them; surely Allah is High, Great.”
When he finished, Shams closed his eyes and recited the same verse, this time in a different translation.
“Men are the support of women as God gives some more means than others, and because they spend
of their wealth (to provide for them). So women who are virtuous are obedient to God and guard the
hidden as God has guarded it. As for women you feel are averse, talk to them suasively; then leave
them alone in bed (without molesting them) and go to bed with them (when they are willing). If they
open out to you, do not seek an excuse for blaming them. Surely God is sublime and great.
“Do you see any difference between the two?” Shams asked.
“Yes I do,” I said. “Their whole texture is different. The former sounds as if it gives consent to married
men
to beat their wives, whereas the latter advises them to simply walk away. I think that is a big
difference. Why is that?”
“Why is that? Why is that?” Shams echoed several times, as if enjoying the question. “Tell me
something, Kimya. Have you ever gone swimming in a river?”
I nodded as a childhood memory returned to me. The cold, thirst-quenching
streams of the Taurus
Mountains crossed my mind. Of the younger girl who had spent many happy afternoons in those streams
with her sister and her friends, there was now little left behind. I turned my face away as I didn’t want
Shams to see the tears in my eyes.
“When you look at a river from a distance, Kimya, you might think there is only one watercourse. But if
you dive into the water, you’ll realize there is more than one river. The river conceals various currents,
all of them flowing in harmony and yet completely separate from one another.”
Upon saying that, Shams of Tabriz approached me and held my chin between his two fingers, forcing
me to look directly into his deep, dark, soulful eyes. My heart skipped a beat. I couldn’t even breathe.
“The Qur’an is a gushing river,” he said. “Those who look at it from a distance see only one river. But
for those swimming in it, there are four currents. Like different types of fish, some of us swim closer to
the surface while some others swim in deep waters down below.”
“I’m afraid I don’t understand,” I said, although I was beginning to.
“Those who like to swim close to the surface are content with the outer meaning of the Qur’an. Many
people are like that. They take the verses too literally. No wonder when they read a verse like the Nisa,
they arrive at the conclusion that men are held superior to women. Because that is exactly what they want
to see.”
“How about the other currents?” I asked.
Shams sighed softly, and I couldn’t help noticing his mouth, as mysterious and inviting as a secret
garden.
“There are three more currents. The second one is deeper than the first, but still close to the surface. As
your awareness expands, so does your grasp of the Qur’an. But for that to happen, you need to take the
plunge.”
Listening to him, I felt both empty and fulfilled at the same time. “What happens when you take the
plunge?” I asked cautiously.
“The third undercurrent is the esoteric,
batini, reading. If you read the Nisa with your inner eye open,
you’ll see that the verse is not about women and men but about
womanhood and
manhood. And each and
every one of us, including you and me, has both femininity and masculinity in us, in varying degrees and
shades. Only when we learn to embrace both can we attain harmonious Oneness.”
“Are you telling me that I have manliness inside me?”
“Oh, yes, definitely. And I have a female side, too.”
I couldn’t help but chuckle. “And Rumi? How about him?”
Shams smiled fleetingly. “Every man has a degree of womanliness inside.”
“Even the ones who are manly men?”
“Especially those, my dear,” Shams said, garnishing his words with a wink and dropping his voice to a
whisper, as if sharing a secret.
I stifled a giggle, feeling like a little girl. That was the impact of having Shams so close. He was a
strange man,
his voice oddly charming, his hands lithe and muscular, and his stare like a crease of
sunlight, making everything that it fell upon look more intense and alive. Next to him I felt my youth in all
its fullness, and yet somewhere inside me a maternal instinct sprawled, exuding the thick, milky scent of
motherhood. I wanted to protect him. How or from what, I could not tell.
Shams put his hand on my shoulder, his face so close to mine that I could feel the warmth of his breath.
There was now a new, dreamy gaze to his eyes. He held me captive with his touch, caressing my cheeks,
his fingertips as warm as a flame against my skin. I was flabbergasted. Now his finger moved down,
reaching my bottom lip. Baffled and giddy,
I closed my eyes, feeling a lifetime’s worth of excitement
welling up in my stomach. But no sooner had he touched my lips than Shams drew his hand back.
“You should go now, dear Kimya,” Shams murmured, making my name sound like a sad word.
I walked out, my head dizzy and my cheeks flushed.
Only after I went to my room, reclined on my back on the sleeping mat,
and stared up at the ceiling,
wondering how it would feel to be kissed by Shams, did it dawn upon me that I had forgotten to ask him
about the fourth undercurrent in the stream—the deeper reading of the Qur’an. What was it? How could
one ever achieve that kind of depth?
And what happened to those who took the plunge?