Word of his fairness spread, and with it came more need. A pair of orphans arrived, eyes wide and mistrustful, clutching a crooked toy. He took them in, teaching them to read the morning call to prayer and to wind the toy’s tiny mechanism so it would march again. He did not raise them as his own children — he knew what it meant when bonds were stitched by circumstance rather than blood — but he taught them manners and math and how to keep promises. The boys grew into men who, when they left, carried with them not only knowledge but an unassuming kindness.
In a world that often confuses loudness with virtue, he remained an argument for decency—a quiet revolution of manners and courage. He proved that being a gentleman was not performance but practice: daily choices layered into a life that, without fanfare, made the world a softer place to pass through. A Gentleman Afsomali
A standard gentleman opens a car door. A goes further. Word of his fairness spread, and with it came more need