Square Roots

by Mishbah Patel

This essay was the winner in the Secondary School category of The Warren Trust Awards for Architectural Writing 2020.

Some days, you look at the simplest of things, and it reminds you of a home you know not of; but you feel it deep inside, the yearning for the land heard about through countless memories retold.

A land at the heart of which lies a gem worth far more than the childlike dream of 1000 juice boxes.

Sometimes, when I look at a square, I do not think of the countless cuboids laying flat in my maths book, nor the lone Rubik’s cube left unfinished at the back of my wardrobe. Some days, I imagine the square as 3D. As a physical object hosting layers upon layers, and dozens upon dozens of red bricks. Simplicity is its definition. No meticulous arches, expensive stained glass, or any sign of voluptuously high pillars. Just a plain old cuboid draped in kiswah (pure silk cloth), made heavy by its intricately woven strands of solid gold. 

Then I look again and see not the gold-trimmed embroidered Arabic, remade annually and hand-stitched during 10 months of hard labour. I do not see the surrounding buildings, wrought high through the evolution of modern architecture; acting as a fierce shield against which the harsh winds of the modern world dare not approach. Nor do I imagine anything other than what is in front of me. I look beyond all of this and open my eyes to what is really there. Deeply embedded in these threads, I trace back my lineage through these delicate strands of knowledge, life and hope, and find it; I find my roots in plain sight for all the world to see in this one square block.

Many say it traces back to the time of Ibrahim; however, what matters most is that, throughout history, this monument’s sole purpose has remained intact. Made by the bare hands of the Prophet Ibrahim, and his son, Ismail, this sacred place has been a sanctuary since pre-Islamic times. The Black Stone is said to be the only remnant of the original structure, which is located at the eastern corner of the Ka’aba. Here, in the holy city of Mecca, they gather in the millions, at the House of God, in reverence and with a mutual desire to cleanse the soul and renew their faith.

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