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The story of the apple – Part I

By Afis Oladosu
28 June 2019   |   3:08 am
“There was certainly in their stories a lesson for those of understanding...” Quran 12:111 Brethren, at a time when ideals and virtues appear to be in short supply, the following story from Arab-Islamic annals might provide some succour to us all. It is said that there once lived a pious young man who tried to…

Apple could then be seen as a metaphor for the forbidden and the unlawful – stealing, fornication, adultery and murder among others.

“There was certainly in their stories a lesson for those of understanding…” Quran 12:111

Brethren, at a time when ideals and virtues appear to be in short supply, the following story from Arab-Islamic annals might provide some succour to us all. It is said that there once lived a pious young man who tried to acquire knowledge. He dedicated all his time to this cause and ensured he excelled in his field.

The story says that one day, he left his home due to extreme hunger. He eventually found a garden that was full of apple trees. One of the trees had a few of its branches hanging outside the fence on the roadside.

The young man then stood and began to contemplate the fruits on the tree. He stood face to face with the object of his desire. He stood like we always do whenever we find ourselves in a space where we are alone with the forbidden under the watchful eyes of the Almighty!

Then he heard a voice saying: “Go on, eat one of the apples…after all it’s only ‘one’ apple…the garden wouldn’t be affected by the absence of one apple…’ But just before he plucked one of the apples, he heard another voice saying: “those apples do not belong to you. If you pluck one of them without the permission of its owner, you would become a sinner, a thief”!

You can imagine the dilemma the young man must have found himself in; that type of dilemma we always find ourselves in whenever we set out to commit infractions against the will of the Almighty. Ibn Qayyim was once asked to describe the worst person in the sight of the Almighty. ‘The worst person in the sight of the Almighty’, Ibn Qayyim responded, “is he who knows the boundaries set by the Almighty and still goes ahead to commit sins against him”.

Brethren, the young man whose story caught my attention today eventually, after much vacillations and contemplation, plucked one apple from the tree and ate it. The human in him took hold of him; like Prophet Adam (a.s) in the garden of paradise, he ate the forbidden fruit and now stood face-to- face with the repercussions.

The apple could then be seen as a metaphor for the forbidden and the unlawful – stealing, fornication, adultery and murder among others. Hardly would a sin be committed without the sinner ‘hearing’ those two voices- the first, that of the devil, goading him on to commit the infraction; the second that of the reprobative soul, seeking to rescue him from descent into the abyss of iniquity.

Thus not long after the young man had eaten the apple, the reprobative soul, that entity in humans that lampoons us each time we descend below our destiny in the cosmos started to upbraid the young man for his conduct. He asked himself: “how could I have done what I just did? How could I have eaten that apple? How did I get the courage to take from someone else’s wealth and possession without his permission?

As soon as the day broke the following morning, he decided to seek the owner of the apples in order to seek his forgiveness for his infraction.

When he eventually found the man, the young man narrated his story; the story of hunger and how he was driven by necessity to take one apple from the garden of the man. He concluded by saying: “I have come to ask for your forgiveness, for taking that apple from your garden”. But the owner of the garden declaimed the young man’s action. He said: “By His name! I will not forgive you. I will remain angry with you until the Day of Judgement, where I will complain to the Almighty about you.”

Thus the young man found himself in dire situation. He began to plead with the owner of the garden to forgive his action. He even told the man that he was ready to atone for his sin by whatever action the man may demand from him. When the owner of the garden left for his home, the young man followed him on his heels, pleading and begging perchance he might change his mind. Eventually the owner garden arrived his own home, entered his house and then closed the door. Instead of leaving the man’s house, the young man decided to remain at his doorstep. When it was time for prayers, the owner of the garden stepped out of his house and was surprised that the young man was still at the doorstep, crying and in apparent state of remorsefulness for his action. Looking at the man straight in the eyes, the young man said once again: “Sir, I am ready to work in your garden, without a salary, for my whole life….I’ll do anything you may want me to do provided that you forgive me”. At that moment, the garden owner stopped, took pity on the young man, then said, “Son, I am ready to forgive you, but on one condition….” The young man, thrilled at the gesture, replied, “Give me any condition you wish, Sir”.

The owner replied, “My only condition is that you marry my daughter”. The young man was taken aback, totally shocked and bewildered. But the owner of the garden continued: “But son… you must know that my daughter is blind, deaf and unable to talk. She does not walk either. For a long time now, I have been searching for a husband for her; someone I can trust to take care of her and accept her as she is, with all the features I mentioned to you. I will forgive you, only if you accept to marry her”.
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