The Ones Who Left
The Journey of a Blind Man who
Carved Light Out of Darkness
Then there's Hafiz Ataullah.
Yet when he looked at me—without seeing me—and said, "I am thankful to Almighty Allah for what I have, and I am thankful to Almighty Allah for what I do not have," something inside me shattered and rebuilt itself simultaneously.
I sat there, a man blessed with sight, suddenly feeling blind to the profound truths this extraordinary human being was revealing. His words didn't just challenge my perspective—they demolished it entirely and forced me to rebuild my understanding of gratitude, resilience, and what it truly means to live.
I first encountered Hafiz Ataullah in 2016 when I was transferred to New Saeedabad branch of a private bank. He would enter our branch with measured steps, his white cane tapping rhythmically against the floor, navigating our space with a precision that left me amazed.
He came for various tasks assigned to him by others, and I made it my personal mission to expedite his work, driven by a deep respect for his independence. During my two years at that branch, we developed what I thought was just a professional courtesy.
When I transferred to Nawabshah Regional Office, our paths diverged, and I assumed our story had ended.
Then, months later, my phone rang.
That day, I realized I wasn't just meeting a client. I was encountering someone whose inner compass was far more sophisticated than any GPS system ever created.
Over nine years of friendship, Hafiz Ataullah has never once asked me for financial help. Not a single rupee. Our relationship exists in its purest form—built on respect, genuine affection, and the simple human need for connection.
Born in 1974 in Abreja, a small village near New Saeedabad, Hafiz Ataullah entered a world he would never visually experience. His father, a humble carpenter, welcomed what he thought was a healthy baby boy.
It wasn't until months later that the cruel reality emerged—their firstborn would never see the world around him.
Fate seemed particularly harsh to this family. Of three sons born to them, two would live in permanent darkness. Only their youngest son and daughter were blessed with sight.
Picture a child's natural desire to explore, to run freely, to discover the world through boundless curiosity. Now imagine that same child confined to the boundaries of a small home, dependent on others for the simplest tasks like fetching water.
The First Harsh Lesson:
One day, driven by the universal need of children to play and explore, he ventured outside barefoot. In villages where garbage is often burned in open spaces, the ground holds hidden dangers. He stepped onto the smoldering remains of burned waste, injuring his feet.
The physical pain was temporary, but the message was permanent: the world outside was dangerous for someone like him.
His parents, already carrying the enormous burden of raising a child with disabilities, faced an impossible choice: keep him safe but dependent, or risk his well-being for the chance at independence.
Then a guardian angel appeared.
Mrs. Abrejo, wife of the local school's headmaster Mr. Mushtaq Abrejo, approached Hafiz Ataullah's grandmother with an extraordinary proposition.
It sounded impossible. How could a blind child become someone others would rely on? But his grandmother, watching her grandson waste away in helpless dependency, made a leap of faith that would change everything.
At 8:30 every morning, six-year-old Hafiz Ataullah would leave his home, walking carefully to the Abrejo household. He wouldn't return until 9:00 PM, thirteen hours later.
What happened during those long days was nothing short of miraculous transformation.
Under their guidance, he learned to navigate their home with the precision of a sighted person. He memorized every room, every piece of furniture, every corner. He mastered household chores that seemed impossible for someone without sight—operating washing machines, hanging clothes to dry, identifying which garments belonged to which family member.
"It felt like I could see everything. They taught me to see the world through darkness."
Going Beyond Training:
Mr. Mushtaq Abrejo went beyond household training. Desperate to restore his protégé's sight, he traveled to distant cities searching for doctors, even investigating the possibility of eye transplants.
When medical experts confirmed that the optic nerves had never developed—making treatment impossible—he didn't give up on Hafiz Ataullah's future. Instead, he doubled down on developing the extraordinary abilities that blindness had forced into existence.
When Mr. Mushtaq passed away in 2005, followed by his wife just six months later, Hafiz Ataullah didn't just lose mentors—he lost the parents who had chosen him.
A fellow villager with partial blindness returned from the RCPH (Rehabilitation Center for Persons with Handicap) with exciting news. The government-run facility taught vocational skills to people with disabilities, offering accommodation, food, and most importantly, a path to economic independence.
The center buzzed with activity—people affected by polio, blindness, deafness, and various other disabilities all working toward the common goal of self-reliance.
For those with visual impairments, the curriculum focused on chair-making: weaving materials, constructing frames, repairs, and creating furniture from scratch.
But Hafiz Ataullah quickly discovered that even in institutions designed to help the most vulnerable, human prejudices flourish like weeds.
The Favoritism Problem:
"The instructor was from a different region. I felt he was only focused on students from his own area. He would ignore me, provide unclear instructions, and seemed determined to see me fail."
