As a goat enters the home of Noura and Rashid, they ask their friend, the lantern, to find out where it came from, and it turns out that it came from the book that tells the tale of the Prophet Musa (Moses) when he left Egypt and found a well next to two girls who were grazing the sheep, so he helped them.
Noura accidentally pours water on Rashid's painting and apologizes to him, but he does not accept. Siraj tells them the tale of the Prophet Yusuf (Joseph), how beautiful he was, and how his brothers kept him away from his father, who asked them to bring his shirt to make sure that he was still alive.
Rashid buys a small bird from his friend and ties it so that he would not lose it, so the bird gets hurt, whereupon Siraj tells Noura and Rashid the tale of the camel that spoke to the Messenger Muhammad, and how it was crying because the owner of the orchard did not feed it.
Rashid and Noura ask Siraj about the meaning of patience, and he tells them the tale of God's Prophet Nuh (Noah) and how his people became arrogant and turned away from worshiping God, so Nuh built an ark in which he sailed through the flood and survived with those who believed in God.
Noura and Rashid suggest that Siraj help the turtle Sarah arrange the boxes, so Siraj tells them the tale of the hoopoe with Prophet Solomon and how it was responsible for conveying news, and once it was tasked with delivering a message to the Queen of Sheba, which he did despite the difficulty of the task.
Rashid tries to fix his old toys and sell them, but Noura tells him that this is fraud, so Siraj tells them the tale of the Prophet Shuaib, and how God blessed his people with fortune, but they were ungrateful and skimped the scales, and they did not listen to Shuaib.
Rashid invites his friends, except for Salem, because he does not do household chores, then Siraj tells them how Prophet Muhammad was humble, worked with his hands, repaired his sandals, and sewed his own clothes.
As the neighbor's cat breaks Rashid's tablet, Siraj tells Rashid and his sister the tale of the Prophet Dawud (David) and his son Sulaiman (Solomon) when a shepherd's sheep ate grapes from a farm, so Sulaiman proposed to David that the sheep stay with the farm's owner until the shepherd compensates him.