It is a story of times long gone by. It is a story from ancient Egypt - long before the time of the Pharaohs, when people still worshipped the old gods. The new gods and religions emerged long after. It is a strange story - a story of souls meeting, drifting apart, and then coming together again, across the thresholds of time and space.
Once I was Ashastû – son of Darsha and a resident of the ancient city of Nishapur. Once I was a bird, imprisoned by a gilded cage. I was the follower of Mazdayasna and the worshipper of Ahura Mazda.
Like a butterfly, which once was a caterpillar, I was all that but no more. Now, I have become the bearer of the most ancient of all the legacies – the legacy of forgotten wisdom. This is the story of my transformation and my transition, from a caterpillar to a butterfly; and from the path of dark ignorance to the path of bright wisdom.
My family had been serving the grand temple of Nishapur since the times of the great Zarathustra. My father was amongst the most respected leaders of the Council of Mobeds. He was also the Chief Priest of the Temple of Fire and the Custodian of the Towers of Silence.
My father was kind and affectionate and wanted me to take his place one day, once it was his time to return to the lap of Ahura Mazda. But I was a free spirit – an eagle living under the shades of the great grey mountains. An eagle, who was waiting for his chance to ride the mighty shoulders of wind; and make his nest atop the summits of the snowy peaks.
Nishapur was not an ordinary city. This Persian city was the capital of the Province of Khorasan and attracted intellectuals and artisans from as far as Jerusalem and Taxila. The city was filled with gold and riches, thanks to the never-ending turquoise mines.
It was a tough and resilient city. It survived the raids of the rebels fighting the Sasanids and the Samanids. It survived the onslaught of the Tahirid and the Seljuq forces, and it also survived the devastation imposed by the Mongols. In fact, the city’s survival against the Mongols was nothing short of a miracle.
The devils from the Khanate in Mongolia slaughtered the entire population of the city within days. A few citizens including my family, saved their lives by hiding in caves, masked by the slopes of the Binalud Mountains. But something deep within the city’s carcass kept breathing; and after the fall of Khwarezmia at the hands of the Mongols, Nishapur kept on thriving under the Shiites. Along with the great cities of Balkh, Merv and Herat, it evolved into an intellectual, commercial and cultural gem.
Nishapur was a colourful city with a life of its own. But, with all its charms and knowledge and with all its riches and women, the city was unable to keep me chained to the feet of my father. I was waiting for my chance to fly away and my father knew this.
‘Ashastû! My son! You are going to get lost in the world out there.’ He used to say, gracefully attired in his flowing white robes.
‘Yes, father!’ I used to bow my head with a tiny and rebellious smile dancing around the corners of my lips.
‘Stay here with me and one day the spirits of our ancestors will bring peace to you.’
‘But the spirits live beyond the frontiers of space and time. Won’t they be able to bring peace to me wherever I am in this whole wide world?’ I used to tease him, feeling confident in the warmth of his paternal affection.
‘Do not exploit the love of an old man, Ashastû. I love you my son and would like you to stay here with me till the day I breathe my last.’ His moist eyes used to plead.
‘If you truly love me, Father….’ I used to beg in return, ‘…..you would let me go wherever I want to go.’
Then one day, a great caravan from Kashghar crawled like a great serpent through the grand city entrance. To the city of Nishapur and its countless dwellers, the caravan was nothing out of the ordinary. But for me, the caravan was the wind, the eagle within me was seeking. Once it left Nishapur a few days later, I was riding one of the camels, concealed by the grey and brown of an old tattered robe.
Once I left Nishhapur, I never looked back. It was my dream to see the world stretching beyond the horizon imposed by the mighty mountains. That world I saw with my eyes and felt with my heart. With each new journey, came a new adventure.
I carried along a copy of the Avesta, the collection of the Zoroastrian’s sacred texts. The ancient book, the obscure prophecies hidden within its disintegrating pages and my understanding of the verses, were all I had to earn my livelihood. I was willing to trade my religion for my survival.
The caravan followed the southern shores of the Caspian Sea and entered Azerbaijan. I smelt the salt-laden air kissed by the snow and peered into the grey eyes of the wild mountain women. I found the majesty of the icy peaks reflected in those eyes. The freedom of my soul fell in love with the freedom in those grey eyes. But I had to move on and I moved on, leaving a piece of my heart buried in the white snow.
The caravan moved through Armenia and then Georgia and reached the great city of Smyrna in Turkey. The captivating architecture and the minarets with their high spires lost within the white billowing clouds, stimulated my curiosity. The music of lyre and the smells of spices intoxicated my soul and incited my sensuality. I wanted to study the graceful curves of each marble dome and feel the textures of each sun-dried brick. But I had to move on and I moved on, leaving a piece of my soul tied to the pigeons of Smyrna.
The caravan moved through Babylon and Mesopotamia and then back into Persia. It crawled along the Persian Gulf and re-entered Khorasan. The caravan did not stop either at Kandahar or Ghazni except for a day or two, and kept moving until it reached the feet of the great Buddhas of Bamiyan.
Bamiyan awed me. The Buddhas, managing to look humble even in their silent grandeur, captivated my imagination. There they were, carved into the side of a great mountain, looking down on the wandering Hazara tribes. I used to sit on a rock facing the statues and think of Budhha – the Prince who abandoned the rich comforts of his palace in search of peace and wisdom.
I loved Bamiyan so much that when the caravan left, I stayed behind. But it was not my interest or curiosity in the Buddhas which made me stay in Bamiyan. Rather it was my dark fate, which perched upon a lonely ledge of the naked mountains; and stalked its ignorant prey. Then one day it dived down from the ledge. It hid her dark ugliness behind the sweet and lovely face of Zahran and introduced me to the yet alien feeling of love.
One summer morning in Bamiyan, I was sitting at my usual spot and was lost in a reverie. The day was bright and peaceful with a few soft clouds floating on the clear blue sky.
‘Who are you and why do you sit here every day?’ The gleaming steel of a delicate but firm voice neatly sliced the silence.
I slowly turned my neck and looked at my nemesis. There she was, riding the most beautiful horse I had ever seen. It was tall and had gleaming black satin skin stretched over wonderfully formed muscles. Its long mane was knit into braids, each tied with a small silver bell at the end, and the leather saddle and straps looked as soft as velvet and were dyed a dark hue of purple.
My gaze remained fixed on the delicately carved silver spurs attached to the black leather saddles for a moment and then climbed up slowly. My eyes traced the firm contours of muscled and well-toned shins and thighs. The rider had an excellent taste in clothes and her dark velvet apparel spoke of her high status.
My gaze finally reached the face where a pair of emerald eyes were staring at me with curiosity. Two bushy eyebrows stretched like scimitars over those lovely eyes. Nothing else was visible as a purple silk scarf covered her face.
‘I am Ashastû of Nishapur.’ I answered while getting up. ‘And who might be you my lady?’
‘I am Zahran.’ She briefly answered and kept staring at me.
‘Zahran who? Queen of the Dark Night or Guardian of the Golden Sunlight?’ I asked with a smile.
