Ethiopian English Readers

Ahmed and the Clever Woman

Somalia · 8 min read

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Before you read the story

"Hypocrites" are people who pray to God and seem very religious, but at the same time they do bad things.

  • Do you know any hypocrites?
  • How do you know they are hypocrites?

Now read the story

Illustration from “Ahmed and the Clever Woman”

Once upon a time, there was a man called Ahmed. He worked at a well. He used to pull up water for the people. 

"I am a holy man," Ahmed used to tell everyone. "I am very good. I pray to God. I study the Koran. I am a sheikh!"

Everyone believed Ahmed. 

"Yes, Ahmed is very holy. He is a sheikh," they all said.

But Ahmed was not a holy man at all. He was a trickster. 

Every day, a beautiful woman came to the well to fill her water pot. Ahmed fell in love with her. But the woman was married already, and she had a son.

One day, the woman's son came to the well to fetch water for his mother. Ahmed refused to give water to the child.

"You are too small," he said. "You can't carry this big water pot. Your mother must come."

The next day, the woman came. Ahmed talked to her.

"You are so beautiful," he said. "Meet me here tonight, when it is dark."

The woman did not answer him.

"This man is in love with me," she thought. "But I love my husband. I must be careful. Ahmed is rich and powerful. I don't want him to be our enemy."

That evening, she told her husband about Ahmed.

"What shall I do?" she said. "I don't want to meet Ahmed secretly. But if I don't meet him, perhaps he will be angry. Perhaps he will quarrel with us. Then people will know about it. There will be trouble."

They talked about it for a long time, and at last they made a plan.

The next morning, the woman went back to the well. Ahmed was waiting for her.

"Oh, my darling, you are here at last!" he said. "Well? Did you think about me last night? Will you meet me here tonight?"

The woman smiled at him.

"I can't meet you here," she said. "People often come this way. Someone will see us. They will tell my husband and he will be very angry. No, I have a better plan. Today, my husband is going away to another town. He will not be at home this evening. Come to my house then, after your evening prayers."

Ahmed was very happy.

"She loves me!" he said to himself. But then he began to think.

"I must be careful," he said to himself. "I always stay at home in the evening. I never go out. My wife will be surprised. She will ask me many questions. What can I say to her?"

At last, he had an idea. He smiled, and hurried home. He ate his supper quickly, and said his prayers. 

Then he said to his wife, "I must go out this evening."

"Why?" she said. She was very surprised.

"Oh," he answered. "I met some friends today. We were talking about the Koran. There are some very difficult verses in the Koran. They want to study them tonight. They think that I am a sheikh. They want me to help them."

His wife was pleased.

"That's good," she said. "If you want to study the Koran, of course you must go."

Ahmed went to the woman's house. He was happy.

"She loves me!" he thought. 

The woman opened the door for him. She was wearing a beautiful dress. Ahmed went inside. He sat down on the mat and she gave him some tea.

"Wait," she said, "I will lock the door."

She went to the door and locked it. Now, the woman's husband was hiding behind the house. He was listening.

"Ah!" he thought. "She has locked the door. That's the signal for me."

He ran to the door and began to knock.

"Wife! Wife!" he called out. "Open the door! Why have you locked it? It's me, your husband. I have come home early."

Ahmed jumped up. He was frightened.

"Your husband?" he said. "This is terrible! If he finds me here, he will kill me. What shall we do?"

The woman ran to her chest and took out a dress.

"Quickly," she said. "Put on this dress. My husband will think that you are a woman."

So Ahmed put on the woman's dress, and the woman opened the door.

Illustration from “Ahmed and the Clever Woman”

Ahmed was frightened. He pulled his scarf over his face. The woman's husband came in. He carried a sack of maize in his arms.

"What happened?" his wife said. "Why have you come home early?"

"I wanted to travel with some friends," her husband said, "but they didn't go today. They are going tomorrow. But I brought you this sack of maize."

Then he saw Ahmed.

"Oh, that's lucky," he said. "Has this girl come to help you? She can pound the maize. There is a lot of it. It's too much for you. Bring your mortar and pestle. She can pound it now."

