Saturday, July 11, 2026

Two Loves, Two Fates: The Tale of Laila-Majnun and the Pune Fort Murder

Two Loves, Two Fates: The Tale of Laila-Majnun and the Pune Fort Murder

For the last few days, I have been watching the Pune Fort trekking murder case that the Indian media has been reporting on. In that case, police allege a bride-to-be and her lover conspired to kill her fiancé, Ketan Agarwal, by pushing him into a gorge at Lohagad Fort; what first looked like an accident was later treated as a planned murder. According to reports, Agarwal went trekking with his fiancée, Siya Goyal, and police later said her alleged lover, Chetan Chaudhary, was also involved. Investigators believe Goyal did not want the marriage to go ahead because of her relationship with Chaudhary, and the pair allegedly plotted to eliminate the would-be groom.

As I read this chilling tale of betrayal, my mind wandered to another story from the ancient sands of Arabia, where love was not a weapon but a wound, where hearts broke not from treachery but from fate's cruel hand. The contrast struck me like a thunderbolt. In one story, we see love twisted into murder; in the other, we see love transformed into madness and martyrdom. Both tales speak of lovers and unwanted marriages, but where one woman used treachery to avoid marriage, another would offer her life for it. Let me take you now to that timeless desert legend—a story that will make your heart ache and your eyes overflow with tears.

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The Legend of Laila and Majnu: A Love Written in the Stars

In the heart of the vast, unforgiving Arabian desert, under a sky full of a million glittering stars, there lived a young man named Qais. He was the son of a respected chieftain, a boy with a gentle heart and a head full of poetry. His world was simple, full of the scent of date palms and the warmth of the desert sun. But his life was forever changed the day he met Laila.

It was at a school for the children of the tribe. Laila was like a mirage made real, a girl with eyes as dark as the desert night and a smile that could rival the morning sun. Her laughter was like the tinkling of silver bells, the most beautiful sound Qais had ever heard. He was mesmerised.

From that day on, Qais was a changed man. He spent his days stealing glances at Laila, his heart beating an agitated rhythm against his ribs. His only wish was to hear her voice, to see her smile. He began to write poems, not about the desert or his tribe, but about her. He filled his notebooks with verses praising her beauty and his devotion.

 

"I have lost my heart to Laila,"* he would whisper to the wind.

"She is not a girl; she is a moon, and I am but a moth drawn to her light."

Laila, in turn, felt a deep affection for Qais. She saw the sincere poetry in his eyes and the gentleness in his soul. In a world where women were often seen and not heard, Qais saw her. He saw her spirit, her intelligence, her very soul. They would exchange secret glances, their hearts speaking a language that needed no words. He would leave her small gifts—a desert flower, a perfectly smooth stone—and she would blush and hide them in the folds of her dress. Their love was an innocent, all-consuming fire that grew stronger with each passing day.

But their love was not meant to be a simple one. Their families belonged to rival tribes, and such a union was unthinkable. The elders, bound by old traditions and pride, would never allow it. When Qais's father, seeing his son's mad devotion, went to Laila's father to ask for her hand, he was met with a stern refusal.

 

"Laila is promised to another, a wealthy merchant from a powerful tribe,” Laila’s father declared, his voice cold as steel. "Your son is a dreamer, a poet. He is not worthy of my daughter."*

The news shattered Qais. It was as if the desert sun had been extinguished out, leaving him in eternal darkness. The world that had once been so full of colour and light turned grey. He could not eat, could not sleep. His poetry, once filled with beauty, became filled with sorrow. He roamed the desert, talking to the stars, his cries echoing into the empty night.

 

It was then that the people started calling him "Majnun," which means "The Mad One." He had gone mad with love. His eyes, once full of life, now held a vacant, haunted look. He wore tattered clothes and let his hair grow long. He was no longer Qais, the chieftain's son. He was Majnun, the wandering lover, the mad poet of the desert.

Laila, meanwhile, was forced into a marriage she did not want. She was taken to her husband's tent, a prisoner in a gilded cage. Her heart, however, remained in the desert with her Majnun. She would hear stories of his madness, of how he wandered the dunes crying her name, and her tears would flow like rivers. She was trapped, a beautiful bird in a cage, forced to sing for a master she did not love. The news of his suffering was a slow poison, killing her spirit day by day.

 

One day, Majnun learned that Laila was ailing. He rushed to the outskirts of her tribe's village, but he was not allowed to see her. He stood on the edge of the dunes, screaming her name into the wind. He composed a final, heartbreaking poem for her, sending it on the wings of a pigeon.

"My Laila," he wrote in his most passionate verse.  "If you are to leave this world, let me be the one to carry you. Let my soul be your vessel. If you must perish, then take my heart with you, for it has always, and will always, belong to you."

Laila received the message. With tears streaming down her face, she read his beautiful, sorrowful words. The pain of their separation was too much for her fragile heart to bear. That night, under the same stars that had witnessed their love, Laila breathed her last.

She did not push anyone off a fort. She did not conspire. She simply died—because a heart that loves so purely cannot survive without its other half.

When Majnun heard the news, the world stopped. A silence deeper than the desert night fell upon him. He fell to his knees, and a wail of such pure agony erupted from his soul that the very sand seemed to tremble.

He had lost his Laila, the moon that had guided him through his darkness. There was nothing left for him in this world. He made his way to her grave, a simple mound of sand. He collapsed upon it; his body wracked with cries and tears. He didn't speak, didn't weep. He just lay there, his cheek pressed against the cold, rough sand that held his beloved. The sun rose and set. The desert wind screamed and shrieked, but Majnun did not move. He had found his peace. He had rejoined his Laila.

Many years later, the people of the desert who found their bodies were amazed. When they lifted Majnun's lifeless form from Laila's grave, they saw that the sand had been stained a deep crimson. The legend says that it was not from his blood, but from the tears of the heavens, crying for the two lovers who had defied fate itself.

They say that if you listen closely on a quiet desert night, you can still hear the echo of Majnun's poetry in the wind and see the spirit of Laila in the most beautiful of desert flowers, forever intertwined, an eternal love story written in the sands of time. Theirs was a love so strong, so pure, that it could not be contained in one life. It was madness, yes, but it was the most beautiful madness the world had ever known.

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As I close this tale and return to the grim news of Pune Fort, I cannot help but wonder—what makes one heart choose murder and another choose martyrdom? Siya and Chetan chose violence to escape a marriage. Laila and Majnun chose to suffer, to pine, and ultimately to die—but they never chose to harm another soul. In their tragedy, there was nobility. In their madness, there was purity. And perhaps that is why, centuries later, we still weep for Laila and Majnun, while the names from Pune will fade into forgotten newsprint.

Love, when pure, is a flame that burns only lovers themselves. Love, when poisoned, becomes a fire that consumes everyone in its path. Choose your story wisely.

Sham Misri from Washington

7-4-2026

 

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