‘Zahran, the daughter and only child of Katib Ahang – the Chief of all Hazara tribes.’ She answered haughtily and then turned her horse and galloped away.
I kept on standing there for ages, my senses numbed by the fragrance diffusing the clear mountain air all around me. It was the fragrance of the night-scented jasmine and it seeped deep into my heart.
Zahran, who she might have been and what she might have been, became my destiny in a few fleeting moments. I forgot that I was a traveller. I forgot that I was away from my home and in a foreign land of strange customs and traditions. All instincts of safety and survival abandoned me and were replaced by the vision of two emerald eyes, peering at me from behind a silk scarf.
Of course, I had heard of her father, Katib Ahang – the cruel and despotic tribal chief of all Hazaras. Whoever spoke of him, spoke with a fear-inspired deference. I knew where he lived. It was a navy blue pavilion, the colour of the night sky, on which a silver flag waved at the mercy of the crisp mountain air.
From that day onwards, I sat in the same spot every day and at all hours, waiting for Zahran to return. I forgot all about the grand Buddhas and I stopped revelling in the sad majesty of the lofty mountains. Zahran became the centre of my universe. Her memory became the fire around which my mind circled like a moth. I breathed in her name and breathed it out. I was a man struck by the thunderbolt of love. I was a doomed man.
Days changed into nights and nights transformed back into days. The sun and the moon followed each other from horizon to horizon. Then one day, while I was sitting at my usual spot, something cold and wet fell on my head. I looked up. Snow had started falling. Winter had come to Bamiyan and with it came a freezing wind, chilling my bones. Zahran didn’t come but I kept on waiting for her.
It was an extremely cold morning when the gods chose to smile down at me. There was a harsh wind blowing from the North. But I was oblivious to all. I was sitting cross-legged, facing the Buddhas with my eyes closed and vision filled with the beauty of emerald eyes. Suddenly I heard the sound of hooves thudding upon the soft carpet of snow.
When I heard the tinkling of silver bells along with the sound of hooves, my heart leapt with joy. But I didn’t get up. Ashastû of Nishapur was in love but he was also patient.
‘Who are you and why do you sit here every day?’ Her voice still sounded the same – gleaming steel slicing the thick blanket of silence.
‘I am Zahran’s slave and I wait here every day for her.’
My heart had stopped beating in the anticipation of a response. But there was only silence. Finally, I decided to turn around. There on her tall horse, sat my beloved – clad in an ebony-coloured gown. Her emerald eyes were staring at me and through me, their green depths betraying nothing of what was going on in her mind.
‘I find you interesting – Ashastû of Nishapur.’ Zahran decided to speak.
‘Then I am the luckiest man on earth. Let death come and I will willingly embrace it for I have found all that I ever desired and all that I ever will desire.’ I approached the horse, placed my hand lightly on the reins and bowed my head.
‘One never finds all he desires. Don’t be absurd.’ Her eyes smiled at me.
‘One does if he learns contentment.’ I smiled back at her.
‘So, are you content, Ashastû?’
‘Yes, I am……now.’
She got down from the horse and we sat together on the boulder.
‘What do you desire most in the world?’ She asked, after a few moments of fragrant silence.
‘Interestingly, I always thought I desired freedom the most. But….’ I deliberately left my sentence frozen in the cold mountain air like an icicle.
‘But?’ She asked softly.
‘But that was before I met you Zahran. Now I desire you the most.’ I picked up some courage and delicately touched her hand.
She laughed at my answer and her laughter was the sound of silver bells riding the early morning air.
‘Ahh! Desire….the most temporary and fragile of all human feelings.’ She subtly pressed my hand back.
‘One moment, the desire overpowers us and intoxicates us with its heady perfume; and the next, it dissolves into nothingness, making way for the next desire. But if fulfilled, it transforms into the stink of regret.’
‘My desire for you is nothing like that. It is here to stay in my heart – forever.’
‘Forever?’ She laughed again. ‘Forever is a word that suits only our creator. We, humans, can just live in the moments and can only dream for a forever.’
We sat together for some time and then seeing a few horses leave her father’s camp, she hurriedly left. But that was not our last meeting. Instead, it was the first of many such meetings. Each time we met, I expressed my love and each time she brushed aside my submissions with laughter. But as steadily falling drops of water engraved and carved a stone, my words of love, slowly and gradually melted Zahran’s heart.
Seasons changed – winter gave way to spring and summer and autumn heralded the advent of another reign of harsh coldness. But our young hearts, warmed by love and passion, were oblivious to the cold winds raging outside.
Then one day, Zahran did not come. I waited and kept on waiting. First for a day, then for a few days and then for weeks. When a whole month passed and she didn’t come, I knew something was amiss. Without reflecting on the consequences, I decided to go check one evening.
The pavilion of Katib Ahang was not very far from where I lived. I approached it stealthily. It was dark in the valley but brighter than daylight around the pavilion. A thousand torches burned brightly, illuminating the lower expanse of the grand canvas structure.
The place was thickly manned by a battalion of menacing-looking sentries – some on foot, while the others rode tall horses. My heartbeat was throbbing in my ears and I could smell the stink of my raw fear. But still, the memory of a fragrance – Zahran’s fragrance, kept me steadfast.
‘Who goes there?’
‘Who moves like a thief amidst the shadows?’
‘Halt! Or you will be slain like a filthy pig.’
Suddenly, frantic and threatening cries halted my feet. My foolish presence had been detected.
In a few moments, I had been caught by the sentries and my hands and feet were bound tightly. They threw me into a dark dungeon. A few nights passed and no one interrogated me. The guards were silent as trees and my desperate queries were met only by cold eyes.
Then one morning, the dungeon gates were opened, and I was bound again and dragged to the Chief’s pavilion.
The pavilion indeed looked grander from the inside. The canvas was covered by maroon velvet embroidered with gold, while the high steel and bamboo pillars were decked with golden fixtures. The floor was strewn with Afghani and Persian carpets, so luxuriously soft that I found my toes digging for hold at each step. Towards the farther end of the pavilion and in front of a black silk curtain, sat the Chief.
Katib Ahang looked young for his age. His hair was still black and scattered on his wide shoulders. Beneath a wide forehead, two dark eyes glared at me, but not with malice. Instead, there gleamed a strange curiosity. If I was not wrong, there was even a hint of a smile on his thin lips. But that was all deception. He was rumoured to be wise yet cruel and fair to the point of strict rigidity.
Katib flicked his fingers and I was pushed forward. I could hear subdued snickering all around me. A stranger was definitely not welcome amongst that strange company. I was surprised to see women sitting amongst the men, not as subjects or objects, but as equals. I was aware that Hazara women formed part of the council of elders but I didn’t know that they participated in the court proceedings so openly.
‘Who are you and why are you here in Bamiyan?’ Katib Ahang inquired softly.
‘O’ mighty and noble chief of all Hazara tribes, I am Ashastû of Nishapur.’ I submitted in the humblest tone I could muster.
