She's
my
Sister
A
true
story
translated
by
Muhammad
Alshareef
Her
cheeks
were
worn
and
sunken
and
her
skin
hugged
her
bones.
That
didn't
stop
her
though,
you
could
never
catch
her
not
reciting
Qur'an.
Always
vigil
in
her
personal
prayer
room
Dad
had
set
up
for
her.
Bowing,
prostrating,
raising
her
hands
in
prayer.
That
was
the
way
she
was
from
dawn
to
sunset
and
back
again,
boredom
was
for
others.
As
for
me
I
craved
nothing
more
than
fashion
magazines
and
novels.
treated
myself
all
the
time
to
videos
until
those
trips
to
the
rental
place
became
my
trademark.
As
they
say,
when
something
becomes
habit
people
tend
to
distinguish
you
by
it.
I
was
negligent
in
my
responsibilities
and
laziness
characterized
my
Salah.
One
night,
I
turned
the
video
off
after
a
marathon
three
hours
of
watching.
The
adhan
softly
rose
in
that
quiet
night.
I
slipped
peacefully
into
my
blanket.
Her
voice
carried
from
her
prayer
room.
"Yes?
Would
you
like
anything
Noorah?"
With
a
sharp
needle
she
popped
my
plans.
`Don't
sleep
before
you
pray
Fajr!'
"Agh
...
there's
still
an
hour
before
Fajr,
that
was
only
the
first
Adhaan!"
With
those
loving
pinches
of
hers,
she
called
me
closer.
She
was
always
like
that,
even
before
the
fierce
sickness
shook
her
spirit
and
shut
her
in
bed.
`Hanan
can
you
come
sit
beside
me.'
I
could
never
refuse
any
of
her
requests,
you
could
touch
the
purity
and
sincerity.
"Yes, Noorah?"
`Please sit here.'
"OK, I'm sitting. What's on your mind?"
With the sweetest mono voice she began reciting:
[Every soul shall taste death and you will merely be repaid your earnings on Resurrection Day]
She
stopped
thoughtfully.
Then
she
asked,
`Do
you
believe
in
death?'
"Of
course
I
do."
`Do
you
believe
that
you
shall
be
responsible
for
whatever
you
do,
regardless
of
how
small
or
large?'
"I
do,
but
Allah
is
Forgiving
and
Merciful
and
I've
got
a
long
life
waiting
for
me."
`Stop
it
Hanan
...
aren't
you
afraid
of
death
and
it's
abruptness?
Look
at
Hind.
She
was
younger
than
you
but
she
died
in
a
car
accident.
So
did
so
and
so,
and
so
and
so.
Death
is
age-blind
and
your
age
could
never
be
a
measure
of
when
you
shall
die.'
The
darkness
of
the
room
filled
my
skin
with
fear.
"I'm
scared
of
the
dark
and
now
you
made
me
scared
of
death,
how
am
I
supposed
to
go
to
sleep
now.
Noorah,
I
thought
you
promised
you'd
go
with
us
on
vacation
during
the
summer
break."
Impact.
Her
voice
broke
and
her
heart
quivered.
`I
might
be
going
on
a
long
trip
this
year
Hanan,
but
somewhere
else.
Just
maybe.
All
of
our
lives
are
in
Allah's
hands
and
we
all
belong
to
Him.'
My
eyes
welled
and
the
tears
slipped
down
both
cheeks.
I
pondered
my
sisters
grizzly
sickness,
how
the
doctors
had
informed
my
father
privately
that
there
was
not
much
hope
that
Noorah
was
going
to
outlive
the
disease.
She
wasn't
told
though.
Who
hinted
to
her?
Or
was
it
that
she
could
sense
the
truth.
`What
are
you
thinking
about
Hanan?'
Her
voice
was
sharp.
`Do
you
think
I
am
just
saying
this
because
I
am
sick?
Uh
-
uh.
In
fact,
I
may
live
longer
than
people
who
are
not
sick.
And
you
Hanan,
how
long
are
you
going
to
live?
Twenty
years,
maybe?
Forty?
Then
what?'
