of His house!
“I should never have gone there,” I said to Sesame, my voice cracking like thin ice. “They’re right, you
know. A harlot has no place in a mosque or a church or in any of His houses.”
“Don’t say that!”
When I turned around to see who had said this, I couldn’t believe my eyes. It was him, the wandering
hairless dervish. Sesame broke into a wide smile, delighted to see him again. I lurched forward to kiss his
hands, but he stopped me midway. “Please don’t.”
“But how can I thank you? I owe you so much,” I beseeched.
He shrugged and looked uninterested. “You owe me nothing,” he said. “We are indebted to no other
than Him.”
He introduced himself as Shams of Tabriz and then said the strangest thing ever: “Some
people start
life with a perfectly glowing aura but then lose color and fade. You seem to be one of them. Once your
aura was whiter than lilies with specks of yellow and pink, but it faded over time. Now it is a pale
brown. Don’t you miss your original colors? Wouldn’t you like to unite with your essence?”
I looked at him, feeling utterly lost in his words.
“Your aura has lost its shine because all these years you have convinced
yourself that you are dirty
inside and out.”
“I
am dirty,” I said, biting my lip. “Don’t you know what I do for a living?”
“Allow me to tell you a story,” Shams said. And this is what he told me:
One day a prostitute passed by a street dog. The animal was panting under the hot sun, thirsty and
helpless. The prostitute immediately took off her shoe and filled it with water from the nearest well for
the dog. Then she went on her way. The next day she ran into a Sufi who was a man of great wisdom.
As soon as he saw her, he kissed her hands. She was shocked. But he told her that her kindness toward
the dog had been so genuine that all her sins had been pardoned there and then.
I understood what Shams of Tabriz was trying to tell me, but something inside me refused to believe
him. So I said, “Let me assure you, even
if I fed all the dogs in Konya, it wouldn’t be enough for my
redemption.”
“You cannot know that; only God can. Besides, what makes you think any of those men who pushed you
out of the mosque today are closer to God?”
“Even if they are not closer to God,” I replied, unconvinced, “who will tell them that? Will you?”
But the dervish shook his head. “No, that’s not the way the system works. It is
you who needs to tell it
to them.”
“Do you think they would listen to me? Those men hate me.”
“They will listen,” he said determinedly. “Because there is no such thing as ‘them,’ just as there is no
‘I.’ All you need to do is keep in mind how everything and everyone in this universe is interconnected.
We are not hundreds and thousands of different beings. We are all One.”
I waited for him to explain, but instead he continued: “It’s one of the forty rules.
If you want to change
the way others treat you, you should first change the way you treat yourself. Unless you learn to love
yourself, fully and sincerely, there is no way you can be loved. Once you achieve that stage, however,
be thankful for every thorn that others might throw at you. It is a sign that you will soon be showered
in roses.” He paused briefly and then added, “How can you blame others for disrespecting you when you
think of yourself as unworthy of respect?”
I stood there unable to say a word as I felt my grip on what was real slip away. I thought about all the
men I had slept with—the way they smelled, the way their callused hands felt, the way they cried when
they came.… I had seen nice boys turn into monsters and monsters turn into nice boys. Once I had a
customer who had the habit of spitting on prostitutes while he had sex with them. “Dirty,” he would say as
he spit into my mouth and all over my face. “You dirty whore.”
And here was this dervish telling me I was cleaner than fresh springwater. It felt like a tasteless joke,
but when I forced myself to laugh, the sound didn’t pass through my throat, and I ended up suppressing a
sob.
“The past is a whirlpool. If you let it dominate your present moment, it will suck you in,” said Shams as
if he had read my thoughts. “Time is just an illusion. What you need is to live this very moment. That is all
that matters.”
Upon saying that, he took out a silk handkerchief from the inside pocket of his robe. “Keep it,” he said.
“A good man in Baghdad gave it to me, but you need it more than I do. It will remind you that your heart is
pure and that you bear God within you.”
With that, the dervish grabbed his staff and stood up, ready to go. “Just walk out of that brothel.”
“Where? How? I have no place to go.”
“That’s
not a problem,” Shams said, his eyes gleaming.
“Fret not where the road will take you.
Instead concentrate on the first step. That’s the hardest part and that’s what you are responsible for.
Once you take that step let everything do what it naturally does and the rest will follow. Do not go
with the flow. Be the flow.”
I nodded. I didn’t need to ask in order to understand that this, too, was one of the rules.