‘Well, that answers my first question. What about the second question?’ Katib’s voice rang with impatience.
‘I came to Bamiyan by chance. I stayed in Bamiyan by choice. And I remained in Bamiyan by a stroke of fate.’ I bent my head.
‘Nothing happens by chance for every occurrence has a reason. The choice is rational but fate is only what we make out of our circumstances.’ The Chief chewed on each word of his.
For a few moments, nobody spoke. Even the whispers and snickering had died down. All was silent in the court of Katib Ahang; while the Chief‘s steely gaze scrutinised me from head to toe and he scratched his short pointed beard.
‘What do you do for a living, Ashastû of Nishapur?’
‘I am a follower of Zarathustra and a believer in Ahura Mazda. I am a religious scholar and a seeker of eternal truth. I am a traveller and a lover of freedom.’ I raised my head, stared back into his eyes and answered confidently.
‘Hmm!’ He scratched his beard again. ‘What were you doing near my pavilion the night you were caught? There is neither any eternal truth nor freedom to be found here.’
I couldn’t find any words to answer that question so I stood in silence.
‘No answer eh?’ Katib’s voice mocked me. ‘Perhaps you are not a religious scholar and a seeker of truth, but only a common thief.’
‘I am no thief O’ mighty Chief.’ I protested. ‘But I am afraid of telling the truth.’
‘Truth is the only force that will set you free, Ashastû of Nishapur. Speak the truth and I will respect your words. Only if I find them free of the poison of deception. But if I find even a hint of cleverness and lies, I will have you quartered by four strong horses.’
For a while, we both kept staring at each other. I thought of many possible lies. Perhaps I could tell him that I had lost my way. That was believable and logical. Or I could tell him that I wanted to witness the grandeur of his pavilion first-hand so that I could go back and tell my countrymen of his magnificence and might. That could have flattered him surely. But then reason abandoned me and I decided to tell the truth.
‘I came here to search for Zahran, your daughter.’ My answer was the spark to the fuse of a cannon.
A cacophony broke out and there was even the sound of a few swords and scimitars being unsheathed. But I refused to look around and kept on staring at the Chief. The colour of his face changed to red for a moment. He almost got up from his throne and started to speak but then controlled himself and sat back.
‘Silence!’ Katib snarled and the chaos around us died down abruptly. ‘And why were you searching for my daughter?’
‘Because I love her and was worried about her absence. I feared that some sickness or malady had overcome her. But as I had no means of inquiring about her well-being, I decided to come check myself.’ I was growing fearless by the moment. Now that the truth was out in the open, I wasn’t afraid of death any more.
‘Are you crazy or mad? Don’t you fear for your life young man?’ Katib inquired while impatiently rubbing his hands.
‘He is neither crazy nor mad.’ Zahran’s beautiful voice rang out from behind the black curtain. ‘He speaks the truth, Father. He loves me and I love him.’
Katib was startled by Zahran’s answer. He looked at the curtain and then at me and then back at the curtain again. He looked unbelievingly at his council of advisers and ministers, all of whom looked equally startled and shocked. It was a strange day in the court of Katib Ahang. He gave me a final look of disbelief and then held his hairy head in his hands and shut his eyes.
‘Do you belong to an illustrious family – perhaps a line of ancient kings?’ The Chief raised his head and asked me. He looked old. Truth has that impact. It ages people.
‘No, I do not belong to a line of kings O’ mighty Chief of Hazaras. But my family is noble and I can trace my lineage back to the times of the great Zarathustra. My father is the Chief Priest of the Temple of Fire and the Custodian of the Towers of Silence in Nishapur. He is the Chief of the Council of Mobeds and is respected by the followers of all religions alike.’ I clasped my hands and explained with respect.
‘He is an infidel.’
‘He is the worshipper of fire.’
‘He dares to dishonour the Hazaras and our noble Chief.’
‘He should be killed.’
Chaos broke out in the court again.
‘Enough!’ Katib raised his hand and silenced the audience.
‘It is true that we are the people of one true faith. But it doesn’t mean that we do not honour the truth and the decisions of our women. Hazaras are noble not because of their lineage or race. We are noble because we honour truth and we honour our women. And one doesn’t honour women by taking away their right of choice; one honours women by respecting their decisions.’
I breathed a sigh of relief and gave myself a pat for sticking to my instinct.
‘But!’ Katib spoke again. ‘Zahran is no ordinary woman. She is the Princess of all Hazaras. For the honour of all Hazaras, she has a right to exercise her choice only if her choice proves his merit.’
‘I am ready for any test. I am even ready to give my life to prove my love for Zahran.’ I bowed my head.
‘I agree too. You can test him, Father, for I have an absolute confidence in my choice.’ Zahran spoke from behind the curtain.
‘You are a seeker of truth you say?’ Katib looked at me sternly.
‘That I am O’ mighty Chief.’ I was at my humblest.
‘Then give me the answer to these three questions and Zahran will be free to marry you.
What is God?
What is religion?
What are prayers?’
I listened to the three questions and processed them with unease. I looked up and saw that Katib was smiling.
‘But all these….all these are absolute questions and only absolute truths can answer these questions. Nobody can find absolute truths.’ I protested.
‘Even absolute questions can be answered satisfactorily, provided the answers are founded on reason and logic.’ The Chief waved his hand.
I nodded my head in agreement and that was that. The deal was struck.
The next morning, Zahran along with a few riders from her father’s guard bade me farewell at the borders of Bamiyan. I looked at her face and instead of tears, there was confidence lighting up her eyes. She knew and she believed in my capabilities. I had to prove myself worthy of her belief and confidence. With a heavy heart, I waved at her one final time and started climbing the mountain path.
I had nowhere in particular to go. I didn’t know where the answers could be found. But trusting some instinct deep inside my heart, I decided to travel towards the North.
My path was strewn with innumerable difficulties.
I crossed the lands of the wily Turks. They looked at my tattered clothes and mistook me for a Sufi. Nobody asked about my identity or religion. I passed through them unharmed.
I came across the cruel and bloodthirsty Uzbeks. Their marauding bands caught me and then released me, unable to determine my nationality. I passed through them unharmed.
I passed through the tribes of the Kazakhs. One look at me and the robbers knew I did not carry any valuables or money. They even took pity on me and I passed through them unharmed.
It was like some force of nature was guiding my path and protecting me against all odds and all harm. The swords froze mid-air while plunging down on my neck; and daggers seeking my blood were withdrawn at the last moment. When I was thirsty, I found sweet mountain springs; and when I was hungry, I found either game or kind villagers.
One day, while I was getting tired of following the endless curves of a mountain river, I reached the feet of a mighty mountain range. The stones and rocks were all shades of black, white and grey. About a few hundred feet up on the slope, there was a building made of blackened and aged wood and stone. It was two stories high and smoke rose out of its chimneys. I had reached a caravan sarai.
After many negotiations and pleas on my part, the owner of the sarai agreed to let me spend a few nights there; in return for my agreement to entertain the guests each night.
