The old woman chuckled, a dry, rustling sound like wind through millet stalks. “There was once a man in Baghdad,” she said, “who tried to count every drop of the Tigris. He died old and bitter. Another man simply drank from the river and wrote a poem about its taste. Which one was wiser?”
And so it was proven: the ink of the scholar is holy, but the tongue of the storyteller? That is the fire that warms the soul in the cold desert night. hidayatul mustafid hausa
“In the beginning,” he said, “when the world was still soft like clay, the First Father walked from the East to the West. Wherever he placed his right foot, a market sprang up. Wherever he placed his left foot, a mosque grew. And he carried on his shoulder not gold, but a bag of stories.” The old woman chuckled, a dry, rustling sound
In the ancient, sun-scorched city of Kano, where the dust of trade routes mingled with the whispers of scholars, there lived a young man named Hidayatul Mustafid. His name, meaning “Guidance of the Chosen One,” was a heavy cloak for a boy who felt lost among the towering shelves of his father’s library. Another man simply drank from the river and
That night, a great caravan arrived from Timbuktu, carrying a blind scholar from the University of Sankore. The scholars of Kano gathered to honour him, but no one could make him smile. He had lost his manuscripts in a flood. “Without my books,” the blind man lamented, “I am blind twice over.”
I will join you in prayer for a spiritual awakening among God's people and the advancement of the gospel.