A poem about religions and the concept of a religion's holy property. |
I On a desert’s burning sands, a child who has no people, one who was orphaned long ago, sits, surviving on fruit that grows from a mound of sand and water left for her from three different peoples. She is the sole life on this piece of earth, growing where nothing else can grow. Her life here began from the suffering of the three peoples whose water she lives on. These people’s suffering started with an orchid that grew alone in this desert, rising towards the sun for the sustenance of light. The three different peoples surrounded the desert, each one believing themselves sacred to a certain element. At sunrise, a man of the people of the Star crossed the sand and saw the orchid growing, where nothing else can grow and said “In this orchid, this sole life within this desert, I can see my people’s Star. Its design can be seen outlined within the plant’s roots. For this reason, it is sacred to my people and therefore, I will praise it.” And the man watered the flower’s roots to help it to survive. At noon, a woman of the people of the Sacrifice crossed the sand and saw the orchid growing, where nothing else can grow and said “In this orchid, this sole life within this desert, I can see the color of the blood of my people’s Sacrifice. Its shade can be seen within the plant’s petals. For this reason, it is sacred to my people and therefore, I will praise it.” And the woman watered the flower’s petals to help it to survive. At dusk, an elder of the people of the Moon crossed the sand and saw the orchid growing, where nothing else can grow and said “In this orchid, this sole life within this desert, I can see my people’s Moon. Its shape can be seen within the bud of the plant. For this reason, it is sacred to my people and therefore, I will praise it.” And the elder watered the flower’s bud to help it to survive. II Each person of each faith told their people of the flower and how it represented their worshipped element. All the three peoples decided that they should go and make a holy pilgrimage to the orchid. The journey of each one was planned for sunrise on the same day. And so, all of the peoples crossed the desert, and did not stop walking, even for water, till they reached the orchid. All water was to be offered to the holy orchid in praise. Once they came to the plant, they formed a trinity of peoples and elements. Realizing that there were other peoples that they had not known existed, they questioned each other’s presence at this flower. “We are here,” said the man from the people of the Star, “because this orchid is sacred to us. Our Star’s design can clearly be seen within the flower’s roots.” “It is not sacred to you,” said the woman from the people of the Sacrifice, “It is sacred to us. The shade of our Sacrifice’s blood can clearly be seen within the color of the flower’s petals.” “You are both wrong,” said the elder from the people of the Moon, “The orchid is only sacred to us. Our Moon’s shape can clearly be seen with the flower’s bud.” And so, the peoples continued to argue of who the plant was sacred to and who was worthy to praise it. Their arguments turned into fights, fights became battles, battles grew into wars, and they began to neglect the holy orchid. For three days the peoples suffered amongst each other, causing the flower to also suffer, and finally the plant, the sole life that used to exist within this desert, died and no one noticed. III As the peoples battled, the child who lives here now, crossed the sands, entering the desert for her first time, saw the dead orchid and said, “In this orchid, I can see the suffering of all the peoples. The tragedy of their suffering can clearly be seen within its death. For this reason, it is sacred to all.” The fighting halted abruptly. Everyone had heard the child, and everyone now saw that the once holy plant was dead. The child picked the flower from the burning earth, soaked it within the water of each of the peoples, and then buried it under the ground. All of the peoples went back to their own land, leaving the child to live in the desert, surviving on the rest of their water, and the fruit which was born from the orchid’s death. She is now the sole life in this desert, growing where nothing else can grow. She remains here as a reminder that nothing is sacred to just one, but that everything is sacred to all. |