Blisters forming on my palms despite my initial gentle grip.

The wind carrying away loose sand from my pile, making me work harder.

Time distorted.

Minutes felt like hours.

I’d dig for what seemed like an eternity.

Then look at the depth and realize I’d barely made progress.

My father wanted it deep.

deep enough that wild animals won’t reach her.

I heard him tell Khaled.

That’s when I understood fully.

This wasn’t a theater.

This was an execution.

I tried appealing to them individually.

Ahmed, please.

You taught me to ride a bicycle.

You used to call me little sister and let me win at chess.

Please, brother, stop this.

Ahmed turned away.

But I saw his jaw clench.

Fisel, you work in the Ministry of Interior.

You know the law.

You know this is murder.

Please, please.

Fisizel’s voice was tight when he spoke.

This is family law.

Family honor.

You betrayed us.

Yousef.

I turned to my youngest brother and saw tears in his eyes.

Yousef.

We’re the closest in age.

We grew up together.

You know me.

I’m still me.

I’m still your sister.

Yousef looked at our father, then back at me.

For a moment, I thought I’d reached him.

Then he shook his head and walked to the truck, sitting on the tailgate with his back to us.

I turned to my father.

Please, I’m your daughter, your nightingale.

You love me.

I know you love me.

He stopped pacing, looked at me with those cold eyes.

I loved my daughter.

You’re not her anymore.

The girl I loved would never betray her family, her faith, her honor.

You’re a stranger.

Dig.

The grave took shape slowly.

6 ft long, 4 ft deep, then five.

I could no longer easily climb out.

My arms screamed with fatigue.

My back spasomed.

Sweat soaked through my clothes despite the cooling evening air.

At 5 and 1/2 ft deep, I tried to run.

I threw the shovel at my uncle and attempted to scramble out of the grave.

Armad and Fisizel were on me in seconds, shoving me back down.

I hit the bottom hard.

The air knocked from my lungs.

That’s when true panic set in.

I clawed at the sides, sobbing, begging, screaming for help that wouldn’t come.

My father stood at the edge of the grave, looking down at me.

Then he did something that broke whatever small hope I’d been clinging to.

He reached into his pocket and pulled out my Bible.

The little Bible that Miss Rosa had given me, the one I’d read every night for 3 months.

The pages were still bookmarked at John chapter 14.

He held it over the grave and let it drop.

It landed in the sand beside me.

“You wanted this Christian poison,” he said.

“Die with it.

” That’s when I knew, absolutely knew this was happening.

No lastm minute change of heart, no rescue, no miracle intervention.

Uncle Khaled grabbed my arms.

Ahmed and Fisizel took my legs, and as I screamed into the empty desert, a sound that seemed to echo back from the stars themselves.

They lowered me into the hole I dug with my own hands.

I fought.

I thrashed and kicked and bit.

I felt my teeth connect with someone’s hand and heard a curse.

But there were four of them and one of me.

Exhausted from digging, small from years of limited nutrition.

They positioned me on my back at the bottom of the grave.

I looked up at the rectangle of darkening sky above me.

Stars now visible, beautiful, and indifferent to my terror.

The last thing I saw before the first shovel full of sand hit my face was my father’s expression.

Not anger anymore.

Not righteousness or religious fervor.

Just emptiness.

Like he’d already convinced himself I was dead.

Already buried the daughter he’d loved.

Already moved on.

The sand hit my face like a slap.

Drowning in air is a strange sensation.

Your lungs scream for oxygen that’s technically all around you, but can’t reach you through the weight pressing down on your chest, your face, your entire body.

The first instinct was to shield my face with my hands.

I brought them up, trying to create a pocket of air around my nose and mouth, but sand is relentless.

It flows like water, finding every gap, every space.

The sound was the worst part initially.

That’s soft, persistent, rain-like sound of sand on skin.

Rhythmic, steady, inevitable.

Each shovel full a countdown.

I tried screaming again, but immediately regretted it.

Sand poured into my open mouth, coating my tongue, grinding between my teeth.

I spat and choked, learning the hard way that silence was survival, at least temporarily.

I forced myself to breathe only through my nose.

