بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ
“Whatever blessing you have is from Allah.”
Sūrat an-Naḥl 16:53
There is an old darkly funny story from the Khyber.
It is not a story to build belief upon. It is one of those sharp teaching stories that makes us laugh first, then become uncomfortable a moment later.
A saintly man once came into the lands of a tribe.
He was a holy man. A traveller. A man of prayer. A man whose presence seemed to carry barakah.
When he arrived, the village changed.
The sick felt lighter. The anxious slept better. The quarrels became fewer. The goats gave milk. The traders returned smiling. The children stopped throwing stones at each other for almost half a day, which everyone agreed was close to a miracle.
People began to say:
“This man has brought blessing.”
The women sent food. The elders visited him. The children stared at him. The men who had never prayed in the first row suddenly remembered that the first row existed. Even the dishonest people became honest for a little while.
Not completely honest. But honest enough to surprise their neighbours.
And the village was pleased.
Then one day the saint said: “I must go.”
The village became silent. “Go?” they said.
“Yes,” he said. “I am a traveller. I must continue.”
The elders gathered. This was a serious matter.
They had received blessing, and now the blessing was walking away on two feet.
One elder said, “Perhaps we should ask him to stay.” Another said, “We already did.” A third said, “Perhaps we should offer him more food.” A fourth said, “We already fed him until he began to look afraid.”
Then a practical man spoke. There is always one practical man in every village. Sometimes he is useful. Sometimes he is the beginning of a disaster.
He said, “If he leaves, the blessing leaves.”
The elders nodded. This sounded reasonable.
Then he said, “But if he does not leave, the blessing remains.”
The elders nodded again. This also sounded reasonable.
Then he said the sentence that should have made everyone pause, make wudu, pray two rakʿah, and seek refuge from Shaytan.
He said:
“What if we keep him here permanently?”
There was a silence. Not the silence of wisdom. The silence of men doing arithmetic with their nafs.
Another elder said, “Also, we do not have a proper shrine.”
This was true.
Other tribes had shrines. A shrine gave dignity. A shrine gave identity. A shrine gave people a place to swear oaths. This was especially useful for people whose ordinary promises were not always believed.
If a man said, “I promise,” people might laugh. But if he said, “I swear by the saint buried in our land,” people became more careful.
A shrine was not only spiritual capital. It was social capital. And, someone added quietly, it was also good for business.
Pilgrims would come. Travellers would stop. Offerings would be made. Food would be sold. Animals would be tied nearby. Stories would spread.
A village with a saint was not like an ordinary village. A village with a saint had weight.
The elders looked at each other. Then they looked at the saint. Then they looked at the future shrine.
The saint, who had spent his life reminding people that all blessing comes from Allah, was now being discussed as though he were a useful piece of land.
So they honoured him. They fed him. They praised him. They told him how much they loved him. Then, according to the dark version of the story, they killed him.
And they buried him. And they built a shrine.
Now the blessing would remain.
This was their thinking. They had solved the problem. The saint could no longer leave. The village now had barakah, a place for oaths, a reason for pilgrims to visit, and a small business plan.
The Terrible Joke
The story is funny because it is so foolish. But it is terrible because it is not only foolish.
It is familiar.
A people receive a blessing. Then they want to own it.
They do not ask: How do we become worthy of this blessing?
They ask: How do we keep control of it?
They do not say: This blessing came from Allah, so let us become more grateful, more truthful, more humble, more clean in our dealings, more careful with our tongues, more sincere in our worship.
They say: Where can we build the shrine?
The saint came to remind them of Allah. They turned him into a possession.
He came as a sign. They turned the sign into property.
He came to soften hearts. They used him to strengthen reputation.
He came with barakah. They used the barakah as a village asset.
And this is the oldest mistake.
We love the gift, but forget the Giver.
What Did They Want?
They wanted blessing. That is understandable. Who does not want blessing?
A home with sakinah. Children with adab. Food with enoughness. Work with honesty. Friendship without jealousy. Knowledge without pride. Worship without show. A school with light. A community with trust.
These are blessings.
But blessing cannot be trapped. It cannot be locked in a room. It cannot be buried under a dome. It cannot be forced to stay by fear, control, image, or violence.
Barakah is not magic attached to objects. Barakah is a gift from Allah.
Sometimes Allah places it around certain people. Sometimes around certain places. Sometimes around certain times. Sometimes around certain actions.
But the blessing is still from Allah.
وَمَا بِكُم مِّن نِّعْمَةٍ فَمِنَ ٱللَّهِ
Whatever blessing you have is from Allah.
So the question is not: How do I trap the blessing?
The question is: What kind of person receives blessing and does not corrupt it?
The Shrine for Oaths
There is another layer in the story. The people did not only want blessing. They wanted a shrine by which to swear oaths.
This is even more revealing.
When a community loses trust, it begins to need stronger and stronger signs. A truthful person does not need many oaths. His life speaks before his mouth speaks. But when words become cheap, people start asking for proof.
