was mocking him or not. “Nobody ever does that,”
he said when he spoke again, flashing me a warm
smile.
“You mean apologize to your ox?”
“Well, that, too. But I was thinking nobody ever apologizes to
me. It’s usually the other way round. I am
the one who says sorry all the time. Even when people do me wrong, I apologize to them.”
I was touched to hear that. “The Qur’an tells us each and every one of us was made in the best of
molds. It’s one of the rules,” I said softly.
“What rule?” he asked.
“God is busy with the completion of your work, both outwardly and inwardly. He is fully occupied
with you. Every human being is a work in progress that is slowly but inexorably moving toward
perfection. We are each an unfinished work of art both waiting and striving to be completed. God
deals with each of us separately because humanity is a fine art of skilled penmanship where every
single dot is equally important for the entire picture.”
“Are you here for the sermon, too?” the peasant asked with a renewed interest. “It looks like it’s going
to be very crowded. He is a remarkable man.”
My heart skipped a beat as I realized whom he was talking about. “Tell me, what is so special about
Rumi’s sermons?”
The peasant fell quiet and squinted into the vast horizon for a while. His mind seemed to be
everywhere and nowhere.
Then he said, “I come from a village that has had its share of hardships. First the famine, then the
Mongols. They burned and plundered every village in their way. But what they did in the big cities was
even worse. They captured Erzurum, Sivas, and Kayseri and massacred the entire male population, taking
the women with them. I myself have not lost a loved one or my house. But I
did lose something. I lost my
joy.”
“What’s that got to do with Rumi?” I asked.
Dropping
his gaze back to his ox, the peasant murmured tonelessly, “Everyone says if you listen to
Rumi preach, your sadness will be cured.”
Personally, I didn’t think there was anything wrong with sadness. Just the opposite—hypocrisy made
people happy, and truth made them sad. But I didn’t tell this to the peasant. Instead I said, “Why don’t I
join you until Konya, and you’ll tell me more about Rumi?”
I tied my horse’s reins to the cart and climbed in to sit beside the peasant, glad to see that the ox didn’t
mind the additional load. One way or the other, it walked the same excruciatingly slow walk. The peasant
offered me bread and goat cheese. We ate as we talked. In this state, while the sun blazed in an indigo
sky, and under the watchful eyes of the town’s saints, I entered Konya.
“Take good care, my friend,” I said as I jumped off the cart and loosened the reins of my horse.
“Make sure you come to the sermon!” the peasant yelled expectantly.
I nodded as I waved good-bye.
“Inshallah.”
Although I was eager to listen to the sermon and dying to meet Rumi, I wanted to spend some time in
the city first and learn what the townspeople thought about the great preacher. I wanted to see him through
foreign eyes, kind and unkind, loving and unloving, before I looked on him with my own.