I caught sight of the dervish darting toward the mob, like a flaming arrow shot straight up into the sky. I
jumped to my feet and rushed to catch up with him.
When he reached the head of the procession, Shams raised his staff like a flag and yelled at the top of
his voice, “Stop it, people! Halt!”
Baffled, and suddenly silent, the men stared at him in wonder.
“You should all be ashamed of yourselves!” Shams of Tabriz shouted as he struck the ground with his
staff. “Thirty men against one woman. Is that fair?”
“She doesn’t deserve fairness,” said a square-faced, burly man with a lazy eye, who seemed to have
proclaimed himself the leader of this impromptu group. I recognized him instantly.
He was a security
guard named Baybars, a man all the beggars in town knew well for his cruelty and rapacity.
“This woman here dressed up as a man and sneaked into the mosque to deceive good Muslims,”
Baybars said.
“Are you telling me you want to punish a person for going into a mosque? Is that a crime?” Shams of
Tabriz asked, his voice dripping with scorn.
The question created a momentary lull. Apparently nobody had thought of it that way.
“She is a whore!” yelled another man, who looked so enraged that his face had turned a dark scarlet
color. “She has no place in a holy mosque!”
That seemed enough to inflame the group again. “Whore! Whore!” a few people at the back chanted in
unison. “Let’s get the whore!”
As
if that were an order, a young lad leaped forward and grabbed the woman’s turban, yanking it
forcefully. The turban came loose, and the woman’s long blond hair, bright as sunflowers, fell down in
graceful waves. We all held our breath, astonished by her youth and beauty.
Shams must have recognized the mixed feelings in the air, for he reproached them without skipping a
beat: “You have to make up your minds, brothers. Do you really despise this woman, or do you in fact
desire her?”
With that, the dervish caught the harlot’s hand and pulled her toward him, away from the young lad and
the mob. She hid behind him, like a little girl hiding behind her mother’s skirts.
“You are making a big mistake,” the leader of the group said, raising his voice above the murmur of the
crowd. “You are a stranger in this town and don’t know our ways. Stay out of this matter.”
Someone else chimed in. “What kind of a dervish are you anyway? Don’t you have anything better to do
than to defend the interests of a whore?”
Shams of
Tabriz was quiet for a moment, as if considering the questions. He displayed no temper,
remaining invariably tranquil. Then he said, “But how did you notice her in the first place? You go to a
mosque but pay more attention to the people around you than to God? If you were the good believers you
claim to be, you would not have noticed this woman even if she were naked. Now, go back to the sermon
and do a better job this time.”
An awkward silence descended on the entire street. Leaves skittered along the sidewalk, and for a
moment they were the only things that moved.
“Come on, you lot! Off you go, back to the sermon.” Shams of Tabriz waved his staff, shooing the men
away like flies.
They did not all turn and walk away, but they
did take a few steps back, swaying unsteadily, puzzled as
to what to do next. A few of them were looking in the direction of the mosque as if considering returning.
It was exactly then that the harlot mustered the courage to get out from behind the dervish. Fast as a rabbit,
she took to her heels, her long hair flying every which way while she scurried into the closest side street.
Only two men attempted to chase her. But Shams of Tabriz blocked their path, swinging his staff under
their feet with such suddenness and force that they tumbled over and fell down. A few passersby laughed
at the sight, and so did I.