“That the hypocrite reign not, lest the people
be ensnared.”
In a city called Lano, the king
died, and the people decided to abolish the monarchy and install a novelty: a
mayor.
The position was on offer to the
highest bidder. Muslims wanted their richest man Adamu to buy it and therefore
enthrone Sharia. The Christians with their gung-ho bishops queued behind Isaac
who was their plutocrat. If the Muslims knew Adamu with his liberal zakat
offering, why could the Christians not praise the Lord for the munificence of
tithing from their beloved Isaac?
It was hard to tell who was richer
until Suleiman Solomon or Solomon Suleiman materialised. No one was sure of the
name order. But this man who sometimes wore the Islamic turban or the Christian
cross and who knew his psalms as well as his recitation of Islamic text,
preened over his pots of money. He preserved the mystery of his name order by
calling Solomon his last name when he supped with Christians and Suleiman his
surname when with Muslims. He owed eternal debts to the father of the faithful
for the two faiths he bestowed humanity.
Though he claimed his blessings came
from his tithing and zakat, the elders of both faiths disavowed him and called
him a corrupter of the faith. But the city elders who presided were moved by
Solomon Suleiman’s campaign line: Muslim money for Muslims, Christian money for
Christians. So, he promised that once he became the mayor, he would split the
city’s money in half. Half of it would go to the Muslims and the other half to
the Christians.
The fundamentalists were defeated
and the majority tagged along with their new interfaith hero. He was equal
parts god and equal parts the devil, noted the citizens. The Christians said
the part of him that called Jesus belonged to God, and the Muslims said the
part that worshipped on Fridays at mosques belonged to Allah. The other part,
depending on whether you spoke to a Christian or Muslim, belonged to the devil.
The Lanoites went along in relative
harmony until things began to unravel. One midnight, the two-year-old son of
Nurudeen Mukhtar caught a serious fever, and in another part of town, the pregnant
wife of John Jacobs was on the verge of delivery. They could not access their
usual hospitals because of the distance. Mukhtar decided to visit Sacred Hearts
Clinic. His son’s temperature had reached such a fiery point as he and his wife
could not manage until the crack of dawn.
So, out of desperation, Mukhtar bore
his son on his shoulder and hurried to the Sacred Hearts.
The frustration began early. On
introducing himself to the nurse on duty to register his son, Mohammed, the
nurse quickly replied, “but you should know that people with such names cannot
receive treatment here. Why don’t you go to one of your hospitals? Even if I
wanted to help, I would be in trouble.”
Meanwhile the little boy, more
febrile and fragile by the second, looked with an eye that looked as though
about to expire. The father cried, and begged, and asked the nurse to have
mercy.
“It is not about mercy,“ declared
the nurse. “It is about faith.”
John Jacobs’ wife, Elizabeth, had no
option but to rush into Ansarudeen Hospital, which was the closest and only one
within range. When he and his wife managed to enter the premises, they expected
sympathy. His wife, already irritant and cursing her husband for choosing that
time of night for her delivery, would not listen when the spouse begged for
forgiveness.
The real forgiveness, however, was
not forthcoming from the resident doctor who saw them and knew from their
dressing that they could not be true believers. If he found out that they were
believers, he would chasten them before reluctantly administering help. But the
Jacobs did not want to forswear their trust in Jesus. So they both decided to
say they were Christians and the doctor, a true believer, told them to go to
the hospital of their God.
“Can’t you see my wife’s condition?”
protested John Jacobs.
“Can’t you see that this hospital is
named Ansarudeen? Even if we tried to help, you may die. The sovereign of cure
is Allah, not Jesus,” replied the physician.
While both families tried to
overcome their crises, commuters and travelers had to come to terms with their
roads. Suleiman Solomon had constructed two sets of roads, one for Muslims and
one for Christians. That very night a transporter was passing through Lano, and
then he met a roadblock. It was a Muslim roadblock with policemen clad in
peculiarly Muslim police uniforms. They asked the driver his name, and he said
he was Hussein but the policemen discovered that about a quarter of his
passengers were Christians.
They told the Christians to
disembark, and that they were not allowed to take advantage of Muslim
facilities. The Muslims remained on board while the Christians were ordered to
walk a bush path for about seven kilometres where the Christian road began.
They complied. After several hours of trekking they met the bus and the driver
who obliged at the end of the Muslim highway, and found their seats. Before
they reached there, they witnessed a dramatic scene. A very hungry beggar had
Christian currency and wanted in that hour of night to buy tea and bread from a
seller who catered to Muslims in the neighborhood. The Muslim would not sell
and the Christian beggar wondered why he would not sell. “Can’t you see you
have not sold anything all night? You get a customer and you say no,” the
beggar intoned.
“Your money is sinful,” replied the
seller.
But a Christian roadblock awaited
them with Christian policemen dressed in Christian police uniforms. Hussein was
not permitted to drive, so one of the Christian passengers took over the
steering, while the Muslims entered the bush like the Christians and met at
another intersection of Muslims. About two yards separated both roads, and it
was called conversion pass. The Muslims rejoined them in the bus at about 4am
and they decided to rest. But a strange and ravenous wind howled in and scooped
the bus from the edge of the road and it rolled over into a deep ravine.
That night, not faraway, buzzed with
a Christian party and people had had their fill of rice and stew and lots of
drink. Somehow the word passed round that the tomato in the stew was purchased
from a Muslim market. No one was able to authenticate it. Even when one or two
persons came to deny the rumour, it was too late. Nausea had caught everyone
and they ran to the conversion pass. They looked over the ravine and puked profusely.
The throaty choir of retching, puffing, rasping, coughing, spitting resembled a
coarse comedy if it did not sound like a dirge. It could have been a funny
sight as all of them in their glorious shirts and dresses decided to retch on
the road and into the ravine.
They did not know that a more
terrible act of the devil had happened at the receiving end of their vomit. All
the passengers and driver died as the vehicle caught fire and burned everyone
beyond recognition.
The next morning, the question was where
to bury the bodies. They could not identify who was Muslim or Christian, and
they could not bury them in any of the available cemeteries because there were
only Christian and Muslim cemeteries.
Even if they were to bury them, they
could not put them in a casket. It was not acceptable to swaddle a Muslim in a
Christian casket and vice versa.
Suleiman Solomon or Solomon Suleiman
pondered these riddles. It became the least of his worries when the news also
broke that a Muslim boy died outside a Christian hospital and a woman delivered
a stillborn girl on the roadside.
- In Touch, The Nation newspaper, 02/06/2014
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