It was a strange place. I could see a hundred or so travellers, each having a different nationality and a unique set of features. This by itself was not strange. Caravan sarais are supposed to be melting pots of many cultures and nationalities. But what I found strange was that none of those guests was a tradesman.
There was a thin naked sadhu from Benares in India; his naked body glistening at all times with the fat of dead animals and sometimes smeared with ash. I was fascinated by the markings on his forehead and his knotted hair and yoga asanas.
There was a young woman with flaming red hair; her green eyes betraying her Nasrani ancestors. The owner of the sarai called her a witch; an accusation which she neither denied nor confessed to. I was entranced by the fluid way in which her body gyrated, while she danced to the strange beat of some invisible music.
There was a Tibetan Buddhist monk; his head as bald as eggshell and his face filled with lines deep with age and experience. I marvelled at the sea of calmness reflected in his expressionless eyes and his slow deliberate way of doing each routine task as it was some mystic ritual.
And then there was a shaman from some unknown lands; his long hair adorned by the most marvellous-looking feathers of exotic birds. I was captivated by his deep guttural incantations and his throat singing, which resonated with something deep inside me.
One night, I was sitting by the fire burning in the middle of the sarai’s courtyard – huddled in my tattered blanket and unable to sleep. Suddenly, I felt someone staring at me and looked around. Everyone was either busy or asleep. No one was interested in me. But the feeling of being stared at, persisted strongly.
I closed my eyes and the wise words of my far-away-father, echoed in my ears:
‘When there is a sensory perception but you cannot find its origin, close your eyes and regulate your breathing. Breathe in and breathe out. Cancel out the noise of the world around you. Slowly and gradually, the origin will reveal itself to you.’
I regulated my breathing. Then ten breaths in and ten out – each of equal duration. When the world fell silent around me, I opened my eyes. I again searched the shadows and finally was successful in sensing a movement. I focused onto it and slowly, the shadows transformed into a definable physical shape and the Shaman stepped out of the darkness and approached me.
He wasn’t walking. Instead, he was dancing. He was taking slow deliberate steps – two forward, one back, two forward, one sideways and then again two steps forward. Nobody around us was playing any instrument but I thought I could hear the weeping of the lyre and the beating of the unseen drums. I looked at him, totally entranced.
The Shaman came closer and started dancing around me. He completed one circle around me and then another in the opposite direction. But all that time, his half-closed eyes remained fixed on me. Then suddenly he stopped and raised his right hand in the hair. My eyes followed the direction his index finger was pointing in. There, in a window on the top floor of the sarai, stood a woman with the palest and most featureless face I had ever seen. Her long hair fanned her shoulders. She was looking at me intently. Then she raised a hand and motioned at me to join her.
I had never seen that woman at the sarai before that moment. She was probably a new guest. I wanted to ask the Shaman about her, but he had vanished – dissolving like smoke in the night air. I looked around and searched the shadows. He was nowhere to be found.
Scratching my head in confusion, I got up, adjusted the blanket around my shoulders and entered the building. The owner was sitting behind a stone counter, busy doing some calculations in the weak lamp light. Sensing my presence he looked up and stared at me questioningly.
‘I have been summoned.’ I offered confusedly.
‘By whom?’ He sounded almost bored.
‘By a woman.’
‘There is no woman in the sarai. The witch was the only woman and she left this morning for the Lake of Grey Shadows.’ He chuckled softly.
‘I saw an old woman standing in a window.’ I insisted.
‘Well! We see what we want to see and not what is there to see. Go on then. Go see what the woman wants.’ He waved his hand at me disinterestedly and bent his head to his figures again.
I grabbed a burning torch from a wall and started climbing the dark stairs. The top floor was all dark and quiet. All the doors were closed shut and looked the same. However, one was different from others. While all others were made of dark wood, this particular door was made of some strange metal which glowed in the dark. Rather, while the door itself provided a dark background, certain carvings on it pulsated with a strange glow.
I looked at the carvings closely. They looked vaguely familiar. I moved back a little and then suddenly I understood. Those were not random carvings. Instead, from a certain angle and when viewed in totality, they formed a symbol. It was the figure of a bearded and crowned man with spread wings.
The symbol was not alien to me. It represented Faravahar, a significant symbol of my religion, which represented many different things like sins, virtues, loyalty and faith. But above all it represented truth.
I took a deep breath and knocked softly on the door. The moment my knuckles touched the door, the glowing lines of the symbol rearranged themselves into figures. Those were all awful figures. There were souls writhing in agony and tortured spirits begging for mercy. For a moment I was startled, but then I comprehended what was meant by it.
It was the door to the truth but truth is the most torturous of all revelations. It comes with a heavy price – the price that has to be paid in coins of anguish and misery. I asked myself if I was really ready to pay that price. Something inside me was convinced that whatever I sought, was to be found beyond that door. I thought of the sweet face of Zahran and her magical emerald eyes. I took another deep breath and knocked again. The glowing lines extinguished abruptly like a flame snuffed between two fingers and the door went dark. I knocked for the third time.
‘Enter!’ A quavering voice commanded from beyond that door and the door opened by itself.
From the threshold, all looked dark inside. But the moment I closed the creaking door behind me, the room lighted up.
It was a small room not unlike others in the Sarai, but far more decorated and rich with hanging tapestries. The walls were covered by dark heavy folds of blue black velvet, adorned with ornate drawings and writings in gleaming silver. There was a wolf’s skin, complete with the snarling jaw and sparkling beady eyes, lying in the middle of the floor. There was a bright warm fire lit in the hearth and someone was sitting facing the fire.
It was a small hooded figure – most probably the old woman who beckoned at me from the window. She was wearing a deep purple silk gown, but the rich colour was fading fast with age. But even within the folds of fading silk, intricately woven and embroidered dragons and other mythical beasts were visible.
‘Come sit down with me.’ The woman patted the small wooden stool at her side without looking at me.
‘Who are you?’ I sat down and tried to look at her face. But it was hidden by the fall of the silk gown.
‘I am the weeping wind in the willows,
which sighs and passes into silence’
Her sing-song voice rose like a lament.
‘I am the weeping wind in the willows,
which sighs and passes into silence
I am the song of the grasshoppers,
which comes after the rains
I am the bright sun of joyous life,
which seems to shine eternally
And I am the pale moon of death,
which comes after the sun has set
I am what was and I am what is;
and what will be and what could have been
I am the riddle and I am the answer,
I am the woman in the porcelain mask.’
With the last words she looked at me and I was startled. There was no face. Under the crown of magnificent silver hair, there was an expressionless and delicate white mask of porcelain, covering all her features. She was old – of that I was sure. But how old? I had no means to assess her age.
‘I haven’t understood any of what you have said.’ I humbly confessed my failure.
‘You will understand.’ Her voice told me she was smiling underneath that mask. ‘You will understand all at the right time. Not before that and not after that – but only at the right moment.’
‘But who are you?’ I asked respectfully asked.
