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(Lights up. A single celestial beam shines on MIRDAD standing barefoot at center stage. Stillness surrounds him. He speaks gently but with power.)
MIRDAD
You have come to witness a story.
But this is not a tale.
It is a remembering.
Not of me… but of you.
For what I am, you are.
And what I give, you already carry.
I come not to teach—but to remind.
Not to shine—but to reveal the light in your own shadow.
This monastery, this mountain, this silence you shall see—
they are not apart from you.
They are the chambers of your heart.
There will be hunger.
There will be grief.
There will be shame.
And if you let it break you…
Good.
For what is broken can finally be shared.
If your tears come, let them come.
They are not weakness.
They are the soul remembering how to speak again.
Let us begin.
ACT I: The Stranger at the Gate

🎬 Scene 1: Storm Above, Storm Within
Setting: A crumbling mountaintop monastery. A winter storm howls outside.
Lighting: Dim, flickering torchlight. Walls cast long shadows.
Sound: Distant thunder. Wind pushes the doors.
[Eight monks gather around a long wooden table. Their robes are threadbare. Each carries tension—some quiet, others angry.]
ABIMAR (pacing)
The new Keeper of the Ark should have been here weeks ago.
He’s either dead or too afraid to climb.
MICAYON (quietly)
Or maybe he walks slowly... with purpose.
SAMUEL (snaps)
Purpose? The Ark needs a man—not a dreamer!
ELIAB (older)
We are monks, not gatekeepers of mystery. Let the Council send someone else.
[Suddenly, a knock—three slow knocks—echoes from the gate.]
[Everyone freezes.]
🎬 Scene 2: The Arrival of the Unwelcome
[They open the heavy wooden door. In walks a tattered man—barefoot, soaked, eyes luminous with calm. It is MIRDAD. He says nothing.]
SAMUEL (mocking)
Who are you? A lost goat herder?
MIRDAD (softly)
No. But I’ve lived among them.
ABIMAR
Your name?
MIRDAD
The name I wore is buried in the sea. Call me... what you need.
[The monks grow uneasy.]
SAMUEL
This cannot be the Keeper. He carries nothing—no documents, no seal, no instruction.
MICAYON (to Mirdad)
Why have you come?
MIRDAD
To serve. To listen.
To mend the thread where your world is unraveling.
[Laughter erupts.]
SAMUEL
This is madness. We wait years for a Keeper, and God sends a beggar?
[He pushes Mirdad toward the door.]
🎬 Scene 3: The First Blow
[Mirdad stumbles. A monk strikes him with a walking staff. Blood appears at his temple.]
MIRDAD (does not flinch)
Strike me if it eases your burden.
But know—where pain is given, compassion waits just behind.
[Silence. MICAYON kneels beside him. Begins to clean the wound with his robe.]
MICAYON (whispers)
You should run from here. This place is not kind to... truth.
MIRDAD (smiling faintly)
Where else would truth go... if not where it is most unloved?
🎬 Scene 4: The Feet and the Flame
[MICAYON removes Mirdad’s sandals, revealing torn, bleeding feet. He begins to wash them in a small bowl of warm water.]
SAMUEL
You disgrace us, Micayon. A monk bows to a lunatic?
MICAYON (without looking up)
I bow to a wound I once carried.
[He gently washes the feet. Mirdad watches in silence, eyes glistening.]
MIRDAD (to all)
You fear me because I carry no sword.
You mock me because I carry no shield.
But I carry something heavier.
(beat)
I carry compassion.
And you do not yet know the weight... of love that asks nothing in return.
🎬 Scene 5: The Recognition
[ELIAB approaches slowly. Looks Mirdad in the eye.]
ELIAB
I saw a man like you once—during the famine.
He gave his bread away, then died in the night.
The world does not honor such fools.
MIRDAD
No. But the world weeps for them—long after the swords have rusted.
[Pause. The storm grows quieter outside. One candle stays lit as the others flicker.]
