Of pools of pure hate

April 29th, 2004 by

God says to be merciful to others and He’ll be merciful to you.
That by no means implies that you don’t have the right to not forgive some.

She sat in the corner and cursed him, she cursed him openly, and she cursed him in the name of her Allah. “One day, when you’re dying, when you’re gasping your last breath, you will seek me out in this world, you will desperately search for me and beg me to forgive you, to absolve you of these sins. And I will not, I will never ever forgive you”.

He sat there, a look of complete boredom on his face, a complete lack of an islamic perspective this bloody nation proudly proclaims. He sat there with stone ears and a stone heart. All the whilst his mother sat in the back, watching it all, mutely.
Poor bastard.

Well…

Burn bastard burn.
For you have hurt the one thing in this world that even I cannot forgive you for.
You hurt my mother. On purpose. Repeatedly.
You hurt my family. Intentionally. Repeatedly.
Burn.
May even the duas of your mother fall short to protect you.

5 Responses to “Of pools of pure hate”

  1. .e!manie. Says:

    there lies immense power in the power of forgiveness…(as cliche as it may sound)… especially when you find it in you to forgive those who have inflicted immeasurable harm on yourself or those you love… it rids you of the burning hate and the throbbing anger that eats up your insides.. and more so, you dont do it for them, because it was never between you and them… ultimately, it is between you and Him.. and so you forgive for His sake..and His sake only…

  2. nicole Says:

    and the great thing about forgiveness is that you don’t have to let the person you have forgiven know about it. And just because you forgive doesn’t mean you have to forget, that would be just foolish.

  3. Bushra Says:

    It’s all very easy to say.. forgiveness is good, opens your heart, etc etc… but what do you do when someone you trusted, loved or placed absolute faith in, did the most heinous act? “She’ll forgive me”, is what everyone will think, without considering for a moment how much it might hurt.

    “That by no means implies that you don’t have the right to not forgive some.”

    Took me a while to figure out what that meant. I think I agree.

  4. akds Says:

    “I was angry with my friend I told my wrath, my wrath did end. I was angry with my foe: I told it not, my wrath did grow.” – William Blake.

  5. Abez Says:

    Khandaani problems eh? Same in my family sometimes. :(

Leave a Reply