The opera, in two acts, follows ibn Said's life loosely, as Giddens maintained that her libretto was only one possible telling of a life about which so much is still unknown. She wrote in the program for the premiere: "Who was Omar? We will never really know.
This Omar is merely one of a thousand different possible interpretations of his writings and what we know of his life." Act One contains five scenes. The first shows him in his village along with his mother Fatima, a spiritual matriarch of the village. His brother Abdul warns them that slavers are nearby and urges them to flee, but it is too late; the slavers overrun the village, capturing Omar and killing his mother. Scene two is aboard a slave ship, where several prisoners describe their own situation and pray to survive the voyage. Scene three is set in the Charleston slave market, where Omar meets a slave for sale named Julie. Omar's
kufi, a Muslim cap, reminds her of her father, and she retrieves his kufi and keeps it. She is planning to escape and return to a gentler master in Fayetteville, and urges Omar to do the same if he can. He observes an auction where a child is separated from his parents despite the father's pleading. In a vision, Omar's mother tells him to cover for Julie so she can escape. He creates a distraction and she escapes. He is then sold to an abusive master named Johnson. Scene four is on Johnson's plantation, where Omar is sent to pick cotton in the fields. In scene five, he dreams of his mother urging him to escape, which he does, intending to go to Fayetteville. Act Two also contains five scenes. In the first scene Omar, who was caught, is imprisoned in the Fayetteville County Jail, where he has covered the walls of his cell with Arabic prayers and verses from the Quran. The townspeople are intrigued by him and his writing. The plantation owner Owen is urged by his daughter Eliza to buy Omar. Owen talks to Omar about his background and thinks he might be able to convert him to Christianity. In the second scene, Omar is introduced to the other slaves, including Julie who has returned to the plantation and is impressed that Omar has followed her advice. She gives him back his kufi, singing "My daddy wore a cap like yours." Scene three takes place in a study room that Owen has given to Omar. Owen gives him a Christian Bible written in Arabic. Scene four finds Omar under a tree reading his new Bible and praying to Allah to understand the meaning of his life journey. He recites Psalm 23, reinterpreting it from the point of view of an enslaved Muslim. In scene five Julie urges Omar to write a book. So does the spirit of Fatima, telling him to write about his experiences and his faith. The company joins Omar in a song in praise of Allah. == Roles ==