03/12/2026
The first time I heard my father’s voice crack on the minbar, I was ten years old and still believed imams did not cry.
The masjid was overflowing that night, bodies pressed into every corner, men shoulder to shoulder in the main hall, women and children lined up along the back wall, the air thick with sweat, incense, and the tired murmurs of a neighborhood that had already buried too many sons. Outside, sirens wailed past in the distance, that familiar city lullaby of trouble and arrival. Inside, under the soft yellow glow of ancient chandeliers, my father gripped the edge of the wooden lectern as if it were the only thing keeping him upright.
“Ya ikhwan,” he said, “how many janazahs will it take before we choose a different path?”
His voice was steady at first, low and controlled, threaded with the same quiet authority that made men twice his size fall silent when he entered a room. He was still young then, only in his forties, but there was already silver threading his beard and permanent shadows under his eyes. Being an imam in our part of the city was different. It meant more funerals than weddings. More interventions than congratulations. More late-night phone calls than peaceful mornings.
I sat cross-legged on the carpet near the front, the way I always did on Friday nights, close enough to see the faint ink of his veins and the callouses on his hands from years of wudu and work. He had promised me pizza afterwards if I stayed still and listened. At ten, pizza was a stronger motivator than paradise.
“We bury boys,” he continued, scanning the rows of men. “We wash their bodies with our own hands. We see the bullet holes that their mothers can’t bear to look at. We wrap them in white and pray over them, while the same streets that killed them wait for the next one.” His gaze deepened, as if he were seeing something beyond the room. “And still, we say, ‘Just one more hustle. Just one more risk. Just until I catch up.’”
A murmur moved through the crowd. Men shifted, eyes dropping to the floor. I felt something in my chest tighten, a knot of fear I didn’t yet have words for. I knew the boys he was talking about, at least some of them. They had shared my basketball court, my corner store, my bus stop. A few had given me advice about how to tie my laces tighter before a game. Now they were names in du’a.
My father’s hand trembled as he lifted it to his face. He paused, swallowed, and when he spoke again, his voice was softer.
“Wallahi, I have stood over too many small bodies in this masjid,” he said. “I have watched too many mothers scream into my shoulder and ask me why Allah took their sons.” His throat worked around the words. “And I have no answer for them, except that we loved the streets more than we loved our own imaan.”
The last word caught.
It was not loud. It was not dramatic. It was just a small fracture, a tiny break in sound that almost disappeared beneath the quiet hum of the ceiling fan. But I heard it. Everyone did. The man who never flinched at any confession, who washed the dead with unshaking hands, who could recite ayah after ayah in the janazah prayer without stumbling, could not say my name without his voice cracking in public.
Because that was the truth lodged in his chest, the one I was too young to understand then: he had named his only son Imaan, and the streets were already reaching for me.
He cleared his throat and tried again. “We treat our imaan as if it is something we can gamble with and reclaim whenever we decide the game is over,” he said, this time forcing the word out smoothly. “But faith is not a spare key we leave under the doormat. It is the house itself. Once it burns, there is nowhere left to go home to.”
His eyes found mine in the crowd. For a moment, the entire masjid faded. It was just the two of us, the imam and his boy, tethered together by a name he had chosen with trembling hands the day I was born. There was pleading in his gaze that night, and a kind of fear I had never seen before. It was not fear of police or bullets or poverty. It was fear for my soul.
“Listen to me, my son,” he had whispered hours earlier, tying my kufi at our front door before we left for the masjid. “The world will offer you many shadows. Money, power, respect. But your imaan” his hand pressed lightly against my small chest, “this is the only light worth protecting. Do you understand?”
I had nodded because I wanted to make him proud and because we were late and because the smell of the masjid after maghrib always made me feel safe. I did not understand. Not yet.
Years later, when the House of Imaan sign flickered above my barbershop in neon gold while bricks of haram money sat stacked in the back room, that night would return to me in flashes: my father’s shaking hand on the minbar, his voice breaking on my name, his warning about shadows and light. I would remember how the men in that crowded masjid lowered their heads in shame.
And I would wonder, standing alone under my own crescent glow, whether this was the house he had imagined, or the fire he had tried to save me from.