Colorism in the Somali Community

This writing is not to take away from the current issue at hand here in the USA, but to help highlight a long-standing problem that has been silenced and needs to be discussed in our community.

This topic has weighed heavy in my heart, and even left scars in my reasoning.

Rooted deep in our history is the truth that fears to escapes our lips whenever confronted, but the heavy secret will no longer be concealed by our tongues. We must speak of this truth.

The truth that is colorism in our community is factual and visible in the present time, as well as in our vivid history.

“If you were a little lighter, you would be beautiful…” he spat while scanning my body with his tired eyes. It was my curiosity for ignorance that allowed me to leave with a smirk, but if I ever doubted myself, it would have been his words that would spoil the seeds my mother has watered for many years with wisdom and love.

During my travels in Somalia, I have witnessed a husband buying bleaching products for his wife, so he can redesign God’s perfection with his stale hands. I saw a mother breastfeeding her child while harsh chemicals fumed from her skin. I saw a young girl shout derogatory words to a darker skin girl, whom she deemed unworthy because she wasn’t fair enough.

This has become the norm as the beauty we were known for has faded, along with our anthem and pride. Vanished are the melanin rich skin that radiated truth and strength while bathing in the sun.

Instead today, we are left with cheap-china-made pigmentation that fears the rays of the sun.

Our foundation has crumbled. We’re standing with crippled minds, and tarnished pride.

This inner psychological warfare of colorism has to be recognized and depleted while speaking of racism.

How do we seek acceptance, or fight equality when we fail to accept our own skin?

Our self-hate overshadows the power of liberty, imprisoning our truth and self-worth.

Today, Somali Bantus remain marginalized; treated with disgust, disregard, and disrespect while they have shaped our history, played a critical role in our infrastructure and even fought alongside our military.

I have asked my elders about Somali Bantu’s and their history. No one knew the truth or perhaps the truth was never acknowledged, so that shame wouldn’t taint our history.

But their history will burden any heart that is connected to God and Love.

During the Arab Slave Trade, Somalis have participated in the buying of slaves. Bantu’s have worked in plantations, harvested lucrative cash crops for Somalis such as grain and cotton.

There are George Floyd’s all over Somalia, who are being degraded, shamed, and oppressed because their image rejects the typical Somali look.

We can’t stand in ‘solidarity’ with our brothers and sisters here in America, while we are altering our own blackness.

We can’t speak of racism until we remove the negative connotation of the word “Madow or Jareer” to describe a none-Somali black person.

It’s hypocritical of us to seek equality when quality of our skin is appraised by the tone of our complexion.

We must highlight the truth.

We are not Arabs.

We are Somali.

People of Africa.

Black people of Africa.

The Beginning

Part One 

The Beginning of the end. 

As a young girl, ‘boyfriend and girlfriend,’ were terms, my sister and I were brought up to avoid. “Don’t fall into their trap, waa gaalo and their sneaky ways of trying to rob your innocence,” my father would often emit before we left for school.

I watched most of my peers break their virginity in their teens and blossom into adulthood early. It was disturbing. Covered in layers of make-up, and wearing sexy clothing was a new trend. My sister Hawo, and I were different and wore modest clothing that covered us from head-to-toe.

We were raised in a strict home that was dedicated in serving God. Most things that were deemed simple and entertaining were forbidden in our home. Such as television, music, photos, and most importantly non-Muslim friends were banned from our home.

In six days, I was turning eighteen and was off to college. I have received an academic scholarship, which made my mother proud, but left my father feeling bitter. It was hard for him to grasp the idea of his daughter moving away for college. He didn’t believe a girl is to leave home unless it was because of marriage.

“This is wrong! Very wrong, Maryan,” I hear him mutter to my mother in the living room.

“She is smart, you must trust her Yusuf. We raised her responsibly. It’s time for her to learn how to conquer this world on her own, we will not always be here to protect them,” my mother utters to defend me.

“Ah, nonsense Maryan! She will get married, and her husband will protect her. That’s the cycle of life that was meant by God,” he continued to argue.

My father would have never allowed me to move out for uni. It was my mother. No matter how religious my father seemed, it was the love he had for my mother that crippled his demands and commands. I admire that about him the most. It was hard to spot love in a world filled with hate and darkness.

“Men, they lie. Just like the devil, they will try to deceive your innocence. You hear me?” he yelled, as he grabbed my shoulders. We stood outside for an hour, as I was packed and was ready to go off to college. The driver pulled up in the driveway. 

“Yes, aabo,” I replied back for the millionth time. His eyes were filled with disappointment and grief. He was speaking to me as if he has already lost me to the dark side. He was worried and felt defeated.

“But look at you aabo, you did not deceive Hooyo. You are not the devil, you’re an angel” I smiled playfully.

“This is serious, do not mock me and downplay this gabaryahay. Men, these days are not in the same caliber as the men back in my time. We knew love, we knew women, we knew respect; we honored and guarded it with our lives. Love lies loose on their lips, hanging on lies instead of love” he spat in despair. My father was a poet, who only wrote words of wisdom when he was angry or sad. It was his way of curtaining his emotions away from us.

“Aabo, I will not succumb to weakness, I promise. I’m smart, you have raised me to be courteous, and prideful. I will not disappoint you,” I said to him while he stood there with teary eyes. I never saw him like this. I forced a smile to comfort him but he was broken.

Finally, I left home. It faded behind me, as the driver drove me away from what I have always known to be comfort. I felt a sense of unease creep in my heart. It felt heavy, like a sudden burden. It must be the responsibility I was to carry on this journey. I had no sister to befriend, no mother to hold, and no father to accommodate. I was alone and scared.

My driver got lost three times trying to find my dorm building.  “I am sorry, but I find the building soon,” he said, as he struggled to communicate in English. He didn’t speak much, but he was polite and helped carry my bags inside my dorm-room once he found the building.

“You look scared,” my driver mustered up a perfect sentence as he glared into my eyes.

“Yes, I am but I will be fine,” I replied, as I opened the door to my assigned dorm-room.

A petite, light skinned girl was laying on one of the beds, curled up reading a book.

“Oh hi, I am Aashi,” she jumped up to greet me with a thick Indian accent. The room carried profound smell that reeked of curry powder.  

“I just arrived from India this week, I am new here!” She bobbed her head as she spoke to me excitedly. She had a pleasant smile, and looked guiltless. 

She sat on her bed cross-legged, and watched me as I unpacked my bags.  

“The closet is very small, but I managed to leave some space for you,” she continued talking.

“That’s nice of you, thank you,” I finally replied in a sad monotone voice. I didn’t feel like talking, I had this burden in my heart. I was just a few hours away from home, but comfort felt distant.

I didn’t sleep that night. I hated sharing a small space with another stranger who snored and grunted in the middle of the night. I hated that I wasn’t sleeping in my own bed.

Part Two

It was clear to me that I didn’t fit in with this new crowd. White people feared my religion. Modesty provoked fear in their hearts. I lived in a world where being naked was more accepted than coating once dignity. I didn’t mind. I was more concerned about my grades then the likings of simpletons. So, I ignored the mean muggings and the rude whispers of classmates. 

Aashi made new friends, and we barely speak. She looks different, and wears make-up now. The profound smell of curry gradually faded in time now that she sprays victoria secret body mist on herself. She looks polished and lost. She doesn’t smile as much anymore, and her English sounds forced. I blame society. 

It was friday, and the library was somewhat empty. A group of guys huddled at one table not far from where I was sitting. Everyone was whispering in their soft voices except one guy who felt comfortable to talk in a normal tone in a big, quiet, echoing library. It was hard not to notice him. He had soft hair, and caramelized skin tone. He looked and sounded very Somali. He was the type to carry his loud tradition everywhere. He talked with his hands, and sat on the table instead of the empty chair next to him. He was the center of attention. 

I tried to look away before he noticed my creepy stares but it was too late. I felt his presence, hover heavily above me as I pretended to read my biology book. 

“Hi,” he greeted me, as he stood there. He was tall, and looked trendy with his trimmed beard. 

“Hey,” I shyly replied, hesitating to make eye contact.

“You must be a freshmen. I have never seen you on campus,” he spat as he tried to form an awkward conversation. 

“Yeah, first semester,” I replied nonchalant. 

Are you coming to the get-together-party for the Muslims?” 

“No, I don’t go to parties.”

“Nah, it’s just Muslim students getting together in a halal way.” he chuckled as he sat down comfortably across from me.

“I don’t think so, I have a lot of homework and studying to do.”

His lips quivered as he tried to build a conversation. I can tell, he was trying to be confident in his approach but looked nervous. His demeanor changed from when he was sitting with his boys. His voice was soft, and his words were careful. 

“I’ll see you around!” I stood up to pack up my things. I didn’t know what else to tell him. His presence produced discomfort for me. It was my father’s voice that kept interrupting my thought process, ‘stay away from boys, they’re the devil.’

“I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to bother you Walaalo. I was just excited to see a Somali person at this school. I felt a sense of home, that’s all. My name is Ahmed by the way,” he muttered as he got up, feeling dejected.

