That night, Al-Jahiz opened a fresh scroll and wrote: “Chapter on the Gray Parrot of Hind. It does not speak from understanding, but from longing. It imitates the voice of its captor as a lover imitates the sigh of the beloved. Do not ask what an animal knows. Ask what it watches. Ask what we have taught it to fear. In the eye of a caged bird lies the whole history of man’s desire to be obeyed.” He named the chapter “The Parrot of the Two Judges.” And Zubayda lived out her days in his courtyard, where no one asked her to decide anything except when she wanted a fig.
For ten years, no one could prove her wrong.
Al-Jahiz paid the fee but did not leave. He bought a cup of tea and sat outside the shop for three days. He watched Abu Hilal whisper to the parrot each morning before opening the shutters. He watched the old man touch the left side of the cage three times, the right side once. He watched Zubayda mimic not truth, but the tremor of her master’s finger.
Abu Hilal smiled, eager for a fee. He whispered the brother’s claim into Zubayda’s left ear— dawn only —and Al-Jahiz’s false claim into her right ear— any hour . Al jahiz book of animals pdf
“Old man,” he said, “I am Rashid of Kufa. My brother and I share a well. He says I may draw water only at dawn. I say any hour. Let your parrot judge.”
To prove it, Al-Jahiz offered a new test. He asked Abu Hilal to leave the room. Then he whispered to the left ear of the parrot: The sun rises in the west . To the right ear: The sun rises in the east —a falsehood. He placed no pebbles, gave no hand signals. He simply stood still.
On the fourth day, Al-Jahiz returned in his proper robes—the scholar’s black turban, the leather satchel heavy with papyrus rolls. “I am Al-Jahiz of Basra,” he announced. “And I have come to write the true chapter on parrots.” That night, Al-Jahiz opened a fresh scroll and
Zubayda looked at him. She blinked. She stretched one gray foot, then the other. And she said nothing.
“You see?” Abu Hilal beamed. “The parrot says any hour. Your brother is wrong.”
When two neighbors argued over a borrowed donkey that had returned lame, Abu Hilal would place a copper dish before Zubayda’s cage. “Truth on the left,” he would announce. “Falsehood on the right.” He would whisper the first man’s claim into her left ear, the second’s into her right. Then, Zubayda would tilt her head, ruffle her gray feathers, and pick a side by dropping a pebble onto the dish. Do not ask what an animal knows
When Abu Hilal returned, his face fell. He knew, then, that the secret was broken. But Al-Jahiz did not expose him to the crowd. Instead, he bought the parrot for a handful of dinars—more than the old man had ever earned from her tricks.
He knelt before the cage. “Zubayda is no judge,” he said gently. “She is a mirror. You have taught her to watch your left hand for the real answer. Parrots do not reason, Abu Hilal. But they read men better than men read themselves.”
She always chose the fig.