calm, his lips constantly moving in prayer.
Finally the music slowed down. All at once the dervishes stopped whirling, each lotus flower closing
up into itself. With a tender salute, my father blessed everyone
onstage and in the audience, and for a
moment it was as if we were all connected in perfect harmony. A thick, sudden silence ensued. Nobody
knew how to react. Nobody had seen anything like this before.
My father’s voice pierced the silence. “This, my friends, is called the
sema—the dance of the whirling
dervishes. From this day on, dervishes of every age will dance the
sema. One hand pointed up to the sky,
the other hand pointing down to earth, every speck of love we receive from God, we pledge to distribute
to the people.”
The audience smiled and mumbled in agreement. There was a warm, friendly commotion all over the
hall. I was so touched by seeing this affirming response that tears welled up in my eyes. At long last my
father and Shams were beginning to receive the respect and love that they most certainly deserved.
The evening could have ended on that warm note and I could have gone home a happy man, feeling
confident that things were improving, had it not been for what happened next, ruining everything.