“No no, it’s not you. I just have a lot to do,” I lied. Truth was, it was him. It was the scent of his cologne that reached across the table to trickier these unknown senses, it was his subtle but daring approach, it was his nervous smile that forced his facial expression to soften. Yes, it was totally him. 

“Let me give you an advice, walaalo. It’s healthy to give yourself a break from these books. Trust me, only a refreshed mind can learn new things,” he spat as he smiled a perfect smile. 

Even though I was just a stranger to him, his eyes were filled with concern for my well-being. What did he want? He must want something? My father was always right; men were the perfect liars and he was probably lying through his teeth.

We parted ways but not for long. 

He came to the library three times a week. He mostly sat at the same table with the same group of people. Oftentimes, I would catch him staring in my direction. I found myself craving for his attention, wanting him to approach me again. This time, I was prepared to be more receptive and approachable. 

But that day, never came. His presence in the library slowly faded in time.  

It’s been three months, and he was nowhere to be found. I longed for his attention. I missed his thick eyebrows and long eyelashes gazing in my direction intently. Maybe, he wasn’t interested in seeing me anymore. He probably found a girl, an easier-going-less-hostile type of girl. One, who didn’t dress in layers, and wasn’t afraid to talk to him. Maybe, it was better that way. 

I lost myself in trying to find this stranger. I heard there was another MSA party being held tonight. Perhaps I should go and pretend I was part of this weird society.

It was time to put efforts in dressing up but I didn’t know where to start. 

Aashi saw me dressing up for the first time, and offered to put some light make-up on my face. 

“Wow, you look beautiful,” she mumbled in shock as she dabbed my face with powder. 

“So, who is he?” she spat. 

“There is no he, I just want to look good for this party,” I lied. 

“Ah huh!” she raised her eyebrows skeptically. She didn’t believe me.  Truth is I didn’t believe in myself. 

Part Three

The party was filled with ostentatious people who wore the muslim tag as a milestone. Of course I didn’t fit in but I was on a greater mission. 

I was saddened, and little heartbroken that I couldn’t find him. This was the first time I liked someone, a stranger whom I barely met. 

I wanted to ask someone but how crazy would that conversation sound? ‘Hi, do you know a Somali guy named Ahmed? Who has a long eyelashes and thick eyebrows? With beautiful plump red lips, and unblemished skin? Oh, and he smells heavenly?’ God forbid, I would sound creepy and desperate. 

I left the party with disappointments. 

I feared darkness, but the night came with a slight breeze of wind,  the moon was full and the skies were crowded with sparkling stars that lit my path as I walked back to my dorm room. 

Hey you,” I heard a voice creep from behind. It sounded familiar. 

“It’s me, Ahmed -from the library?” 

I had a hard time breathing. I felt a sudden rush in my head as my heart pulsated out of my chest. What was happening to me? 

“Hey, you” I stumbled on my words as I turned around to face him.

“I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to scare you. I saw you walking alone, and thought to accompany you?”

“Sure, but I’m not going far.” Dammit, I was playing hardball again. I promised I’d be more receptive and welcoming but it was hard to avoid old habits. 

“You look different,” he smiled. 

“Bad, or good?” I smiled back nervously.

“Some people don’t wear change very well, but you, you look amazing.” 

I felt the hair on my arms rise, and butterflies dance in my tummy. 

“Thanks,” I replied back while trying to stay composed.

He was wearing a light shade of brown pants with a yellowish tinge and a blue striped shirt. He looked wonderful, and smelled amazing as usual. 

“Hey, you hungry? I know this food truck that sells tasty halal burgers, and spicy cajun fries,” he spat in an exciting voice. 

“Is this your halal way of asking me out?” I replied jokingly. Ya Allah! Why was I joking? I hated myself for sounding so freaking desperate.  

“Or maybe I’m just a concerned brother who is trying to feed his sister some good food. Is that really a problem?” he grinned playfully. Was this what they call flirting? Whatever it was, it felt good to me. My father’s’ voice drowned as melodies played in the background and butterflies danced inside my womb wild and free from their cages.

The food truck was around the corner from my dorm building and although the burgers were amazing, I was too nervous to eat.

“Why did you stop coming to the library,” I suddenly interrogated him.

“So you used to notice me?” he inquired as he smiled with his eyebrows raised.

“You were not hard to notice. You were loud and very…Somali,” I chuckled. 

“Nevertheless, I’m honored. By the way, you never told me your name.”
“That’s because you never bothered to ask.”

“Fine, what is your name, Miss Mysterious?” He smiled.

“Misty,” I replied back.

“Let me guess, its short for Mysterious?”

“Maybe, ” I playfully replied back while holding back my laughter.

“Fair enough. So…” he stopped his sentence, as he just stared into my eyes. 
My heart felt warm and occupied. Although we were silent for a longtime, he spoke to me through his eyes. His silence was deep. Sound was for the simpletones, who resorted in simple words to convey their lust. That night, love, was spoken loud and clear.

The Sword Of Love

The Beginning:

Two years ago, I met the man of my dreams at a local café across the campus of my university. I remember noticing him through the quiet breeze in the small scoped café. It was early, and I think we were the only two souls sitting across from each other.

He took gentle stares at me, as he nervously flipped the pages to the book he was reading. Minutes later, he walked in my direction and stood tall above my table with a shy smile. He blurred his name shyly into my direction;

“Hi, I’m Nasiib.”

While in school, I fancied books and sugarless coffee while my friends sought love in the dark hours of the night. Dorm rooms were filled with weeping souls, begging to be consumed by love. To me, love was a great pitch to sell books and movie tickets.

Before Nasiib, I hated love.

See, my father left my mother while she was pregnant with me. He married a younger woman, who he met while on a trip to Somalia. My mother found out he paid the wedding with their life savings, after her card declined at the supermarket, while she was shopping for milk and bread.

The next day she cued up for food-stamps. Then moved in a building filled with gangsters and drug dealers. I grew up playing with kids who smelled of piss and weed.

For a long time, I blamed love.

I thought, it was love that shattered the soul of my mother, as she lied awake middle of the night, feeling lonely and unwanted. It was love that dismantled the

spirit of a civil-war survivor as she crippled out of bed in the morning to pack us lunch.

I hated my father. Some days, I hated my mother for loving him.

He refused to divorce her. He claimed there wasn’t any legitimate reasons for a divorce, since Muslim men are permitted to marry four. So, he comes back twice a year to drain the little money she saves up.

I believed love was a curse.

Until love took a different shape; a different form. It started to weigh heavy in my heart.

I fell in love with Nasiib.

Some girls wish to find a man who carries the same characteristic traits as their father; I wished for the opposite.

Nasiib, was raised by his aunt. His mother died after giving birth to him. The doctors informed her of the risks of being pregnant but she chose him over her life. She died holding him, trying to put him to sleep. She was cold and alone. The nurses had to call her closest kin, to come and pick up Nasiib.

His father didn’t even bother to attend the funeral. He was a seasonal fisherman, who’s time was absorbed by money-grubbing women and khat. We had that in common. We both had two selfish pricks for a father.

Nasiib and I, decided to get engaged. We both agreed that it was time for us to embark on the next journey together.

What happens next was unpredictable. It was January.

Nasiib took me out to dinner at a luxurious rooftop restaurant we both fancied.

Usually, his emotions are well articulated and organized, but I could tell by the shakes in his voice, he was nervous. His eyes were filled with passion, as he expressed his feelings for me.

“I want to be your husband and your best-friend. I promise to always cater to your needs, and be the husband our fathers should have been to our mothers,” he whispers as he gently holds my hand across the table. Like a blind butterfly, I felt his words lost inside me, tickling. I was scared but I felt protected in those words. I trusted him. I knew deception wouldn’t dare lay on his lips.

It was a Friday night. I remember the open sky, the full moon glaring through the window on our way home.

There was a slight breeze of lustfulness looming in the air, as we quietly sat in the car. It was a moment to be cherished, not with cheap words but through the weight of patience in love; the power in taming desire as it seeps through the vessels of pride. It was painful.

We arrived at my apartment complex. He parked the car, turned the engine off, and accompanied me to the front door, as he held my hand with a nervous grip.

I loved his gentle approach and calm tenor. He kissed me on my cheek, and whispered ‘I love you’ slowly into my ear before letting my hand go. His deep voice tickled my insides, tempting my curiosity to burst. I longed for his body, his manly scent, timidly fused with Hugo Boss.

“Hold me a little longer,” I secretly whisper into the wind but my pride wouldn’t deliver.

We didn’t sleep that night. We talked on the phone until the birds hummed tunes of blues in the early hours of the day. We chatted about our mutual hate for big weddings, our bad habits, and Mehr (engagement/wedding).

Nasiib and I both weren’t really religious individuals, but we wanted our marriage to be a symbol of love for each other and for God. We wanted to keep it small; mostly family, and friends. We both worked as newbies in the profession we graduated, so we barely had the necessary funds to hold a big fancy wedding.

We marked 25th of April, ‘MARIED’, on our calendar.