‘I was once a princess of the Song Dynasty. When the Mongols attacked China, I was a prized catch. Kublai Khan took one look at me and his heart surrendered to me forever. I became one of his many beloved wives. With time I learnt to overcome my hatred for the Mongols – the killers of my noble family.’
She fell silent and started prodding the dying flames. The sparks hiding beneath the ash resurfaced with a fury and the room was warm again.
‘Alas! Life is a series of sorrows separated by a few small joys. One day when I was travelling with a caravan to join my husband on one of his hunting expeditions, I was kidnapped by the Hashisheen.’
‘Hashisheen?’ I asked. The term was strange to me.
‘Yes, Hashisheen – the crazy followers of the Old Man under the Mountain. They were a fearsome lot. The Old Man, Hassan bin Sabah and his mad followers, had created a force of chaos. Theirs’ was the power of death and the instruments of death were a band of young men – all blinded by visions of heaven and hell.’ She answered without looking at me and then suddenly shivered as though the memory of some dark place was still haunting her senses.
‘Visions of heaven and hell? How did the Old Man manage that?’ I was surprised.
‘Hasheesh is a strange drug. It dulls the senses and makes you see visions in the smoke. Besides, the heaven and hell were real. I was myself one of the houris of that heaven. One look at our naked bodies and the boys were ready to kill just to have another look.’
Suddenly a wailing chant from the courtyard disturbed our conversation. It was the Shaman. The old woman stood up and went to the window. She stood there watching the shaman for a while; and then raised her right hand and said sternly:
‘Be quiet you fool. Your job is done. Go find a dark corner and rest in peace.’
With these commanding words, the Shaman stopped chanting and silence ruled the night air once again. She turned back and walked back to her place by the fire.
‘Enough about me.’ She said staring at me. ‘Now ask the questions you are seeking the answers to.’
‘Questions?’ I was startled. ‘But how do you………?’
‘Don’t be a fool. Ask the questions before the night turns into day.’ She raised her hand and silenced my query.
‘The first question………’ I scratched my chin. ‘What is God?’
‘Are you familiar with the ancient Greeks?’ She asked.
‘Yes, somewhat.’ I couldn’t grasp the tangent our conversation was following.
‘Archimedes was a famous Greek philosopher and scientist. Once when asked to launch the naval fleet, he asked the King of Syracuse to pull at a string lightly. When the King pulled that string, a great system of cleverly designed pulleys and levers moved and the whole fleet was launched in one go.
What can you not do – O’ great and wise Archimedes? The King asked in awe.
Everything can be done. Archimedes smiled. Give me a place to stand and I shall move the world.
The old woman fell silent and I looked at her expectantly.
‘Well….so?’ I asked impatiently.
‘So, Ashastû of Nishapur!’ She was smiling again. I could sense it.
‘God is the place where we have to stand in order to move the world. God is the constant in all equations. This constant has to be incorporated in order to understand the relationship between the variables. God is not biologically significant. He is philosophically relevant and rather a compulsion.’
‘So the belief in God is a must in order to understand the world?’ I asked.
‘Yes, God is the path you walk on – the only path to truth.’
‘The second question….?’ I looked at her hesitatingly and waited for her permission.
‘Yes please.’ She patted my knee with her bony hand reassuringly.
‘What is religion?’ I asked.
Hearing my question, the woman fell silent again. She again got up and walked to the window. Lightening was illuminating the distant peaks and the far-away thunder was a muffled roar. Then she turned towards me and spread her arms wide. She looked like a priestess of the heathens – her silver hair spread across the silk-clad shoulders and the white porcelain mask illuminated by the light of the flames.
‘Listen Ashastû of Nishapur, all religions are the same. I was brought up a Buddhist and was then taught Taoism . I lived amongst the Mongols and learnt of their great religion of Shamanism; and I also witnessed the conversion of Kublai Khan to Islam. Then when I was abducted by the Hashisheens, I learnt of many other religious doctrines and styles. There were Christians and Jews and even Hindus amongst us.’
‘But…’ I protested, ‘Zoroastrianism is the one true religion.’
The woman laughed and her brittle laughter shattered the stillness of the peaceful mountain night.
‘Tell me Ashastû.’ Seeing my obvious discomfort, she took pity on me. ‘Are you familiar with the story of the Angra Mainyu from your religion?’
‘Yes!’ I excitedly answered. ‘The architect of destruction, the King of all demons and noxious creatures and the opposite of Ahura Mazda.’
‘And is your Angra Mainyu any different from the Christian concept of the devil or the Islamic concept of Shaitan? Or is your Ahura Mazda any different from the Christian God, the Islamic Allah and the Jewish Ellohim?’
‘All religions are the same. They talk about similar concepts: judgment after death; free will; and heaven and hell. Man needs to believe in a higher power and higher system of judgment for his own psychological security. Man wants to commit sins with a belief in forgiveness; and wants to ward off the consequences of his actions.’
The woman fell silent leaving me trying to somehow restitch my badly tattered beliefs.
‘I am ready to answer the third question.’ The woman had very little patience for my uncomfortable silence.’
‘The third question – what are prayers?’ I asked.
‘Do you pray and are your prayers answered?’ The woman asked me.
‘Yes!’ I excitedly nodded my head. ‘Whenever I pray with a focus and I really desire something or someone, God answers my prayers.’
‘That is indeed admirable?’ She smiled at me. ‘But does God answer your prayers, when you yourself, do not move or act?’
‘No!.’ I thoughtfully replied. ‘I have to make an effort.’
‘So who answers your prayers – is it God or is it your prayers?’
‘From the perspective of faith, I would like to believe that it is God who answers my prayers. But from the perspective of reason and logic, I believe it is my efforts which make my prayers come true.’
‘I am not negating your belief in God.’ The woman patted my knee kindly. ‘What I am trying to make you see is that your own efforts are responsible for the fulfillment of your prayers.’
‘But what about God’s role then?’ I persisted.
‘Perhaps He blesses your prayers. Perhaps He gives you a push in the right direction. Or perhaps, He simply doesn’t care or perhaps He doesn’t want to interfere with the carefully-balanced system that He has created. We do not know for sure’.
A wolf howled at the moon somewhere in the valleys. I looked outside the window. The East was turning pale. Morning was approaching fast.
‘Quick!’ The woman raised her hand. ‘Ask the final question and begone.’
‘The final question?’ I was surprised. ‘There is no final question. I had only three questions and all have been answered.’
‘They weren’t your questions Ashastû. Those were the questions of your lover’s father. Search your heart. You still have a question left.’
I bent my head down and closed my eyes. I looked inwards and thought of my life. I thought of my old father and my many journeys. And I thought of the sweet face of Zahran. I knew what I wanted to ask.
‘What is love?’ I raised my head and opened my eyes slowly.
‘Yes!’ She sighed contentedly. ‘What is love?’
‘Love is not desire and love is not the destiny. Instead love is a path to knowledge.’
‘Then knowledge is the destiny?’ I asked.
‘No. There is no destiny. Knowledge comes with walking on the path. It comes with each step. Love is only the instrument to reach understanding. Once understanding comes, love’s task is done.’
