Allahu Ekber - Kebbiru
In the midst of the growing despair, Yusuf remained calm. Every morning, as the first rays of the sun kissed the parched earth, he would stand at the edge of his withered garden, raise his hands, and call out clearly: "Kebbiru Allahu Ekber!" (Proclaim that God is the Greatest!)
As the villagers danced in the rain, their faces upturned to the sky, their cries changed from desperate pleas to joyous celebrations. Yusuf stood quietly under the eaves of his small house, his eyes wet with more than just raindrops. Kebbiru Allahu Ekber
That evening, as the sun dipped below the horizon, the air grew heavy and still. Then, a single, cool drop of water fell onto Yusuf's forehead. Within minutes, the heavens opened, and a torrential rain began to soak the thirsty earth. In the midst of the growing despair, Yusuf remained calm
Yusuf looked at them with eyes that held the wisdom of many winters. "My sons," he said softly, "we say 'Allahu Akbar' not just when the rain falls and the harvest is plenty. We say it especially when the path is dark and the burden is heavy. It is a reminder that no matter how big our problems seem, God is greater. Our thirst is great, but His mercy is greater. This drought is a test of our patience, not a sign of His absence." That evening, as the sun dipped below the
He encouraged them to join him in a prayer for rain, a Salat al-Istisqa. He told them that proclaiming God's greatness was an act of surrendering their worries and trusting in a power far beyond their own.
"Kebbiru Allahu Ekber," he whispered, a final, grateful acknowledgement. The drought had ended, but the lesson remained: in every hardship, in every joy, and in every breath, there is a greatness that transcends it all—a greatness that can be found simply by proclaiming it.