The situation escalated when the instructor filed a false complaint with the female head of the institute, claiming Hafiz Ataullah skipped classes and wandered around instead of learning.
The Real Teacher Emerges:
Here's where the story takes a turn that still brings tears to my eyes.
Javed, a fellow student whose legs were paralyzed by polio, noticed what was happening. Unable to walk, he would drag himself across the floor to Hafiz Ataullah's workstation. There, this man who could barely move his own body became the teacher that the official instructor refused to be.
Think about this scene: a man without legs teaching a man without sight, while the person paid to help them both chose prejudice over purpose. It's a snapshot of humanity at its worst and finest, existing in the same room.
"Do you know what I discovered? Favoritism exists everywhere. Even in places specifically created to help people like us."
He learned his skills not because of the system, but despite it. And that lesson—that you can't depend on others' kindness, but you can depend on your own determination—would serve him well in the decades to come.
Armed with new skills and an unbreakable spirit, Hafiz Ataullah returned to his village ready to carve out his economic future. He continued his work with the Abrejo family while expanding into furniture repair and creation throughout the region.
His reputation spread like ripples in still water:
But he didn't stop at chairs. Recognizing that local demand included traditional string beds called charpais, he taught himself this more complex skill. These weren't simple repairs—creating a charpai from scratch requires understanding wood grain, measuring without sight, and weaving rope patterns that will support human weight night after night.
Expanding Services Beyond Craftsmanship:
His services expanded beyond furniture making. A local madrassa hired him to purchase vegetables and supplies weekly, paying him for both the service and his careful selection. Community members began requesting that he travel to nearby towns or even Hyderabad to purchase specific items, trusting his judgment implicitly.
Here's what amazes me most: when people would only provide exact money for travel and purchases—giving him no profit margin for his time and effort—he never complained or refused.
"If it's within my reach, I don't say no to anyone."
How many of us, blessed with sight and full mobility, can honestly say we serve others with such selfless dedication?
Mrs. Abrejo's prophecy was fulfilling itself exactly as promised: people with eyes were indeed becoming dependent on Hafiz Ataullah.
By age 37, Hafiz Ataullah carried the same yearning that beats in every human heart—the desire for companionship, love, and family. But who would marry a blind man in a society where physical imperfection often overshadows character strength?
Years of rejection had almost convinced him that marriage wasn't destined for his life. Then a woman approached him with hope wrapped in deception.
For a man earning modest amounts through furniture repair and odd jobs, 80,000 rupees represented months of careful saving. But the promise of love, of having someone to share his life with, of perhaps having children—these dreams proved too powerful to resist.
He handed over his life savings.
She had returned to her family and sent word that she wouldn't continue the marriage. The matchmaker, when contacted, offered to "fix the situation" but returned only 15,000 rupees of his money before disappearing forever.
It was all a con. A carefully orchestrated scheme to rob a blind man of his savings while dangling his deepest desire as bait.
As he recounted this story, I studied his face for signs of bitterness, anger, or self-pity. Instead, I found the same calm acceptance that seemed to define every aspect of his character.
After COVID-19 disrupted many traditional income sources, a longtime acquaintance approached Hafiz Ataullah with what seemed like a perfect business opportunity.
It sounded reasonable—a steady income stream requiring his investment but not his physical presence at the market. After years of knowing this person, trust seemed justified.
The arrangement worked beautifully for six months. Every day, Hafiz Ataullah received his promised 200 rupees. His investment was generating steady returns, and he began planning how this reliable income could improve his family's life.
Then the payments stopped.
Months passed. The excuses multiplied, but the payments never resumed. Eventually, the man simply vanished, taking the entire business and Hafiz Ataullah's capital with him.
As I listened to this account, my mind raced with righteous anger. How do these people justify their actions? How do they live with themselves after stealing from someone whose options are already so limited?
But Hafiz Ataullah's response revealed a spiritual strength that humbled me:
"They will one day appear before Allah and will have to answer for everything."
Sometimes evil wears a helpful face, and predators hunt by offering assistance to those who need it most.
Hafiz Ataullah was traveling to Hyderabad on behalf of several people from New Saeedabad, carrying a list of items to purchase and the money to buy them. In those days, currency included 1, 2, and 5 rupee notes, making the cash bundle more substantial.
He tucked the money into his shirt's front pocket but forgot to button it closed. After reaching Hyderabad by bus, he took a shared four-seater to Chotki Gali and still needed to walk several blocks to reach his destination shop.
Standing on the roadside, clearly a visitor unfamiliar with the area, he presented an easy target.
When Hafiz Ataullah explained his destination, the man offered to guide him there personally. Grateful for the assistance and trusting human nature, Hafiz Ataullah accepted the help.
