bad as they claim, why would they serve it in paradise?”
“Questions, questions …” Hristos murmured as he threw his hands up. “You are always full of
questions. Do you have to question everything?”
“Of course I do. That’s why we were given a brain, don’t you think?”
“Suleiman, I have known you for a long time. You are not just any customer to me. You are my friend.
And I worry about you.”
“I’ll be fine—” I said, but Hristos interrupted me.
“You are a good man, but your tongue is as sharp as a dagger. That’s what worries me. There are all
sorts of people in Konya. And it’s no secret that some of them don’t think highly of a Muslim who has
taken to drink. You need to learn to be careful in public. Hide your ways, and watch what you say.”
I grinned. “May we top off this speech with a poem from Khayyám?”
Hristos heaved a sigh, but the Persian merchant who had overheard me exclaimed cheerfully, “Yes, we
want a poem from Khayyám.”
Other
customers joined in, giving me a big round of applause. Motivated and slightly provoked, I
jumped onto a table and began to recite:
“Did God set grapes a-growing, do you think,
And at the same time make it a sin to drink?”
The Persian merchant yelled, “Of course not! That wouldn’t make any sense!”
“Give thanks to Him who foreordained it thus—
Surely He loves to hear the glasses clink!”
If there was one thing these many years of drinking had taught me, it was
that different people drank
differently. I knew people who drank gallons every night, and all they did was get merry, sing songs, and
then doze off. But then there were others who turned into monsters with a few drops. If the same drink
made some merry and tipsy and others wicked and aggressive, shouldn’t we hold the drinkers responsible
instead of the drink?
“Drink! for you know not whence you came, nor why;
Drink! for you know not why you go, nor where.”
Another round of applause followed. Even Hristos joined the excitement. In the Jewish quarter of
Konya, in
a tavern owned by a Christian, we, a mixed bunch of wine lovers of all faiths, raised our
glasses and toasted together, hard though it was to believe, to a God who could love and forgive us even
when we ourselves clearly failed to do so.