Through
the
dark
she
reached
for
my
hand
and
squeezed
gently.
`There's
no
difference
between
us;
we're
all
going
to
leave
this
world
to
live
in
Paradise
or
agonize
in
Hell.
Listen
to
the
words
of
Allah:
[Anyone
who
is
pushed
away
from
the
Fire
and
shown
into
Jannah
will
have
triumphed.]
I
left
my
sister's
room
dazed,
her
words
ringing
in
my
ears:
May
Allah
guide
you
Hanan
-
don't
forget
your
prayer.
Eight
O'clock
in
the
morning.
Pounding
on
my
door.
I
don't
usually
wake
up
at
this
time.
Crying.
Confusion.
O
Allah,
what
happened?
Noorahs
condition
became
critical
after
Fajr,
they
took
her
immediately
to
the
hospital
...
Inna
lillahi
wa
inna
ilayhi
raji`un.
There
wasn't
going
to
be
any
trips
this
summer.
It
was
written
that
I
would
spend
the
summer
at
home.
After
an
eternity...
It
was
one
O'clock
in
the
afternoon.
Mother
phoned
the
hospital.
`Yes.
You
can
come
and
see
her
now.'
Dad's
voice
had
changed,
mother
could
sense
something
had
gone
deathly
wrong.
We
left
immediately.
Where
was
that
avenue
I
used
to
travel
and
thought
was
so
short?
Why
was
it
so
long
now,
so
very
long.
Where
was
the
cherished
crowd
and
traffic
that
would
give
me
a
chance
to
gaze
left
and
right.
Everyone,
just
move
out
of
our
way.
Mother
was
shaking
her
head
in
her
hands
-
crying
-
as
she
made
dua'
for
her
Noorah.
We
arrived
at
the
hospitals
main
entrance.
One
man
was
moaning,
another
was
involved
in
an
accident
and
a
third's
eyes
were
iced,
you
couldn't
tell
if
he
was
alive
or
dead.
We
skipped
stairs
to
Noorahs
floor.
She
was
in
intensive
care.
The
nurse
approached
us.
`Let
me
take
you
to
her.'
As
we
walked
down
the
aisles
the
nurse
went
on
expressing
how
sweet
a
girl
Noorah
was.
She
reassured
Mother
somewhat
that
Noorah's
condition
had
gotten
better
than
what
it
was
in
the
morning.
`Sorry.
No
more
than
one
visitor
at
a
time.'
This
was
the
intensive
care
unit.
Through
the
small
window
in
the
door
and
past
the
flurry
of
white
robes
I
caught
my
sisters
eyes.
Mother
was
standing
beside
her.
After
two
minutes,
mother
came
out
unable
to
control
her
crying.
`You
may
enter
and
say
Salam
to
her
on
condition
that
you
do
not
speak
too
long,'
they
told
me.
`Two
minutes
should
be
enough.'
"How
are
you
Noorah?
You
were
fine
last
night
sister,
what
happened?"
We
held
hands,
she
squeezed
harmlessly.
`Even
now,
Alhamdulillah,
I'm
doing
fine.'
"Alhamdulillah
...
but
...
your
hands
are
so
cold."
I
sat
on
her
bedside
and
rested
my
fingers
on
her
knee.
She
jerked
it
away.
"Sorry
...
did
I
hurt
you?"
"No,
it
is
just
that
I
remembered
Allah's
words
[One
leg
will
be
wrapped
to
the
other
leg
(in
the
death
shroud)]
...
Hanan
pray
for
me.
I
may
be
meeting
the
first
day
of
the
hearafter
very
soon.
It
is
a
long
journey
and
I
haven't
prepared
enough
good
deeds
in
my
suitcase.'
A
tear
escaped
my
eye
and
ran
down
my
cheek
at
her
words.
I
cried
and
she
joined
me.
The
room
blurred
away
and
left
us
-
two
sisters
-to
cry
together.
Rivulets
of
tears
splashed
down
on
my
sister's
palm
which
I
held
with
both
hands.
Dad
was
now
becoming
more
worried
about
me.
I've
never
cried
like
that
before.
