Page:Folk-lore of the Holy Land.djvu/54

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FOLK-LORE OF THE HOLY LAND

runs that a strange camel was to come and guide El-Khalil to the appointed place. This time Iblis succeeded in deceiving the Father of the Faithful, who began to build at Ramet el Khalil, an hour from Hebron, but, after he had laid the few courses which are still to be seen there, Allah showed him his mistake, and he moved on to Hebron.

[1]Hebron was then inhabited by Jews and Christians, the name of whose patriarch was Habrûn. Ibrahim went to visit him, and said he wished to buy as much land as the “furweh” or sheepskin jacket which he was wearing would enclose if cut into pieces. Habrûn, laughing, said, “I will sell you that much land for four hundred golden dinars, and each hundred dinars must have the die of a different sultan.”’ It was then the ’asr,[2] and Ibrahim asked leave to say his prayers. He took off his furweh and spread it on the ground for a prayer-carpet. Then, taking up the proper position, he performed his devotions, adding a petition for the sum demanded. When he rose from his knees and took up the jacket, there lay beneath it four bags, each containing a hundred gold dinars, and each hundred with the die of a different sultan.

He then, in the presence of forty witnesses, told the money into Habrûn’s hand, and proceeded to cut his furweh into strips with which to enclose the land thus bought. Habrûn protested, saying that was not in the agreement; but Ibrahim appealed to

  1. Some of the details in the ensuing narrative remind one of the story of the founding of Carthage.
  2. Hour for afternoon prayer, half way from noon to sunset.—Ed.