MICAYON (to the others)
Let him stay the night.
If he’s a fool—he’ll leave.
But if he’s who he says he is... we’ll leave different.
SAMUEL (growling)
This is madness.
MIRDAD
No, brother.
This... is mercy.
ACT II: The Burden of Brotherhood

🎬 Scene 1: The Weight of Silence
Setting: The monastery courtyard. Spring winds.
Lighting: Soft gray daylight, patches of green.
Sound: Birds in the distance, leaves rustling.
[The monks sit in a half-circle. MIRDAD sits apart, eyes closed. Tension simmers.]
SAMUEL
He’s been here two weeks. Says nothing. Does little.
He listens to the wind as if it speaks to him.
ABIMAR
Maybe it does.
SAMUEL
Maybe your mind has gone soft with him.
[MIRDAD opens his eyes. Calm.]
MIRDAD
The wind carries things you bury.
Memories. Words you wish unsaid.
Mothers you left to die.
[A beat. All heads turn slowly to ABIMAR. He freezes.]
🎬 Scene 2: The Memory of Milk and Blood
Setting: A memory space. Dimmed stage. A lone chair in light.
Lighting: Blue and gold.
Sound: A heartbeat. Then, slow breathing.
[ABIMAR stands in the center. The monks fade into shadows. MIRDAD stays beside him silently.]
ABIMAR (shaking)
She was dying.
Her hands—so small.
She asked me to stay.
And I ran.
[His voice cracks.]
ABIMAR
I had to catch the boat.
She said, “One more day, my son. Just one more.”
But I left.
And the next letter said she was buried. Alone.
[He sinks to his knees. MIRDAD places a hand on his back.]
MIRDAD
Then stay now.
ABIMAR (whispers)
What?
MIRDAD
Sit with her now.
Hold her now.
Let your tears be the arms you never gave her.
[ABIMAR closes his eyes. He weeps. MIRDAD remains still beside him.]
🎬 Scene 3: The Gift of the Wound
Setting: Back in the courtyard. The other monks sit quietly.
Lighting: Warmer, golden tones now.
Sound: Wind has softened.
[ABIMAR returns slowly. His eyes red, but clear.]
ABIMAR
I have lived so long with my guilt—it became my identity.
But today, someone sat with me in my worst hour... and said nothing.
And it was enough.
ELIAB (to Mirdad)
You said nothing... but it felt like thunder inside my chest.
MIRDAD
Words are not always medicine.
Presence is.
[Pause. SAMUEL remains distant, arms crossed.]
SAMUEL (bitterly)
So we are to sob our way into holiness now?
MIRDAD (turns gently to him)
No.
You are to bleed together until you forget which wound was whose.
🎬 Scene 4: The First Healing
Setting: A simple meal table.
Lighting: Candlelit twilight.
Sound: Gentle clinking of bowls and spoons.
[The monks share bread. ABIMAR places a small bowl in front of MIRDAD.]
ABIMAR
It’s not much. Lentils and silence.
MIRDAD (smiling faintly)
A feast—when shared from a clean heart.
[They eat quietly. For the first time, no tension. Just quiet breathing. A deep shift.]
🎬 Scene 5: The Song She Never Heard
Setting: Night. ABIMAR alone in the chapel.
Lighting: One small oil lamp.
Sound: A soft hum—a lullaby.
[ABIMAR kneels before the altar. He begins to sing—his mother’s song. Broken at first. Then full. Then trembling.]
ABIMAR
Sleep, mama. Sleep…
I am here now.
Too late, too late—but I am here.
[MIRDAD appears in the doorway but says nothing. Just listens, eyes shining.]
Final Line of Act II:
MIRDAD (whispers, to the dark)
When the past becomes a song instead of a scar...
Compassion has done her work.
ACT III: The Silence That Speaks

Scene 1: The Withering
Setting: The monastery kitchen. Empty shelves. A cold hearth.
