"Don't be sad,
Salem. Do you know who's going to take you to the masjid today?"
This is a true story
about a man named Rashed. He tells his story as follows...
I was not more than
thirty years old when my wife gave birth to my first child. I still remember
that night.
I had stayed out all
night long with my friends, as was my habit. It was a night filled with useless
talk, and worse, with backbiting, gossiping, and making fun of people. I was
mostly the one who made people laugh; I would mock others and my friends would
laugh and laugh. I remember on that night that I'd made them laugh a lot. I had
an amazing ability to imitate others – I could change the sound of my voice
until I sounded exactly like the person I was mocking. No one was safe from my
biting mockery, even my friends; some people started avoiding me just to be
safe from my tongue. I remember on that night, I had made fun of a blind man
who I'd seen begging in the market. What was worse, I had put my foot out in
front him – he tripped and fell, and started turning his head around, not
knowing what to say.
I went back to my house,
late as usual, and I found my wife waiting for me. She was in a terrible state,
and said in a quivering voice, "Rashed... where were you?"
"Where would I be,
on Mars?" I said sarcastically, "With my friends of course."
She was visibly
exhausted, and holding back tears, she said, "Rashed, I'm so tired. It
seems the baby is going to come soon." A silent tear fell on her cheek.
I felt that I had
neglected my wife. I should have taken care of her and not stayed out so much
all those nights... especially since she was in her ninth month. I quickly took
her to the hospital; she went into the delivery room, and suffered through long
hours of pain.
I waited patiently for
her to give birth… but her delivery was difficult, and I waited a long time
until I got tired. So I went home and left my phone number with the hospital so
they could call with the good news. An hour later, they called me to congratulate
me on the birth of Salem. I went to the hospital immediately. As soon as they
saw me, they asked me to go see the doctor who had overlooked my wife's
delivery.
"What doctor?"
I cried out, "I just want to see my son Salem!"
"First go see the
doctor," they said.
I went to the doctor,
and she started talking to me about trials, and about being satisfied with
Allah's decree. Then she said, "Your son has a serious deformity in his
eyes, and it seems that he has no vision." I lowered my head while I fought
back tears... I remembered that blind man begging in the market who I'd tripped
and made others laugh at.
SubhanAllah, you get
what you give! I stayed brooding quietly for a while... I didn't know what to
say. Then I remembered by wife and son. I thanked the doctor for her kindness,
and went to go see my wife. My wife wasn't sad. She believed in the decree of
Allah... she was content... How often had she advised me to stop mocking
people! "Don't backbite people," she always used to repeat... We left
the hospital, and Salem came with us.
In reality, I didn't pay
much attention to him. I pretended that he wasn't in the house with us. When he
started crying loudly, I'd escape to the living room to sleep there. My wife
took good care of him, and loved him a lot. As for myself, I didn't hate him,
but I couldn't love him either.
Salem grew. He started
to crawl, and had a strange way of crawling. When he was almost one year old,
he started trying to walk, and we discovered that he was crippled. I felt like
he was an even greater burden on me. After him, my wife gave birth to Umar and
Khaled. The years passed, and Salem grew, and his brothers grew. I never liked
to sit at home, I was always out with my friends... in reality, I was like a
plaything at their disposal [entertaining them whenever they wanted].
My wife never gave up on
my reform. She always made du'aa for my guidance. She never got angry with my
reckless behavior, but she would get really sad if she saw me neglecting Salem
and paying attention to the rest of his brothers. Salem grew, and my worries
grew with him. I didn't mind when my wife asked to enroll him in a special
school for the handicapped.
I didn't really feel the
passing of the years. My days were all the same. Work and sleep and food and
staying out with friends. One Friday, I woke up at 11 am. This was early for
me. I was invited to a gathering, so I got dressed and perfumed, and was about
to go out. I passed by our living room, and was startled by the sight of Salem
– he was sobbing! This was the first time I had noticed Salem crying since he
was a baby. Ten years had passed, and I hadn't paid attention to him. I tried
to ignore him now, but I couldn't take it... I heard him calling out to his
mother while I was in the room. I turned towards him, and went closer. "Salem!
Why are you crying?" I asked.
When he heard my voice,
he stopped crying. Then when he realized how close I was, he started feeling
around him with his small hands. What was wrong with him? I discovered that he
was trying to move away from me! It was as if he was saying, "Now, you've
decided to notice me? Where have you been for the last ten years?" I
followed him... he had gone into his room. At first, he refused to tell me why
he'd been crying. I tried to be gentle with him... Salem started to tell me why
he'd been crying, while I listened and trembled.
Do you know what the
reason was?! His brother Umar, the one who used to take him to the masjid, was
late. And because it was Jumu'ah prayer, Salem was afraid he wouldn't find a
place in the first row. He called out to Umar... and he called out to his
mother... but nobody answered, so he cried. I sat there looking at the tears
flowing from his blind eyes. I couldn't bear the rest of his words. I put my
hand over his mouth and said, "Is this why you were crying, Salem!"
"Yes," he
said.
