In a sacred court beyond time, animals gather to stand before their Creator. A crow, a dog, an ant, a cow, and a serpent each carry a testimony shaped by loyalty, silence, guilt, longing, and revolt. As they enter the Divine Hall one by one, what begins as complaint becomes something deeper: a reckoning with the voices, instincts, and burdens that define creation itself.
Divine Justice is a philosophical allegorical play that unfolds through poetic dialogue, symbolic encounter, and ritual-like dramatic movement. Each scene stages a confrontation between creature and Creator, where obedience meets conscience, judgment meets mercy, and speech itself becomes a test of being. Through sparse, meditative language, Hirbod Human builds a theatrical world in which animals stand not only as creatures, but as reflections of memory, hierarchy, fear, faith, and human struggle.
This is not a story of easy redemption or final answers. It is a literary meditation on justice, divine authority, and the fragile boundary between silence and voice. Haunting, contemplative, and mythic in tone, Divine Justice invites readers into a drama where meaning is not simply declared, but revealed through testimony, transformation, and the unsettling search for what it means to be judged.