“Swear.” “Swear by Allah.” “Swear by the saint.” “Swear by the shrine.” “Swear by the grave.” “Swear by everything sacred, because I no longer trust your ordinary sentence.”
This is a sad condition.
The real problem was not that they lacked a shrine. The real problem was that they lacked truthfulness. But it is easier to build a shrine than to rebuild character. It is easier to decorate a grave than to discipline the tongue. It is easier to make a sacred place than to become a trustworthy people. So they solved the wrong problem.
They did not become truthful.
They created a place to make their untruth sound heavier.
Good for Business
Then there is the final little ugliness. The shrine would be good for business.
This part makes us smile because it is so human.
Even in religion, the nafs asks:
Will there be visitors? Will there be influence? Will there be donations? Will this make our village known? Will this increase our standing? Can holiness be useful?
The nafs can turn anything into trade.
Knowledge can become trade. Spirituality can become trade. Service can become trade. Education can become trade. Even humility can become trade, if we perform it for admiration.
This does not mean business is wrong.
Trade can be clean. Hospitality can be clean. Institutions need resources. Schools need budgets. Communities need organisation.
But when the sacred is used mainly for gain, something becomes crooked.
The shrine may stand.
The heart may fall.
In a School
This story belongs in education too.
A school may receive a blessing.
A good teacher comes. A child begins to heal. A class becomes calmer. A new practice brings life. A rhythm works. A prayer softens the day. A garden changes the children. A craft brings the hands back to attention. A story opens the heart.
Then the school becomes afraid.
What if the teacher leaves? What if the practice changes? What if the form disappears? What if we lose what made us special?
This fear is understandable. But fear can make us foolish.
We may try to trap the blessing in a system.
Or in one person. Or in a timetable. Or in a brand. Or in a method. Or in a building. Or in a sentence we repeat until it no longer has life.
But the blessing was never only in the form. The blessing was in sincerity.
In adab. In attention. In love. In truthfulness. In service. In the hidden prayer before the visible work.
If we keep the form and lose the heart, we have built a shrine and lost the saint.
In a Community
A community can also do this. It may receive a person of wisdom. At first, people benefit.
They listen. They change. They become gentler. They remember Allah.
Then slowly they begin to possess the person.
They say: “He is ours.” “Our scholar.” “Our teacher.” “Our elder.” “Our saint.”
Then they become jealous when others benefit from him. They become angry when he corrects them. They become frightened when he travels. They would rather keep him small and near than let his service be wide.
This is another way of killing the saint.
Not with a knife.
With ownership. With expectation. With control. With praise that becomes a cage.
A living teacher can be buried under people’s need. A living blessing can be suffocated by the hands that claim to love it.
The Lesson
The villagers thought the saint brought blessing. Perhaps he did. But they misunderstood the blessing.
The blessing was not that a holy man had entered their land. The blessing was that Allah had sent them a reminder.
A reminder to become truthful. A reminder to become grateful. A reminder to become people whose words could be trusted without needing stones, tombs, and dramatic oaths. A reminder that barakah comes from Allah and returns to Allah.
But they wanted the reminder without the change. So they kept the body and lost the meaning.
This is the danger.
To keep the object and lose the adab. To keep the building and lose the worship. To keep the name and lose the truth. To keep the story and lose the warning. To keep the shrine and lose the saint.
Closing Reflection
Perhaps the question is not: Where is the blessing?
Perhaps the question is: What do I do when Allah sends me a blessing?
Do I receive it with gratitude? Or do I try to own it?
Do I let it change me? Or do I turn it into my identity?
Do I become more truthful? Or do I use sacred things to cover my lack of truth?
Do I become more generous? Or do I calculate how the blessing can serve my name, my group, my project, my business?
A blessing is a trust. And a trust can be betrayed even while we are praising it. The villagers of the story did not hate the saint.
That is what makes the story scary.
They loved him wrongly. They loved the blessing more than truth. They loved the shrine more than the soul. They loved usefulness more than adab.
So they made a grave.
And perhaps people came. Perhaps candles were lit. Perhaps oaths were sworn. Perhaps trade improved. Perhaps the village became known.
But somewhere in the unseen account, the question remained:
Did the blessing stay? Or did only the building remain?
Ya Allah, do not let us trap what You sent to free us.
Do not let us possess what You sent as a trust.
Do not let us use sacred things to hide crooked hearts.
Make us people of gratitude.
People of truth. People whose oaths are not decorations. People whose word has weight because the heart has taqwa.
And when You send blessing into our lives, let us not ask only how to keep it.
Let us ask how to become worthy of it.
Āmīn.
Source note
This story is adapted from the old frontier anecdote of the Ziarat of Gurgurra, associated with the Zakha Khel Afridis of the Khyber region. In Sir Robert Warburton’s 1900 account, the shrine is described as a contested local story: a saintly Kaka Khel man entered Zakha Khel territory, and the dark tale says they killed him and buried him so his tomb could become a shrine and a place by which they could swear oaths. Warburton also records that Zakha Khel chiefs denied this version and said the man died after being attacked by raiders, so it is best treated as a teaching story, not established history.