At
home
and
upstairs
in
my
room,
I
watched
the
sun
pass
away
with
a
sorrowful
day.
Silence
mingled
in
our
corridors.
A
cousin
came
in
my
room,
another.
The
visitors
were
many
and
all
the
voices
from
downstairs
stirred
together.
Only
one
thing
was
clear
at
that
point
...
Noorah
had
died!
I
stopped
distinguishing
who
came
and
who
went.
I
couldn't
remember
what
they
said.
O
Allah,
where
was
I?
What
was
going
on?
I
couldn't
even
cry
anymore.
Later
that
week
they
told
me
what
had
happened.
Dad
had
taken
my
hand
to
say
goodbye
to
my
sister
for
the
last
time,
I
had
kissed
Noorah's
head.
I
remember
only
one
thing
though,
seeing
her
spread
on
that
bed,
the
bed
that
she
was
going
to
die
on.
I
remembered
the
verse
she
recited:
[One
leg
will
be
wrapped
to
the
other
leg
(in
the
death
shroud)]
and
I
knew
too
well
the
truth
of
the
next
verse:
[The
drive
on
that
day
we
be
to
your
Lord
(Allah)!]
I
tiptoed
into
her
prayer
room
that
night.
Staring
at
the
quiet
dressers
and
silenced
mirrors,
I
treasured
who
it
was
that
had
shared
my
mother's
stomach
with
me.
Noorah
was
my
twin
sister.
I
remembered
who
I
had
swapped
sorrows
with.
Who
had
comforted
my
rainy
days.
I
remembered
who
had
prayed
for
my
guidance
and
who
had
spent
so
many
tears
for
so
many
long
nights
telling
me
about
death
and
accountability.
May
Allah
save
us
all.
Tonight
is
Noorah's
first
night
that
she
shall
spend
in
her
tomb.
O
Allah,
have
mercy
on
her
and
illumine
her
grave.
This
was
her
Qur'an,
her
prayer
mat
and
and
this
was
the
spring
rose-colored
dress
that
she
told
me
she
would
hide
until
she
got
married,
the
dress
she
wanted
to
keep
just
for
her
husband.
I
remembered
my
sister
and
cried
over
all
the
days
that
I
had
lost.
I
prayed
to
Allah
to
have
mercy
on
me,
accept
me
and
forgive
me.
I
prayed
to
Allah
to
keep
her
firm
in
her
grave
as
she
always
liked
to
mention
in
her
supplications.
At
that
moment,
I
stopped.
I
asked
myself:
what
if
it
was
I
who
had
died?
Where
would
I
be
moving
on
to?
Fear
pressed
me
and
the
tears
began
all
over
again.
Allahu
Akbar,
Allahu
Akbar...
The
first
adhan
rose
softly
from
the
Masjid,
how
beautiful
it
sounded
this
time.
I
felt
calm
and
relaxed
as
I
repeated
the
Muadhdhins
call.
I
wrapped
the
shawl
around
my
shoulders
and
stood
to
pray
Fajr.
I
prayed
as
if
it
was
my
last
prayer,
a
farewell
prayer,
just
like
Noorah
had
done
yesterday.
It
had
been
her
last
Fajr.
Now
and
in
sha'
Allah
for
the
rest
of
my
life,
if
I
awake
in
the
mornings
I
do
not
count
on
being
alive
by
evening,
and
in
the
evening
I
do
not
count
on
being
alive
by
morning.
We
are
all
going
on
Noorah's
journey
-
what
have
we
prepared
for
it?
"Allah
is
the
Light
of
the
heavens
and
the
earth.
The
parable
of
His
Light
is
as
a
niche
and
within
a
lamp:the
lamp
is
in
a
glass,
the
glass
as
it
were
a
brilliant
star,lite
from
a
blessed
tree,an
olive,neither
from
the
east
nor
the
west
,
whose
oil
would
almost
glow
forth,
though
no
fire
touched
it.
Light
upon
Light!
Allah
guides
to
His
Light
whom
He
wills.
And
Allah
sets
forth
parables
for
mankind,
and
Allah
is
All-Knower
of
everything."{Quran
24:35}<>