I bent my head again in contemplation. The woman was strange but she was right. I tried to think of Zahran but her sweet face was fast dissolving into a sphere of light. I opened my eyes to thank the strange woman, but there was nobody there. The room was empty. Only her porcelain mask was there – placed carefully on the stool on which she was sitting.
The court of Katib Ahang was in order. He sat on his throne – the very picture of a worried father. Zahran was not fine at all. She was sure some misfortune had befallen her lover. Katib did everything to divert her attention. He arranged dark magicians from the East and exotic dancers from the West. But nothing worked.
‘Your majesty!’ Katib looked up. An old servant was standing in front of the throne, holding a small piece of parchment in his hand.
‘Yes?’ He asked.
‘A raven brought this message today. It has all the answers to the questions that you asked that Zoroastrian scholar.’
Katib eagerly grabbed the parchment and read it from top to bottom.
‘Bravo! The scholar has answered all the questions correctly and has even provided the answer to a fourth question that I never asked.’ He proclaimed loudly.
‘What is the fourth question father?’ Zahran suddenly tore open the black silk curtain and stepped outside. Her face wore a mask of anguish.
‘The fourth question is…….’ Katib read the parchment. ‘What is love?’
‘And what is the answer father?’ She asked, while rubbing together her beautiful hands in anguish.
‘Love is not desire and love is not the destiny. Instead love is a path of and to knowledge. Knowledge comes with walking on the path. It comes with each step. Love is only the instrument to reach understanding. Once understanding comes, love’s task is done.’ Katib read each word deliberately.
‘Ahh! My Ashastû is no more.’ Zahran exclaimed and fell down on the rug, clutching her delicate heart.
Hundreds of miles away from Bamiyan and the court of Katib Ahang, I opened up my eyes. It was true that Ashastû was no more. He had become the Man in the Porcelain Mask.
Deep beneath ancient Bakkah lies a secret chamber with a forgotten goddess - and the woman who guards her secret taught a heartbroken scholar why patriarchy buried the divine feminine and why wisdom requires embracing loss.
An epic narrative set in ancient Becca about Venusian, a scholar whose broken heart drives him up a mountain to seek a legendary hermit, only to discover Inanna, a warrior priestess of the forgotten goddess Ishtaar.
A wise man once said that all great quests for knowledge start with a broken heart.
The traveler was tired. He could feel and listen to each little creak in his middle-aged joints. All the creaks sang in unison, the chorus of weariness and exhaustion.
He looked around. The red sun was setting behind the pale mountains, painting the sky in shades of gold, crimson, and purple. The stars had started glimmering faintly just above the eastern horizon.
The mountain under his feet was ancient, like all other mountains - its stones witness to billions of years of sadness. He could feel it gently vibrating as if it was trying to tell him stories of the days past.
‘If only I could talk to the mountains,’ he chuckled to himself.
He checked his leather mushkeezah and greedily sucked upon the few leftover drops. The sudden chill in the air seeped into his bones, almost freezing his sweaty brow.
‘I should not have stopped,’ he thought.
He looked up. The summit was almost within reach.
‘I can reach it,’ he decided determinedly. ‘But what if I do not find the old hermit in his cave? What if he is already dead? What if he was never there in the first place?’
Then, shaking away the onslaught of negative thoughts, the traveler readjusted the load of his meager belongings on his shoulder. He strengthened his grip on the gnarled wooden staff and restarted climbing.
He was Venusian, a resident of the ancient city of Becca. As he climbed higher, he could see the city down below and thousands of twinkling lamp-lights. The city was located in a narrow valley, in the middle of the Paran Desert.
He was not of Arabian descent. His father was Procopius of Caesarea, a leading late-antique scholar from the ancient region of the Levant, and a prominent Roman historian for the Roman Emperor Justinian.
It was love that had brought him to that cold and barren mountain range, which was located just North of Becca. More appropriately, it was a broken heart that drove his tired steps. But it was not the hope of regaining lost love. Instead, it was a quest for knowledge.
Venusian did not weep when she betrayed his love. He did not beg her to stay. He just let her fade away in the distance, anxiously awaiting the first jab of cold pain.
He was not a sadist. He was just a man who knew pain brought along so many gifts within its dark fold - the gift of understanding, the gift of knowledge, and the gift of awareness. Maybe that is why the old gods made him fall in love with her.
By the time he reached the top, darkness had already set in. Venusian breathed in deeply the pure mountain air. The cold air felt warm against the coldness of his heart.
The stars glittered across the length and breadth of the ever-stretching galaxy, sparkling like spilled jewels. Towards the west, the sky was still a deep hue of purple, the farewell gift of the long departed sun. He looked around but could see nothing except dark boulders and a few dry bushes. No hermit or caves were visible.
Suddenly, he saw a dull orange glow behind a nearby boulder. He eagerly stepped ahead, but then the earth vanished beneath his tired feet. Venusian could hear himself scream and then heard the dull bang of his head hitting a small rock. The night became absolutely dark within seconds.
It seemed only moments had passed when he reopened his eyes and found himself warm and comfortable. He found himself lying on a rough bed of thistles, while a crackling fire was burning nearby.
Venusian looked up and could see a low ceiling of rough-hewn rock. Dark shadows were dancing on the ceiling, playing hide and seek with the red glow of fire.
He tried to look around, and the sudden movement brought back pain. He groaned loudly and delicately felt his head. There was an apricot-sized lump, extremely sore to touch.
‘It’s nothing but just a bruise. You are quite alright.’ A deep and almost female voice resonated around the cave.
Startled, he looked up. A woman was sitting cross-legged on the floor beside the fire, and her broad back was covered with a saffron-colored robe.
There were gold patterns on the robe. He looked at the patterns closely and identified an eight-pointed star, enclosed within a circle alongside a crescent moon, and a rayed solar disk. There were also strange words written on the robe with the same gold paint, in apparently the Babylonian or the Sumerian script. Venusian tried to sit up to examine the words and symbols, but groaned with pain again.
‘Do not move. Keep on resting. There is no reason to get up. You are safe.’ The robed back spoke again, and Venusian ceased all efforts to get up. Within minutes, he was asleep again.
He woke up to a brilliant afternoon. The sun was shining brightly, and even from inside the cave, he could catch sight of delicate, white clouds. He looked around, but there was no sign of anyone else in the cave.
He thankfully sipped from a bowl of fresh, sweet water, placed near his makeshift bed, and then got up with the assistance of his staff.
The cave was a strange place. Its rock walls were decorated with crude paintings and carvings made by people from before the dawn of civilization. There were scenes of hunting and dancing and also of birth and death, all surrounded by innumerable handprints. There were also a few rosettes drawn in gold.
There were only a few material possessions inside the cave - a rolled up bed in a corner with a few pillows and blankets, a few clay pots and earthenware, and a small collection of dry wood. But everything was arranged in an orderly fashion, and the cave looked neat and clean.
Firmly holding onto his staff, Venusian delicately put pressure on his legs. They were sore but strong. After a few moments, he grew confident and was successful in walking out of the cave.
