But there was a quiet worry in the air, carried on the humid wind like the scent of bunga tanjong . The old khatib , Tuan Guru Haji Awang, had fallen ill. His voice—a gravelly river that had recited the khutbah for forty years—was now a whisper lost to a fever.
" Sabar tok… sabar makcik… Sabar semua. Allah tak pernah tidur. Jangan rasa sunyi. Jangan rasa keseorangan. Bumi Patani ni tanah para anbiya'? Tak pasti. Tapi tanah ni tanah orang yang beriman. Dan iman tu, dia macam pokok kelate. Makin ditiup angin makin kuat akar dia. " khutbah jumat jawi patani
A soft sob escaped from a woman in the back—Mak Som, whose son was in a detention centre across the border. She clutched her telekung . But there was a quiet worry in the
Usop saw it. A flicker of disconnect. He paused. His mind raced. He had a second, prepared text. But something else rose in his throat—not from the book, but from his grandmother's kitchen. From the lullabies she had sung to him in the dialect of the Patani river. " Sabar tok… sabar makcik… Sabar semua
He leaned into the microphone, and his voice changed. It softened. It became basi —like old rice porridge, warm and familiar.