• Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Access to private conversations with other members.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!

Why Islam? Stories of New Muslims

saidur611

New Member
Assalamulikum, It is Almighty Allah who has shown u the right path. I am quoting one verse of holly Koran for ur knowledge:
Yet there are men who take (for worship) others besides Allah, as equal (with Allah): They love them as they should love Allah. But those of the Faith are overflowing in their love for Allah. If only the unrighteous could see, behold, they would see the penalty: that to Allah belongs all power, and Allah will sternly enforce the penalty. (Surah Al-Baqara, 2:165)

 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Muhammad John Webster (UK)
(President, The English Muslim Mission)
Born in London I was brought up Christian of the Protestant persuasion.

In 1930, in my teens, I was confronted with the problems normal to a reasonably intelligent young man, these problems being basically relating to the reconciling of everyday affairs with the claims of religion. ...

We in the West find it difficult to acquaint ourself with Islam for since the days of the Christian Crusades there has been either a conspiracy of silence or a deliberate perversion of Islamic matters.

Anyway at the time living in Australia I asked for a copy of the Holy Qur'an at the Sydney Public Library, when I was given the Book and was reading the preface by the translator, the bigotry against Islam was so obvious that I closed it up. There was no Qur'an translated by a Muslim available.

Some weeks later in Perth, Western Australia, I again asked at the library for a copy of the Qur'an stipulating that the translator must be a Muslim. It is difficult to put into words my immediate response to the first surah, the Seven Opening Verses: Then I read something of the life of the Prophet (peace be on him).

I spent hours in the library that day, I had found what I wanted, by the mercy of Allah. I was a Muslim. I had not at this time met any Muslim. I came out of the library exhausted by the tremendous intellectual and emotional experience I had received. The next experience, I still ask myself: was it true or was it something I had dreamed up, for in cold print it seems impossible to have happened.

I came out of the library intending to get myself a cup of coffee. I walked down the street and raising my eyes to a building beyond a high brick wall I saw the words `Muslim Mosque' I straightway said to myself `You know the truth, now accept it'.

`La illaha illalah Muhammad ur Rasul Allah' and so by the mercy of Allah I became a Muslim.

http://thetruereligion.org/modules/xfsection/article.php?articleid=365
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Sister Fitra (Japan)

By the grace of Allah, six months have passed since I made Shahada.

Reflecting on what had changed in my life in those days, I notice “the change of consciousness”. Before embracing Islam, the criteria of my life had been myself in every aspect. However, one day, I realized the danger of human criteria, which means that people may have different criteria of good or bad, or right or wrong if freedom of choice is given to each person.

Once I came across Islam and studied it, I came to know that Allah exists in the centre of my life. Keeping the Qur’an, the words of Allah as the principles of my life, constantly being conscious of Allah, and concerning myself always whether I follow the right path of Allah- these efforts have greatly changed my consciousness.

Next to the change of consciousness, I experienced “the change of view”, that ‘how to see’ matters. Afterwards I remained always aware of Allah, He taught me many things which I had never noticed, Alhamdulillah. What is true happiness? What is true richness? What is true kindness? What is true strength? In the past I had thought religion as something vague without any clear answer. Nevertheless, I realized Islam provides me answers in the Qur’an like solving a formula of mathematics. Allah has opened the closed eyes of my heart, Alhamdulillah.

Recently, I joined a free market as a volunteer, in order to sell goods which were made in Nepal, to support Nepalese orphans. One of the volunteer staffs sold goods while telling lies to the customers to draw their attention. I told him; “It is not good to tell a lie.” He replied; “You can tell a lie as far as you do not hurt people.” What shall I learn from this experience? What made me different from this staff?

At first, the difference of the criteria is to judge what is good or bad, and the second difference is purpose. If a purpose is different its method must be necessarily different. We Muslims, can learn from the Qur’an which describes what’s good and bad, Alhamdulillah. The purpose is to love Allah, to seek help to please Him. I believe that the knowledge of Islam is enough to realise this aim. This is “the change of behaviour”, along with the change of view. In the 40 Hadiths, the first words of the Prophet (peace be upon him) is “an action is judged only by its intention and the importance is the intention of people.” This is the lesson which I have learned from the experience as a volunteer who is engaged in uplifting orphans in Nepal. I confirm that we should always be aware of Allah and behave ourselves righteously.

We have to use all our abilities to see, to hear and to feel from our heart in order to behave in the right way.

One day I was told by a convert, a Japanese Muslima that she could not yet grasp the faith since she was not a native Muslima. I can understand her feeling very well. Though six months have passed since I made Shahada, frankly speaking, I could only recently feel the existence of Allah from the bottom of my heart. I cannot read the Qur’an in Arabic and I am doing my best every day in order to find what I should study in Islam.

While staying in Nepal, I started thinking what true richness is. Richness is not that we have a lot of money or materialistic prosperity. Alhamdulillah I met Islam. The encounter with Islam did not change all of my life at once. Most of Japanese people know that we cannot buy happiness with money. Nevertheless, we feel unsafe without money and many people follow a materialistic life. When I met Islam, being much away from Fitra (natural disposition) which was given in the name of Allah, my heart was tightly closed like a stone. Everything started with the assumption, “if there is Allah,” I had many questions and looked for answers in the Qur’an which is Kalamullah (God's Words). What is Allah? Why do we exist in this life? For what sake do we live and where do we go? What is Faith?

I could find all the answers in the Qur’an. I am neither a native Muslim nor have travelled any Arab country. I did not have any other way to find answers except the Qur’an and to confirm that there is no contradiction in Islam. While my knowledge about Islam is almost equal to zero, I cannot help thanking Allah that He has guided me till now.

Even though I did not know Islam, I did many wrong things in the past. Since I felt I was not unhappy, I thought everything all right and I never thought I had to pray or ask forgiveness of anyone. Now I realize I had been in a very unhappy situation without salvation. My friend told me that my soul was saved after I met Islam. I can understand its meaning. I believe that my encounter with Islam is a token of Allah’s love for me and that He has given me a chance to live as a Muslima, Alhamdulillah.

When you feel weak, we Muslims are strengthened by the Qur’an and Muslim brothers and sisters, Alhamdulillah. I would like to declare to my friends; “I agree with the rightness in the road of Allah, Insha Allah.”

I am scared to deny Allah because it would deny everything including myself. I am here to exist in this world. I was created by Allah and will return to Allah. Allah teaches me what I am. I will soon return to Allah. I wish to meet Allah straight without shame. I believe we are made to live in this world to meet Allah in the Hereafter with all the Khair (good), Insha Allah.

Sister Fitra, Osaka Muslim Women's Union - Osaka, Japan

http://thetruereligion.org/modules/xfsection/article.php?articleid=253
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Brother Omar (USA)

February 1992… "My wife and I are driving down Highway 80 (Northern California) heading back home to San Francisco after a weekend in Reno (a popular town in Northern Nevada for gambling casinos…little sister to Las Vegas) about a 5 hour drive from the bay area. I'm in a severely distressed state of mind as I have lost money which I cannot afford. More than the fact that I lost playing poker is an undeniable sense of despair about my life and where my destination seems to be heading.

For the past seven plus years my free time has been occupied by heavy liquor consumption on a daily basis. A situation which obviously needs correcting, but given my theological philosophical point of view at the time, a day without drinking is not possible for me.