Small shallow breaths trying to conserve the air, though I knew that was futile.

The sand was coming.

Weight began accumulating on my chest.

5 lb 10 20.

Each shovel full adds to the pressure.

My ribs compressed.

Breathing became work.

Real work.

Each inhalation a battle against the increasing mass.

The sand covered my eyes and I experienced total darkness.

Not the darkness of a room with the lights off, but absolute complete absence of light.

Darkness that pressed against your eyelids, that seemed to seep into your skull.

The sound became muffled.

My father’s voice reciting Quranic verses about judgment and hellfire became distant underwater.

I heard my uncle grunting with effort.

The scrape of a shovel on sand.

The soft thump as each load landed.

Time stopped meaning anything.

Was it seconds, minutes? I had no way to know.

My world contracted to the desperate present, the next breath, the next heartbeat, the mounting pressure.

Sand worked its way into my ears despite my attempts to keep my head tilted.

It found the gaps around my hands covering my face.

Grain by grain it claimed me.

The temperature shifted.

The sand was cool, carrying the chill of the desert night, but trapped against my skin.

My own breath created humid heat.

The contrast was disorienting.

I tried to move my arms to keep fighting, but the weight was too much now.

My hands were pinned to my face, which was a mercy because at least there was still a small pocket of air.

But I couldn’t lift them.

Couldn’t push against the mass above me.

My legs were completely immobilized.

I couldn’t feel them anymore.

Couldn’t tell if they were still there or if I’d somehow separated from my lower body.

The sand filled my nose despite my desperate attempts to keep it clear.

I snorted, trying to expel it.

But that just pulled more in.

Each breath became a fight.

Each one shorter and more desperate than the last.

My body began its automatic panic responses.

My heart raced, hammering so hard I could feel it in my skull.

Adrenaline surged, that primal chemical scream of an organism that does not want to die.

My muscles spasomemed involuntarily, uselessly against the weight that wouldn’t yield.

And then somehow past the panic came a strange calm acceptance maybe or just the biological shutdown that happens when the brain realizes the battle is lost.

My heartbeat slowed.

The desperate gasping stopped.

I took one final shallow breath.

In that moment, suspended between life and death, buried in the earth with sand in my lungs and absolute darkness, I prayed one last time, not to Allah, not to the God of my childhood, the God of rules and punishment and honor killings.

I prayed to Jesus, the man I’d read about in that little Bible is now buried with me.

The one who’d said he came to give life, abundant life.

Jesus, I thought or whispered or screamed.

I couldn’t tell anymore if you’re real.

I’m sorry I didn’t get more time to get to know you.

Thank you for those 3 months.

Thank you for showing me love.

If there’s anything after this, please be there.

And something impossible happened in that grave, in that absolute darkness with sand crushing the life from me.

I wasn’t alone anymore.

A presence filled the space, warm, peaceful, like someone had climbed into the grave with me.

Except there was no physical body, no displacement of sand, just presence and a voice, not audible, not something my dying ears could hear, but more real than any sound I’d ever heard.

It spoke words I recognized from the Gospel of John, words I’d memorized.

I am the resurrection and the life.

My heart stuttered.

Once, twice, then stopped.

And that’s when everything changed.

Death isn’t darkness.

At least mine wasn’t.

It was the brightest light I’d ever seen.

Brighter than the Saudi sun at noon, brighter than anything that exists in our physical world.

But it didn’t hurt to look at it.

It called to me.

The first sensation was weightlessness.

After the crushing pressure of the sand, the sudden absence of physical constraint was shocking.

I could move again.

I could breathe again.

Except I didn’t need to breathe.

I became aware that I was rising, moving upward without effort or valition.

And as I rose, I could see below me the burial site, the mound of freshly moved sand, rocks placed on top to mark the location.

My father and uncle standing beside it.

My father’s lips still moving in prayer.

My brothers by the truck.

I should have felt something seeing this.

Anger, grief, horror.

But there was only distance, like watching a scene from a movie about someone else’s life.

They were loading the shovels back into the vehicle.

My father looked back once at the grave, his expression unreadable in the truck’s headlights.

Then they climbed in.