Obligated by our withering culture, my father had to give me away, so we had to accommodate to his ‘busy’ schedule as we waited for him to return back. In the meantime, we prepared ourselves emotionally and financially.

In March, we found a two-bedroom apartment, in the same building as my mother. I thought it was brilliant, since I wanted to care for my mother as often as possible.

My father arrived the first week of April. We rarely spoke, but for the first time, we sat in the living-room, as he attempted to care and enquire about my life and future goals. He wanted to know if I trusted and loved Nasiib enough to share a life with him.

My mouth curved into an ironic smile, to reflect my fathers’ feigned wisdom. How hypocritical, I thought. “Aabo, he’ll provide what a wife deserves to gain out of a husband,” I replied as I stared at him with a distasteful look. He was not in a position to speak about trust and love. My mothers’ feet were swollen from the heavy burdens, he should have carried as a husband and a father.

My father was hesitant about Nasiib, due to his fatherless past. “No one knows wuxu yahay,” my father expressed his pretentious concerns. How would he know, he never met or spoke to Nasiib? He’s just going through baseless speculations;

judging Nasiib through the actions of his deadbeat father, who disappeared before he was even born.

It was obvious, they needed to meet each other.

Nasiibs uncles from his mother’s side accompanied him to our house, to meet my father and ask for my hand. I was nervous, and feared disappointment.

And for some odd reason, I had a gut-feeling that something was going to go wrong.

My mother and I prepared food and drinks for the guests, while my father and my two older brothers were sitting in the living-room, chatting about Somali politics.

I finally get a text from Nasiib: “Baby, we’re outside,” it reads.

I was nervous, but I was also excited. I wanted everyone to meet Nasiib, because I was proud of his brilliance and humble spirit. He illuminated light into my heart. He guided me to love, when I only knew to hate.

I asked my brother Saabir to open the door from Nasiib and his uncles as my mother and I hid in the kitchen. There was a door connecting the kitchen and the living-room, which I purposely left open to eavesdrop as the men bargained my womanhood.

For a while, they talked about politics and Somalia’s history.

“Like men before us, we have come to you today to seek for your daughter’s hand,” Nasiib’s uncle intervenes the unnecessary chatter. “Our nephew and your daughter fulfil the Islamic principles of marriage and they have great intentions in leading a sacred life together.”

I see my father’s eyes slowly shift in the direction of Nasiib. I felt bad for Nasiib. Though he was a law-graduate who studied the art of persuasion, he was to protest his love for me to a man who knew nothing about love.

“I want to marry your daughter,” he shyly states. “I want to build a future with her, and become the best husband a man can come to be…if you let me, I will be honored to take responsibility of your daughter,” he sweats.

“First of all, I want to thank you all for coming. I appreciate your interest in my daughter. Unfortunately, you are a stranger to me unless you declare your name, son. Who is your father?”

That was my father’s polite way of asking what tribe do you stem from.

“In all honesty, Adeer. My tribe didn’t raise me. My tribe didn’t carve me into the man I am today, and it surely didn’t help me obtain my education. And it’s important you must know, my tribe will not be the provider to your daughter, but my strength will,” Nasiib nervously articulates.

“You are a young man, who doesn’t understand the importance ‘name’ carries in the family. If strange men with disreputable forefathers marry our daughters, who will be responsible for their curse? Son, my daughter will not carry karma in her womb. Qabiilkaaga sheeg, otherwise there is nothing to discuss,” my father replies in annoyance.

Nasiib’s uncle tried to intervene the intense conversation, stating that Nasiib was birthed by their younger sister, who died after giving birth to him. “He stems from Xeer-hashiis, a small tribe from the south-west. His fathers name is Abdulkadir Ahmed Isse, known as Belaajiyo and worked mostly at the port in Kismaayo.”

There was an awkward silence. I can sense the disappointment in my father’s face, as if he knew this man Belaajiyo.

“Gentlemen, I will sit down with the mother of my daughter, and I will let you know about the outcome. I thank you for coming and will see you soon.” My father abruptly gets up from his seat to lead Nasiib and his uncles to the door.

Nasiib, the belittlement he must have felt while my father was casting judgment over him.

Our eyes connected, as he was escorted to the door. He forced a smile but I felt the sadness in his eyes pierce through my heart like an apathetic dart. I didn’t know what was appropriate; to remain silent or to scream.

The man of my life was rejected by the same man who rejected mine growing up.

I turned to my father, “Why, why would you want to ruin my life?” I scream in frustration. “You know nothing about Nasiib?” My father just sat there quietly in his couch, as my brothers eyed him in distress. The room was silenced with empathy. My mother stood next to me as she too didn’t understand why my father was being rude. “Why did you have to do that? You could have been more respectful towards the kid,” intercedes my mother in disappointment.

“You don’t know what you’re talking about. I am your father, the defender of your womanhood. That young man is lost. A lost man cannot guide a young woman like yourself,” he shouts in dismissal. I was livid at his accusations and pretentious concerns. “What defender? Since when can you claim to have defended me? You have never existed in my life,” I shout.

Everything I felt for him, were poured into words. I can feel my heart weighing less heavy as each word carried hurt; buried underneath me for far too long.

My brother Saabir stood up and hugged me as I stood in the middle of the living- room in tears. I could feel the rapid beating of his heart, pulsating underneath his shirt. I know. He wanted to cry too.

He walked me to my room, and begged me to stay there as they talked to father.

I lied awake in my bed, staring at my phone. I must have texted and called Nasiib trillion times, but he wasn’t returning my calls or texting me back. He probably

felt betrayed by me. I peeked through the cracks and watched him being humiliated by my own blood.

I hear the footsteps of my brother, approaching. “What happened?” I question him as he opens the door. “Aabo is stubborn, but he wants to talk to you alone,” he sighs. “But I have to go. It’s getting late. I have a wife and two kids to attend to. And by the way, you know he doesn’t respond well by being yelled at,” My brothers’ last words of wisdom as he exits the house.

I made my way to the living-room. My father was sitting there grudging in his macawis and shawl. It was just the two of us, sitting across from each other. I can hear him whisper ‘Istaqfurililah’ while he fondles with his Tusbax. His face softens, as he looks in my direction. He looked unfamiliar.

“I was young and naive. When I married your mother, I thought love was going to be consistent, effortless, and always on sight. Marriage is difficult, my daughter. It’s complicated, and wearying to the feeble heart. I see myself in Nasiib. The naivety in his words, I have spoken them before, weightlessly,” he pauses.

It felt like a movie. For the first time, my father was utilizing his words to express his emotions but nothing inside me moved. His words were too cheap to be bought, too late to be accepted, and too crippled to withstand my hurt.

“I accompanied her as a fetus, lying inside her womb when you left her for another woman. How selfishly you left us to have more children, as if we weren’t enough for you. You are right, you were selfish and naive, which makes you nothing like Nasiib. He is different from you, trust me” I replied while holding back my tears.

“I know Nasiibs father, Bilaajiyo. He was a well-known thug in Kismaayo,” he reveals to my surprise. “What do you mean, you know his father?” I question him.

“When Nasiib’s mother was giving birth, it was my other wife who was nursing her to deliver Nasiib that day. Before his mother passed away, she told my wife about Bilaajiyo,” he expresses.

I felt mortified. Judging by the expression on my father’s face, he was about to tell me something disheartening

“Bilaajiyo was an arrogant hustler who worked as a fisherman. Tall and light- skinned, with a body armored with muscles. It was hard not to notice him around the neighborhood, walking conceitedly with his chest out. I shared tea with him a couple of times, and spoke about politics,” he pauses. “Nasiib is an exact image of his father. In our neighborhood, women drooled over Bilaajiyo, but he wasn’t an easy man to satisfy. He believed that the institution of marriage was a cave that was crafted for lonely and desperate men, who only yearned to belong somewhere,” my father continues to tell me.

“Nasiib’s mother was a beautiful woman, very elegant and kind. She had a distinct smile that lit up the neighborhood. After she married Bilaajiyo, her beauty withered and her smiles were replaced with furrowed brows; darkness overshadowed her light. Nasiib’s mother was a victim of Bilaajiyo, not his wife,” my father entails as he grabs his cane and gets up from his seat. I never understood why my father walked with a cane, when he was physically fine. “So what did his mother tell your wife in the hospital before she died,” I replied anxiously. “It’s been a long day, and it’s getting late, we’ll talk about this tomorrow,” he mumbles as he walks away.

I was annoyed. What did he mean by ‘she was a victim?’

It was a long night, and I was exhausted. Nasiib still hasn’t returned my calls, which made me anxious. I turned and tossed in my bed, thinking about Nasiib’s mother and father.

I woke up feeling heavy. I felt worrisome weight on my shoulders. I grabbed my phone to check if Nasiib has come to his senses to call or text me back. Two missed calls and a text that reads:

[I’m sorry,

call me when you wake up,

love,

Nasiib].

I call him quickly.

