Kafir

Rashid spoke first. "You are from the other side. My people call your people a word that means 'coverer of truth.' I have used that word. But standing here, seeing you also carry water for the thirsty, I realize I have been the one covering a truth: the truth that your child's thirst is the same as my child's thirst."

Eli, standing before his own council, said, "We were taught that their word was a weapon. But Rashid used it as a mirror. He showed me that the only true 'unbelief' is the refusal to believe in the possibility of peace between us."

The next day, the two villages did not merge, nor did their beliefs change. But they dug a second well, together. And when a child from the east would ask, "Is that a Kafir from the west?" their parent would reply, "No, child. That is an olive farmer who helped us dig. Their name is Eli. Or Tariq. Or Sara. Use their name. That is the only word that matters between neighbors." Rashid spoke first

Eli was silent for a moment. He then said, "My scholars have a word for someone who reduces a living soul to a label. It is a form of blindness. I have been blind too."

A word meant to separate can become a bridge, if we are brave enough to pour our water into another’s jug. The real "covering of truth" is not a different creed, but the act of seeing an enemy where a thirsty human being stands. But standing here, seeing you also carry water

One summer, a terrible drought came. The only water source was a single, ancient well that sat exactly on the unmarked border between the two villages. Neither side would let the other draw water first.

That evening, the elders of both villages demanded to know why Rashid and Eli had broken the old rule. Rashid stood before his own people and said, "I called him Kafir . But when I saw him come for water, I understood: A Kafir is not someone who believes differently. A Kafir is anyone who looks at another human being and sees only a label, instead of a soul parched for the same rain." But they dug a second well, together

Rashid, troubled by the cries of thirsty children on both sides, decided to act. He remembered a teaching from his tradition: "To remove a harm from the road is charity." The greatest harm, he thought, was not disbelief, but the refusal to see another's suffering.

He took a heavy jug and walked to the well. There he found Eli, also carrying a jug.

Rashid lowered his bucket into the well. When he pulled it up, he did not walk back to his village. Instead, he poured half the water into Eli's jug. "Take this to your children first," he said. "Tomorrow, you will pour for mine."

Eli did not argue. He nodded, and walked back to his village.