imran. How he was a successful doctor in London and had put forward the proposal for his son. Zareena’s eyes had lit when she heard ‘London’ and ‘Doctor’. She was busy thinking of all the boasting she would do to her neighbors and gossip gang. Sharique then went and talked to his daughter. He told her about his friendship with Imran and how he met him today and his proposal. “They are coming to meet you tomorrow. You can meet his son and talk to him. My dear daughter, if you have any apprehensions about marrying him and if you do not like him, you can always tell me. I will only give your hand to the one you approve of” his daughter nodded her head and smiled shyly. Sharique kissed her on her forehead and went out of the room.

Imran came the next day with his family. His wife and son. His son, MashaAllah was a handsome youth. He took after his father and was very respectful. Zareena had acted to her best. This was a proposal she didn’t plan to leave. She wanted her friends to be jealous and go green in envy.

The children were left alone to talk in the garden. They liked each other instantly and talked about various things for almost half an hour. When they came back, Imran asked them what they had decided. Both nodded their heads and smiled. “Alhamdullilah!” Sharique was happy. He wouldn’t have found a better match for his daughter. She seemed happy and that was most important to him.

The wedding took place with joy. Soon it was time for his daughter to leave. Sharique’s heart was heavy with emotion. He loved his daughter and it was sad to bid her adieu. She hugged him and cried and cried. It was heart breaking to leave such a loving man.

Imran left for London with his family. Sharique went to see them off at the airport. Both friends hugged each other. They were silent, for they didn’t know when they would meet again.

Sharique then returned home. Zareena was busy talking over the phone to one of her gossip friends. “Oh well, she is my daughter you see and she is so beautiful. The boy literally begged her to get married to him. Did I tell you he is a doctor? Oh yes, they are so rich. I can’t wait to go to London.” She kept on boasting. Sharique gave her a reprimanding look to make her stop but she just sneered at him and turned away. Ah, the misfortune of getting a bad wife.

The coming days became more intolerable for him. Now that his daughter had left, he didn’t have any solace. He was happy she was finally settled with a good husband. He missed her a lot. He remembered the day she was born, the first time he held her, the first smile she gave him. He had not realized that he would miss her so much. On top of that his wife continued to nag him and living with her had become even more difficult.

The next day, after finishing work, Sharique decided he would go to the masjid directly. He did not want to go home and listen to his wife’s nagging. He went to say good bye to his boss. His boss was the Seth’s son and Sharique and he had shared a comradely since they had worked together for so long. He gave the final accounts he had prepared that day to him. The business was doing well and they both were pleased. He went back to his desk and arranged his things just the way he always did. On the way to masjid, a beggar begged for some money. Sharique was always careful to see his charity going the right way. He took him to the nearby tea shop and bought him some food. The beggar was very happy and gave him a lot of blessings. Sharique always felt good when he did a good deed. He felt more humbled and thanked God to have given him so much that he could help another being.

At masjid, after namaz, Sharique talked to all his brothers. They would sit and discuss how things were, the economy, the new rules and amendments. They congratulated him on his daughter’s wedding. This was his family; People who truly cared about him and loved him. Soon everyone left and Sharique was alone. He picked up his Quran Shariff and started to read. Time soon passed and he didn’t realize how late it became. When he finished reading, he sat there holding the Quran Shariff to his heart. His heart felt heavy. He wondered how he could go on living with his wife especially now that his daughter was gone. “Persevere Sharique, Persevere.” He told himself. He brought to his mind Prophet Nuh (Noah) and Prophet Lut (Lot) and thought of how they had persevered. Tears fell down his face, “Dear Lord, I am not a prophet. I am just a slave, Oh Lord, relieve me now, I don’t know how much longer I could go on” Sharique prayed. He didn’t know what could relieve him. Divorce was a word foreign to him. He knew he had the right to exercise it, but never did he think about it. He was after all, the kind man who would not hurt anyone and to divorce his wife, he knew she would be devastated. No, he wouldn’t do that. He would sincerely perform all his duties as a husband, just this night, his shoulders had slumped and he appeared as one who had born a lot of pain.

He remembered Prophet Muhammed and said his blessings to him. He asked forgiveness from God for his sins, he prayed for his parents, his children and even his wife. After reading a few lines from the Quran in his heart, he was ready to leave.

As he leaned forward to get up, a terrible pain shot right through his heart. With the Quran in one hand, he clutched his heart “Ya Allah!” he cried out in pain. He was so shocked. The pain was unbearable. It was as if his heart was being torn. And then, he saw him, the angel. The one he had seen when he had been eight. Oh yes, it was him. He smiled through the terrible pain, he was scared but he knew in a few moments, there would be no pain. No pain at all.

They found him the next day at dawn prayer. Sitting by the pillar, the Quran Shariff clutched in his hand. He had a peaceful smile on his face. The doctor brother checked his pulse, no; Sharique’s soul had left this world.

Sharique is still remembered today. Children are told about him, what a kind man he was and what a good end he had.

The early morning sunlight had colored the world and silently slipped away.