Lighting: Sparse. Pale daylight flickering through slats.
Sound: Hollow wind. A single spoon scraping an empty bowl.
[MONKS sit silently. Faces thin. No one speaks. Hunger gnaws at them all. MICAYON faints quietly, head hitting the table. MIRDAD catches him.]
SAMUEL (tightly)
We’ve gone from prayers to weakness.
And weakness becomes rot.
ELIAB
There's no food left, Samuel. Even the rot is gone.
[MIRDAD rises slowly, takes the last piece of bread from his pocket, breaks it into tiny pieces, and gives one to each monk—including Samuel.]
MIRDAD
One crumb for the body.
And if you find nothing in it...
Close your eyes and eat what it meant to me to give it.
🎬 Scene 2: The Accusation
Setting: The sleeping quarters.
Lighting: Moonlight through cracked shutters.
Sound: Shallow breathing, a distant owl.
[JOSHAB, a young monk, is found hoarding dried figs under his blanket. The others surround him.]
ABIMAR (angrily)
You let Micayon faint while you stored sweetness?
JOSHAB (crying)
I was afraid. I—I just—
SAMUEL (yells)
He’s a snake. He eats while others starve!
[MIRDAD enters silently.]
MIRDAD (to Joshab)
Your hunger was not for food, was it?
JOSHAB
No. It was... to know I mattered.
That something... anything... was mine.
[The room falls still.]
MIRDAD
Then feed that part of you now—with truth.
Sit. Do not defend.
We will not shame you.
We will share the shame together.
[Everyone sits. In silence.]
🎬 Scene 3: The Gift of No Words
Setting: The prayer chamber.
Lighting: Only candlelight. One candle burns.
Sound: Complete silence for nearly 30 seconds.
[MIRDAD kneels with the monks. No prayers spoken. No chants. Just breath. Just eyes closed. Just sitting.]
[One by one, monks begin to cry silently. Shoulders shake. Heads lower. No one speaks.]
[SAMUEL opens his mouth—then closes it. His eyes soften for the first time in the entire play.]
[MIRDAD opens his eyes. They are wet.]
MIRDAD (very softly)
Now... you are beginning to understand.
ABIMAR
Understand what?
MIRDAD
That the soul does not speak language.
It listens through silence... and answers through presence.
🎬 Scene 4: The Breaking of the Fast
Setting: Morning. A knock at the monastery gate.
Lighting: Golden dawn.
Sound: Rooster. Footsteps.
[A VILLAGER appears with a sack of barley and dried fruits. He speaks only one line:]
VILLAGER
A stranger passed through town weeks ago... and asked us to send this when the snow melted.
[He leaves. The monks open the sack slowly, reverently.]
MICAYON
He gave before we ever needed.
MIRDAD (smiling)
No. He gave... because you would need.
That is the difference.
🎬 Scene 5: The Silent Song
Setting: That night, under the stars.
Lighting: Stars. Soft stage light mimicking their glow.
Sound: A single violin, slow and distant.
[The monks sit together. No one eats yet. The food remains in bowls before them. They are looking at one another—not the food.]
MIRDAD (gazing upward)
You think silence is empty.
But it is full—of all the things we’re too frightened to say aloud.
And when we bear it together...
That is compassion.
ACT IV: The Ascent and the Departure

Scene 1: The Sky Begins to Open
Setting: The mountaintop monastery at dawn.
Lighting: Pale golden light bleeding into the gray.
Sound: A soft breeze and the faint call of a bird unseen.
[The monks wake to find the chapel door open. MIRDAD is standing barefoot on the threshold, facing the rising sun.]
MICAYON (softly)
It’s today, isn’t it?
MIRDAD (without turning)
It has always been today.
SAMUEL (torn)
And yet… you leave us?
MIRDAD
No. I return you… to yourselves.
[Pause. The monks gather. One by one, they kneel—not out of obedience, but reverence.]
MIRDAD
You came seeking a Keeper of the Ark.