“Hey,” he picks up the phone on the first ring. “Are you okay,” “Yeah, just needed some alone time, that’s all. Sorry,” he mumbles in a dry voice. This meant he saw my calls but deliberately ignored me. But can I really blame him, I thought? “We need to talk, I have something to tell you,” I reply. “Can we talk tomorrow, I have to do something today,” he responds frigidly. I knew he was in his own feelings, but he wasn’t making the situation any easier for us. “Listen, I have a dire news, and we need to talk as soon as possible, preferably today,” I demand. “Okay. I’ll come pick you up in three hours.”

I get up from bed, and run to see if my father is still home. He needed to finish the story. It was important for him to tell me what Nasiib’s mother told his wife.

“Hooyo, is Aabo home?” I greet my mother as she stood in the kitchen, baffled by my unexpected inquiry. This was new to her. “No, he left early to the masjid, and hasn’t returned yet. Is everything okay?” She asked me in a concerning voice. “Yes, Hooyo. I just needed him to finish what he was telling me last night, that’s all. Hooyo, do you know anything about Najiib’s mother?” I asked curiously. She gave me an unsettled look. “Yes and no,” she paused. “Your father didn’t tell me much, and it’s best you wait for him to tell you the complete story,” she replies in dismissal.

I got ready, and sat in the living room, patiently waited for my father to arrive.

Finally, I hear the rumbling of the keys as it rotates inside the door. “Is tea ready, Fadumo?” my father yells across the hall to my mother, who was in the kitchen making pancakes. He walks in the living-room leisurely, and spots me sitting on the couch. “Haye,” he mumbled with a surprising look.

I needed for my father to see his wrongs. “Father, let me ask you this. Say, when you were marrying my mother, her father denied you to marry her? In fact, what if he humiliated you in front of her, and told you that your worth wasn’t on par with his daughter? What would you do?” I questioned him. “I’m not denying or humiliating anyone. I just want to make sure who my daughter is marrying is clean and honest man,” he replies. “Nasiib is CLEAN and HONEST man,” I grumbled in a broken voice. I was too exhausted and hurt to argue with him.

“Nasiib is birthed by a woman who was raped by a thug,” he interjects my emotions. “He was a product of rape, his gene is contaminated and cursed. I don’t want you to face the consequences of his curse,” he raises his voice at me, as he placed his cane behind his seat.

I felt dizzy. My thoughts were overclouded, and words couldn’t carry the weight I was feeling. “The boy is not guilty of his fathers’ actions. You must not blame him for what his father did to his mother. If anything, he is a victim too,” my mother replies, as she places the cup of tea on the table. “He comes from a seed that has done a lot of wrongs. He stems from a man who has done a lot of hurting, Fadumo,” my father replies back to my mother.

I get a text from Nasiib: [I’m outside, baby.]

As I stood up to leave, my father asked me where I was going. “I…have…to go,” I spoke haltingly, feeling lightheaded.

I was hesitant to see Nasiib. His car was parked across the street. With a heavy heart, I walked towards him.

I open the door to the passenger seat. He sat there with a smile. I couldn’t make eye contact with him too long. “Hey,” he mumbled. “You okay, ‘cause you look scared.” I was scared and drowning in questions. “Yeah, I’m okay. How are you?” I lied. “I’m good. I just…need to lay a plan on how to convince your father to accept me. He seems like he made up his mind about me already, you know?” I felt the hurt in his voice. His face was painted with innocence. I didn’t see a curse, I saw love. I didn’t see the seed of a rapist; I saw hurt.

“Do you know anything about your father?” I inquired, to see if he knew anything. “I mean, not much. My family never bothered to speak about him, and I never requested information in regards to his existence, because he had no relations to mine,” he dismissed.

“My father knows about your father…” I voiced nervously. Nasiib looked at me with a quizzing face. “What do you mean, he knows about my father?” I couldn’t hold myself back. I felt the guilt as words poured out. I told him everything. I unveiled the story my father told me. Everything.

I could hear his heart shatter into pieces, as his eyes sunk in water. “So my father raped my mother?” he whispers in a cracking voice. “He raped my mother, and she carried me… died for me …knowing I was planted inside her by … a rapist?” he consoled. Tears, made way to his cheeks, as it dropped on his jeans, I sat there feeling useless. “I’m sorry,” I replied back. I wanted to hold him, help him carry the pain, and tell him that ‘…it will be okay.’

“I’m sorry baby, but I need to go. Just give me some time to think through this, please,” he snivels under his breath. I knew he felt reluctant to cry in front of me. He needed some space, and I was willing to give him that and more. “Okay baby, but please know, I’m here for you.”

It was a Saturday, 4pm in the evening. The clouds were gray, but it never rained that day. It was the last day I saw Nasiib. He never made it home. His car collided

head-on with an 8-wheeler-truck that was carrying cement. No one knows the cause of the collision, but it might have been a suicide.

After that day, life tasted bitter. Everything seemed too dark. Too cold. Too lone. Too much pain to bare. I’d stay awake at night, going through old messages Nasiib sent me: “I love you. I can’t wait to make you my wife,” it reads. I lay sleepless with my eyes shut; it was the only way to keep the tears from wetting the pillow.

Things I loved, have become disheartening. Flowers carried foul smell. The ray of the sun irritated my eyes. The sound of rain caused more grief. I preferred tears over laughter. Death over life. I was tired of waking up with a heavy heart in the morning.

I felt cursed. I wish I could have done things differently. I wouldn’t have told him about his father that day in the car.

I needed to leave. I needed to get away from this place.

I went to a travel agency in town. His name was Amir. He greeted me with a grin, as he asked me “…where to?”

“Tell me, is there a destination for a soul in despair?” I asked him. “Book me a one-way ticket to a place where I can lose my thoughts,” I said. He stared at me with a curious mind. “Are you okay?” he inquired. I hated ‘how are you’s and are you okays.’ No one was willing to carry the burden of someone’s pitiful day, because no one truly cared. I hated that it was the norm in society to question ones’ feelings, while they didn’t have an iota of care. “Yes, I’m okay” I lied.

I want to go to a place where I am not the only one hurting. A place where people lost loved once and still managed to carry on.

“Somalia. I want to go to Somalia,” I tell him abruptly. “Are you sure, because Somalia isn’t really …safe,” he voiced his concern. “Only a soul that longs for life, fears death. Book me a ticket to Somalia, please” I replied annoyed.

My mother hated that I was leaving, but deep down she accepted my plea for a different environment. She knew as a mother; it wasn’t safe for me to stay.

She spoke to her cousin in Mogadishu to provide me a place to stay. She hasn’t spoken to her for a long time, but she managed to get hold of her through her old phone number.

My flight was via Dubai, where I was forced to stay in the airport for five hours, until the plane was set to leave to Mogadishu. We were strained to drag our heavy luggage across the airstrip to the plane.

Somali airplanes weren’t treated as luxurious as the other airlines, I thought.

As I entered the plane, I noticed how seats were occupied mostly by elders and men in oversized suits. I sat next to a woman with big sunglasses that covered half of her face. “Is your first time?” she spoke in broken English, assuming I didn’t speak Somali. “Yes,” I respond. I wasn’t in the mood to talk, but I felt rude if I didn’t pretend I cared. “And you? I questioned her back. “No, I come all the time. I am a business woman. I live in Dubai,” she declares unrequested. I pushed my seat back, trying to rest my body on the worn-out cushions. “So why you going to Mogadishu?” she continued to press. I felt annoyed by her curiosity. Why do people go to Mogadishu, I thought? Family! “I’m going to see family.”

Although the journey was short, it felt exhausting trying to accommodate a stranger with a million questions.

I got a glimpse of the blue ocean, as the plane descended into Mogadishu’s airport. I felt nauseous from the plane jolting side to side as it prepared to land.

Hawo, my mother’s cousin came to pick me up with her son who was driving an old white sedan. Through the loud Quranic recitation playing in the background, it was hard to hear what she was saying to me. I admit, my Somali wasn’t sharp, but I knew enough to avoid being self-conscious. “See waaye Amerika?” she asked. “Waa caadi,” I replied.

He pulled up to a shabby home in a torn neighborhood. Houses were decorated with bullet holes and the streets were filled with shattered bricks.

“Come, my girl. You must be tired and hungry,” my auntie said as she struggled to get out of the car. I was hungry, but not for food. I wanted to sleep. I longed for silence and a comfortable bed.

Upon entering the house, a beautiful brown-skinned girl, stood at the front door wearing a big smile. She was dressed in baati and a little gabasaar, decorated with bright colored flowers. “That’s my daughter, Amina,” my aunt indicated, pointing at the girl in the flowery gabasaar.

She escorted me to the back of the house, and took me to an empty room with a single mattress and a fan. The walls were painted green, and the windows were made with metal bars, similar to a jail cell. I asked her for the toilet. She pointed at a small door across the hall. I opened the door, only to find a hole in the ground, a sink and a shower head that only a giant person can reach.

After washing up and changing into something comfortable, I made my way to the living room.

Saucepan and plates were set on the dining table, which contained rice and broiled lamb. It smelled delicious but I had no appetite. I lost my desire for food, because my heart was filled with unease, and hurt.