The cave was located under a bluff, and that is why he was unable to detect it. It had a small stone platform in front. There was a large flat stone boulder on the farther end of the platform, and beyond that boulder, there was absolutely nothing - just a sheer drop of hundreds of feet.
The sun was washing the complete valley down below with a golden splendor. But Venusian had no time to look at the valley and the glittering city of Becca, visible in the far distance. Instead, his eyes were fixed on another spectacle.
A woman was sitting on the boulder and facing the valley. A grown Barbary lion cradled his massive head in her delicate lap. She was dressed in all leather, though it was unfair to call it a dress. It was more like a female battle attire in two pieces, both insufficient to cover her attractive form. Her auburn hair was blowing in the crisp mountain wind.
On hearing him approach, the lion suddenly sprang up to attention. It growled and faced him as though protecting his mistress. Venusian observed that it was a full-grown lion, which was at least four and a half hands in height, with a nose to tail length of approximately eight hands. The lion had a majestic brown-black mane, which almost touched the ground between his proudly stretched forelegs.
‘Sit down, Gala.’ The woman commanded the lion softly, without turning her head. ‘He is a friend.’
Hearing her gentle yet firm command, Gala the lion turned back and sat down on the boulder again, with his head in her lap.
After a few moments, the woman got up gracefully and faced Venusian.
He was awed by her beauty and elegance. She was tall - taller than him and was muscular. There was not an inch of fat anywhere on her finely-toned, bronze body. She had a high forehead and deep, green eyes flecked with gold. Her eyebrows arched like scimitars above her eyes, and an aquiline nose. The nose descended onto full red lips and a round chin.
Her scant leather garments were without any adornment, but there was a gold rosette-shaped pendant hanging around her lovely neck. She held a twisted knot of reeds lightly in her right hand, while the left was placed casually along the lovely curve of her hip.
‘You look perfectly alright, Venusian.’ She smiled at him.
‘How do you know my name?’ He was surprised as there was absolutely nothing in his belongings that could betray his identity.
‘Between the mighty blue sky and the patient expanse of mother earth, there is very little, which I do not know.’ She said while making a wide gesture with her well-formed arms.
Venusian shook his head. It all seemed a dream.
‘Who are you and what are you doing here?’ He asked.
‘I am Inanna of Nippur, and I choose to live here.’ She said, gesturing at the cave.
‘But….but who are you?’ He was perplexed.
‘I am a humble priestess of Ishtaar.’ She answered with a smile.
‘And Gala….?’ Venusian pointed towards the lion, who was lazily studying the birds circling high up in the sky.
‘One day, I was roaming the forests of Akkadia when a serpent attacked me.’ Inanna said with closed eyes, recalling something important from her past. ‘Gala came to my help. He attacked and killed the serpent. Since that day, he has been my staunch companion.’
‘And who is Ishtaar? Is she a goddess?’ Venusian asked. ‘It is strange that I have never heard her name.’
Instead of answering him, Inanna turned and climbed the boulder.
‘Come, join me.’ She motioned to Venusian.
He hesitatingly climbed up the boulder and stood on it alongside Inanna. They were both facing the valley, but Venusian’s efforts were more focused on avoiding stepping on the tail of the resting lion.
‘Don’t worry.’ Inanna said with a smile. ‘He knows how to take care of himself.’
Becca could be seen down below in the valley. It was a beautiful city, which was located on the lower slopes of a mountain, and lacked any defensive walls. The mud and brick houses appeared to be neatly stacked over each other. The streets looked like threads marking the boundaries of small localities and neighborhoods.
Somewhat located on the outskirts of the city, was Bakkah - a place of worship, thousands of years old. It was not a grand structure - just a small square room, built with dark stones, in the middle of a circular courtyard. Very few were allowed to go inside that room. For most of the populace and the visiting pilgrims, the small building was holy and hence, out of bounds. But Venusian had been inside that room many times.
‘What is inside Bakkah?’ Inanna asked him.
‘It is the abode of nine gods. There is Hubal, who presides over Wadd, Suwa’, Yaghuth, Ya’uq, and Nasr. Then there are also Al-Lat, Al-Uzza, and Manat.’ Venusian dutifully counted the names of the nine deities, six male and three female.
Nobody knew the origin of the deities. Some said they were brought from Egypt and India, while others considered them local.
‘Yes, the nine deities.’ Inanna smiled. ‘And what lies below Bakkah?’
‘Below Bakkah? There is nothing below it.’ Venusian was surprised. He had seen each nook and cranny of the abode of gods, but had never heard of any other place below the sacred chamber.
‘Deep down, below the chamber of Bakkah, there is another secret chamber - far more sacred and far more significant.’ Inanna said.
‘And what lies inside that chamber?’ Venusian was very curious.
‘Ishtaar lives in that chamber.’ She placed her hand lightly on Venusian’s shoulder, and he could feel a strange heat flowing from her to him.
‘Ishtaar?’ He asked, puzzled by the name.
‘Ishtaar is the most ancient of all the gods and goddesses.’ Inanna explained. ‘She is the mother who gave birth to everything. She gave birth to life, and she gave birth to death. She created knowledge, and she created wisdom for those who desired it. She created light, and she created darkness for those who chose to follow it.’
‘But why is she hidden in that chamber? Why is she not up there alongside Hubal and the other deities?’ Venusian asked, still puzzled and confused.
‘Because she is a female and not a male.’ Inanna said and looked deep into his curious eyes. ‘In the beginning, it was the woman and not the man who ruled. Women led their tribes and sat on the tribal councils. Women rode the stallions and participated in the wars. And man respected woman. He respected her for her patience, and strength, and for her wisdom, and intellect. He respected her for her power to give birth and her power to create life out of nothing. But slowly and gradually, man’s heart was corrupted and his intentions went foul.’
‘Corrupted how?’ Venusian asked.
‘He looked at the apparent frailness of women, and identified somebody who could be objectified.’ Inanna replied. ‘He looked at the immense value of women, and found an instrument to satisfy his greed and lust.’
‘What happened then?’ He asked with a growing interest.
‘When women lost their power and status, so did Ishtaar.’ Inanna answered while smiling at his impatience. ‘Ishtaar reminded men of the former glory of the women. She threatened the security of the men. So men relegated her to the deep secret chamber - hidden from the world for times to come.’
‘But why did they not destroy Ishtaar once and for all?’ Venusian asked her.
‘Because men were afraid of her power, and also because men knew she was the true holder of power.’ Inanna answered the query of his inquisitive guest.
‘Come now.’ She said and grabbed hold of his hand. ‘Enough talk of Ishtaar and the greed of men. It is time to eat. You must be hungry.’
Venusian spent many days and many nights with Inanna in her cave. Whenever they were hungry, Gala the lion hunted in the mountains and brought them fresh game. Fresh water came from a well-hidden spring in the mountain.
He learnt so much from her.
She told him of the dark skies, filled with mysterious, moving stars, and also of the treasures hidden deep beneath the earth.
