Having thus settled down, I roamed the streets, amazed at the mixture of religions, customs, and
languages permeating the air. I ran into Gypsy musicians, Arab travelers, Christian pilgrims,
Jewish merchants,
Buddhist priests, Frankish troubadours, Persian artists, Chinese acrobats,
Indian snake charmers, Zoroastrian magicians, and Greek philosophers. In the slave market, I
saw concubines with skin white as milk and hefty, dark eunuchs who had seen such atrocities
that they had lost their ability to speak. In the bazaar I came across traveling barbers with
bloodletting devices, fortune-tellers with crystal balls, and magicians who swallowed fire. There
were pilgrims on their way to Jerusalem and vagrants who I suspected were runaway soldiers
from the last Crusades. I heard people speak Venetian, Frankish, Saxon, Greek, Persian, Turkish,
Kurdish, Armenian, Hebrew, and several other dialects I couldn’t even distinguish. Despite their
seemingly endless
differences, all of these people gave off a similar air of incompleteness, of the
works in progress that they were, each an unfinished masterwork.
The whole city was a Tower of Babel. Everything was constantly shifting, splitting, coming to
light, transpiring, thriving, dissolving, decomposing, and dying. Amid this chaos I stood in a
place of unperturbed silence and serenity, utterly indifferent to the world and yet at the same
time feeling a burning love for all the people struggling and suffering in it.
As I watched the
people around me, I recalled another golden rule: It’s easy to love a perfect God, unblemished
and infallible that He is. What is far more difficult is to love fellow human beings with all their
imperfections and defects. Remember, one can only know what one is capable of loving. There is
no wisdom without love. Unless we learn to love God’s creation, we can neither truly love nor
truly know God.
I roamed the narrow alleys where artisans of all ages toiled in their small, dingy stores. In every
place I visited, I overheard the townspeople talk about Rumi. How did it feel, I wondered, to be
this popular? How did it affect his ego? My mind busy with these questions, I strolled in the
opposite direction from the mosque where Rumi was preaching.
Gradually the surroundings
began to change. As I moved northward, the houses became more dilapidated, the garden walls
falling down, and the children more raucous and unruly. The smells changed, too, getting
heavier, more garlicky and spicy. Finally I stepped into a street where three odors loomed in the
air: sweat, perfume, and lust. I had reached the seamy side of town.
There was a ramshackle house atop the steep cobbled street, the walls supported by bamboo
pillars, the roof of thatched grass. In front of the house, a group of women sat chatting. When
they saw me approach, they eyed me curiously, looking half amused. Beside them was a garden
with roses of every color and shade imaginable and the most amazing smell. I wondered who
tended to them.
I didn’t have to wait too long to learn the answer. No sooner had I reached the
garden than the
entrance door of the house was flung open and a woman dashed out. She was heavy-jowled, tall,
and enormously fat. When she squinted, the way she did now, her eyes were lost in rolls of flesh.
She had a thin, dark mustache and thick sideburns. It took me a while to comprehend that she
was both man and woman.
“What do you want?” the hermaphrodite asked suspiciously. Her face was in constant flux: One
moment it looked like the face of a woman; then the tide came back, replacing it with the face of
a man.
I introduced myself and asked her name, but she ignored my question.
“This is no place for you,” she said, waving her hands as if I were a fly she’d like to chase away.
“Why not?”
“Don’t you see this place is a brothel? Don’t you dervishes take an oath to stay away from lust?
People think I wallow in sin here, but I give my alms and close my doors in the month of
Ramadan. And now I’m saving you. Stay away from us. This is the filthiest corner in town.”
“Filth is inside, not outside,” I objected. “Thus says the rule.”
“What are you talking about?” she croaked.
“It
is one of the forty rules,” I tried to explain. “Real filth is the one inside. The rest simply
washes off. There is only one type of dirt that cannot be cleansed with pure waters, and that is
the stain of hatred and bigotry contaminating the soul. You can purify your body through
abstinence and fasting, but only love will purify your heart.”
The hermaphrodite was having none of it. “You dervishes are out of your minds. I’ve got all
sorts of customers here. But a dervish? When frogs grow beards! If I let you linger, God will raze
this place to the ground and put a curse on us for seducing a man of faith.”
I couldn’t help chuckling. “Where do you get these ridiculous ideas? Do you think God is an
angry, moody patriarch watching us from the skies above so that He can rain stones and frogs on
our heads the moment we err?”
The patron pulled at the ends of her thin mustache, giving me an annoyed look that verged on
meanness.
“Don’t worry, I’m not here to visit your brothel,” I assured her. “I was just admiring your rose
garden.”
“Oh, that”—the hermaphrodite shrugged dismissively—“is the creation of one of my girls,
Desert Rose.”
With that, the patron gestured to a young woman sitting among the harlots ahead of us.
Delicate
chin, pearl-luster skin, and dark almond eyes clouded with worry. She was heartbreakingly
beautiful. As I looked at her, I had a sense she was someone in the process of a big
transformation.
I dropped my voice to a whisper so that only the patron could hear me. “That girl is a good girl.
One day soon she’ll embark on a spiritual journey to find God. She’ll abandon this place forever.
When that day comes, do not try to stop her.”
The hermaphrodite looked at me flabbergasted before she burst out, “What the hell are you
talking about? Nobody is telling me what to do with my girls! You better get the hell out of here.
Or else I’m calling Jackal Head!”
“Who’s that?” I asked.
“Believe me, you wouldn’t want to know,” the hermaphrodite said, shaking her finger to
emphasize her point.
Hearing the name of this stranger made me shiver slightly, but I didn’t dwell on it. “Anyway, I’m
leaving,” I said. “But I’ll come back, so don’t be surprised next time you see me around. I’m not
one of those pious types who spend their whole lives hunched on prayer rugs while their eyes
and hearts remain closed to the outside world. They read the Qur’an only on the surface. But I
read the Qur’an in the budding flowers and migrating birds. I read the Breathing Qur’an
secreted
in human beings.”
“You mean you read people?” The patron laughed a halfhearted laugh. “What kind of nonsense
is that?”
“Every man is an open book, each and every one of us a walking Qur’an. The quest for God is
ingrained in the hearts of all, be it a prostitute or a saint. Love exists within each of us from the
moment we are born and waits to be discovered from then on. That is what one of the forty rules
is all about: The whole universe is contained within a single human being—you. Everything that
you see around, including the things you might not be fond of and even the people you despise or
abhor, is present within you in varying degrees. Therefore, do not look for Sheitan outside
yourself either. The devil is not an extraordinary force that attacks from without. It is an ordinary
voice within. If you get
to know yourself fully, facing with honesty and hardness both your dark
and bright sides, you will arrive at a supreme form of consciousness. When a person knows
himself or herself, he or she knows God.”
Crossing her arms above her chest, the hermaphrodite leaned forward and squinted at me
menacingly.
“A dervish who preaches to harlots!” she grunted. “I warn you, I’m not going to let you badger
anyone around here with your silly ideas. You better stay away from my brothel! Because if you
don’t, I swear to God, Jackal Head will cut off that sharp tongue of yours and I’ll eat it with
pleasure.”
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