22 pages 44 minutes read

Naguib Mahfouz

Zaabalawi

Fiction | Short Story | Adult | Published in 1961

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Important Quotes

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“Finally I became convinced that I had to find Sheikh Zaabalawi.

The first time I had heard his name had been in a song.”


(Page 1)

The narrator begins by announcing his urgent need to find Zaabalawi—the task that occupies the story’s pages. This introduction frames Zaabalawi’s existence as uncertain. By painting him as a song lyric that the narrator seems barely able to remember, Mahfouz gives us a sense of Zaabalawi’s fleetingness. This passage also introduces the important motif of music, which recurs throughout “Zaabalawi.”

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“‘Who is Zaabalawi?’ He had looked at me hesitantly as though doubting my ability to understand the answer. However, he had replied, ‘May his blessing descend upon you, he’s a true saint of God, a remover of worries and troubles. Were it not for him I would have died miserably—’” 


(Page 1)

Zaabalawi’s identity is a recurring question in the text. Here, the narrator’s father hesitates before he answers, likely because Zaabalawi is not a physical man but rather the personification of spiritual awakening. By providing a more specific answer—that Zaabalawi is a healer—the father has already begun to obscure Zaabalawi’s full significance, and we enter a world of illusion as our narrator’s sense of the world becomes unreliable.

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“The days passed and brought with them many illnesses, for each one of which I was able, without too much trouble and at a cost I could afford, to find a cure, until I became afflicted with that illness for which no one possesses a remedy.”


(Page 1)

Nostalgia is an important theme in the story, here evidenced by the narrator reflecting on the many illnesses that came with the passage of time. Such a statement suggests that the natural world itself has become colder and less tolerant. The narrator’s encounters bear this out; many of the people the narrator meets disregard him or greet him with outright hostility.

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