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👑 A cruel sultan learns from a mysterious old man that his beloved daughter is fated to marry a slave in his own household. Enraged, he tries everything to change destiny—including sending the slave on a deadly mission to "the place where the sun rises." But fate has other plans. The slave arrives in a foreign land, is chosen as sultan by a sacred bird, meets the sultan while hunting, and unknowingly agrees to marry the very princess he was destined for. This is a story about the futility of fighting fate, the power of trust in the divine, and the strange paths that lead us where we were always meant to go. 👑 PART 1: THE CRUEL SULTAN AND THE OLD MAN The Setting: Sultan Zulfiqar and Vizier Efzelshah—both cruel and merciless—order the people to stay inside so they can stroll freely. The Old Man: By the river, an old man writes on paper and throws it into the water. He is writing destinies. The Question: The sultan asks about his daughter's fate. The answer: "With the slave in your own household." The Demand: The sultan tries to change it. The old man refuses: "Once a destiny is written, it cannot be changed." The Sorrow: The sultan returns home in despair. His wife dismisses the prophecy: "What does that old man know?" 🗡️ PART 2: THE PLAN – Send the Slave to Die The Sultan's Fear: Every time he sees the slave, he thinks: "If I kill him, it's a sin. If I don't, he'll take my daughter." The Vizier's Scheme: "Send him to the place where the sun rises. He'll never return." The Mission: The slave is ordered to go and bring back news from that impossible place. He accepts, saying: "Ya hu ya men hu leysel hadi illa hu" —a phrase of trust in the divine. 🕊️ PART 3: THE BIRD OF FATE – A Slave Becomes Sultan The Journey: The slave travels far, over hills and dales, until he reaches another country. The Coincidence: On that very day, the sultan of that land has died. The people gather to choose a new ruler by releasing a state bird—a bird of omen. The Selection: The bird lands on the slave's head. The people object. They release it again. It lands on him again. A third time—same result. No one can argue. The Rise: The slave becomes sultan. The impossible mission is forgotten. He now rules a kingdom. 🦌 PART 4: THE HUNT – Two Sultans Meet The Hunting Ground: The girl's father, the sultan, goes hunting. The former slave, now a sultan, also arrives at the same place. The Meeting: They become acquainted. They host each other. The girl's father asks: "Are you married?" The slave sultan says: "I am single." The Proposal: The girl's father offers his daughter. The slave sultan hesitates but agrees. The wedding is set. The Joy: The sultan returns home rejoicing: "I am marrying my daughter to a sultan!" His wife says: "I told you—don't heed the old man's words." 💍 PART 5: THE WEDDING – The Truth Revealed The Celebration: Forty camels and forty horses laden with gold. Forty nights and forty days of wedding. The Recognition: The princess notices something familiar—his mannerisms, his way of speaking, his laugh. She says nothing. The Question: After the meal, the sultan asks: "Did you recognize who I am?" She says no. The Revelation: "I am your former slave." She is shocked: "How is that possible? You are a sultan!" The Story Told: He tells her everything—the mission, the journey, the bird, the throne, the hunt. 🏃♀️ PART 6: THE CONFIRMATION – The Mother's Doubt The Daughter's News: She runs to her mother: "Mother, my husband was our slave!" The Mother's Denial: "Impossible. He brought forty camels of gold. A slave couldn't do that." The Verification: The mother asks the sultan herself. He confirms: "Yes, I was your slave." The Mother's Astonishment: She tells her husband: "The old man's words have come true." The Sultan's Realization: He goes to the former slave and hears the truth with his own ears. 📜 PART 7: THE MORAL – Fate Cannot Be Outrun The Return: The couple returns to their palace. The prophecy is fulfilled. The sultan who tried to kill destiny now bows to it. The Lesson: You cannot change what is written. The storm, the bird, the hunt—all were threads in a pattern the sultan could not see. 🧠 THEMES & MEANINGS: The Futility of Fighting Fate: The sultan's every action—sending the slave away, marrying her to a rich man—only brought her closer to the destiny he feared. The Power of Trust: The slave's simple phrase—"Ya hu ya men hu"—is a key. He trusts the divine, and the divine delivers him. The Bird as Divine Sign: The state bird landing three times is not chance. It is providence made visible. The Irony of the Hunt: The sultan goes hunting for game and finds his son-in-law. He thought he was choosing a sultan; he was choosing the slave. The Old Man's Wisdom: He writes destinies, but he does not control them. He is a witness, not a shaper. #TurkishFolklore #Fate #Destiny #Sultan #Slave #Folktale #Mythology #BirdOfOmen #DivineWill #LifeLesson #Philosophy #Storytelling #ClassicTale