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life is precious

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life is precious
gift
04/22/02 at 07:08:06
[slm]

i received this by email a while ago, but re-reading it, it still has a great impact

Jawad took a long look at his speedometer before
slowing down: 73 in a
55 zone. Fourth time in as many months. How could a
guy get caught so
often? When his car had slowed to 10 mph. Jawad pulled
over, but only
partially. Let the cop worry about the potential
traffic hazard. Maybe
some other car will tweak his backside with a mirror.

The cop was stepping out of his car, the big pad in
hand. Ali? Ali from
mosque? Jawad sunk further into his trench coat. This
was worse than
the coming ticket. A muslim cop cathcing a guy from
his own mosque. A guy
who happened to be a little anxious to get home after
a long day at the
office. A guy that was scheduled to play cricket with
him tomorrow.
Jumping out of the car, he approached a man he saw
every friday, a man
he'd never seen in uniform.

"Salaam, ya Ali. Fancy meeting you like this."

"Wasalaam, Jawad." No smile

"Guess you caught me red-handed in a rush to see my
wife and kids."

"Yeah, I guess."

Ali seemed uncertain. Good.

"I've seen some long days at the office lately. I'm
afraid I've bent
the rules a bit, just this once. Farah said something
about chicken
tikkah and kebabs tonight. Know what I mean?"

Jawad toed a pebble on the pavement.

"I know what you mean. I also know that you have a
reputation in our
precinct."

Ouch! This was not going in the right direction. Time
to change
tactics.

"What'd you clock me at?"

"Seventy-one. Would you sit back in your car, please?"

"Now wait aminute here, Ali. I checked as soon as I
saw you. I was
barely nudging 65." The lie seemed to come easier with
every ticket.

"Please, Jawad, in the car."

Flustered, Jawad hunched himself through the still
open door.

Slamming it shut, he stared at the dashboard. He was
in no rush to open
the window. The minutes ticked by. Ali scribbled away
on the pad. Why
hadn't he asked for a driver's license? Whatever the
reason, it would be
a month before Jawad ever sat near this cop again in
the mosque. A tap
on the door jerked his head to the left.

There was Ali, a folded paper in hand. Jawad rolled
down the window a
mere two inches, just enough room for Ali to pass him
the slip.

"Thanks." Jawad could not quite keep the sneer out of
his voice. Ali
returned to his car without a word.

Jawad watched his retreat in the mirror. Jawad
unfolded the sheet of
paper. How much was this one going to cost? Wait a
minute. What was this?
Some kind of joke? Certainly not a ticket. Jawad began
to read.

"Dear Jawad,

Once upon a time I had a daughter. She was six when
killed by a car.
You guessed it - a speeding driver. A fine and three
months in jail, and
the man was free. Free to hug his daughters. All three
of them. I only
had one, and I'm going to have to wait until heaven
before I can ever
hug her again. A thousand times I've tried to forgive
that man. A
thousand times I thought I had. Maybe I did, but I
need to do it again.

Even now, pray for me. And be careful, My son is all I
have left.

Ali."

Jawad twisted around in time to see Ali's car pull
away and head down
the road. Jawad watched until it disappeared. A full
15 minutes later,
he, too pulled and drove slowly home, praying for
forgiveness and
hugging a surprised wife and kids when he arrived.

Life is to precious. Handle with care.

[wlm]


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