As we near San Francisco a heavy thunder storm begins to pound into us. This is the first time I've seen a full blown storm in the Bay Area replete with numerous lightning strikes which can be seen flashing all around the valleys to the east and the ocean to the west.

As suddenly as the storm hits, I am hit with a lightning bolt of undeniable realization … for me it's over! My nights of drunken bitter meandering about the philosophical virtues of Jean Paul Satre , Nietzche and Dostoevesky have brought me to a place of dark anguish and existential hopelessness. This is why I drink, I tell myself. I am convinced that there is no point to birth, life or death beyond this present reality. I cannot see investing effort in something as obviously finite as the human life-span. I can't beat it, so I might as well stumble about in a drunken stupor. So on this night, rolling down the highway amidst the thunder and lightning, I can sense for the first time "Enough is enough" . For you, it's over.

The following day at work, I go through the motions as usual, but I know that something is terribly wrong. At my lunch break, I tell the boss that I am sick and head home. I've got to do something about this alcoholic condition. I read the phone book searching for a way out. I call a place in the Los Angeles area which offers a 30 day in-house treatment program. This sounds plausible to me. When my wife arrives home, I lay out the whole scenario to her and in her wise and wonderful way, she advises me to see what happens over the next two days. If I drink…go for treatment. Keep in mind that this is the first night in over seven years that I haven't had any liquor. I'm tense and nervous but agree with my wife's idea.

The next morning I tell my boss the story so my company insurance will cover the treatment program. I'm embarrassed, but relieved that I'm doing something about this problem. When I get home that evening, right on schedule my sick alcoholic mind tells me, "Just go to the liquor store for a half-pint…you can ease off gradually and this will calm you down." But this time I don't go. As I sit on the sofa, head in my hands lost in my own internal struggle, it hits me like a "bolt of lightning" READ THE QUR'AN!

As is my usual way, I don't analyze this impulse, I just do it! As I read Surah Fatihah, tears swell up in my eyes and Allah blesses me with the sweetest of miracles! I continue to read the sacred script for the next two hours until my wife returns from work.

A transformation was taking place inside of me. Shockingly, I proclaim to her that I have become a Muslim and have quit drinking!

For the next eight months, I read the Holy Qur'an on a daily basis. I read everything on Islam that I can find. I had the Holy Qur'an (English translation) at home because I had every other religious book that I knew of. I had read bits and pieces of it prior to Allah's blessing me with the revelation, but I had also read the Bible, the Bhagavad Gita, numerous Zen texts, the Kabbalah, as well as all of the major Greek and existential philosophers available. I had a large selection of books promising enlightenment. It was not mere chance that I picked up the Holy Qur'an that fateful evening.

I had heard of people in life-and -death situations beg God to rescue them and they will follow whatever religion they are brought to. It seems that they invariably convert to Islam. This is the human being's natural religion. As the Holy Qur'an tells us, we are born Muslims…it is the parents that call us Jews, Christians, etc.

At first, I stumbled about praying salat in English, trying to practice my deen as best as I could alone. I tried to reach out but the phone numbers of the masjids were either unanswered or I would be immediately invited to the mosque. I was too afraid of looking foolish in front of the "real Muslims" as I couldn't even say "Assalamu Alaikum" so I declined the offers.

I had first become aware of islamic conversion in America from reading about jazz musicians that I looked up to such Yusef Lateef and Ahmad Jamal. I was a big jazz fan and a poor saxophone player myself. I knew of a number of African Americans who converted to Islam, but not many whites like myself. This made me hesitant to approach a masjid. I didn't know what to expect or what to do. What were the proper manners?

Finaly after eight months of self-study and research, I called the Islamic Center of San Francisco and spoke to a brother by the name of Samy. He made me feel at ease, he spoke English clearly and he didn't act as though I was another insecure American following a temporary religious whim. He invited me to the Friday night program at the Islamic Center in the area.

This was November 6, 1992. I drove to the mosque following Samy's directions, and arrived at 6:00 p.m. even though the 'program' didn't start until 8:00 p.m. I wanted to 'look before I leaped'. I was nervous, but Alhamdulilah, Allah guided me out of my car and up to the front door. I was greeted by two brothers named Mohammad Hamid and Abdul Rauf, two most knowledgeable and pious men who patiently instructed me in the requirements of the deen. When I shook their hands, I felt not only welcome, but that I had 'come home' after 37 years of searching. They taught me how to make proper wudu (the act of cleaning oneself before prayer or handling of and reading of the Qur'an) and led me in reciting the Shahada (the Muslim Declaration of Faith) which was the most significant moment of my life. May Allah make it easy for people who seek His guidance to be as blessed as I was with so many understanding brothers as I had, and continue to have the honour of knowing.

After officially taking Shahada, I spent the last ten days of Ramadan doing the work of dawah (inviting others to Islam). This gave me a first-hand look at the beauty of this deen when practiced at what is our current best. As an ummah (brotherhood) , I could not believe how I met so many pious brothers who were actually practicing their faith. ...

Wher did we come from? Allah, Subhana'Allah, created us to manifest His glory in this reality.


Why are we here? To bring glory to the One True Creator of all things and to enjoin good and and to forbid evil. To fight our own desires and to bring the remembrance of Allah to mind.

Where are we headed? To eternal Paradise, Insha'Allah. How do we get there? By following the ways of the one who is an example by which to live. Allah in His Mercy and Grace has blessed us with His guidance.
It is often said that Islam is simple and we make it complicated. Let me tell you dear brothers, sisters and elders…Islam says it all! I wandered so long in the darkness of existential dead ends and esoteric thinking and the answer was there all along.

I can't say that my struggle came to an end when I converted to Islam. I can say that one of the happiest moments of my life came when my father also said shahada. We must continually strive to improve and practice our faith. The devil is ever vigilant to our weaknesses. But Allah in His Mercy has given us the light called the Holy Qur'an and His Beloved Prophet Mohammed (pbuh) to make it through this brief journey of life.

May Allah increase all of our understanting, raise our Iman and bless all who seek His guidance. Assalamu Alaikum.


Omar Abdul-Salaam, Daly City, CA 1998

http://thetruereligion.org/modules/xfsection/article.php?articleid=348
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Stefani Perada

UNION CITY, N.J. — On a hot summer day, Stefani Perada left work for the day in West New York, N.J., and stepped outside in her long jilbab, the flowing clothes worn by many Muslim women.

Meanwhile, other Latinas in the mostly Hispanic neighborhood were taking advantage of the warm day, walking around in shorts and midriff-exposing halter tops.

Perada, 19, who converted to Islam just over a year ago, is still trying to become acclimated to certain customs, such as the jilbab and the hijab, which covers her head and hair.

"Mostly it's because of how your friends and family are going to look at you," she said. "They look at you like, ‘Why is she wearing that, it’s so hot.’”

But, she said, “I am doing this for God, and one day I will be rewarded for what I am doing.”

And there's an immediate benefit: She's not harassed as much by men when she walks down the street.

“You know how guys [say], ‘Hey Mami, come over here?’ I used to always hate that. I would cross the street just to get away. Now you still get some guys that are still curious, but it’s much less,” she explained.

“They are going to look at me for me, and not for my body.”

Growing number of converts?

Perada is not alone as a Hispanic women converting to Islam.

The exact number of Latino Muslims is difficult to determine, because the U.S. Census Bureau does not collect information about religion. However, according to estimates conducted by national Islamic organizations such as the Council for American Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) there are approximately 40,000 Latino Muslims in the United States.

