Sahih Muslim, Book 32, Hadith 6274: The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said, "You see the believers as regards their being merciful among themselves and showing love among themselves and being kind, resembling one body, so that, if any part of the body is not well then the whole body shares the sleeplessness (insomnia) and fever with it."
As a street urchin, a term often used to describe those who were both impoverished and orphaned, Rukia endured a nomadic existence, drifting from one poverty-stricken district to another in a relentless quest for survival. On one fateful day, her young eyes observed four groups of children engaged in a clandestine operation, pilfering goods from a street vendor peddling water. While Rukia held a firm stance against theft, preferring instead to seek honest work or scour the forest and lake for sustenance, her compassionate heart couldn't bear the sight of these desperate youngsters, likely driven by hunger and need.
Silently trailing them like a shadow, she, despite her diminutive stature compared to the towering vendor, summoned her courage and tripped the angry man running after the children with a well-placed kick.