Picture this scene: a blind man, robbed and abandoned in a strange city, with no money and no way to complete the tasks people were counting on him to finish. Most of us would have called for help, returned home empty-handed, and explained what happened.
The Good Samaritan:
As he walked through his confusion and despair, trying to find his way back to familiar territory, a voice called out his name. A man from his hometown who worked in Hyderabad had spotted him and immediately recognized something was wrong.
After hearing the whole story, this angel in disguise took Hafiz Ataullah to a roadside restaurant, gave him water, and provided enough money for the bus ride home.
But here's where Hafiz Ataullah's character truly shines:
Instead of simply returning home and explaining what happened, he stopped in New Saeedabad and borrowed money from a friend. He purchased as many of the requested items as possible locally, then visited each person who had trusted him with their money.
He delivered what he could find, returned money for items he couldn't locate, and told everyone the complete truth about being robbed.
Read that again. A blind man, victimized by a thief, took full responsibility for other people's losses. He borrowed money to fulfill commitments that were impossible to keep due to circumstances beyond his control.
How many people have you met in your entire life who would handle betrayal with such integrity? This wasn't just honesty—this was honor at a level most of us will never achieve.
In a life marked by challenges and occasional betrayals, happiness often comes in unexpected packages. For Hafiz Ataullah, joy arrived in the form of a kitchen appliance that most of us take for granted.
During a work trip to Sakrand, he visited a friend who owned an electronics shop. The summer heat was particularly brutal that year, and keeping food fresh without refrigeration had become a daily struggle.
His friend, unable to simply gift such an expensive item, offered an installment plan instead. When Hafiz Ataullah explained that his modest income couldn't handle monthly payments, his friend suggested an alternative that seemed like a long shot.
Most people would have dismissed this advice as unrealistic. Why would a successful businessman give away expensive appliances to strangers? But Hafiz Ataullah had learned that sometimes the most unlikely paths lead to unexpected destinations.
He traveled to Hyderabad and somehow convinced the office staff to let him meet Mr. Qavi directly. The conversation was simple and honest.
Instead of dismissal or false promises, Mr. Qavi handed him a visiting card and made a commitment: "I'll do my best to get you a fridge. Call me every 10-15 days to remind me."
A month of phone calls passed. Then, one day, the call Hafiz Ataullah had barely dared to hope for finally came.
The fridge still sits in his home today, a daily reminder that genuine kindness exists in unexpected places.
Think about that phrase: "the happiest day of my life."
How many of us can say that about acquiring any single possession? We accumulate gadgets, clothes, cars, and homes, yet struggle to identify moments of pure joy connected to any of them.
For Hafiz Ataullah, happiness wasn't about status or luxury—it was about a machine that would keep his food fresh during summer heat. It was about the kindness of strangers who chose to help rather than ignore.
When I asked Hafiz Ataullah about his dreams and aspirations, his response stopped me cold.
Think about the profound faith that statement represents. He has heard descriptions of Makkah and Madinah countless times. He knows every detail from stories, recordings, and conversations with pilgrims who have returned.
In his mind, he has constructed images of these sacred spaces built entirely from words and imagination. Yet his deepest desire is to experience them with senses he's never possessed.
Meanwhile, many of us who have seen photographs and videos of these holy sites from every conceivable angle struggle to maintain the spiritual connection he carries effortlessly in his heart.
I found myself praying that somehow, someday, Hafiz Ataullah's dream becomes reality.
I asked Hafiz Ataullah if he had any final message for those who would read his story.
Sometimes the wisest thoughts come from the most unexpected sources. Here was someone who had every reason to feel forgotten by society, yet his deepest wish was for that same society's wellbeing.
"I love this country and pray for its prosperity. We all should make efforts to make this beautiful country a great place to live."
As our conversation drew to a close, Hafiz Ataullah returned to the statement that had started our journey together:
Sitting across from this extraordinary human being, I realized I had been the blind one all along.
I had sight but lacked vision. I could see colors but missed the beauty in acceptance. I had witnessed countless sunrises but never truly observed the light that shines from unshakeable contentment.
Hafiz Ataullah may not have biological vision, but he sees everything that truly matters:
His story doesn't ask for our pity—it demands our admiration. It doesn't seek our charity—it offers us wisdom. It doesn't plead for special treatment—it demonstrates that true disability lies not in what we lack physically, but in what we refuse to see spiritually.
The next time you find yourself frustrated by what you don't have, remember the man who has never seen his own reflection but knows exactly who he is.
In the darkness of his world, Hafiz Ataullah found a light the rest of us are still searching for.
Perhaps it's time we learned to see through his eyes.
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Noor M Abro is a Pakistani writer and storyteller who believes in the power of authentic narratives to inspire change. Through RumZar Writes, he shares real stories of ordinary people doing extraordinary things, challenging readers to see the world through new perspectives.
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