“Sit down and eat!” said my aunt as she pointed at an empty chair at the table. “Amina, bring her some bisbaas.” “No, its okay auntie. This is just fine,” I

protested. Out of mere politeness I tried to eat. It was uncomfortable. They kept staring at me as if I was an alien. “You have to eat the rice too,’ my aunt pointed out the bowl containing the rice. I felt embarrassed. I didn’t know how to scoop the rice up properly with my hands, it felt strange. I never ate with my hands. I just plucked the meat off the bones with my fingers like a little baby, playing with food for the first time.

They probably thought I was a strange, spoilt with the fortunes of life. Both, Amina and Adan haven’t said a word to me yet. Strangely, I liked it. I longed for silence. It was hard to find silence in America.

“We are saddened about what happened to Nasiib,” my aunt breaks into sympathy. “To Allah we belong, and to Him we must return” she continued. I wasn’t in the right mood to talk about this, so I accepted her sympathy with a silent nod.

I excused myself from the table. “Habo, I’m going to sleep. I’m extremely tired,” I spat, excusing myself from the table, after washing my hands.

I was tired, I wanted to lay down.

It’s been two months since I’ve been here in Mogadishu.

My depression subsidized a little. I found out that life had little to no value in Mogadishu. People didn’t dwell much in sorrow and frankly no one had time for sympathy. People died, but life moved on the next day.

In my time here, there were several bombings carried out by a group called Al- Shabab. Their ideology was that ‘everyone’ except them were infidels, especially members of the government. They carried out assassinations and bombings in public places; sometimes even killing innocent people to achieve their targets.

“Soon, the ground we walk, will all be graveyards; burials of souls waiting for trials of life” says Adan, as he sits there smoking a cheap cigarette. He was slim,

tall and dark skinned. He wore cheapish clothes, and a pair of torn sandals. It seemed his priorities were above worldly goods.

Adan and I sat outside the house in the dark hours of the night, and stargazed as we discussed about politics, and philosophy. He was very intelligent for a twenty- five-year old, unschooled young man.

He’d ask me about life in America, and I’d inquire about life in Somalia. We found similarities, but also penetrated each others moral ethics, disclosing our differences. He had a dislike for the west and criticized their political system. “America, likes to play God, when in fact, they are the devil,” he’d usually highlight in his arguments.

To be honest, I was worried for him. With his type of mental attitude, he could easily be recruited by Al-shabab, I thought.

One night, sitting outside the gate of the house, I asked Adan, “what do you think of Al shabab? Do you agree with their ideology?” I was curious about his stance. “You will never understand,” he chuckles as he flicks the cigarette bud on the floor where he was standing. “What is there to understand? It’s a simple question, really,” I interject.

“America. You think you owe them your life, right? They gave you a piece of paper that validates your stay in a land they stole from innocent men, women and children. They hand you a piece of paper that legitimizes your degree of knowledge while teaching you only what they want you to learn. Their history. Their philosophy. Their dubious ways of life. They keenly teach you the history of ‘yahuuda’ along with America’s heroism, in the meanwhile they bargained souls of blacks like a bag of chips, as they lynched them on trees and used their women and men as sex slaves. How heroic?” he questions me in annoyance. “They are excellent in wiping their footprints from the sand? Do they show you the holocaust that is taking place in the middle east now? See, they only depict the wrongs done to them while cowardly hiding the wrongs they do to others. That is YOUR America,” he expresses in anger.

I was boggled by his cognizance of the western history. I haven’t seen any books in the house, and his cell phone was an old Nokia which I doubt had any internet connection. How would he know all this, I wondered? I was curious but fearful. His eyes were filled with rage.

“You didn’t answer my question, Adan,” I reply back, digging for more elaborative answer. He gives me a sadistic smile, and gets up to walk back inside the house, leaving me with more questions. It scared me a little but my curiosity grew more.

I know, this part of the world, the cost of life was cheap and death was in arms reach. Simple questions can turn into a fatal death.

It was Friday, after sunset. Adan and I sat outside the house again. The wind was calm but persistent. The air smelt like burning timber, and charcoal. Neighbors were cooking supper in their backyards. In Somalia, the main meal was eaten at lunchtime. At night, beans were cooked in a pot on the burning wood for long hours.

This night, it felt different. Adan, usually never inquired about my personal life, but he asked me about Nasiib, and what happened. I told him everything, and how I was drained with guilt.

“Your journey with Nasiib was written exactly how it occurred. There is nothing you could have done to change the pages of the book God has planned for you,” he replies. He was absolutely right. “Can I ask you something?” he says. “Yes, of course,” I reply.

“If you saw Nasiib’s father, what would you do or say to him?” That was an odd question, I thought. “Uhm, probably kill him,” I replied without hesitation. He looked at me with a grin on his face. As if he knew something, I didn’t.

“Nasiib’s father, owns a small hotel, five miles from here,” he babbles to my surprise. I couldn’t believe it. “You mean to tell me, that Nasiib’s father is here?” “Yes, five miles from where you are standing. He is a big, tall and light skinned man. His name is very popular in this town.” I felt lightheaded. My heart started pounding out of my chest. I had trouble breathing. I stood up from where I was seated, and started pacing up and down, trying to catch my breath.

“Listen, I can help you,” he whispers. “Help me in what?” I reply stunned. “What if you were amongst the chosen ones, who were given the opportunity to carry the sword to cut the neck of the devil,” he dramatized. “You mean, actually kill him?” I respond confused. “Imagine, the lives he has damaged; the hurt and pain he has caused innocent women? His death will not be mourned but celebrated and your bravery will open the gates of heaven for you.” Blood was rushing to my head.

It was in this moment, I realized Adan was trying to recruit me to kill. He looked at me gravely and said “I will take you somewhere tomorrow.” I wasn’t sure what he meant by that.

“Go to sleep tonight, and tomorrow we’ll go together,” he said as he walked away from me.

I couldn’t sleep. I tossed and turned in my four-squared room. My thoughts were accompanied with fear and coincidence. How did I end up here, five miles away from the man who derailed my future, and the reasons for my love’s death? Oh God, I missed Nasiib. I missed his smile. My heart never eased at remembering him.

‘Amongst the chosen one?’ I continued to replay in my head. What did Adan mean by that, I thought? I believed Bilaajiyo deserved to die. His spirit was definitely evil, but I’m not a killer.

I doze off.

“Baby, baby,” someone whispers into my ears. I open my eyes. It was Nasiib, standing above me. He looked radiant, heavenly and at peace. “Nasiib,” I sigh, as I try to sit up. “Sshh, it’s okay. I’m here…baby,” he whispers into my ear, as he kisses my forehead. I felt his warm hands on mine. His skin was unblemished. His eyes filled with innocence. “I miss you, baby. My heart is empty without you. I’m now in a better place, a place where you and I, belong together, forever,” he whispers into my heart. “I miss you too, Nasiib. This world is not the same without you. I want to be with you,” I sobbed, as I held onto his hand. I didn’t want him to let go. “Listen baby, don’t be scared to go with Adan. Follow him, and he will guide you to me.” “How, Nasiib?” I questioned confused. He lets my hand go. I suddenly felt cold breeze harbor my insides. Just like that, he was gone. I felt shaken.

“Hey, hey! Wake up!” I hear a voice again. “Nasiib,” I shout as I open my eyes, but it was just Amina hollering above me. “Oh,” I hurl disappointedly. “Sorry, I didn’t want to wake you up, but it’s afternoon and Hooyo is worried about you. You haven’t eaten anything yet.” I wasn’t hungry, I was exhausted. “Tell Habo, I’m okay.”

My dream last night felt bizarrely real, and tangible. I felt Nasiib’s presents. His scent still roamed in the air.

It was 6pm in the evening. I can hear the first Azhan, as the local imam calls for prayer. Habo and Amina are sitting in the living-room, hawking the television on loud volume. They loved Turkish, Arabic and Indian soap operas. It was their favorite.

“Come here, and watch this with us,” yells my auntie across the living-room. I was sitting on the dining table with my laptop, trying to read the news, but I could barely focus because the television was too loud. I closed my laptop, and sat next to Amina, who was deep into the show.

Amina was kind enough to depict everything that was happening in the scenes, so I wasn’t lost and bored. The actors were too dramatic for my liking, but I pretentiously nodded my head, showing my interest for the sake of respect. “So you speak Arabic?” I asked her. “I can read and comprehend the language, but I can’t articulate myself in Arabic. I’ve learned most of what I know from watching shows and films,” she explains.

I liked Amina, but it was unfortunate that we shared not a single thing in common. She was refined by society to act as expected, and I grew up as a rebel, ignoring every expectation society had of me. I dressed in pants and shirts, as I roamed depressed in the house; she wore baati and gabasaar, as she sang beautifully whilst cleaning. She knew how to blaze wood, and charcoal to cook in perfection and I…was useless. I simply admired her.

I got up and excused myself to my room. It was time to pray.