Likewise, it is difficult to break-down the number of Latino converts to Islam into male versus female. But, according to anecdotal evidence and a survey conducted by the Latino American Dawah Organization (LADO), whose mission is to promote Islam within the Latino community in the United States, the number of Latinos converting to Islam tilts slightly in favor of women — with 60 percent women to 40 percent men.

Juan Galvan, the head of LADO in Texas and the co-author of a report "Latino Muslims: The Changing Face of Islam in America," explained that those numbers are unscientific, but based on the results of a voluntary survey that has been conducted on the LADO website since 2001.

“From observation and experience those numbers are correct,” Galvan said. “From my personal experience, there are definitely more Latina Muslims than Latino men.” Galvan explained said that there “just seem to be more” Latina Muslims at the various events he attends through his work with LADO.

At the Islamic Education Center of North Hudson, 300 of the people who attend the mosque are converts, and 80 percent are Latino converts. In addition, out of the Latino converts, 60 percent are women, according to Nylka Vargas, who works at the mosque with the Educational Outreach Program.

Overall growth

Peter Awn, an Islamic studies professor at Columbia University, says there is no doubt that the number of Latinos converting to Islam is growing.

Louis Cristillo, an anthropologist who focuses on Islamic education at Columbia University, points out there are several indicators that reflect the growing trend of Latinos converting to Islam.

For example, there are a number of regional and national organizations that cater to Latino Muslims, and there are even support groups that can be found on-line specifically for Latino converts — in particular Hispanicmuslims.com, as well the LADO organization at latinodawah.org.

In fact, last weekend, Latino Muslims in this country celebrated the third annual Hispanic Muslim Day with different activities throughout the day.

For women, particular challenges

Converting to Islam can be shocking for families who are largely Catholic and harbor stereotypes of Muslims, specifically concerning women.

Perada says her mother, who is Colombian, accepted her decision to convert because she never really pushed her into Catholicism. However, her father, who is of Italian origin, has had a tough time dealing with it.

“Sometimes he says things about the way I dress,” said Perada. “He’ll say, ‘Why do you have to dress that way. I’m Christian. I don’t walk around with a cross in my hand.'

“He always complains to my mom about it, but with me he just keeps it to himself. But I know for him it is very hard,” Perada added.

Vargas, 30, from the Islamic Education Center, is of Ecuadorian and Peruvian descent. She says her family is already accustomed to the idea of her being Muslim, since it has already been ten years since she converted. But she recalls the days in which her family was dealing with the initial shock of her new faith.

“When I started being more visible, that’s when things started getting weird. My sisters couldn’t understand why I would cover myself. They thought I was being oppressed or brainwashed,” said Vargas.

She admits it was difficult at first to adjust to certain customs, such as wearing the hijab or a headscarf and having to pray five times a day.

“First it felt kind of weird to be covered, but after a while it [the headscarf] becomes your hair. I refer to my hijab as my hair.”

‘A return to traditional values’

Like other ethnic groups, Latinos convert for a variety of reasons.

Some, says Cristillo, grew up in inner-city areas ravaged by poverty, drugs and prostitution, and were attracted in part by the fact that some Islamic communities were very active in cleaning up the neighborhoods.

Vargas, meanwhile, says she questioned many things about the Catholic faith in which she was raised and felt an emptiness in Christianity.

Galvan, from LADO, pointed out that many people come to Islam through people that they know, "friends, co-workers, classmates, boyfriends or husbands.”

Professor Awn said that many Latinas find there is a greater sense of economic and social stability in Islam and that it also represents “a return to traditional values.”

In that regard, Awn does not think Islam is any more patriarchal than other traditional religions, but recognized that “the younger generation is looking for a more progressive form of Islam."

And Perada does not feel that her adherence to the Muslim faith restricts her freedoms as a woman.

“If I get married, I know I am going to work, but I am going to be there for my kids, too,” said Perada, dismissing any notions that Islam would prevent her from living the life of any other modern woman.

Carmen Sesin is an assignment editor on the NBC News Foreign Desk.

Source: http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9352969/

http://thetruereligion.org/modules/xfsection/article.php?articleid=406
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Lorri (USA)

A few years after high school I first met Muslim students. As an American my “knowledge” about Islam was far from accurate. I knew so little and much of it negative from what the media and Hollywood movies spun at that time. I found these Muslims fascinating. The first thing I noticed was their strength in belief in God, and they weren’t afraid to say they believed in God. Even their maturity towards responsibility was different; they seemed more mature than others in their twenties. Mind you I know that not all Muslims are great examples of Islam; I was richly blessed to have met decent ones from the start. I was impressed too that these young people were so devoted to their families.


The first Muslim female I met was sister Janan. I can still picture seeing her the day she came to UW-Milwaukee wearing the hijab, and asking her why she started wearing it. It was because of Islam and to please God she said. Cool. Someone who loves God so much and wasn’t afraid of what people thought about her modest covering. (To this day I greatly respect all Muslimahs who dress and act with dignity and wear the headscarf—this shows a deep love and strength to please Allah regardless of what other people think).


Next was Estelle, a young woman who converted to Islam. We started talking about Islam and got on the topic about Prophet Muhammad. Just like a water dam opening, those words “Muslims think Mohammad is higher than God” flowed out of my deep memories. I mentioned to her what my Sunday School teacher told me, she giggled politely and told me this was untrue. How intriguing. I felt as if a spark was ignited in me! Just what is this religion? Most of what I knew was wrong. Every thing I saw was pure and good. From the Muslims I met and how they acted I sensed this religion could not be the negative the media continuously portrayed. I liked their phrases of “subhan Allah” (Glory be to Allah), “al-humdu lillah” (praise to Allah), “in sha' Allah” (if Allah wills). “as-salamu `alaykum” (peace be with you). What an exceptional way to greet each other. All these expressions, it was as if they were thinking about God all day long just in their conversations alone. My journey sped faster…


A student who would later become my husband gave me a few books on Islam to read because I mentioned I was interested in studying. There was “Islam Day” at the university and I was able to gain more information about this “strange” religion. I say this word because growing up in western culture, it was odd to see people "living" their religion throughout the day. Although I was interested, it came with an attitude. I wanted to prove Islam was “nice” but not the truth. I discovered that there were similarities between Christianity and Islam. They call the Creator “Allah” which is simply “God” in another language. Why did I think “God” in English was only correct? From what I read too, Allah is incredibly merciful, and not so stern as some non-Muslims claimed. Every single book I could get my hands on about comparative religion, I immediately flipped ahead to the chapter on Jesus (peace be upon him). This is the core issue Christianity is based on and the one that differs much between Christians and Muslims. What I found was that Islam gives superior respect to this man and does not compromise his purpose by claiming he is God or the Son of God. ... I agreed that as an adult it’s now my responsibility to investigate my childhood beliefs; my parents meant well but that does not mean they taught me the truth. And since I professed belief in a Creator, I was obligated to learn about Him and what’s required of me. So I continued. What a blessing. ...

