I reached the madrassa later than usual, my mind heavy with these thoughts. As soon as I opened the door
to my classroom, I sensed there was something unusual. My students were sitting in a perfect line, pale
and oddly silent, as if they had all seen a ghost.
Then I understood why. Sitting there by the open window with his back resting against the wall, his
hairless face lit with an arrogant smile, was none other than Shams of Tabriz.
“
Selamun aleykum, Sheikh Yassin,” he said, staring hard at me across the room.
I hesitated, not knowing whether to greet him, and decided not to. Instead I turned to my students and
inquired, “What is this man doing here? Why did you let him in?”
Dazed
and uneasy, none of the students dared to answer. It was Shams himself who shattered the
silence.
His
tone insolent, his gaze unwavering, he said to me, “Don’t scold them, Sheikh Yassin. It was my
idea. You see, I was in the neighborhood and said to myself, ‘Why don’t I stop by the madrassa and visit
the one person in this town who hates me most?’ ”