After Nasiib died, I started to view life from a different perspective. I found the importance of praying, and being connected to Allah was critical in order to avoid more hurt and sorrow in this world. Is it selfish, that I only remembered Allah in my time of despair? Maybe. But what is important is that I remembered God, and it wasn’t too late.

After I was done praying, I heard a knock on my door. I got up from the floor to open, and see who it is. “Hey,” mumbles Adan as he stood there sweating. “Hi,” I reply back. His eyes were piercing through me. He looked worried. “Are you ready?” he stutters. I pretended I didn’t know what he was referring to, so I vaguely replied, “I don’t know, ready for what Adan?” “I want to show you something, come outside,” he demands, as he walks away from my door.

I dressed up quickly. He was standing by himself, next to his white Toyota. Our neighborhood was dark, and scary at night time. “What’s up Adan, why are you sweating and breathing so heavy?” I inquired, as I walked towards him. “I jogged

from the mosque to hurry home, so I can pick you up and take you somewhere.” “Where exactly do you want to take me?” I curiously replied. “I just…want to…show you something, that’s all. I will bring you back home safely, I promise,” he chuckles. “I see that you’re scared, but there is no need, I promise,” he continues. He opens the passenger seat, and indicates for me to go inside the car. For some odd reason, I trusted his words. I felt comfortable in his promises. There was a force that was telling me to be at ease with myself and relax.

I got in the car.

Adan drove silently for twenty minutes in the dark terrain. There were no souls visible in the direction we were heading. “You will meet someone. He will talk to you briefly, but you just listen, okay?” he pled as he drove blind into the darkness. “Who is this someone?” I questioned. Adan, remained silent. I heard a noise from a distance. It was getting closer as we drove straight ahead. Then, I saw a flame that was lit afar. “What is that Adan?” I continued to ask. Adan just ignored me.

As we got closer, I noticed people surrounding the flame, rocking their heads back and forth. They were chanting in a language that was unfamiliar to me. “Who the hell are they, Adan?” I shouted in frustration. “They, are the soldiers of Allah. The sword keepers,” he finally replied dramatically. My heart started racing, my anxiety kicked in. I was in the middle of the dark terrain with the most wanted group in the world.

“Adan, is that…who I think…it is?” I emit a long, deep breath. He stops the car, and tells me to wait inside as he walks to the group of people surrounding the fire.

As I sat quietly in the car, the chanting was getting louder, and more intense. I was scared. I felt betrayed by my instinct. Why did I allow myself to be in this situation, I questioned myself? Adan approached one of the men in the circle, and pointed at the car, probably indicating that I was sitting inside.

I rapidly fixed my clothes, as I noticed Adan and the strange man walking in my direction.

“Come out,” demanded Adan, as he opened the door of the passenger seat. It was too dark to clearly see the stranger, but he was dressed in black salwar qamiis, the type that is worn traditionally by Pakistani males. He stood short, and his head was wrapped. He had a long beard, and a lighter complexion.

“Salaam, my sister,” he greeted me calmly, while I was making my way out of the car. “Salaam,” I stuttered, as my knees quivered in fear. I can feel my heart pulsate in my throat. “Brother Adan, told me a lot about you. He also told me about your hardship in this world. That’s why the likes of my kind is here, my sister. To ease all the hardship Iblis brings to this world; to innocent Muslims like yourself,” he says in a heavy accent. I noticed he wasn’t Somali. His accent sounded middle eastern. I didn’t say anything, I just stayed silent and attentive.

“The workers of Iblis and Dijal roam in this world, disguised in the form of a human, dedicated to destroy the name of Islam. It’s our job as the soldiers of Islam, the sword keepers, to define who is the culprit in aiding them …See, people see us as killers, but we are preventers, sister. We halt them from dominating this world. That is our task,” he pauses, as another man approached him, whispering something in his ear. He was wearing similar clothing, but he looked darker, taller, with broader shoulders, and heavier body. “Sorry,” he apologized as he searched for his thoughts.

“We have been targeting Bilaajiyo for a long time. Now, we must close his book. His chapters are filled with sin, and greed. He is a cold-blooded brute. He has done a lot of damages, caused many hurt, therefore his time must end,” he expressed as his voice intensified. “You are the chosen one sister. Your duty in this world, as the server of Allah, is to close his book, sister. Are you ready?”

I felt a sudden attack of fright. His question sustained a substantial weight of power that can instil fear in the heart of an ordinary person. I wanted to say no, but those two simple letters could end my life. “I am not a …killer, brother,” I pled. “You will be trained, sister. We have men who will help you carry out this task. They will teach you how to execute this mission.” My ideology, and views on life were different. My Islam wasn’t about killing or revenge but about survival and forgiveness.

“Did you see Nasiib, last-night?” the strange man interrupts my thoughts. “Excuse me?” I replied surprisingly.

“We’ve sent Nasiib to you, last night. His spirit came to your dream. He was supposed to ease you heart and mind for this meeting.” I was confused. “You see those men,” he pointed at the circle of men who were chanting and rocking their bodies back and forth around the fire. “Yes,” I replied. “They are calling for spirits. Spirits that have been wronged whilst in this world. These spirits help us ease our mission.” “How do they ease your mission,” I asked curiously. “They enter the bodies of the chosen ones, and carry out the execution. This way, you will not feel guilt or pain,” he replies.

I was stumped, but mostly scared stiff. I can’t believe Nasiib’s spirit came to my dream last night. They called upon him to visit me. Was that allowed? Who gave them the authority to disturb the dead, I thought? I had many questions, but this wasn’t the right place nor the right time to ask them. “You go home, we talk tomorrow, sister. Salaam,” he walks away abruptly.

I entered the car, feeling a slight headache. Adan, made his way to the drivers- seat, as he finished saying his goodbyes to the strange man.

“You must stay quiet. You cannot say anything to mother and Amina,” he demanded as we drove back home. “Tomorrow, after Maqrib, you must be ready.” “Ready for what?” I asked him. “For brother Amir. He will introduce you to someone. You must be prepared for the mission,” he continued. “I don’t want

to do it, Adan. I’m not made for this…,” I sobbed. This was getting too serious and too real for me. He slammed on the brakes and suddenly stopped the car in the middle of nowhere. “Saying no, is refusing to serve Allah. Are you rejecting to serve your Creator?” he shouted as he looked at me enraged. “No, I’m not,” I answered petrified.

We arrived home.

I didn’t trust Adan. He was just a puppet, who’s loyalty aligned with these men. I didn’t see him as a cousin anymore.

It was hard for me to fall asleep, my heart was still trembling in fear. I laid in bed, and prayed to God to help me in this difficult time. I didn’t understand many things; questions were drowning me. I felt drained.

I fell asleep, but I suddenly woke up, breathing heavy. Staring at the ceiling, seeing my own reflection, peacefully sleeping, …but I was awake; my eyes were open, I was fully aware of my surroundings. Then my body started floating off the bed, I was mid-way in the air. I tried to scream, move side-ways, but I wasn’t able to do anything but stay still. I forced to close my eyes, and begged God to intervene and help me. I suddenly remembered the power of Ayat Al-Kursi. I tried to quickly recite it in my head. As soon as I was done reciting the last verse ‘…wa la ya’uduh xifduhuma wahuwal caliyul cadiim.’ I was dropped to my bed. Whatever force was holding me up, decided to let me go.

Then, I felt a cold breeze hover over my body, as I lay feeble in my bed. It was freezing. I knew I wasn’t alone in this room.

Suddenly, I sense a heavy pressure, pressing down on my chest. I felt an unbearable pain strike me inside, as if my organs were about to explode. I quickly resorted to reading Ayat Al-Kursi again, only this time, I was being strangled around my neck. I couldn’t breathe. Blood rushed to my head, and I was slowly fading away.

I felt a release.

I opened my eyes. It was pitch black. I heard a deep voice echo inside the room. “We, the spirit of Jinn, have come to offer peace with you. As long as you do, as we say,” the voice commands. My body felt strong. I was gaining strength as the voice spoke to me. “You will feel our energy envelop your weak body. We will guide your shadow, as we cast our light on your dark soul,” the voice carried on. “You do as we say, or we will fling your delicate body into the darkness. And oh weak one, not your darkness, but ours. Sleep, and wake up tomorrow morning engulfed in our power. Seek refuge in your kind, and you will regret, for we are inside you and behind you at all times.”

I felt weak upon waking up. It was 6 in the morning, and everyone was still asleep. I felt the urge to eat, and munch on everything that was in the kitchen. I haven’t felt this hungry for a long time. I hear whispers in my head. They weren’t clear enough for me to understand. They were getting louder, and louder as I munched on Samosas that were lying on the kitchen counter.

‘Stop,’ I suddenly shout. I can hear my ears ringing, as the voices disappeared. Then, there was a sudden silence. “You’re awake early,” mumbles Amina, as she stood behind me. Her voice startled me, but I felt a sense of relieve once I noticed it was her. “You look like as if you seen the devil. Are you okay?” I wanted to tell her everything, but I knew that would endanger her. “Yes,” I bluntly lied to her, but she could sense the fear painted on my face. ‘Seek refuge in your kind, and you will regret…’ I hear a voice inside me. The bass of the voice, trembled my eardrums. It was the same voice that came to me last night. ‘We are inside you, and behind you at all times, remember’ the voice continued. ‘Why me? Why did you choose me?’ I replied. “Choose you for what?” Amina retorted. “Nothing, I’m just…never-mind,” I replied back.