On many nights I would read past 2:00 AM not even realizing the late hour. I had to "force"myself to put the book down and go to sleep. I was beside myself in wonderment. When I’d awake in the morning I would immediately grab the book and dove right in again. My heart would race from the adrenaline. The more I researched the more I realized—to the depths of my soul—that all I wanted was to was submit to my Creator, to be a Muslim. I started to dress more modestly accepting that this is a large part of piety. I reasoned if two females are walking down the street dressed in scant clothing, one is a believer, the other an atheist, how can others tell the first one believes and loves God?! The thought of living outwardly as a believer brought an immense comfort because I was doing it for God. Every aspect of life from prayer to cleanliness to treating others to caring for the poor to humbleness to piety to being closest to God is in Islam. No other religion honestly comes close to this completeness. And the Qur'an. A unique Book with words that could only come from the Most Merciful Creator, with a complete system of living and information that no man could have known about 1,400 years ago! To this day I still marvel at the scientific knowledge in its chapters. The words of the Qur'an in English made (and make) my eyes well with tears, not out of fear but out of joy. [You see their eyes overflow with tears because of what they have recognized of the truth] (al-Ma'idah5: 83).

To be fair I looked at other religions. I did so with this criteria: strict monotheism and acceptance of all the prophets. Buddhism, Hinduism and others similar were crossed out right away. Judaism, being strict with monotheism, denies both Prophets Jesus and Muhammad. Christianity, I painfully realized is not a monotheistic religion because of the Trinity, and it denies the final prophet. The more I researched Christianity, the more I kept going back to Islam. The only religion that consistently stood alone was Islam. I give Allah credit for this thought that finally pushed me to become Muslim. He did not give mankind different religions to confuse us. All the guidance sent to various communities was actually Islam, in portions. People took those portions and named them Judaism or Christianity or whatever. It was not until the final prophet, Prophet Muhammad, that Allah’s Guidance was completed. It was Allah who called it Islam (complete submission to the Will of Allah).

I said the shahadah with Allah as my witness. I distinctly remember days later the sun looked brighter, my senses were stronger, the trees looked more colorful, the entire world looked different. It was like I was brand new person. My purpose of why I exist became crystal clear. The first time I prayed, reading off a paper where I phonetically wrote the Arabic, I wept like a baby! Finally I was praying and pleasing my Creator the way He obliges us to. Instant comfort. Instant peace.


My family was not too pleased as they felt I was going against them, but al-humdu lillah they see how clean and content my life is. In sha' Allah I pray Allah will guide them to be Muslims before they die. When I began to wear a scarf I did feel anxious every time I would see family and friends who didn’t know I reverted to Islam, but I would whisper to myself “Fear the Creator, not the created”; “I do this to please you Allah”, and my nervousness would vanish. How merciful Allah is in that these same words keep my faith strong to this day.


I apologize for this being so long. No one can write about this great endeavor in just a few phrases. I’ve been a practicing Muslim for about 13 years actually I can’t give a specific time because as I was learning Islam, I was slowly living like a Muslim well before I said the shahadah. For those who are born into a Muslim family, in sha' Allah perhaps you will see that embracing Islam and turning your entirelife in another direction is not a small thing. It’s a grand struggle however the journey is worth taking, subhan Allah. What a blessing to be lead to Islam. There is a power in it hard to describe; an unmatchable gift to be cherished until our last breathe. Instead of us existing aimlessly, we are blessed with a pure Guidance to keep us disciplined and free from misery.
http://www.islamonline.net/english/journey/2005/09/jour04.shtml
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Walter Gomez (El-Salvador - USA)

My conversion to Islam has alarmed many friends and family members. It seems to them strange and odd for a Latino like me to become a Muslim.

The journey to God is a beautiful road that was given to the Prophets from God, to us humans. The Prophets are our ways, and that's the way I follow.

My story begins at my birthplace, El Salvador, a beautiful tropical country located in Central America, filled with exotic, delicious, and tasty fruits. The people are warm welcoming to others, and possessed a very intimate culture. Our culture is a crossroads of the mingling of many rich cultures. If you mingle Spanish Arab intellect with the African tangy taste of rhymes, and the Native Indians love of the earth, you get the beautiful people of El Salvador.

I was born in 1975, from middle class of the poor, yes we were poor but we had the blessing of food. My father was a farmer, whose family who bought a lot of cheap land, so they were well off and my mother was from a very humble, poor family who lived by fishing and working for others to get by.

My father came to America in 1978, to make some quick money and he kept coming and going back for a period of 4 years until he bought a cargo truck with his brother and worked for a while. ...

In 1984 my father sent a letter to my mother telling her come to America, and to bring me too. When my mother told me about it, I felt sick and destroyed. Because I felt that I was in paradise and I didn't want leave. I would cry almost everyday pleading with my mother to leave me with grandpa, but my words were not heard.

We left El Salvador in August, and I did enjoy the trip to America but it was very hard for my mom. My two sisters stayed with my aunt in San Salvador the capital of El Salvador. We arrived at the National Airport of Washington D.C. three weeks after we had left El Salvador.

After spending time here in America I found out that religions are thrown away by society and are considered private, and not a way of life to many. I didn't feel the love of God as I did in El Salvador, but still tried to keep Him in my heart. Most of my desires of God in my life were gone in America. I went to regular schools from second grade to High school, but my thirst for religion began at High school.

In 1990, my first year in High School, what a joy!!! I was so happy the first day, and my cousin Ana warned me to be careful because seniors threw freshmen in lockers, but I didn't care I was happy. ...

We started going to clubs, drinking, using drugs, and of course women were not excluded. This period of time was the most dangerous of my life. We used to fight for stupid things. ...

My friend at that time was confused what the true Islam was, his Islam looked weird to me. He believed that Nation of Islam was the true Islam; he did not know the differences, that the real Islam was not racist like Nation of Islam was.

I did accept his socialist belief in Communism and "Che" Guevara, and Fidel Castro became our Leaders for world modernization. At the same time, I was not too happy, for Communism denounced God's existence. He pushed on about Islam, telling me to read his Koran, so I did. I was amazed to see Jesus, Moses, Abraham, and many more Prophets of the Bible in this Koran. ...

In 1995, I went to work at a cafeteria at a University a year after I graduated from High school. At work, I saw so many cultures and different religious people. I still had hate towards non-Latinos, yet my first week at work a group of students came to buy some stuff at the store I worked, and they were fighting amongst each other, that everyone wanted to pay. This incident was very touching to me because I was a very giving person yet my friends took advantage of that quality. All the people in that group who came into the store wanted to pay for the others. I asked one of them later that week, why Middle Eastern people were so generous amongst each other? He replied, "See, we owe it to Islam because Islam teaches us to be generous, some of us don't practice that much but Islamic manners are imbedded in our hearts."

This statement moved me. I replied to him that I used to study Islam for political reasons. He asked, " Why did you stop?" I told him that I didn't know where to get more information about Islam. He looks at me with joy and he said I have an American Muslim friend that converted six month ago. The next day they came to visit me, and I saw this white male dressed like the people in the Bible and looked like Jesus. My heart felt this peaceful calm feeling that I still feel. He started asking me about my health, my family and my work. He didn't mention anything about religion. I was so happy that I told him to come every time he could to teach me.

For two months, Muslims were coming to me with books, pamphlets, and just to talk. It went on for two and half months and the place got closed during the summer. So for two months I just relaxed and partied all summer. However, I started to feel guilty while drinking. When I felt that way, I used to prostrate in forgiveness. In September, I went to a party with my friend and I really got drunk that night and almost got into a fight, but my friend reminded me that I was studying Islam, so I stopped and asked him if we can go home.

