Zahrah had a strange and beautiful gift. She took in abandoned wild animals — wolves, tigers, panthers, even birds of prey — and trained them not for war, but for kindness...
But her guardianship didn't end with animals.
After all she had done for the world, Zahrah did something no one expected — something only a heart like hers could do.
She took full ownership of every orphanage across the globe.
To every child abandoned, forgotten, or alone, she came not as a savior, but as a sister.
"Call me your sister," she told them, "because you are not alone anymore."
She taught them many things — how to read, how to build, how to dream.
But above all, she taught them discipline, respect, and kindness.
She taught them to defend themselves — not with anger, but with purpose.
"If danger finds you," she said, "I want it to regret ever trying."
And for those who wished for a family, Zahrah found one.
But before any child was placed in a new home, she made every parent — every single one — write and sign a vow:
"We will never raise our hand in anger. We will never abuse. We will never torture or treat a child with cruelty."
But she didn't stop at paper promises.
Standing before thousands of new parents, Zahrah gave one final warning — not with hatred, but with unshakable truth:
"If even one of you breaks this vow—mark my words—I will find you. I will put you behind bars. I'm not asking for your respect... I am the law you cannot go against."
