He narrated the journey of the First Father, weaving in lessons of patience from the Qur’an, proverbs from Kano’s markets, and the bravery of Queen Amina. The blind scholar leaned forward, tears streaming down his cheeks. “I see,” the old man whispered. “I see the cities. I see the faith. You have rebuilt my library with your tongue.”
Hidayatul was the son of a renowned Maliki jurist, but he was no scholar. While his brothers debated the finer points of ijma and qiyas , Hidayatul preferred the company of birds, the rhythm of the talking drum, and the strange, new stories carried by Hausa merchants from Bornu and beyond. He was fluent in Arabic, but his heart beat in the cadence of his mother’s native Hausa tongue. hidayatul mustafid hausa
“In the beginning,” he said, “when the world was still soft like clay, the First Father walked from the East to the West. Wherever he placed his right foot, a market sprang up. Wherever he placed his left foot, a mosque grew. And he carried on his shoulder not gold, but a bag of stories.” He narrated the journey of the First Father,