The next day, at 9:00 in the morning I woke up with this disgusting feeling and the phone rang. It was my friend from the University. I told him to please pick me up and take me to the Mosque. He came like a lighting flash to my house. I was nervous and happy at same time. We arrived at this beautiful Mosque Darul-Al-Hijra in northern Virginia ten minutes away from my house. At 10:00 a.m. the teacher came, very calm, and not pushing and asked me if I believed that God is One, I said, "Yes." He asked if I believed that Jesus is a Prophet and the son Mary? I said, "Yes." Do you believe that Muhammad is the Last Prophet of God, in doubts, I replied "Yes." At that moment in doubts of Muhammad, I said to myself, “If I believe in the teachings of Islam, I must be a fool not to accept in the one who brought it, I told the teacher that I was ready to became a Muslim (in submission to God); He told me to repeat:

"I testify that there is nothing worthy of worship than Allah and I testify that Muhammad is the Prophet of Allah"

At this point, I could smell the mercy and the sweetness of heaven, felt the presence of God in my torn, sick heart. I felt clean brightness in my new way of life. My life was ready for the next journey on earth, the journey to Paradise.

http://hispanicmuslims.com/stories/waltergomez.html
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Ali (Mexico - USA)

"My name is Ali. I'm a 31 year old Mexican born in America or as some would say a Chicano.

My life before was bad I had no direction in life. I was wasting my life away by dropping out of school in the 11th grade. I would hang out in the streets with my friends "partying" getting high, drinking and selling marijuana, most of my friends were gang members, I myself was never in a gang. I knew most of them before they turned bad,so it was not a problem. I slowly began to use harder drugs, I had dreams but they seemed to far away for me to make them reality. The more I became depressed the more I turned to drugs as a temporary escape.

One day a friend of mine told me that he knew where to get some good marijuana, I agreed to go check it out. We arrived and went inside this apartment their were a couple of people inside, we sat around and talked for a while and sampled the weed. My friend and I bought some and were getting ready to leave when my friend said one of the guys there invited us to his apartment to give him a book.

We left for this guy's apartment when we got there, he gave my friend a book and asked him to read it, and said that it might help him out with his problems in life. On the way home I asked my friend to show me the book that the guy gave him, it was the Qur'an (Koran).

I had never in my life heard of The Holy Qur'an, I began to briefly read some pages, while I was reading I knew that what I was reading was true, it was like a slap in the face, a wake up call. The Qur'an is so clear and easy to understand. I was really impressed and wanted to know more about Islam and Muslims.

The strangest thing is that I was not looking for a new Religion, I used to laugh at people that went to church and some times said that there was no God. Although deep down I knew there was. I decided to go to the Libary a couple of days later and check out the Qur'an. I began to read it and study it, I learned About Prophet Muhhamed (Peace be upon him) and the true story of Jesus son of Mary (Peace be upon him). The Qur'an stressed the fact that God was one and had no partners or a son, this was most interesting to me since I never understood the concept of the trinity.The Qur'an describes the birth of Prophet Jesus (P.B.U.H ) and his mission. There is also a Surah (Chapter) called Maryam (Mary) and tells her story as well.

As a child I always went to church, my mother was a Seventh day Adventist and took my sister and me every Saturday. I never was really religious and stopped going to church when I was about 14 or 15. The rest of my family is Catholic, I always wondered why we were Seventh day Adventist and the rest of my family was Catholic. When we would go visit my family back in Mexico, we went to a Catholic church for weddings and celebrations.

Muhammed (peace be upon him) is the last Messenger of God sent to all mankind. The Qur'an tells the stories of all the Prophets such as Adam, Abraham, Noah, Issac, David, Moses, Jesus (Peace be upon them all) just to name a few, told in a clear and understandable manner. I did months of research on Islam I bought a Holy Qur'an at a bookstore and studied about World History and Islam's contributions to Medicine and Science.

I learned that Spain was a Muslim country for almost a thousand years and that when the Muslims were expelled from Spain by the Christian king and Queen (Ferdanand and Isabela), the Christian Spaniards came to Mexico and forced the Aztecs and others to become Catholic, history and my Islamic roots was all becoming clear to me.

After months of study and research I could not deny the truth anymore I had put it off too long, but was still living the life I was before and knew that if I became Muslim I had to give all that up. One day while reading the Qur'an, I began to cry and fell to my knees and thanked Allah for guiding me to the truth.

I found out that there was a Mosque by my house so I went one Friday to see how Muslims prayed and conducted thier service. I saw that people from all races and colors attended the Mosque. I saw that they took off thier shoes when entering and sat on the carpeted floor. A man got up and began to call the Adthan (call for prayer) when I heard it my eyes filled up with tears it sounded so beautiful, it was all so strange at first but seemed so right at the same time. Islam is not just a Religion but a way of life.

After going a couple of Fridays I was ready to be a Muslim and say my Shahada (declaration of faith).

I told the Khatib (person giving the lecture) that I wanted to be a Muslim,the following Friday in front of the community I said my Shahada first in Arabic then in English: I bear witness that there is no other God but Allah and I bear witness that Muhammed (P.B.U.H) is His Messenger.

When I finished a Brother shouted Takbir! and all the community said Allah O Akbar! (God is great!) a few times,then all the Brothers came and hugged me. I never recieved so many hugs in one day, I will never forget that day it was great.I have been Muslim since 1997, I'm at peace with myself and clear in Religion, being Muslim has really changed my life for the better thanks to Almighty God. I went back to school to get my High School equivalent and computer repair training.

I had the blessing of being able to perform Hajj (Pilgrimage) to the Holy city of Mecca, it was a experiance of a lifetime, about 3 million people from every race and color in one place worshiping Allmighty God The Creator. Alhamdulilla in December of 2002 I got married in Morocco to a very good Muslim woman.

I think that Islam is the answer for the the problems of the youth and society in general. I hope my story Insha'Allah (God willing) will attract more Latinos and people of all races to the light of Islam."

http://hispanicmuslims.com/stories/ali.html
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
A Muslim Sister (USA)

I am an American Christian raised woman. At the age of 23 I started learning about Islam, and eventually became Muslim (All thanks and praise to Allah). As a teenager and on into my 20's, I always made sure I looked my best, and actually I was voted best looking girl by my senior high school class. Full face of make-up, perfect hair, and always the clothes in trend. I had the best looking sports car, a great paying job as a hair designer, and I was always looking to have a good time. I was an independent woman, and was never questioned about any decisions I made, or criticized about anything I did.

