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" Uncle Rashid,” Ali said finally, “I have come here to ask you a question.” “Then ask.” “I have come,” he continued, “to ask for the hand of my cousin Fawziyah.” The moment he said her name, Fawziyah came out of the kitchen with a tray of coffee. “Did you hear that?” her father asked, grinning a brown-speckled handful of teeth. “You and Ali are going to be married.” She flushed and looked down at her feet to hide the size of her smile. Then she ran back into the kitchen to tell her mother. “You have made her very happy,” Uncle Rashid said. “We were beginning to lose faith in the power of our prayers.” It was, Ali realized, exactly what they had all been waiting for. It wasn’t a foolish idea at all. Uncle Rashid raised a glass and together they drank, to grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and so on down the line. "

Michael David Lukas , The Last Watchman of Old Cairo


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Michael David Lukas quote : Uncle Rashid,” Ali said finally, “I have come here to ask you a question.” “Then ask.” “I have come,” he continued, “to ask for the hand of my cousin Fawziyah.” The moment he said her name, Fawziyah came out of the kitchen with a tray of coffee. “Did you hear that?” her father asked, grinning a brown-speckled handful of teeth. “You and Ali are going to be married.” She flushed and looked down at her feet to hide the size of her smile. Then she ran back into the kitchen to tell her mother. “You have made her very happy,” Uncle Rashid said. “We were beginning to lose faith in the power of our prayers.” It was, Ali realized, exactly what they had all been waiting for. It wasn’t a foolish idea at all. Uncle Rashid raised a glass and together they drank, to grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and so on down the line.