my face and sat back.
In the next hour, a few coins were dropped into my bowl. All were chipped copper. I yearned for a
gold coin,
with symbols of sun, lion, and crescent. Since the late Aladdin Keykubad had loosened the
rules on currency, coins issued by the beys of Aleppo, the Fatimid rulers in Cairo, and the caliph of
Baghdad, not to mention the Italian florin, were all pronounced valid. The rulers of Konya accepted them
all, and so did the town’s beggars.
Together with the coins, a few dry leaves fell on my lap. The maple tree was shedding its reddish gold
leaves, and as a gusty wind blew, quite a number of these made it into my bowl, as if the tree were giving
me alms. Suddenly I realized that the maple tree and I had something in common. A
tree shedding its
leaves in autumn resembled a man shedding his limbs in the final stages of leprosy.
I was a naked tree. My skin, my organs, my face falling apart. Every day another part of my body
abandoned me. And for me, unlike the maple tree, there would be no spring in which I would blossom.
What I lost, I lost forever. When people looked at me, they didn’t see who I was but what I was missing.
Whenever they placed a coin in my bowl, they did so with amazing speed and avoided any eye contact, as
if my gaze were contagious. In their eyes I was worse than a thief or a murderer. As much as they
disapproved of such outlaws, they didn’t treat them as if they were invisible. When it came to me,
however, all they saw was death staring them in the face. That’s what scared them—to
recognize that
death could be this close and this ugly.
Suddenly there was a great commotion in the background. I heard somebody yell, “He is coming! He is
coming!”
Sure enough, there was Rumi, riding a horse as white as milk, wearing an exquisite amber caftan
embroidered with golden leaves and baby pearls, erect and proud, wise and noble, followed by a throng
of admirers. Radiating an air of charisma and confidence, he looked less like a scholar than a ruler—the
sultan of the wind, the fire, the water, and the earth. Even his horse stood tall and firm, as if aware of the
distinction of the man he carried.
I pocketed the coins in my bowl, wrapped my head so as to leave
half of my face in the open, and
entered the mosque. Inside, it was so packed it seemed impossible to breathe, let alone find a seat. But the
one good thing about being a leper was that no matter how crowded a place, I could always find a seat,
since nobody wanted to sit next to me.
“Brothers,” Rumi said, his voice rising high, sweeping low. “The vastness of the universe makes us
feel small, even inconsequential. Some of you might be asking, ‘What meaning could I, in my limitedness,
possibly have for God?’ This, I believe, is a question that has occurred to many from time to time. In
today’s sermon I want to generate some specific answers to that.”
Rumi’s two sons were in the front row—the
handsome one, Sultan Walad, who everyone said
resembled his late mother, and the young one, Aladdin, with an animated face but curiously furtive eyes. I
could see that both were proud of their father.
“The children of Adam were honored with knowledge so great that neither the mountains nor the
heavens could shoulder it,” Rumi continued. “That is why it says in the Qur’an,
Truly We offered the
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