The engine started.

The headlights swept across the desert as the vehicle turned.

And then they were driving away.

Tail lights disappearing into the darkness, leaving my body buried in the sand.

But I wasn’t there anymore.

I was above it, moving away, being pulled by something I couldn’t resist and didn’t want to.

The movement accelerated.

The desert shrank below me.

I could see Riad in the distance.

A sprawl of lights against the darkness.

Then even that diminished as I moved higher, faster, though direction and height and speed were becoming meaningless concepts.

There was a tunnel, though calling it a tunnel doesn’t capture it.

More like traveling through light itself, through a space that wasn’t space.

The light surrounded me, permeated me.

I was separate from it and part of it simultaneously.

Sensations flooded in, but not physical sensations.

These were emotional, spiritual peace that went beyond anything I’d ever experienced.

A sense of belonging so profound it made every moment of my earthly life feel like homesickness by comparison.

The feeling of being completely utterly known and simultaneously completely utterly loved.

Music filled the not space around me.

Except it wasn’t just music.

It was also voices and also something beyond both harmonious and overwhelming and beautiful.

If light could sing, this is what it would sound like.

I became aware of others in the light presence.

I couldn’t see them clearly, but I could sense them.

Multitudes, and they were welcoming me, celebrating my arrival.

The movement continued until I arrived somewhere, a threshold, maybe not heaven in the traditional sense of clouds and harps, but a place, a space, a reality that made physical reality seem like a pale shadow.

Colors existed here that don’t have names in human language.

I could see them, experience them, but I can’t describe them any more than you could describe read to someone born blind.

They weren’t just visual.

They were emotional.

They meant something.

And then he appeared.

I knew who he was immediately.

Not because he wore a name tag or announced himself.

I knew him the way you know your own heartbeat, your own breath.

Intimately, completely.

Jesus.

He was walking toward me.

Or maybe I was moving toward him.

Or maybe space worked differently here and we were always both close and approaching.

His appearance was Middle Eastern features, dark hair and beard, brown skin, not the blonde, blue-eyed version from Western paintings.

He looked like he could have warped the streets of ancient Jerusalem without anyone thinking he was foreign.

But it was his eyes that captured me.

They held infinity.

Every emotion, every experience, every moment of existence seemed reflected there.

Sorrow and joy, suffering and triumph, all present simultaneously, and love, such love.

He looked at me, and in that look, I felt seen in a way I’d never been seen.

Not just surface level, not just personality and appearance.

He saw everything.

Every thought I’d ever had, every sin I’d ever committed, every wound I’d carried, every moment of shame.

Six, I expected judgment.

I’d been raised to expect judgment.

Isn’t that what happens when you stand before God accounting for every deed, every word, every intention? But there was no judgment in his eyes, only compassion.

He spoke my name, Leila, just my name.

But the way he said it in it, I heard my entire life, my first cry as a baby, my laughter as a child, my tears as a teenager, every birthday, every disappointment, every moment of joy and pain.

My life wasn’t being judged.

It was being acknowledged, valued, cherished.

Tears came, though I don’t know if I had a physical body to cry them.

Tears of relief, of release, of finally, finally being home.

You saw me.

I said, or thought or somehow communicated in that grave.

When I was dying, you were there.

I’ve always been there, he replied.

His voice was like the music I’d heard, like light given sound.

Every time you read those words, every time you reached for truth, every moment of your life, Ila, even when you didn’t know my name, I knew yours.

My father, I started to say, and he raised a hand gently.

Your earthly father acted from fear and pain.

He thought he was defending truth, but he was defending tradition, pride, control.

I know his heart.

I know the wounds that created those fears.

And I love him, too.

That broke something in me.

After what my father had done, after being buried alive by the man who should have protected me, Jesus was telling me he loved him.

The injustice of it, the scandal of that kind of love was overwhelming.

I don’t understand, I said.

You will, he replied.

in time.

Love doesn’t make sense from a position of hurt.

But perfect love casts out fear, casts out revenge, casts out the need for justice as humans understand it.

I am justice and I am mercy both always.

He extended his hand toward me.

I saw the scar in his palm, the wound where nails had pierced flesh.