My body felt strange. I was feeling weak and overpowered by strange forces. I laid in bed, holding onto the words of my Creator. But every time I read the verses of the Quran, my insides burned, my stomach ached, and my headache intensified. I had a strong feeling that if I allowed them to take control, there were going to kill me.

My senses were on high alert.

I can hear footsteps approaching my door, followed by a subtle knock.

As soon as I got up to open the door, I felt light headed. I quickly held on to the door handle, to find my balance.

“Hey!” Adan, whispers as I opened the door. “Yes,” I sighed back. “You ready to go?” “I’m not feeling well, Adan. Can we not go tonight, please?” I pled. “You’ll feel better…trust me.” I was tired of his deceptive assurances. “Just meet me outside,” he says, as he walks away.

I closed my door. I threw my ailing body back on the bed.

I hear that strong baritone voice again, shaking my eardrums. “You must find the strength we’ve buried inside you, dig deep, beneath the ordinary soil, lies the gift of powers we’ve given you. FIND IT NOW!” it shouts inside me. I felt the hair on my skin rise. The power of his voice galvanized inside me, I rose and made my way out of the house. I wasn’t controlling my body anymore. I felt like I was being driven, as I observed myself from the inside.

Adan was already waiting for me inside the car. I opened the passenger door, and quietly sat down. “The more you fight this, the worse it gets,” Adan moans, as he begins to drive. “This is evil. They are utilizing sorcery, Adan. This is against Islam. They’re employing Jinn’s,” I sobbed.

“Not all Jinn’s are evil. They too were created to worship God; they agreed to

assist us in this war against Iblis and Dijal. The Jinn’s have more power than us. They have the ability to recognize the devil, and see what we cannot see with the naked eye,” he explains. They were using spirits to fight the devil, but how could they trust these spirits. They don’t fit right inside the heart of a believer. “Then why can’t they fight the battles without taking innocent souls hostage?” I asked. “You won’t understand,” he brushed me off. “Please, make me understand,” I plead. “Ok. Say you’re the physical element of an object, like a car, the Jinn is the engine that enables the functionality of your elements. Jinn’s help us find powers within us. They ignite your inner ability to function to a fuller capacity.” I believed whatever was inside me, was there to hurt me. I was in a battle to save myself.

The road looked familiar. We were heading in the same direction as we did last time. “When did you join them?” I asked Adan, curiously. “At fourteen. I wasn’t going to school, so they recruited me and taught me everything I know about the evilness of this world.” “How did they find you?” “I was watching a football match at the beach. And brother Amir was playing for one of the teams. He approached me and my friends, and asked us to go with him to his home for dinner.” “Where is Amir from?” “He was born in London, but his parents took him back to Afghanistan when he was five. He learned everything from his father. He is a brave man; a warrior to be admired in today’s era,” he continued.

I suddenly felt the burning inside me again. My lungs were on fire, my heart started pounding out of my chest. “You’ll be fine,” whispers Adan, as he notices me sweating profusely while breathing heavy. “Why, why am I feeling this way,” I asserted. “Usually this happens, when the individual is too strong and refuses to be overpowered. You need to let him in…, ” he expresses. Who is him, I wondered.

He stops the car. We arrived at our destination. This time, the fire was ignited but there was no chanting, and no men around.

I saw Amir, standing near where the fire was lit. He was standing with another person. Adan instructed me to get out of the car, and to walk with him. I was scared, but not as much as the last time.

As we walked closer, I smelt blood. The scent of death lingering in the air like roses in summer time. It felt strange. “Salaam,” they greeted us.

“Adan, you can go back to the car now,” ordered Amir.

The man standing next to Amir was dark, tall, and didn’t have a friendly face. His eyes were red, like the blazing fire behind him. “You, will be rewarded for your bravery,” he spoke. He sounded exactly like the man who visited me in my sleep last night. It was the same deep voice that ploughs on intervening my thoughts. “You are…” “Yes, I am.” He finished my thoughts. “…but how,” I stuttered. “Like the devil, we are shape-shifters. We have the ability to veer into the wind, metamorphose into a physical human form, sometimes even into an animal. That’s why the devil fears us the most,” he voiced.

“Why am I feeling hot inside?” I enquired. “Our kind is created from smokeless fire, whereas God created you from clay. So, when we enter your body, we burn your soul.”

He grabbed my hand, and blew cold air onto my palms. I suddenly felt a relief.

He instructed me to close my eyes. “Don’t be scared,” he whispers. “When you open your eyes, you’ll see a woman in a hospital bed, laying next to her new born baby. You’ll feel a sudden increase in weight; that’s her burden leaning on your shoulders. You’ll feel a sudden worry intervene your mind; that’s her sins seeking comfort in your heart,” he spoke.

She lied there alone, holding onto her baby. She had so much fear in her eyes. I felt death lurking in the corners of the room, it felt cold and bitter. “You’ll feel her grieve, as she stares into your soul.” “Who are they,” I whispered. “Nasiib and his mother,” he replies. A tear escaped my eye. “I can feel her,” I whispered into the wind. She felt heavy, and hurt. He instructs me to close my eyes again.

This time I was standing outside, in the outskirts, away from residential areas. I can see the sun setting from where I was standing. The howling gales of wind raved through the empty land, as I stood still. Suddenly, I heard a cry echoing through the mountains. “Help me! Somebody, help me!” screamed a voice from behind me. I turned around.

It was her again. Nasiib’s mother. A man was lying on top of her. He held her body down, as he tore her baati in half. “Why are you doing this, please stop…” she cried to him. He ignored her pleas. His eyes had no sympathy, his heart felt cold and rugged. She screamed in pain, as he pierced through her skin, wounding her innocence for his own self-indulgence.

Suddenly, she stopped crying. “I can’t take this,” I cried to the dark man. I felt her sorrow as she lay there alone and feeble. After he was done, he stood above her and instructed her to clean herself, as he lit up a cigarette. Trails of blood leaked to her ankles, while she tried to fix her baati. “Nasiib, was conceived on this day,” the dark man revealed to me. “She will go home, cook for the family, and pretend she is fine while deep down, she is broken and forever ruined by this man. She will not speak a word of this day, until she’s on her deathbed.”

I felt hatred inside. My emotions were demented. He deserved a horrible death, I thought to myself. He wasn’t worthy to breathe another second on this planet. “I will do it,” I said. “Take me to him, I will seek vengeance for her and her son,” I wailed. I felt enraged. Anger overcrowded my perception to think rationally.

“Close your eyes, and breathe” instructed the dark man. Suddenly, I was standing in the middle of my bedroom. “Rest your body,” he whispers calmly. My eyes felt heavy, as I dropped my weary body onto the mattress. “Sleep,” he whispered.

I kept seeing images of Nasiib’s mother. Her eyes piercing through my soul, souring my heart while I was asleep.

Morning came. The sun gushed through the gaps of the metaled window as it hit my eyes. I was awakened by the crowing of the rooster, and the footsteps of goats tramping through the piles of discarded matters chucked by the neighborhood.

“When you wake up in the morning, time will come to a halt. You will feel emboldened. Dark smoke will linger above you, as death accompanies you to Bilaajiyo’s restaurant. You must not fear death, nor feel any remorse when you see him,” uttered the voice of the dark man.

“At noon time, a tuk-tuk will wait for you outside the house. He will drive you to the restaurant and give you a backpack. When you find a seat in the back of the restaurant, ask for Bilaajiyo. He will be working at the cashier around that time. Make sure not to reveal any sense of fear.” Strangely, I didn’t fear death. I was willing to carry that sword, for love, for Nasiib, for his mother, and cut the head of the devil.

I called my mother. I needed her to know that I loved her and I didn’t want her to feel sad when I’m gone. I startled her from her sleep, as she answered the phone in a worrisome tone. “Hooyo, I’m okay. I just …wanted to say that I love you,” I spoke softly, holding back tears. These words sounded unfamiliar to her. “What is wrong?” she asked. “Nothing, Hooyo. Go back to sleep.” “No, I can tell something is wrong. Tell me, what is it?” she pled. “Just know that I love you Hooyo. I have to go,” I rushed off the phone.

I had a few minutes until the tuk-tuk showed up. I took a shower, and purified myself for Wudu. I prayed long and hard, and begged Allah to guide me in this confusing stage. As I was done with my prayer, I felt a gentle wind launch into my space. A load of worry elevated off of my chest. I felt a sense of relief. ‘Alhamdulillah,” I sighed, as I felt light on my feet.