So the woman brought her mortar and pestle and Ahmed began to pound the maize.

The sack of maize was big, and it was full. Ahmed pounded, and pounded, and pounded.

"Why doesn't this stupid husband go away?" he thought. "Why has he brought so much maize?"

At last, he finished pounding all the maize. The woman's husband gave him some money.

"You can go now," he said.

Ahmed ran out of the house, and back to his home. His wife was waiting for him.

"Husband!" she cried. "What's happened? Why are you wearing a woman's dress?"

Ahmed thought quickly.

"Ah," he said. "Well. I was discussing the Koran with my friends."

"In a woman's dress?" asked his wife. She was shocked.

"Yes," said Ahmed. "You see, we were talking about some very difficult verses."

"What verses?" asked his wife.

"They were about Satan, the Evil One," Ahmed said. "Oh, my dear wife, it was terrible! We were sitting quietly, talking about Satan. Suddenly, he came to us!"

"What? Satan came to you?"

"Yes. He began to beat us all with a big stick. But I was lucky. I saw this dress on the mat near me. Quickly, I put it on. Satan beat all my friends, but he didn't want to beat a woman. It was too shameful, even for him. So I escaped and ran away."

"That was very clever," said his wife. "You are a wonderful man, husband. You know all the verses in the Koran, and you can even escape from Satan!" 

The next day, Ahmed went to the well again. He began to pull up the water. Soon, the woman came. She smiled at him.

"Listen," she said. "We had bad luck last night. But come to my house this evening. My husband is going away. His friends came for him this morning."

Ahmed shook his head.

"Oh no," he said. "I'm not coming to your house again. I don't want to pound maize all night. If I want to pound some maize, I can do it at home!"

The woman went home and told her husband everything. They laughed and laughed.

"Our plan was a good one," they said. "Ahmed will not trouble us again. But he has not become our enemy." 

Listen to the story:

Teachers’ answer key

A. How much did you understand?

In the first part of the story, Ahmed falls in love with a beautiful woman, and he asks her to meet him.

Are these sentences about the story true or false?

  1. Ahmed was a holy man.
    False. Ahmed was really a trickster.
  2. The beautiful woman was in love with Ahmed.
    False. The beautiful woman loved her husband.
  3. The woman told her husband about Ahmed.
    True
  4. The woman and her husband made a plan.
    True
  5. The woman asked Ahmed to come to her house after his evening prayers.
    True

In the second part of the story, Ahmed goes to the woman's house.

Are these sentences about the story true or false?

  1. Ahmed was happy because he thought that the woman loved him.
    True
  2. When Ahmed went into the house, the woman's husband locked the door.
    False. The woman locked the door.
  3. The woman was frightened when her husband knocked on the door.
    False. The woman expected her husband to knock on the door.
  4. Ahmed put on a woman's dress and pulled a scarf over his face.
    True
  5. A girl had come to help the woman, and she pounded all the maize.
    False. Ahmed pounded all the maize.

In the third part of the story, Ahmed goes home to his wife.

Are these sentences about the story true or false?

  1. Ahmed's wife was angry with Ahmed because he was wearing a woman's dress.
    False. Ahmed's wife was not angry, but she was surprised.
  2. While Ahmed and his friends were talking, the Evil One came and beat them.
    False. This was a story that Ahmed told his wife.
  3. The next day, the woman invited Ahmed to come back to her house.
    True
  4. Ahmed became the enemy of the husband and wife.
    False. Ahmed did not become the their enemy.

B. Who, what, where?

Find the right words in the story to fill in the gaps in these sentences.

  1. Where did Ahmed work?
    At a well
  2. Who did the woman send to the well to fetch the water for her?
    Her son
  3. What was the woman wearing when she opened the door of her house to Ahmed?
    A beautiful dress
  4. Where was the woman's husband hiding?
    Behind the house
  5. When the woman's husband came into the house, what was he carrying?
    A sack of maize
  6. What did the woman's husband give Ahmed when he had finished pounding the maize?
    Some money
  7. Who was waiting for Ahmed when he went home?
    His wife 

For teachers — answers to the exercises above.

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