I was a teacher in  the Quranic study circle at our neighborhood Masjid at the time. I would see  this young boy after Maghrib prayers; you might say he was about fifteen years  old.  He held a pocket Qur'an and sat  alone reading from it, no, he wasn't actually reading from it, he was just  trying to make it seem as he was.   
                        Now and again, he  would shyly steal a few glances at us, curious to know what we were doing and  what we were talking about. 
                        Every time I caught  his eye, he would avert his head and continue with his recitation, as if he had  not intended to look this way. 
                        Day after day, he  sat in the same reserved manner, revealing the same timid glance.  Finally after Isha prayer one day, I resolved  to confront him. 
                        “Assalamu 'Alaykum,  my name is Salman, I teach the Quranic study circle in this Masjid." 
                        'And my name is  Khalid.' 
                        Strange, he replied  so fast, as if he had been waiting to share this piece of information for such  a long time and expected to be asked. 
                        “Where do you study  Khalid?" 
                        'In the Eighth  grade … and I … I love the Qur'an a lot.' 
                        Strange indeed, why  did he add that last sentence? 
                        Confidently, I  asked him, “Listen Khalid, have you got any free time after Maghrib prayer?  We would be honored to have you join us in  the class." 
                        Yes of course  (happiness overcame him).  I'll be there,  Insha'Allah.' 
                        That night, I  couldn't think of anything other than this young boy and the haze that  surrounded his behavior.  Sleep would  just not come. 
                        I attempted to  interpret an answer for what I saw and heard, but there was none.  A verse of poetry came to mind: 'the coming  days shall unravel the mystery and the news may appear from where you could  never see.' 
                        I turned on my  right side and slipped my right hand under my cheek.  O Allah, I have surrendered myself to you and  to You I turn over my affairs. 
                        Subhanallah, how  the calendar was jogging by.  Khalid was  now a regular in our Qur'anic circle, energetic and successful in  memorization.  He was friends with  everyone and everyone was friends with him.   You could never catch him without a Qur'an in his hand, or find him in  any other line in prayer other than the first. 
                        There was nothing  wrong with him except for his occasional long lapses of attention.  There were times when his stoned eyes would  reflect the fathomless thought going on in his mind.  Sometimes we knew his body was with us, but  his soul was somewhere else, suffocating in another world. 
                        Occasionally, I  would startle him.  All he had was a  mumble to reply with, he would have been the first to admit its fabrication. 
                        One night, I walked  with him after class to the beach shore.   May be his big secret might meet something equally large, relax  somewhat, and release its distress and pain. 
                        We arrived at the  beach and traced the waves.  The full  moon was out. A strange sight. The darkness of the night found the darkness of  the sea, with a lit moon in-between them.   
                        It sat somewhat  embarrassed at its intrusion, similar to my shyness towards Khalid right then. The  rays of the silent moon rested on the silent waves of the sea.  I stood behind the silent boy.  The scene was silence. 
                        Just then! 
                        It all shattered  and crushed to the ground as the young boy fell to the bottom, bleeding his  heart with tears.  I chose not to  interrupt Khalid's emotional release, perhaps the saltiness of his tears might  help him relax and cleanse his distress. 
                        After a few moments  he said from behind his tears, 'I love you all … I love the Qur'an … and those  who love it.  I love pious brothers,  moral, pure brothers. 
                        'But … my father …  it's my father.' 
                        “Your father?  What is wrong with your father Khalid?" 
                        'My father always  warned me not to hang around with you people.   He's afraid.  He hates you  all.  And he always tries to convince me  that I should hate you too.  At any  chance he gets, he'll try to prove his point with stories and tales. 
                        'But … when I saw  you people in a gathering reciting Qur'an, I saw something entirely  different.  I saw the light in your  faces, the light in your clothes, the light in your words, even when you were  silent I could see the light even then. 
                        'I doubted my  father's tales and that's why I would sit after Maghrib prayer, watching you,  pretending that I was part of the circle, trying to share in the light. 
