The Story of Mt. Suluta
People say that in the old days, in the City of Addis Ababa, there
was a young man by the name of Arha. He had come as a boy from the
country of GuragÈ, and in the city he became the servant
of a rich merchant, Haptom Hasei. Haptom Hasei was so rich that
he owned everything that money could buy. And often he was very
bored because he had tired of everything he knew, and there was
nothing new for him to do.
One cold night, when the damp wind was blowing across the plateau,
Haptom called to Arha to bring wood for the fire. When Arha was
finished, Haptom began to talk. `How much cold can a man stand?'
he said, speaking at first to himself. `I wonder if it would be
possible for a man to stand on the highest peak, Mount Suluta, where
the coldest winds blow, through an entire night without blankets
or clothing and yet not die.' `I don't know,' Arha said, `but wouldn't
it be a foolish thing?'
`Well, perhaps, if he had nothing to gain by it, it would be a
foolish thing to spend the night that way,' Haptom said. `But I
would be willing to bet that a man couldn't do it.' `Oh, I am sure
a courageous man could stand naked on Mount Suluta throughout an
entire night and not die of it,' Arha said. `But as for me, it isn't
my affair, since I have nothing to bet.'
`Well, I'll tell you what,' Haptom said, `since you are so sure
it can be done, I'll make a bet with you anyway. If you can stand
among the rocks on Mount Suluta for an entire night without food
or water or clothing or blankets or fire and not die of it, then
I will give you 10 acres of good farmland for your own, with a house
and cattle.'
Arha could hardly believe what he had heard. `Do you really mean
this?' he asked. `I am a man of my word," Haptom replied. `Then
tomorrow night I will do it,' Arha said, `and afterwards, for all
the years to come, I shall till my own soil.' But he was very worried,
because the wind swept bitterly across the peak. So in the morning,
Arha went to a wise old man from the Gurage tribe and told him of
the bet he had made.
The old man listened quietly and thoughtfully. And when Arha had
finished, he said, `I will help you. Across the valley from Suluta
is a high rock which can be seen in the daytime. Tomorrow night,
as the sun goes down, I shall build a fire there so that it can
be seen from where you stand on the peak. All night long, you must
watch the light of my fire. Do not close your eyes or let the darkness
creep upon you. As you watch my fire, think of its warmth and think
of me, your friend, sitting there tending it for you. If you do
this, you will survive, no matter how bitter the night wind.'
Arha thanked the old man warmly and went back to Haptom's house
with a light heart. He told Haptom he was ready. And in the afternoon,
Haptom sent him, under the watchful eyes of other servants, to the
top of Mount Suluta. There, as night fell, Arha removed his clothes
and stood in the damp, cold wind that swept across the plateau with
the setting sun.
Across the valley, several miles away, Arha saw the light of his
friend's fire, which shown like a star in the blackness. The wind
turned colder and seemed to pass through his flesh and chill the
marrow in his bones. The rock on which he stood felt like ice. Each
hour the cold numbed him more, until he thought he would never be
warm again. But he kept his eyes upon the twinkling light across
the valley and remembered that his old friend sat there, tending
a fire for him.
Sometimes wisps of fog passed. He sneezed and coughed and shivered
and began to feel ill. Yet, all night through he stood there. And
only when the dawn came did he put on his clothes and go down the
mountain, back to Addis Ababa. Haptom was very surprised to see
Arha, and he questioned his servants thoroughly. `Did he stay all
night without food or drink or blankets or clothing?' `Yes,' his
servants said, `he did all of these things.'
`Well, you are a strong fellow,' Haptom said to Arha. `How did
you manage to do it?' `I simply watched the light of a fire on a
distant hill,' Arha said. `What? You watched a fire? Then you lose
the bet and you are still my servant and you own no land.' `But
this fire was not close enough to warm me. It was far across the
valley.' `I won't give you the land,' Haptom said, `you didn't fulfill
the conditions. It was only the fire that saved you.'
Arha was very sad. He went again to his friend in the Gurage tribe
and told him what had happened. `Take the matter to the judge,'
the old man advised him. Arha went to the judge and complained,
and the judge sent for Haptom. When Haptom told his story, and the
servants said once more that Arha had watched a distant fire across
the valley, the judge said, `No, you have lost, for Haptom Hasei's
condition was that you must be without fire.'
Once more Arha went to his old friend with the sad news that he
was doomed to the life of a servant, as though he had not gone through
the ordeal on the mountaintop. `Don't give up hope,' the old man
said. `More wisdom grows wild in the hills than in any city judge.'
He got up from where he sat and went to find a man named Hailu,
in whose house he had been a servant when he was young. He explained
to the good man about the bet between Haptom and Arha, and asked
if something couldn't be done.
`Don't worry about it,' Hailu said, after thinking for a while.
`I will take care of it for you.' Some days later, Hailu sent invitations
to many people in the city to come to a feast at his house. Haptom
was among them, and so was the judge who had ruled Arha had lost
the bet.
When the day of the feast arrived, the guests came riding on mules,
with fine trappings, their servants strung out behind them on foot.
Haptom came with 20 servants, one of whom held a silk umbrella over
his head to shade him from the sun, and four drummers played music
that signified the great Haptom was here.
The guests sat on soft rugs laid out for them and talked. From
the kitchen came the odors of wonderful things to eat — roast
goat, roast corn and durra, pancakes called injura, and many tantalizing
sauces. The smell of the food only accentuated the hunger of the
guests. Time passed. The food should have been served, but they
didn't see it. They only smelled vapors that drifted from the kitchen.
The evening came, and still no food was served. The guests began
to whisper among themselves. It was very curious, the honorable
Hailu had not had the food brought out. Still the smells came from
the kitchen. At last, one of the guests spoke out for all the others.
`Hailu, why do you do this to us? Why do you invite us to a feast
and then serve us nothing?' `Why, can't you smell the food?' Hailu
asked with surprise. `Indeed, we can. But smelling is not eating.
There is no nourishment in it.'
`And is there warmth in a fire so distant that it can hardly be
seen?' Hailu asked. `If Arha was warmed by the fire he watched while
standing on Mount Suluta, then you would have been fed by the smells
coming from my kitchen.'
The people agreed with him. The judge now saw his mistake, and
Haptom was shamed. He thanked Hailu for his advice, and announced
that Arha was, then and there, the owner of the land, the house
and the cattle. Then Hailu ordered the food brought in, and the
feast began.
|