[size=-1]When I became Muslim all that changed. Suddenly every one had something to say, I heard it all. I was no longer thought off as being able to use my adult mind the same way again. I was brain-washed, or I was doing it to please my husband. ("You can't change a person ." isn't that a common saying?)[/size]

[size=-1]As a Christian, I was religious on Sunday mornings for an hour, or when the lottery numbers were being picked I would pray -"please God let me win", or when a loved one was hurt I would try to make a deal with God. And ofcourse on holidays.[/size]

[size=-1]I am 28 now, and Islam is a way of life, my way of living. Everything I do, every minute of my day is now done differently. Especially, I pray 5 times a day . Believe me, you can not pretend to be a Muslim. These days I live a simple, peaceful, very moral life. I have no stress, no worries. My husbands' duty is to make sure I'm well cared for, and to provide for me. I am able to stay home and take care of my son according to my standards, not a baby-sitter's. I couldn't trade in his smiles for a pay check, his smiles are my pay. I read, I sew, I relax, and I have plenty of time to prepare fresh home cooked meals for my family.[/size]

[size=-1]Oppressed ? Yes, I was oppressed last week , when my cordless phone broke and I had to use a regular one. I wouldn't change my life now for anything. And if I was to divorce my husband, SURPRISE, I'm still going to practice Islam in the same manner I do now.[/size]

[size=-1]So if you are a friend or a family member of a convert to Islam, instead of being negative or against it, try to understand and respect the persons new way of life. And remember we are Islam. There is no question that will embarrass nor offend us. These people who are great scholars of Islam because they saw a movie, are not the correct source of telling you about my life.[/size]

[size=-1]I saw a few movies about Italians, so should I assume all Italian men are in the Mafia, deal drugs, kill people, and have girl friends on the side? NO![/size]

[size=-1]Believe me, I have a lot more to write about my hardships and hassles of being a Muslim. None of which pertains to the religion itself, but to what even perfect strangers have said or done to me.[/size]

[size=-1]Oh yeah, did I mention I was also voted MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED by my high school senior class.[/size] [size=-1]I feel as though I have.[/size]

http://www.themodernreligion.com/convert/w_enough.htm
 
alhamdulillah... i am so happy to see all thenew muslims in here... subhanna allah he said that islam would one day be the greatest of all religions and hold more people than any other. woohoo we are gaining fast...

well anyway... corboda i think that it is a great idea to post things like this but wouldnt it do great justice to do a geocities website on yahoo (free) that is... with all these so not only people here can reply but others can also? or is it that i may be thinking you cant do that if not let me know we will get it done for you lol
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Iman (Italy)

Iman was born in Italy and migrated with her parents to Canada when she was small. She was educated in Roman Catholic parochial schools equipped with nuns and priests and the daily lessons in catechism. She says that they spoke endlessly of their homeland and without the intention, instilled in Iman a yearning to see Italy.

When she finished her university she went for a vacation to Italy and found it more lovely than she had imagined. She had found her passion in life and after much contemplation, she made the move and lived there for six years.

She was never the materialistic type but more on the intellectual side and spent all her free time at museums and art galleries and Italian operas. She says quite animatedly, if one wants to enjoy life, then Italy is the place to go.

In Italy, she met a Jordanian man and married him, moving immediately to Jordan. The fact that he was Arabic-speaking and Muslim did not daunt her and she never gave it any other thought. She disliked having to leave Italy and felt homesick in the beginning. She was shocked by the Muslim way of dress and felt compassion for the covered women. She saw her mother-in-law wake at Fajr for prayer and made up her mind that it was definitely not the religion for her.

Iman always believed in God but was not a practising Christian. She had friends of both faiths in Jordan and she noticed some prejudice from the Christian Arabs towards the Muslims and thought perhaps because the Christians are a minority they felt threatened. She was dismayed when a Christian friend in Jordan who wanted to be Muslim had to run away from home to do so. Her family had warned her against it; there was nothing else she could do.

She came to Saudi Arabia with her husband and, as happens to many women, she found herself with lots of time on her hands and spent it reflecting about what life means and the direction hers was taking. Being away from the mundane things forced her to re-evaluate her life. She recalled many happenings from Jordan and began to think about Islam.

Iman never contemplated becoming Muslim until her son began school. She wanted to know what it was he was learning and how she might be able to help him in his studies. She thought that she should at least know what he expected of her. Her son is extremely intuitive and sensitive and she could tell that he was concerned about the souls of his parents. His father was not in the habit of taking him to the mosque but when he was in first grade he asked to go. This made a big impression on her coming from someone so young. She thought, could it be he knows something that I don't?

A Muslim friend gave her a book about Islam entitled Islam in Focus. She says she almost became convinced just from the introduction of the book. From her continued reading she found answers to Roman Catholic doctrines she had questioned long ago. For instance, how could it be that, if a child died before he was baptised that he would not go to heaven but instead stay in limbo. She learned that Islam teaches no form of original sin. She also learned about Jesus in Islam. This was a big factor in that before converting she felt she would be turning her back on everything she had been taught; that he was God made man and had died for our sins on the cross. "And when it is recited to them, they say; 'We believe therein, for it is the truth from our Lord: indeed we have been Muslims (bowing to Allah's will) from before this'". (Quran 28:53)

Looking back she realises how ridiculous it was. She understands that God does not make mistakes. He has sent us thousands of Prophets and now suddenly he comes to earth in the form of a man to convince mankind. No, the Prophets were all men, chosen for a specific purpose. She understands that man has included these items in the religion and they are not from God.

When some of her Christian friends learned of her intention to convert they disappeared from her life instantly. She finds it difficult to comprehend that they are not interested in finding out the truth and she is sure they have the same doubts that she had. People all over the world who had never heard of Islam before are becoming Muslim and the people who have been raised in Muslim countries deny the truth of Islam. Its incredible!

She was worried that she would not be able to pray five times a day. Coming from a Christian background it certainly seemed in-surmountable but she said it was so easy to do and she began to look forward to the next prayer time. Now she finds herself completely absorbed when she prays and is at peace and quite content that she has made the right choice.

http://islamicweb.com/begin/newMuslims/convert_italy.htm
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
US Latinas seek answers in Islam
By Christine Armario
The Christian Science Monitor
December 27, 2004


It surprises many of their friends and family, but some young US Latinas say Islam offers women more respect.

UNION CITY, N.J. - Jasmine Pinet sits on the steps outside a mosque here, tucking in strands of her burgundy hair beneath a white head scarf, and explaining why she, a young Latina, feels that she has found greater respect as a woman by converting to Islam.

"They're not gonna say, 'Hey mami, how are you?' “Ms. Pinet says of Muslim men. ”Usually they say, 'Hello, sister.' And they don't look at you like a sex object."

While some Latinas her age try to emulate the tight clothes and wiggling hips of stars like Jennifer Lopez and Christina Aguilera, Ms. Pinet and others are adopting a more conservative lifestyle and converting to Islam. At this Union City, N.J., mosque, women account for more than half of the Latino Muslims who attend services here. Nationwide, there are about 40,000 Latino Muslims in the United States, according to the Islamic Society of North America.

Many of the Latina converts say that their belief that women are treated better in Islam was a significant factor in converting. Critics may protest that wearing the veil marks a woman as property, but some Latina converts say they welcome the fact that they are no longer whistled at walking down a street. "People have an innate response that I'm a religious person, and they give [me] more respect," says Jenny Yanez, another Latina Muslim. "You're not judged if you're in fashion or out of fashion."

Other Latina Muslims say they also like the religion's emphasis on fidelity to one's spouse and family.

But for many family members and friends, these conversions come as a surprise - often an unwelcome one. They may know little of Islam other than what they have heard of the Taliban and other extremist groups.

That creates an inaccurate image, insists Leila Ahmed, a professor of women's studies and religion at Harvard University. "It astounds me, the extent to which people think Afghanistan and the Taliban represent women and Islam." What's really going on, she says, is a reshaping of the relationship between women and Islam. "We're in the early stages of a major rethinking of Islam that will open Islam for women. [Muslim scholars] are rereading the core texts of Islam - from the Koran to legal texts - in every possible way."

New views of women and Islam may be more prevalent in countries like the US, where women read the Koran themselves and rely less on patriarchal interpretations.

"I think the women here are asserting more their rights and their privileges," says Zahid Bukhari, director of the American-Muslim Studies Program at Georgetown University.