                        'I … I remember Usthadh  Salman … I remember the time you approached me after 'Isha prayer.  I'd been waiting for that moment for such a  long time.  When I began the classes, my  soul locked itself into a world of purity with your souls.  I began the circle and was persistent. I wouldn't  sleep; my days and nights became Qur'an.   My father noticed the change in my routine.  He found out, one way or another, that I had  joined the circle and that I was now hanging out with “terrorists." 
                        'Then, on a dark  night… 
                        'We were waiting  for father to come home from the coffee shop, his daily ritual, so that we  could all have dinner together. 'He entered the house with his hardened face  and slaps of anger. 
                        'We all sat  together at the dinner mat.  Silence  settled on the gathering as usual, all of us were afraid to speak in his  presence. 'He knifed the silence with his roaring and immediate voice.  “I heard you're hanging out with the  fundamentalists." 
                        'I was caught  red.  My tongue looped and failed.  All the words in my mouth attempted to come  out at the same time.  But, he didn't  wait for the answer… 
                        'He snatched the  teakettle and threw it maliciously at my face. 'The room spun and the colors  united before my eyes.  I stopped  distinguishing the ceiling from the walls from the floor, and fell. 
                        'My mother held me. 
                        'A damp cloth on my  forehead reminded me of where I was.  The  vicious voice turned on my mother, “Leave him alone, or you'll be in the same  lot." 'I crawled out of my mother's lap and whimpered away to my room.  He followed me down the corridor with the  cruelest curses. 
                        'There was not a  day that he didn't beat me in some way.   Curses, kicks, throwing and whatever was nearest to his hand.  My body had finally become a shiver of fear,  grotesque colors formed all over.  I  hated him. 
                        'One day while we  were sitting at the dinner mat, he said, “Get up, don't eat with us." 
                        'Before I could get  up though, he pounced immediately and kicked me in the back, making me slam  into the pots. 
                        'At that moment,  lying there on there, on the ground, I pretended to stand taller than him and  shout back in his face… 
                        'One day, I'll pay  you back.  I'll beat you just like you  beat me, and curse you just like you cursed me. 
                        'I'll grow up and  become strong.  And you'll get old and  become feeble. 
                        'And then … I'll  treat you just like you treated me.  I'll  pay you back. 
                        'After that, I left  home and ran away.  I just ran, anywhere,  it didn't matter anymore. 
                        'I found my way to  this beach.  It helped me wash away some  of the sadness.  I held my pocket Qur'an  and began reciting until I could continue no longer because of my excessive crying.' 
                          And here, a few of  those innocent tears descended again, tears that sparkled under the moon like  pearls under a lamp.  I couldn't say anything;  the surprise had arrested my tongue. 
                          Should I be aghast  at this beast of a father, whose heart knew nothing about mercy?  Or, should I be amazed at this patient young  lad, whom Allah had wished guidance for and inspired with faith. 
                        Or, should I be  shocked at them both, at the father-son bond that had broken, causing their  relationship to transform into that of a lion and a tiger, or a wolf and a fox. 
                        I held his warm  hand and wiped away a tear from his cheek.   I reassured him, prayed for him, and advised him to remain obedient to  his father.  I told him to remain patient  and that he was not alone.  I promised  that I would meet his father, speak to him, and try to evoke his mercy. 
                        That incident  slipped further away with each passing day.   I tried thinking of ways to open Khalid's case with his father.  How should I speak to him?  How was I going to be convincing?  To be frank, how was I even going to knock on  his door? 
                        Then finally, I  collected my courage, rehearsed my plan, and resolved that the confrontation …,  meeting … would be that day at five o'clock. 
                        When the time  arrived, I left for Khalid's house with all my ideas and questions for his  father dangling from my pockets. 
                          I rang the  doorbell.  My fingers trembled and my  knees were melting.  The door  opened.  There it was, standing in the  shadow with its frowned lips and veins beating with anger.   
                        I tried beginning  with a candid smile.  May be it might  smooth out some of the wrinkles before we even started. 