She told him about the days that were, and the days that were yet to come, along with an onslaught of blood and gore.
And she made him understand desire, and the accompanying darkness, and also lust, and its dark folds of insatiable greed.
With each passing day, Venusian’s knowledge expanded, but he remained thirsty for more.
Then, one day, Inanna informed Venusian that it was the ‘Night of the Great Loss.’
‘What is the Night of the Great Loss?’ He asked her.
‘It is the celebration of the great loss, when Ishtaar lost Shukaletuda.’ Inanna replied while rubbing her bronze body with olive oil.
‘Who was Shukaletuda?’ Venusian asked as he had never heard the name before.
‘Shukaletuda was Ishtaar’s lover.’ Inanna said and looked at him. ‘He was proud and handsome and ruled the heavens with Ishtaar, by her side. They were like two souls within one body - true soulmates who together were capable of conquering the universe.’
‘Soulmates?’ Venusian asked with a smile.
‘Yes.’ Inanna smiled back at him. ‘They compensated and complemented each other’s weaknesses and strengths. Where Shukaletuda was too trusting, Ishtaar was skeptical and experienced. Where Ishtaar was too energetic and excited, Shukaletuda was patient and observant. Where Shukaletuda was too careless and forgiving, Ishtaar was careful and meticulous. And where Ishtaar was too emotionally sensitive, Shukaletuda was comforting and loving.’
‘If their love and bond were so strong, how did they lose each other? Venusian asked Inanna.
‘They started walking the path to loss when Ishtaar became insecure, and her insecurities corrupted her love with Shukaletuda.’ She replied sadly. ‘She started searching for security, but couldn’t find it within her heart. Then one night, to find the solution to her problem, she bowed down to the Lord of the Underworld of Gilgamesh.’
‘What is the Underworld of Gilgamesh?’ He asked while sensing the darkness that came with the name.
‘It is the world of dust and ashes, ruled by evil and darkness.’ Inanna answered with a shudder. ‘When Ishtaar bowed down, the Universal Consciousness got angry with her and decreed that she be limited to the confines of the earth, while Shukaletuda was bound to the heavens. That night is called the Night of the Great Loss.’
‘Universal consciousness? What is that?’ Inanna’s words were adding scores to Venusian’s knowledge.
‘Universal Consciousness is the one true God. It has always been the one true God, and it will always be the one true God.’ She explained with a smile, while brushing her dark tresses.
Thus came the Night of the Great Loss. There was a bright, full moon in the dark, blue-black sky, and all was silent. It was beautiful, but a strange heaviness could be felt in the night air. Venusian had all his senses on alert. His senses were telling him that something significant was about to happen.
Inanna sensed his anxiety and smiled kindly. She prepared an aromatic potion of herbs and made him drink it. The potion had a heady fragrance and a thick taste. It calmed Venusian’s nerves and relaxed his body.
Inanna was robed in saffron again and was fiddling with a metal contraption. It was an eight-pronged frame with a small receptacle at the end of each prong. She carefully placed the fat of some animal in each receptacle and laced it with yellow phosphorus.
Suddenly, Venusian could hear strange music. It was emanating from nowhere in particular. There were heavy drum beats, and also some wooden stringed instruments - weeping in unison. The symphony was strange and reminded him of his lost love.
Inanna started gyrating to the music and then abruptly removed her robe and threw it aside. Her bronze and oiled body gleamed like polished marble in the pale moonlight. She picked up the metal frame and started dancing again. Her movements became faster with each passing moment. As the phosphorous came into contact with air, it first gave off a few random sparks, and then, one by one, each small receptacle burst into flame.
Venusian sat entranced. He intently watched Inanna, dancing and romancing the fire. She twisted and turned in flowing movements, and the mountain danced with her. The burning receptacles drew circles of light in the darkness. Slowly and gradually, Inanna became the nucleus while the receptacles rotated around her in their respective burning orbits.
Inanna kept singing, and Venusian kept listening to her words, floating with the mysterious music. Then, intoxicated, he got up and joined Inanna. They both danced until fatigue overcame their exhausted bodies, and they fell on the platform in each other’s arms.
When Venusian got up the next morning, Inanna had long gone with all her meager belongings.
He cried her name and roamed the mountain slopes, but there was no trace of her. He searched each nook and each crevice behind each rock, but she couldn’t be found. And finally, one day, losing all hope of ever finding Inanna again, Venusian returned to Becca.
‘Tell me, O wise and sacred one, is there a secret chamber deep beneath the Bakkah?’ Venusian asked the Chief Priest of Bakkah.
‘Why do you ask, my son? What is it that you seek?’ The Priest was surprised. It had been ages since he had been asked about the existence of the secret chamber.
‘I have had the strangest of dreams.’ Venusian had no intention of telling the Priest about Inanna. ‘I dreamt that I descended into a deep chamber beneath the Bakkah, and found a goddess there.’
‘And what will you give me if I take you to that chamber?’ The Priest asked with greed sparkling in his old eyes like a blue sapphire.
‘Anything you want, O wise one.’ Venusian humbly bowed and replied.
A secret deal was struck between the two, and one night the Priest led Venusian to Bakkah. He opened up the old brass lock with a heavily engraved and complicated key and took him inside.
When an oil lamp was lighted by the Priest, Venusian could see all the nine deities, standing silently in their respective nooks within the wall. The Priest reached behind the effigy of Hubal. He operated some secret mechanism, and a secret trap door opened up right in the middle of the floor. Stairs could be seen, descending into unending darkness.
Venusian descended the stairs, led by the Priest, who was holding the oil lamp high in his hand. Venusian tried to count the stairs but lost track after one thousand, and still they kept on descending into the bowels of the earth. Finally, they reached an ancient door.
It was a strange door - half gold and half silver, and intricately engraved. The golden half depicted a terrible place full of demons and misery, while the silver one was rich with scenes of peace and tranquility.
The Priest operated a few levers, muttered some unintelligible words under his breath, and the door silently swung open. He entered and lighted a few lamps, and then called the younger man inside. Venusian took a deep breath and entered the chamber.
The chamber was a large room, almost fifty hands in width and a hundred in length. There was a marble-covered walkway in the center, which led from the door to the farthest end of the room, while on both sides of the walkway, there was a pond of black water. Strangely, the water in the pond was not stagnant, and a faint aroma of herbs and spices rose from its surface.
At the very end of the walkway, there was a raised platform, and on that platform, on a stone throne, there sat a life-sized effigy of a woman. Venusian walked up to the effigy and smiled at the familiar features. It was a life-like stone statue of Inanna. He kissed the statue’s cold lips and then sat down, lost in meditation for the next few hours.
On the way back to the surface, the Priest was startled to hear Venusian singing. He tried to focus on his words:
It is a story of times long gone by. It is a story from ancient Egypt – long before the time of the Pharaohs. In those times, man still worshipped the old gods. The new God came long after. One could say that man was still exploring and conceiving the idea of God. It is a strange story – a story of souls meeting across the thresholds of time and space.