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Abu Kasem's Slippers
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14134 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
1 / 1988 |
5,350 Words |
| Author
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Heinrich Zimmer Heinrich Zimmer (1890-1943) was a German Indologist who
attempted to interpret the archaic symbols of folklore in
terms of contemporary experience. His meditations and
commentary masterfully combine mythology with psychology.
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Who knows the story of Abu Kasem and his slippers? The slippers were as famous--yea, proverbial--in the Bagdad of his time as the great miser and money-grubber himself. Everybody regarded them as the visible sign of his unpalatable greed. For Abu Kasem was rich and tried to hide the fact; and even the shabbiest beggar in town would have been ashamed to be caught dead in such slippers as he wore--they were so shingled with bits and pieces. A thorn in the flesh and an old story to every cobbler in Bagdad, they became at last a byword on the tongues of the populace. Anybody wishing a term to express the preposterous would bring them in.
Attired in these miserable things--which were inseparable from his public character--the celebrated businessman would go shuffling through the bazaar. One day he struck a singularly fortunate bargain: a huge consignment of little crystal bottles that he managed to buy for a song. Then a few days later he capped the deal by purchasing a large supply of attar of roses from a bankrupt perfume merchant. The combination made a really good business stroke, and was much discussed in the bazaar. Anybody else would have celebrated the occasion in the usual way, with a little banquet for a few business acquaintances. Abu Kasem, however, was prompted to do something for himself. He decided to pay a visit to the public baths, a place where he had not been seen for quite some time.
In the anteroom, where the clothes and shoes are left, he met an acquaintance, who took him aside and delivered him a lecture on the state of his slippers. He had just set these down, and everyone could see how impossible they were. His friend spoke with great concern about making himself the laughingstock of the town; such a clever
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