The sheikh insulted the waitress in Arabic, thinking that the girl did not understand anything: but a few seconds later the waitress said this in perfect Arabic
In a luxurious restaurant where the elite of the Middle East gathered, the air was filled with the aromas of saffron and oud. Under the sparkling chandeliers at the main table sat an oil tycoon – a sheikh whose fortune was estimated at 43 billion dollars. Around him, influential guests were seated, enjoying exquisite dishes and the playing of musicians.
The waitress, an elegant and reserved girl, served them. No one knew that behind her calm look there was a difficult story: she grew up in the family of an oriental scholar and from childhood she spoke Arabic perfectly, but when she lost her father, she ended up in Dubai, working two shifts to save her sick mother.
That evening, pouring coffee, she heard the contemptuous whispers of the guests. These people said all sorts of nasty things about her. But the waitress remained professional and silent. Then the sheikh himself, deciding to humiliate her in front of everyone, said loudly in Arabic:
– “This Western waitress is not even worthy of touching my expensive glass with her dirty hands.”
Laughter rolled through the hall. The waitress stood motionless, and the sheikh, deciding that she did not understand anything, continued to insult in Arabic.
And suddenly, restrainedly placing the tray on the table, the girl looked at the sheikh and said in impeccable Arabic something that left everyone in sh0ck
“Whoever humiliates a woman at his table, humiliates his own honor in front of the guests.”
The hall sank into silence. The laughter of the guests stopped, and confusion froze on the sheikh’s face. His loud laughter was replaced by a painful silence.
They dined in complete silence for the remaining hour. No one dared to joke or speak loudly, as if the waitress’s words hung in the air and reminded them of what had been said.
When the dinner was over, the sheikh left a generous tip on the table. But he did not stop there: he stood up, walked around the table and approached the waitress personally.
“Forgive me,” he said quietly. “In this luxury, I forgot about humanity. How did you learn Arabic so well?”
The waitress answered reservedly that her adoptive father was an Eastern scholar and had raised her to respect language and culture.
The sheikh thought for a moment, looked at her more closely and said:
“Such talent should not be wasted behind trays. If you want, I invite you to work as a translator for me.”
This was the beginning of a new chapter in her life, a chapter she had never even dared to dream of.