Sandle Tuesday

In a quiet little village in the heart of Egypt, where the Nile whispered secrets to anyone who would listen and pyramids stood as dusty sentinels of long-forgotten kings, there lived a boy named Tarek. Tarek was like any other twelve-year-old kid—mischievous, bright-eyed, and relentlessly optimistic. But beneath his mop of unruly hair and cheeky grin, Tarek harbored the heart of a revolutionary.

In Tarek’s village, there existed an ancient, nonsensical religious rule that decreed: “Thou shalt not wear shoes on Tuesdays, lest ye anger the Sand Spirits.” No one really knew where the rule came from, or what exactly the Sand Spirits were prone to do when enraged, but everyone complied. Every Tuesday, they tucked their shoes away in closets and trudged barefoot through the hot, jagged streets, mumbling half-hearted prayers to keep the imaginary entities at bay.

One sweltering Tuesday morning, Tarek woke up, looked at his sandals, and thought, “Why should we suffer for invisible, angry sand creatures?” Today, he decided, the tyranny of the Sand Spirits would end.

Strapping on his sandals with a sense of purpose, Tarek marched out into the village