|
O Mother of Rain,
Rain Upon Us
Rwala Bedouin Women
(Arabian
Peninsula, Oral Tradition)
Sometimes
gratefulness expresses itself as a heartfelt call for what we truly need.
Mary Ford-Grabowsky, editor of Sacred Voices: Essential Women's Wisdom
Through the Ages, describes one such prayer:
This prayer from the Rwala Bedouin people belongs to
a richly complex ritual performed by the women when drought threatens.
Terrified and trusting, the women create a "Rain Mother" from
a stick and women's clothing, and then girls, led by the woman selected
to carry Rain Mother, process from tent to tent chanting a song such
as the one that appears below....In the third verse, the leader is weeping
because she sees a beloved camel weakening from thirst, perhaps dying,
which hints at the catastrophic loss of animals, crops, and human life
that may life just ahead.

O Mother of Rain, rain upon us!
Moisten the cloak of our shepherd.
O Mother of Rain, rain upon us!
Quench our thirst with torrential rains.
O Mother of Rain, rain upon us!
Give us our portion from Allah's stores.
O Mother of Rain, rain upon us!
Cause torrents of water to fall over us.
O Mother of rain, rain upon us!
We are tormented by this thirst.
O Mother of rain, have mercy on us,
Dust clouds are making us blind.
O Mother of Rain, come to our aid,
The specter of death speeds toward us.
O Mother of Rain, O famished one,
The great cold is destroying us.
Place me upon my camel.
Hold back whoever would restrain me.
The tears of my eyes are used up.
Spent for those who have already gone.
***
The news on our own doorstep, if we're paying attention, can readily
evoke this depth of longing for balance in nature and provision of every
creature's needs.
Additional reading:
Sacred Voices: Essential Women's Wisdom Through
the Ages, edited by Mary Ford-Grabowsky
(San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 2002).
Reprinted here with the kind permission of Mary Ford-Grabowsky.
|