Some Latina Muslims say they harbored stereotypes about Muslim women before deciding to convert, but changed their minds once becoming close friends with a Muslim.

"I always thought, geez, I feel sorry for women who have to wear those veils," says Pinet. Then she met her Muslim boyfriend and began studying the Koran with a group of Muslim women. She says she was impressed with the respect they received.

"A women is respected because she is the mother, she takes care of the children, and she's the one that enforces the rules," Pinet says. "They're the ones who are sacred."

Critics of the decisions of Latinas to convert to Islam say they are adopting a religion just as patriarchical as the Roman Catholic faith that many are leaving behind.

"While it's true the Latino culture tends to be more male-dominated, and there's a tendency toward more machismo, I would venture to say it exists [in Islam] as well," says Edwin Hernandez, director of the Center for the Study of Latino Religion at the University of Notre Dame.

Latinos account for six percent of the 20,000 Muslim conversions in the United States each year, according to a report published by the Council on American-Islamic Relations. Anecdotal evidence suggests this number may be rising. But that doesn't mean it's getting any easier for the women who make this choice.

"At first it was anger and then more like sadness," Nylka Vargas says of her parents' reaction when she told them she was converting to Islam and began dressing more conservatively. "They would sometimes feel strange being around me."

Pinet's family has been more accepting, but she too has encountered some resistance in her community. It's as if you've betrayed your own kind," she says.

For some, the cultural differences are the most trying.

"I can't eat pork, I can't wear [form-fitting] clothing, I can't dance in the clubs, I'm not gonna attend church," says Ms. Yanez, who is of Cuban and Spanish descent. "But I keep my language, and there's still things that we do as Latinos that they don't have to change."

Within the Islamic community, Latina Muslims report being warmly received, although language barriers sometimes exist for Latinas who only speak Spanish. There are few Spanish services at mosques and a limited number of Islamic texts in Spanish.

Grassroots organizations specifically for Latino Muslims have been created in recent years. They function in part as an informational resource for new converts and but also as a support group for those who encounter difficulties at home.

Ultimately, Latina Muslims say that time heals the divisions and angst their conversion sometimes causes among friends and family.

"What I had to learn was patience," says Vargas, whose family came to accept her religious beliefs after several years. "Sometimes things are not as we want them."

Source: Christian Science Monitor
http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/1227/p11s02-ussc.html

http://hispanicmuslims.com/articles/latinas.html
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Rose Munoz

Rose Munoz is president of the Muslim Students Association at the University of South Florida. Beneath the scarf, Munoz is of Colombian ancestry, born 21 years ago in Manhattan.

* * * Tell me why you are Muslim.
I actually converted about three years ago, my freshman year here at USF. I converted on Sept. 3 of '99. I guess I was searching for a religion. I didn't really feel comfortable with any of the religions that I had been to. I was baptized in the Catholic Church. I was also baptized in the Baptist Church. And I learned about Islam, and it was beautiful. My first time to the mosque, I converted.

* * * What did your parents think about your conversion to Islam?

Their first question was, "Who's Jesus to you now?' And I told them, "He's still a great man, a prophet, just not the son of God.' The only thing they don't like is me covering my head with this thing.

* * * What objection do they have with you wearing the traditional scarf?

They're worried for my safety. They think that I'm going to be attacked, or discriminated against, or just that I'm cutting back my opportunities or denying myself certain liberties by wearing it. But I try to explain to them that for me, I feel that I'm giving myself more opportunities, and giving myself the opportunity to be identified as a Muslim, and I like that. They are fine with the religion, and they actually really like what's happened to me because of it, because I've matured, and they see positive changes in my life. And my father even told me that. He's happy with it, and he feels comfortable with it -- all except for this.

http://hispanicmuslims.com/articles/interview1.html
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Marco (The Philippines)

One day, I thought of going abroad not only to work but also with the intention to proselytize the name of Jesus as Lord. My plan was to go either Taiwan or Korea. However, by Divine Will, I got a visa for Saudi Arabia. Immediately, I signed a three-year contract to work in Jeddah.

A week after I arrived in Jeddah, I observed the diverse lifestyle of different people such as the language, customs, and even the food they eat. I was totally ignorant of other’s culture.


I have a Filipino co-worker in the factory that happens to be a Muslim and who can speak Arabic. Though, there was little apprehension, I tried to ask him about the Muslims, their faith and beliefs. I shared to him my faith in Christ. As response, he told me that his religion it totally different from my religion. He quoted two verses from the Holy Qur’aan. One in surah al-maidah 5: verse 3 which says;

“…This day, I have perfected your religion for you, completed My favor upon you, and have chosen for you Islam as your religion.”

Another in surah yusuf 12: verse 40 which says;

“You do not worship besides Him but only names which you have named (forged), you and your fathers, for which Allah has sent down no authority. The command is for none but Allah. He has commanded that you worship none but Him, that is the straight religion, but most men know not.”

The verses he quoted struck me. After that I began to observe his life. Everyday we shared each other’s belief and eventually became close friends. In one occasion, we went to Balad (the commercial district of Jeddah) to post some letters. There, I happened to notice many people watching video of a debate by my favorite “preacher”. My Muslim friend told me that the favorite “preacher” I was telling him happens to be Ahmad Deedat and apparently a famous propagator of Islam. I told him that, our pastors back home had made us to believe that he is just a “great preacher”. They kept to us his real identity that he is a Muslim propagator! Whatever their intention was, definitely, it was to keep us away from knowing the truth. Nevertheless, I bought the videotape as well as some books to read about Islam.

In our residence, my Muslim friend told to me about the stories of the prophets. I was really convinced but pride kept me away from Islam.

Seven months later, another Muslim friend from India went to my room and gave me an English translation of the Qur’aan. Later on, he brought me to Balad and accompanied me to an Islamic Center nearby. There, I met one Filipino Brother. We had some religious discussions and related to me his life before when he was a Christian. Then he lectured to me the teachings of Islam.

That blessed night, on the 18th of April 1998, without compulsion, I finally entered Islam. I announced my declaration of faith called the shahadatain.

http://thetruereligion.org/modules/xfsection/article.php?articleid=212
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Hamza Yusuf Hansen (USA)

Shaykh Hamza Yusuf was born in Walla Walla, Washington, and grew up in Northern California in a Greek Orthodox family.

He is founder of the Zaytuna Institute. He embraced Islam in 1977 in Santa Barbara, California when he was only 17 and set off almost immediately to study Arabic, Islamic jurisprudence, philosophy, and spiritual psychology with masters in the Muslim world.

In 1979, he moved to the United Arab Emirates and studied in the Islamic Institute of Al-'Ain for four years, augmenting his studies with lessons by leading scholars of the Islamic world.

Some of the scholars he studied with include Shaikh Baya bin Salik, head of the Islamic court in Al-'Ain; Shaikh Muhammad Shaybani, Mufti of Abu Dhabi; Shaikh Hamad al-Wali; and Shaikh Muhammad al-Fatrati of Al-Azhar University. In 1984, Hamza Yusuf entered the Bilal ibn Rabah Madrasa of Tizi, Algeria and studied with Shaikh Sidi Bou Sai'd. After being expelled from Algeria by the government, he travelled to a unique madrassa in Mauritania and studied with the most noble scholar Shaykh Murabit al-Hajj bin Fahfu where he continues his studies periodically.