Proof that he knew suffering.

proof that God understood pain.

“You can stay,” he said.

“Or you can go back.

But if you go back, your life will never be your own again.

It will be my testimony.

” I stared at his scarred hand, trying to process what he was offering.

Go back.

Back to what? My body was buried in the desert, sand filling my lungs.

My heart stopped.

“How could I go back?” You’re asking me to choose, I said.

I’m always asking you to choose, Jesus replied.

I never force.

Even in this, even here, your will matters to me.

I looked around at the space we occupied.

This threshold between life and death.

The peace here was intoxicating.

No more fear, no more pain, no more hiding or shame or persecution.

Just rest.

eternal perfect rest.

Why would anyone choose to go back? I asked.

His smile was gentle knowing.

The same reason I chose to leave heaven and be born in a stable.

The same reason I chose the cross when I could have called down angels.

Love makes you willing to embrace difficulty for the sake of others.

But what others? My family buried me.

Who would I go back for? Not who you think.

He said, “If you return, you won’t reunite with your family.

Not for a long time.

The road I’m offering you is harder than death, Leila.

It’s the road of exile, of testimony, of carrying my light into dark places.

You’ll be lonely.

You’ll be afraid.

You’ll question if you really saw me or if this was just the hallucination of a dying brain.

Then why offer it?” The question came out more confrontational than I intended, but he didn’t seem offended because there are people who need to hear your story.

Muslims who felt my call but are terrified of what it will cost them.

Women buried under the weight of tradition and control.

Who need to know I see them.

Seekers who think Christianity is a western religion.

Who need to see my Middle Eastern face reflected in yours.

You will be my witness in places I cannot otherwise reach.

I thought about Miss Rosa, my economics professor who’d given me the Bible.

Had she known what it would cost me? Had she wrestled with the decision to plant that seed, knowing it might lead to my death? Did Miss Rosa know? I asked.

What would happen? No one knows the full cost of obedience until they pay it, Jesus said.

Rosa knew the risk.

She prayed for months before giving you that Bible.

She wrestled with fear, with doubt, with the question of whether she had the right to potentially endanger you.

But she also knew that without risk, there’s no gospel.

Without someone willing to plant seeds, the harvest never comes.

Is she? I hesitated.

Is she safe? She’s exactly where I want her to be.

as you will be.

Whichever choice you make, the weight of the decision settled on me.

Stay here in peace in the presence of God in rest or return to a body that had been buried alive to a life that would be marked by trauma and exile and difficulty.

If I go back, I said slowly, will you still be with me the way you were in the grave? Always,” he said.

Though you won’t always feel me, there will be dark nights when you’ll cry out and hear only silence.

There will be moments when you’ll wonder if this encounter was real or if you invented it to cope with suffering.

Faith isn’t the absence of doubt.

Ila, it’s choosing to trust despite doubt.

That doesn’t sound very reassuring.

He laughed and the sound was like every good thing I’d ever experienced concentrated into music.

I’m not offering you comfort.

I’m offering you purpose.

Comfort is what you have here.

Purpose requires returning to the struggle.

I thought about my life.

22 years of trying to be perfect, trying to earn love through obedience, living in fear of making mistakes.

And in the end, it hadn’t mattered.

Perfect obedience hadn’t saved me.

My father’s love had been conditional all along and the condition was complete conformity.

But Jesus was offering something different.

Not conditional love based on performance, but unconditional love that preceded choice.

He loved me while I was still a Muslim.

He loved me when I was buried in sand.

He would love me if I chose to stay in heaven.

and he would love me if I chose to return to Earth for the first time in my life.

I understood grace.

If I go back, I said, I’ll be terrible at it.

I’ll be scared and broken and probably angry for a while.

I’ll question you.

I’ll doubt.

I’ll mess up.

I know, he said simply.

And you still want me.

I’ve always wanted you.

Before you were born, before the earth was formed, before time began, I knew you and wanted you.

This isn’t a job interview where you have to prove your qualifications, Ila.

This is love.

I’m not asking if you’re good enough.

I’m asking if you’re willing.

I looked at his hand again, still extended toward me.

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