                        He snatched my  collar and jerked me towards him.   'You're that fundamentalist teaches Khalid at the Masjid, aren't you?' 
                        “Well   yes." 
                        'God help me, if I  ever see you walking with him again, I'll break your legs.  Khalid won't be coming to your class  anymore.' 
                        And then, he  mustered all the saliva in his mouth and spit on my face.  The door slammed behind it. 
                        Slowly, I unfolded  a tissue that was in my pocket, wiped what he had honored me with, and  retreated down the stairs consoling myself.   Allah's Messenger - sallallahu alayhi wa sallam - suffered more than  this.  They called him a liar, cursed  him, stoned him with rocks and caused his feet to bleed.  They broke his teeth and placed dung on his  back and expelled him from his house. 
                        Day after day.  Month after month.  No sign of Khalid.  His father forbade him from leaving the  house, even for the congregational prayer.   He even forbade us from seeing or meeting him.  We prayed for Khalid … 
                        Until we about forgot  him.  Years passed away. 
                        One night, after  the 'Isha' prayer, a shadow walked behind me in the Masjid and rested a  familiar harsh hand on my shoulder.  The  same hand that held me years ago.  The  same face, the same wrinkles and the same mouth that honored me with what I was  not deserving of. 
                        But ... something  had changed.  The savage face had  shattered.  The angry veins had subsided,  belittled and still.  The body looked  tired of all the pain and conflict, weakened by sadness and grief. 
                        “How are you?"  I kissed his forehead and welcomed him.  We took a corner of the Masjid.  He collapsed on my lap sobbing. 
                        Subhanallah, I  never thought that that lion would one day become a kitten. 
                        Speak up.  What's wrong?   How is Khalid? 
                        'Khalid!'  The name was like a dagger piercing his  heart, twisting inside, and breaking off.   His head slumped.   
                        'Khalid is no  longer the same boy that you used to know.   Khalid is no longer the generous, calm and humble young lad. 
                        'After he left your  circle he befriended a pack of evil boys, ever since he was little he loved to  socialize.  They caught him at that time  of life when a youth wants to leave the house.   Vanity, jokes. 
                        'He began with  cigarettes.  I cursed him, beat him.  But there was no use, his body had grown  accustomed to the beatings, his ears were used to the curses. 
                        'He grew  quickly.  He started staying up with them  all night, not coming home until dawn.   His school expelled him. 
                        'Some nights he  would come home to us speaking abnormally, his face loose, his tongue confused,  his hands are shivering. 
                        'That body, which  used to be strong, full, and tender, passed away.  What remained was a feeble worn frame.  That pure frosty face of him  transformed.  It became dark and  filthy.  The scum of misguidance and sin  clung to it. 
                        'Those shy and  simple eyes of his changed.  They shot  red like fire as if everything he drank or took showed immediately in his eyes  like some sort of punishment, in this life before the next. 
                        'Hostility and  disrespect replaced that shyness and cowardice he once knew.  Gone was that soft, respectful young  heart.  In its place grew a hardened  center, like a rock, if not harder. 
                        'Seldom would a day  pass without incident.  He would curse,  kick, or hit me.  Imagine it, my own  son.  I'm his father, yet he still hits  me.' 
                        After releasing all  that, his eyes returned wet and bitter.   But, he added quickly, 'I beg you Salman, visit Khalid.  Take him with you, you have my blessing, the  door is open. 
  'Pass by him  sometime.  He loves you.  Register him in the Qur'anic study  circle.  He could go with you on field  trips.  I have no objection.  In fact, I am even willing to allow him to  live in your homes and sleep over. 
                        'The important  thing, Salman … the important thing is that Khalid returns to the way he was. 
                        'I beg you lad,  I'll kiss your hands, warm your feet, and I beg you and beg you…'  
                        He collapsed,  crying and wheezing, into the memories of the grief and pain.  I allowed him to complete everything he had  to say. 
                        Then I addressed  him… 
                        “Despite what has passed,  let me try.  Brother, you planted this  seed.  And this is your harvest." 
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