08/04/2026
Basit, Not Basoo
In a small, quiet village, there lived a boy named Abdul Basit.
He was simple. He worked hard, carried water, helped in the fields, and smiled at everyone he met. His body was strong, but his mind worked differently. He couldn’t always understand things the way others did. Words sometimes got stuck, and feelings came out in ways people didn’t expect.
But Basit knew one thing very clearly.
His name.
Some boys in the village had given him a nickname—“Basoo.”
They would shout it from behind, laugh, and repeat it again and again.
“Basoo! Oye Basoo!”
Every time he heard it, something inside him broke.
“My name… is not Basoo… it is Basit,” he would say, trying hard to speak properly.
Sometimes his eyes filled with tears. Sometimes he got angry, shouting loudly, his hands shaking. People would step back and say, “He’s gone mad again.”
But no one understood—he wasn’t mad.
He was hurt.
Days passed, but nothing changed. The same voices, the same laughter, the same name that didn’t belong to him.
One evening, Basit stood in the middle of the dusty road as the boys laughed again.
He took a deep breath and shouted louder than ever before,
“My name is Basit!”
For a moment, everything went silent.
But then the laughter returned.
And Basit stood there alone.
If you’re reading this… remember:
A name is not just a word.
It is a person’s respect, their identity, their dignity.
If you ever meet someone like him…
Don’t call him what others made up.
Call him by his real name.
His name is Basit. Not Basoo.
Story