But the Ark is not this house.
The Ark is each heart… that learns to hold another’s pain as its own.
🎬 Scene 2: The Unburdening
Setting: The interior hall.
Lighting: A beam of sunlight through stained glass.
Sound: Silence except for breath.
[Each monk approaches MIRDAD one by one to speak the final truth they never dared.]
ABIMAR
You showed me how to grieve without shame.
I feared weakness.
But my tears brought me home.
ELIAB
I judged you.
Mocked you.
Because you made me remember who I had been before the world hardened me.
Thank you… for undoing me.
JOSHAB (weeping)
You let me eat, when I deserved hunger.
That… broke me.
And healed me.
SAMUEL (shaking)
I don’t know how to love.
But I want to.
Will that be enough?
MIRDAD (embracing him)
Wanting… is the first miracle.
🎬 Scene 3: The Light That Stays
Setting: The mountain path just outside the gate.
Lighting: Gold. Ethereal. The sun now full on the stage.
Sound: A soft hum—almost inaudible.
[MIRDAD places his hand over the heart of each monk.]
MIRDAD
Where I am going, you cannot follow.
But where I have been… may you remain.
[He begins to walk up the path. No one follows. The monks simply stand, tears falling freely, as his figure grows smaller in the light.]
JOSHAB (whispers)
He walks like silence made flesh.
MICAYON
He was never ours.
But we were his.
🎬 Scene 4: The Final Teaching
Setting: Mirdad stands alone on the peak.
Lighting: Brilliant white behind him.
Sound: A low rumble, like thunder, but gentle—eternal.
[He turns one final time. Arms open.]
MIRDAD (to the audience)
Compassion is not what you feel…
It is what you become…
When there is no longer any “other” to love or forgive.
I go now, not to vanish,
But to become what you must learn to be for one another.
Final Thoughts by Mirdad

(Final scene fades. The light returns to the same singular beam. MIRDAD steps into it once more. He is older now—but brighter, lighter. A peace surrounds him.)
MIRDAD
And so it ends… not in silence,
but in a music too deep for ears to hear.
You have seen men choose shame… and find healing.
You have seen emptiness… filled by presence.
You have seen the gates of judgment close—
and the hands of compassion open.
If these moments moved you—
then do not carry them like a relic.
Live them.
In the crowded street,
in the moment of anger,
in the still ache of someone you do not understand…
There, be the monastery.
There, be the Ark.
The world does not starve for wisdom.
It starves for those who dare to love as if nothing else exists.
And now I leave you.
Not as a ghost.
Not as a name in a book.
But as a voice
…that weeps for the world
…until the world remembers how to love.
(He bows. Lights out.)
Short Bios:
Mirdad
A mysterious spiritual teacher and wanderer. Appears at the monastery seeking shelter but offers soul-deep guidance that transforms each monk. His teachings blend silence, love, and uncompromising compassion. A figure beyond time—both man and mirror.
Abimar
Once proud and rational, Abimar hides deep guilt over abandoning his dying mother. Through Mirdad’s presence, he learns to weep, to remember, and ultimately, to forgive himself. His arc represents healing through vulnerability.
Eliab
A skeptical and sarcastic monk, Eliab often challenges Mirdad’s silence. Beneath his cynicism lies a man once full of youthful idealism, now afraid to hope again. His transformation is sparked by presence rather than persuasion.
Joshab
Gentle and humble, Joshab was dismissed even by his fellow monks as simple-minded. Yet he becomes one of Mirdad’s first and truest followers, showing that purity of heart often understands what the intellect resists.
Samuel
Rigid, traditional, and often hostile, Samuel clings to doctrine and control. He is the last to break—but his shift is the most powerful. Through Mirdad, he learns that control is no substitute for connection.
Micayon
The youngest monk. Quiet, observant, and deeply moved by Mirdad’s arrival. He serves as a quiet bridge between the old and new ways, between tradition and awakening.
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