I forgot about my
friends, I forgot about the gathering, and I said, "Don't be sad, Salem.
Do you know who's going to take you to the masjid today?"
"Umar, of
course," he said, "... but he's always late."
"No," I said,
"I'm going to take you."
Salem was shocked... he
couldn't believe it. He thought I was mocking him. His tears came and he
started crying. I wiped his tears with my hand and then took hold of his hand.
I wanted to take him to the masjid by car. He refused and said, "The
masjid is near... I want to walk there." Yes, by Allah, he said this to
me.
I couldn't remember when
was the last time I had entered the masjid , but it was the first time I felt
fear and regret for what I'd neglected in the long years that had passed. The
masjid was filled with worshippers, but I still found a place for Salem in the
first row. We listened to the Jumu'ah khutbah together, and he prayed next to
me. But really, I was the one praying next to him.
After the prayer, Salem
asked me for a Quraan. I was surprised! How was he going to read when he was
blind? I almost ignored his request, but I decided to humor him out of fear of
hurting his feelings. I passed him a Qur'an. He asked me to open the Qur'an to
Surat al-Kahf. I started flipping through the pages and looking through the
index until I found it. He took the Qur'an from me, put it in front of him, and
started reading the Surah... with his eyes closed... Ya Allah! He had the whole
Surah memorized.
I was ashamed of myself.
I picked up a Qur'an... I felt my limbs tremble... I read and I read. I asked
Allah to forgive me and to guide me. I couldn't take it... I started crying
like a child. There were still some people in the masjid praying sunnah... I
was embarrassed by their presence, so I tried to hold my tears. My crying
turned into whimpering and long, sobbing breaths. The only thing I felt was a
small hand reaching out to my face, and then wiping the tears away. It was
Salem! I pulled him to my chest... I looked at him. I said to myself... you're
not the blind one, but I am, for having drifted after immoral people who were
pulling me to hellfire. We went back home. My wife was extremely worried about
Salem, but her worry turned into tears [of joy] when she found out I had prayed
Jumu'ah with Salem.
From that day on, I
never missed the congregational prayer in the masjid. I left my bad friends...
and I made righteous friends among people I met at the masjid. I tasted the
sweetness of Iman with them. I learned things from them that distracted me from
this world. I never missed out on gatherings of remembrance [halaqas], or on
the witr prayer. I recited the entire Qur'an, several times, in one month. I
moistened my tongue with the remembrance of Allah, that He might forgive my
backbiting and mocking of the people. I felt closer to my family. The looks of
fear and pity that had occupied my wife's eyes disappeared. A smile now never
parted from the face of my son Salem. Anyone who saw him would have felt that
he owned the world and everything in it. I praised and thanked Allah a lot for
His blessings.
One day, my righteous
friends decided to go to a far away location for da'wah. I hesitated about
going. I prayed istikharah, and consulted with my wife. I thought she would
refuse... but the opposite happened! She was extremely happy, and even
encouraged me... because in the past, she had seen me traveling without
consulting her, for the purpose of sin and evil. I went to Salem, and told him
I would be traveling. With tears, he wrapped me up in his small arms...
I was away from home for
three and a half months. In that period, whenever I got a chance, I called my
wife and talked to my children. I missed them so much... and oh, how I missed
Salem! I wanted to hear his voice... he was the only one who hadn't talked to
me since I'd traveled. He was either at school or at the masjid whenever I
called them.Whenever I would tell my wife how much I missed him, she would
laugh happily, joyfully, except for the last time I called her. I didn't hear
her expected laugh. Her voice changed. I said to her, "Give my salam to
Salem," and she said, "Insha'Allah," and was quiet.
At last, I went back
home. I knocked on the door. I hoped that it was Salem who would open up for
me, but was surprised to find my son Khaled, who was not more than four years
old. I picked him up in my arms while he squealed, "Baba! Baba!" I
don't know why my heart tensed when I entered the house.
I sought refuge in Allah
from the accursed Shaytan... I approached my wife... her face was different. As
if she was pretending to be happy. I inspected her closely then said,
"What's wrong with you?" "Nothing," she said. Suddenly, I
remembered Salem. "Where's Salem?" I asked. She lowered her head. She
didn't answer. Hot tears fell on her cheeks.
"Salem! Where's
Salem?" I cried out.
At that moment, I only
heard the sound of my son Khaled talking in his own way, saying, "Baba...
Thalem went to pawadise... with Allah..."
My wife couldn't take
it. She broke down crying. She almost fell to the floor, and left the room.
Later, I found out that Salem had contracted a fever two weeks before I'd
returned, so my wife took him to the hospital... the fever got more and more
severe, and didn't leave him... until his soul left his body...
And if this earth closes
in on you in spite of its vastness, and your soul closes is on you because of
what it's carrying… call out, "Oh Allah!" If solutions run out, and
paths are constricted, and ropes are cut off, and your hopes are no more… call
out, "Oh Allah." Allah wished to guide Salem's father on the hands of
Salem, before Salem's death. How merciful is Allah!
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