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Click 4 Freedom is a blog set up to help the people defense force and refugees in Karenni State.
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The Fisherman and the Jinni
The Fisherman and the Jinni
There is an old, poor fisherman who casts his net exactly
four times a day. One day he goes to the shore and casts his net. First he
catches a dead donkey, then a pitcher full of dirt, then shards of pottery and
glass. On his fourth and final try, he calls upon the name of God and casts his
net. When he pulls it up he finds a copper jar with a cap that had the seal of
Solomon on it. The fisherman is overjoyed, since he could sell the jar for
money. He is curious of what is inside the jar, and removes the cap with his
knife. A plume of smoke comes out of the jar and condenses into an Ifrit (a
more powerful, malevolent jinni). The fisherman is frightened, although
initially the jinni does not notice him. The jinni thinks that Solomon has come
to kill him. When the fisherman tells him that Solomon had been dead for many
centuries, the Jinni is overjoyed and grants the fisherman a choice of the
manner of his death.
The king recounts the tale of king Sindbad who accidentally
killed his own falcon that was attempting to save him from being poisoned by
vipers while the vizier recounts the story of a vizier who carelessly goaded a
prince into almost getting eaten by a ghula during a hunting trip.
The stories are recited but eventually the king is won over
to the vizier's side. The king tells Duban he will kill him and Duban says that
after he is beheaded, the king must read from a special book to his head and he
will hear the head speak. The king is amazed at this and Duban is prepared and
executed as was chosen by the king. Duban is beheaded and the king licks his
fingers and turns the pages of the book open to find nothing there. The book
was poisoned and the king dies. The head tells him that had he been grateful to
Duban then God would have spared him, but since he hadn't spared him, then God
wouldn't spare the king either.
His wife spent the next three years in mourning and built a
tomb for her still living lover. The prince put up with this for a while but
eventually had enough and yelled at her that the slave was never coming back.
Realizing he was the one who did this the wife cursed the prince and all the
inhabitants of the city. She turned the prince into half stone and the
inhabitants into fishes and placed them in a giant pond.
The Sultan hears this and then assists the Prince in his
liberation and revenge. He kills the slave and then takes his place covered in
bandages in the tomb. He speaks in a thick accent to the wife when she arrives.
He tells her if she'd change back the prince and the inhabitants he would be
cured and they could pursue their love once more. She does as he commands and
when she comes to greet him, the king pulls out his sword and cuts her in two.
Source: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fisherman_and_the_Jinni
#Sheherazade in the One Thousand and One Nights.
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