There was nothing left in the house. Not a grain of food.For seven days, this had been their condition. Rābiʿa al-ʿAdawiyya fasted through the day, breaking it each evening with nothing more than a sip of water. Her body was failing. But her spirit? Still firm. Still radiant. There was no trace of complaint on her face, no plea against fate, no whisper of frustration toward her Lord.
That day, someone arrived with a small offering of food. She accepted it silently.The house was dark. Her companion went inside to light a lamp. But by the time she returned, the food was gone. A cat had eaten it. Rābiʿa’s only response:
“Then it was never meant for me.”
Still, she thought perhaps a little water might bring ease. She reached for a jug. But it slipped. Shattered. And in that moment, as the broken clay scattered across the floor, something inside her broke too. The silent storm within surged.
“O Creator!” she cried.
“Why… why do You treat Your Rābiʿa this way?”
Her companion left quietly, giving her space. And slowly, as the waves of emotion receded, clarity flooded her soul.
“There is still an attachment within me,” she thought.
“Still a craving for comfort. A longing for the material. I must leave it all. Entirely. Without remainder.”
From that day forward, Rābiʿa walked the path of utter renunciation. Walked with light. The kind of light that wounds the self but heals the heart. Once, a visitor came seeking a gift. Rābiʿa offered him a simple bundle: a candle and a needle. Then she explained.
“This candle—your life.
It will burn away until nothing remains. But if, in its burning, it gives others light—then it has triumphed.”
“This needle—your character. Quiet. Modest. Yet it clothes others, stitching warmth where there was none. Be like the needle. Simple. But useful to others.”
The guest left richer than he arrived. By the banks of the Euphrates, a pious man once performed his prayer—on a prayer mat spread across the river’s surface. A miracle. He turned to Rābiʿa and said,
“Come, join me. Pray as I do.”
She said nothing. Instead, she laid her mat flat upon the earth. Then she and the mat rose—lifted into the air. She prayed there, suspended between the sky and the water. The man was astonished. But Rābiʿa turned to him and said, gently:
“Miracles are not signs of true greatness. Your prayer on water—how is it any more wondrous than a fish’s swim? And mine in the air—no greater than a bird in flight. These are not measures of nearness to Allah. True knowledge is not found in spectacles.”
This was Rābiʿa al-ʿAdawiyya— A woman who conversed with the Divine in the silence of hunger.









