Good Deeds for Naw-Rúz
Baha'i Stories for Children · Read original
When in Bahá'í history

It was the day before Naw-Rúz, the Bahá'í New Year. The Khan family was busy at the kitchen table. Mama had made the special spring soup. Baba was setting out the small bowls of sweets. The two children, Yasmín and Hadi, were drawing small pictures to put on the walls.
After dinner, Mama said, "It is time for our Naw-Rúz custom. Each of us will tell one good deed we did this past year, and one new good deed we will try to do this year."
Yasmín went first. She was eight. She said, "Last year I shared my snack with Maya at school every day for a week when she forgot her own. This year I am going to remember to ask her if she needs help with her math."
Hadi was six. He said, "Last year I helped Mr. Brown next door carry his groceries from the car. This year I am going to help him plant the small garden in his front yard."
Then Mama and Baba shared their own good deeds, one from the year past and one for the year ahead. Everyone listened. The candles flickered on the table.
Every new year is a chance to plant a new seed.
That was Baba's saying. The four small new seeds were planted at the kitchen table that night. Some of them, by the next Naw-Rúz, would have grown into tall and beautiful plants.
Source: Baha'i Stories for Children (https://bahaistoriesforchildren.blogspot.com/), paraphrased short story for children.
Cite this story
Various. *Baha'i Stories for Children*. https://bahaistoriesforchildren.blogspot.com/
Record yourself reading this story
Recording stays on this device only. Nothing is uploaded.
Related stories
Happy Holidays!
"Happy Easter, Carla!" Rosemary called to her friend in the hallway as she entered the classroom. "Happy Naw-Ruz everyone!" The members of the New Era Baha'i Club looked up from their lunches.
The Broken Cup
A short story for children, paraphrased from the Baha'i Stories for Children blog: a small girl who broke her grandmother's favorite teacup, the truth she told, and the kindness she received in return.
‘Alí Khán, the warden of the castle of Máh-Kú, had an amazing dream about Mullá Husayn’s…
The night before his [Mullá Husayn's] arrival at Máh-Kú, which was the eve of the fourth Naw-Rúz after the declaration of the Mission of the Báb, and which fell in that year, the year 1264 A.H.,…
A lesson in forgiveness
One evening 'Abdu'l-Baha was talking to a group of the friends who had gathered around Him, warmed and comforted by His love.