I made my way to the living room. I quickly noticed that the house was empty. Everything has been hauled out of the house. It was as if no one has ever lived here. No furniture’s, no television, nothing. Not a single paper or a wire was visible. I ran to my aunt’s room. Upon opening the door, I noticed, a spider has formed a comfortable web around the handle. The room was empty and filled with piles of dirt and dust. My heart started pacing. I ran outside. I stood middle of the street. There was a boy who was playing footie by himself, across the street. “Hey, hey you?” I shouted upon approaching him. He looked at me with fearful eyes. “Do you know, who lives in that house,” I asked, while pointing in the direction the house was located. “Yeah, you. You live there,” he answered me with a confused look. “No, besides me. There was a family I was staying with…do you know them? Amina, and Adan, the boy who drives a white car…?” I quiz him. “Amina and Adan died two years ago with their mother. They were killed by gunmen,” the boy revealed.

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The Enemy Within

Part One |


I loved my husband. He was all I have ever known to love. Cliché as it sounds; he was my Prince charming. He was the most beautiful man I have ever laid my eyes on. He was tall, dark and was filled with kindness and love.

We were married for fifteen years with three beautiful children; Ahmed, Anwar and Awo. He was a role model to our children. Our nights were filled with laughter and talks as we held onto memories of our old days. We had so much love to give, so we never slept without fulfilling each others desires.

Our children were a reflection of our love.

Our home was blessed.

It was spring of 2013, when my childhood friend and cousin, Shamso called me one morning. She wanted to lead a new life in a new place, so she asked to stay with us temporarily until she found a home of her own.

I was excited. All of my relatives were hundreds of miles away, it felt good to have a close female family member nearby. She was a divorcee who didn’t bear any children in her last marriage – “I am a free woman!” she often would cheer jokingly but I knew deep down she was a concerned thirty-two-year-old-woman.

On her arrival, I asked two of my boys to share a room, as I prepared her a room.

Awo, my thirteen-year-old daughter, wasn’t fond of her auntie but the two boys were careless of her presence. Shamso didn’t understand the psychological behavior of teens, and would question my ways of fostering my children. She’d point out that I spoil Awo, and that I submit to her needs more than I should.

Nevertheless, I’d listen to her advice, and befriended her words because she is family.

When we were younger, my mother used to say that family is everything in this world. So I would drive her around to look for subsidized housing and even helped her cope financially.

It was that same year, my husband lost his job. He was an engineer for a top technology firm for three years. He got into an altercation with one of his managers, which resulted in him being fired.

I remember that day, the disappointment in his tone.

“Love, I was fired today,” he voiced angry as he sat down on the bottom stair to take off his shoes.

I asked him what happened.

“My manager said something racist, and I totally lost it.”
It was hard to imagine my husband this way –angry and frustrated. He never spoke ill or cause any harm to another human. He was religious, and believed his actions would carry consequences in the hereafter.

“That is unlike me. I don’t know what took over me,” he continued to express. It seemed he was more disappointed in his actions, then the racist remark his manager spat at him.

“It’s okay, you will get what God has written for you. This was just not for you.” I calmly whispered into his ear as I embraced his cold body.

Things took a strange turn that year. I had two miscarriages, and my daughter Awo was getting bad grades in all of her classes.
My family was falling apart, and I didn’t know how to fix it. My husband became angrier. He was raised to have Imaan and to put his trust in God, but it seemed no matter what he did, the world has become his new enemy, including me. Most nights, he’d fall asleep in the living-room, on the couch whilst watching television. He lost the urge to love me, and the determination he had for his family. It made me sad to see my husband fall into a dark pit –battling to find the light while I was struggling to find him.

One evening, he came home enraged as I was in the kitchen cooking dinner for the family. I was chopping onions on top of the granite countertop, and he walked over to me and said “we have to move out, and find something affordable.” I knew those words were coming, but I was afraid to hear them.

“We will be fine,” I replied back calmly.

“You don’t understand, Khadija! He shouted as he knocked a cup off the kitchen counter, breaking the glass into pieces. It startled me.
It’s clear that he has formed an impulsive behavior -an angry one, and it scared me a lot. For fifteen years, he never showed this type of manners. “I know you’re distraught but your behavior does not help the situation get any better. Calm down Abdi! Please.” I found myself begging him.

My family was in distress.

Shamso left a week before we moved into a smaller apartment. My children hated the new apartment. They complained about the neighborhood, and the lack of attention they were getting from their new teachers.

My husband barely came home. He’d spent hours with other Somali men, something he’d always frowned upon – “A husband belongs home with his wife and children,” he used to declare.

I started to resent him for not being stronger, for not having enough imaan. I felt as if he gave up on us, and I hated him for it.
I befriended a neighbor, Muna. While the kids were at school, we’d share stories and she would be an ear to my misery. She was kind and filled with patience.

One day, on my way to the grocery store to pick up some eggs to make pancakes, I saw my husbands’ car stopped at a stoplight ahead of me. I could tell it was him, because I recognized the license plate. I trusted my husband, but something inside me was curious to know where he was heading. When he left home this morning, he said we was going to the masjid but ironically the masjid was on the other side of the city.

I followed him.

We drove for thirty minutes on familiar streets. My curiosity grew as we made the same exact turns as if we were heading to our old home. I stopped and watched him signal right into the street we used to live in.

I was confused. Why would he drive all the way to our old house, I pondered?

My thoughts froze. I couldn’t believe my eyes


 

Part Two |

As he pulled up to the curb of our old home, there she was cat-walking down the stairs to approach his car. Mona, my neighbor –my friend who I confided in, dressed in pearl white abaya with a grin that hails seduction. 

My heart raced a million miles to the second. Blood rushed to my head, as questions invaded my every thought. What is she doing here in my old home? Why is my husband here with her? 

My heart shattered on the floor as I watched my husband kiss her on the lips. Those same lips have kissed me, they have professed love and have promised to protect me. But it was clear to me, that those lips carried heavy lies. Who was I married to? I didn’t know this man.

My vision was blurred, my thoughts disarrayed, my heart felt defeated as I sat there still with tears to accompany my aching body. I watched them drive off together. 

Where are they heading, I silently voiced shakingly to myself. I followed them for twenty minutes, as they drove around the city. My mind replayed every word I spat to that evil bitch. I shared frustration with her that entailed my husband. There she was meeting my vulnerable husband on the side, as I presented her the tools she needed to entice him. 

I was enraged with anger. 

He pulled into our local masjid. He got out, and walked to the passenger door to assist her out of the car like a gentleman, but as God is my witness, he is a pig in a suit. 

All this time, he had a plan, and I was never part of his plan. 

It was that same day, he married Muna. Their love was legally chained by the local Sheikh, who spat blessings onto their new beginning while ours ended.

I always felt that people exaggerated their feelings when they spat ‘my heart is broken’ but it was in that parking lot, I have felt the truth in those words.  

I asked for a divorce, and told him that I saw him with Muna that same day. He didn’t feel any remorse, instead he spat simple words while my heart weighs heavy in betrayal. This was not the man I knew –definitely not the man I married. 

I wanted a divorce, but it was clear to me that he wasn’t going to lodge a protest. I felt angry, and wanted to stab him in his chest for betraying me. “I fucking hate you,” I whispered, not wanting to alert the kids who were in the next room. I told him to leave and never to return. 

A week went by and his scent still lingers in the air. When I felt the loneliest, voices in my head kept me company. I started to reply back to the voices, as they made sense to me. I have lost weight, and mostly sleep. 

I have forgotten to care for my children. I barely cook, and cleaning the house became a burden. Most days, I felt like a zombie -hauling an empty body around the house. Due to lack of sleep,I began to hallucinate.

My daughter became worried and decided to call her father to check up on me but instead of offering to help me, he came to the house and took the kids with him and left me behind.

I was scared. 

There was a particular voice amongst the voices in my head, that started to convey more authority. He called himself Al-Waswaas, and when he spoke, all of the other voices remained silent.  

“I was born when you were born,” he spoke in a husky voice. “I circulate inside you, just as blood circulates inside you. I am in your thoughts, and in your heart. I am the son of Satan, the night owl who lives in the darkest parts of your soul. I am the strongest when you’re weak,” he spat confidently. 

I was confused and frightened. I wanted to pray, but I was too weak to get out of bed. My lips sealed together, my tongue tight to the roof of my mouth. I was motionless in my own body. A breath of cold air struck my face, as if someone was hovering above my bed. Whatever the voice was, I felt his presence in the room –he was here and close.

“STAND UP! Child of Adam,” it shouted in a deafening tone. My body levitated in the air. I must be dreaming, I whispered to myself. “Please stop, I beg you,” I plead in tears as I floated in the air, trying to gain control over my body. 

“You were always too weak to fight your battles,” he spat disappointed. “I have watched you closely, as people have misled you with love, and kindness. But, they only fed you lies. So now, it’s my turn to take this course in a different direction. I will steer you to victory, Child of Adam.” 

As the voice faded, a black fog loomed in the air. It slowly made its way circling my body as I levitate above my bed. It felt warm, like a warm breeze on a hot summer day. I felt its embrace, snuggled on my skin like a leathercloth. 

Next morning, I woke up drenched in blood.