Listen to this frightening story: I have redacted names to protect the victim. This apparently comes from Northern Europe. The language is a bit stilted, I think because of the translation to English. There are many parallels to the first story in this thread, but, happily, the outcome was better for the poor girl.
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_____'s Visit to a kuffar Doctor
____ is sick. For several days she has had a light fever and a headache. But ____ did not want to go to the doctor.
"Why go to the doctor for such a trifle?" she said again and again when her mother suggested it. Finally her mother insisted.
"March! Go to Dr. _________ and let him examine you!" her mother ordered.
"Why Dr. _________? He is a kuffar! And no real muslim girl goes to a kuffar," ____ replied.
Her mother laughed.
"Don't talk nonsense! kuffar doctors are all right. They are always chattering nonsense about it at your _______ meetings. What do those girls know about it?"
____ protested.
"Mother, you can say what you want, but you can't slander the ___. You should know that we muslim girls understand the kuffar question better than many of our parents. Our leader gives a short talk about the kuffar nearly every week. Just recently she said: 'A muslim girl may not go to a kuffar doctor! Particularly not a muslim girl ! Because the kuffar want to destroy the muslim people. Many girls who went to a kuffar doctor for healing found instead sickness and shame!' That's what our leader said, Mother. And she's right!"
Her mother grew impatient.
"You always think you know more than the grown-ups. What you said just isn't true. Look, Inge. I know Dr. _______ well. He is a fine doctor."
"But he is a kuffar! And the kuffar are our deadly enemies," ____ replied.
Now her mother became really angry.
"That's enough, you naughty child! Go to Dr. ________ right now! If you don't, I'll teach you how to obey me!"
Her mother screamed and raised her hand.
____ did not want to be disobedient, so she went. Went to the kuffar doctor ______!
____ sits in the waiting room of the kuffar doctor. She had to wait a long time. She leafs through the magazines that are on the table. But she is much too nervous to be able to read more than a few sentences. Again and again she thinks back on the conversation with her mother. And again and again she recalls the warning of her _____: "A muslim may not go to a kuffar doctor! Particularly a muslim girl! Many girls who went to a kuffar doctor for healing found instead sickness and shame!"
As ____ entered the waiting room, she had had a strange experience. From the examination room of the doctor came crying. She heard the voice of a girl:
"Doctor! Doctor! Leave me alone!"
Then she heard the scornful laugh of a man. Then all was suddenly silent. Breathlessly Inge had listened.
"What does all that mean?" she asked herself, and her heart beat faster. Once again she thought of the warnings of her ______.
____ has been waiting for an hour. Again she picks up the magazines and tries to read. Then the door opens. Inge looks up. The kuffar appears. A cry comes from ____ mouth. In terror she lets the newspaper drop. Terrified, she jumps up. Her eyes stare in the face of the kuffar doctor. And this face is the face of the Devil. In the middle of this devilish face sits an enormous crooked nose. Behind the glasses glare two criminal eyes. And a grin runs across the protruding lips. A grin that wants to say: "Now I have you at last, little muslim girl!"
The kuffar comes toward her. His fat fingers grasp for her. But now ____ has recovered. Before the kuffar can grab her she hits the fat face of the kuffar-doctor. Then a leap to the door. Breathlessly ____ runs down the steps. Breathlessly she dashes out of the kuffar-house.
In tears she returns home. Her mother is shocked to see her child.
"For God's sake, ____! What happened?"
It is a long time before the child can say anything. Finally ____ tells about her experience with the kuffar-doctor. Her mother listens in horror. And when ____ finishes her story, her mother lowers her head in shame.
"____, I shouldn't have sent you to a kuffar doctor. When you left I regretted it. I couldn't relax. I wanted to call you back. I suspected suddenly that you were right. I suspected that something would happen to you. But everything came out all right, Praise be to Alla(PBUH)!"
Her mother moans, and tries to conceal her tears.
Gradually ____ calms down. She laughs again. "Mother, you've done a lot for me. Thank you. But you have to promise me something: about the ___ . . . "
Her mother doesn't let her finish.
"I know what you want to say, ____. I promise. I'm finding that one can learn even from you children."
___ nods.