After ten-years of studies abroad, he returned to the United States and completed degrees in nursing at Imperial Valley College and religious studies at San Jose State University.

In the early 1990's he began to teach classes in the San Francisco Bay Area and in 1996 he established Zaytuna Institute. Two years later the institute acquired a property in Hayward, California, where it is now based.

Zaytuna Institute is committed to inspiring a traditional understanding and study of the core Islamic sciences. In addition to weekly classes, week-long and month-long educational programs, and annual conferences that addresses contemporary issues affecting the American people, Zaytuna Institute has published four small books and several major audio-tape sets of Shaykh Hamza's classes.

His classes on the life of the Prophet Muhammad, may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him, produced as a 24-audio tape set, has sold well thousands of copies world-wide.

As the executive director of the Zaytuna Institute, Shaykh Hamza travels frequently to major North American and European cities to teach and lecture to both Muslims and non-Muslim audiences.

After years of passionate work Shaykh Hamza completed the first comprehensive English translation of the Burda of Imam Al-Busiri. In June 2002 Sandala Productions in the UK has released “The Poem of the Cloak: The Burda of Al-Busiri.” The poem, on two cds, is sung by the Fez Singers and and the book is calligraphed by Mohamed Zakariya, a world renowed calligrapher and the teacher of Ustadha Aishah Elinor Holland.

He presently resides in the Bay Area with his wife and four children.

(For more information on Shaykh Hamza Yusuf Hanson and the Zaytuna Institute please visit http://www.zaytuna.org)

http://www.themodernreligion.com/profile/sh-Hamza-Yusuf-Hanson.html
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Selma A. Cook (Australia)

"Each and every human being on this earth, will be held accountable before Allah, the Almighty on the Day of Judgment; it is up to us to obey or disobey our Creator.

A famous saying of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) was that, if we turn to Allah He will turn to us. If we approach Allah by a hand’s span, He approaches us by an arm’s legnth, and if we go towards Him walking, He rushes towards us.

I knew deep within myself that I had reached the place of light that I had sought for so many years. I was twenty-two years old. I had been a missionary since I was seventeen. In my heart, I left the church the moment I heard the Qur’an. But I decided to go to the church one more time to publicly announce in the monthly “testimony meeting” the following Sunday that my life had taken a new direction and I wouldn’t be seeing them again, but that I was glad to have known them and wished them all well.

My leaving the church caused something of an uproar in my family and community. Deep down I knew I was alone in life. Family and friends could come close to us but no one really knows us or can help us except Allah. Indeed, we are born alone, will die alone and will stand for judgment alone. I had always felt alone. I was right.

The loud and often hostile reaction of people is easy to confront when one remains in a state of reliance upon Allah, the Almighty. I considered myself a Muslim but had a long way to go, much to change and much to understand. I felt like a young child who had just taken her first steps. I knew with conviction that Allah was the One to whom I’d always prayed but it wasn’t until that time that I knew His name and reality. I spent the next five years rediscovering my life.

As I read the Qur’an in English, I knew that all the things I had ever thought or felt were contained in a book that existed before this world came into being.

How deeply grateful I am that Allah has guided me to Islam, despite the propaganda and hype that abounds this world concerning it. Indeed, Allah, the Almighty, will never allow His message to stop, and He will rescue those who have fallen prey to this life if only they turn to Him with sincerity.

http://www.islamonline.net/english/journey/2004/05/jour02.shtml
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Brad (USA)

My journey to Islam has been a rather long one. I first became curious in 1999 when my ship (I was in the Navy) went to the Middle East.

Fast forward a few years (2004 - about a year ago)) and I started searching the internet for any information about Islam I could find. I even went to my school's library and read a few books.

This past summer my interest reached a peak and I "broke down" and bought my own copy of the Qur'an. I started reading it and really fell in love with the message. Then, at school I began talking to a few other Muslim students who were a part of the MSA (Muslim Student Association). They were kind enough to answer all my questions and they were also very patient with me. In fact, they never once, even before I reverted, made me feel like an outsider within the group.

I began doing the prayers at night (as best I could with only a few basic Arabic phrases). My decision to actually make it official and revert was not easy. I come from a very strong Christian background and it is very hard to let go of your past and embrace a new faith and a new way of life. My family doesn't know yet, and probably won't know for a while. But I'm risking a lot by embracing Islam, at the least they'll probably be "dissappointed" and "confused" and at the worst I could be completely dis-owned (although this is a long shot).

But Allah (swt) has guided me back to him. My biggest problem now is that everything seems very overwhelming - there's so much to learn.

All the best.
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Jermaine Jackson (USA)

Q: When and How did you start your journey towards Islam?

A: It was way back in 1989 when I, along with my sister, conducted a tour to some of the countries of Middle East. During our stay in Bahrain, we were accorded warm welcome.

There I happened to meet some children and had a light chitchat with them. I put certain questions to them and they flung at me their innocent queries. During the course of this interaction, they inquired about my religion. I told them, "I am a Christian." I asked them, as to what was their religion? A wave of serenity took over them. They replied in one voice ? Islam.

Their enthusiastic answer really shook me from within. Then they started telling me about Islam. They were giving me information, much in piece with their age. The pitch of their voice would reveal that they were highly proud of Islam. This is how I paced toward Islam.
A very short interaction with a group of children ultimately led me to have long discourses about Islam with Muslim scholars. A great ripple had taken place in my thought. I made failing attempt to console myself that nothing had happened but I could not conceal this fact any longer from myself that at heart I had converted to Islam.

This I disclosed first to my family friend, Qunber Ali. The same Qunber Ali managed to take me to Riyadh, capital of Saudi Arabia. Till that time, I did not know much about Islam. From there, in the company of a Saudi family, I proceeded for Mecca for the performance of "Umrah". There I made public for the first time that I had become Muslim.

http://www.islamawareness.net/Converts/jermaine.html
 

Cordoba

Well-Known Member
Sarah (New Zealand)

This is the amazing story of Sarah from New Zealand, and her brief one month journey to Islam, as described by Amr Khaled, a famous young Muslim in a talk he gave this year and on his web site:

I got an e-mail from a girl living in New Zealand. Her age, 22 years. She said in the mail:

- I am a Lebanese who has left Lebanon at the age of 10 and came to New Zealand with my mom and dad. My father, a Muslim, and my mother, a Christian, were divorced, each one got remarried and left New Zealand where they left me all alone. In the morning I go to college where I study and at night I work in a bar. I can't pray. I know nothing about religion or Islam. I don't even know what Fateha is. And I have never even opened a Mus'haf before. My father never taught me. So I am only Muslim by name.

She continues: I am very beautiful and for that reason I enrolled in a beauty contest for the whole of New Zealand. I won the contest in my own state and I expect to be admitted to the main beauty contest for the whole country. Everybody expects me to win. There's no sin I haven't done, and when I win this contest I will win a big amount of money and I intend to become a model, even for illicit magazines.

I lived that way until I once visited a Christian family in New Zealand and watched one of your episodes on TV that was talking about “Chastity” and this was how I got to know your website since it was mentioned in the sub-title. I kept asking myself while I watched this episode. Why am I not like that? So I am sending you this message now to ask you if Allah can forgive me the way I am.

She continues, Can Allah forgive me after all I've done?

- So I replied to her mail saying, yes, of course, Allah would accept you and forgive you. Of course, He would.

- So she answered me two days later saying, I have repented to Allah and left the bar I was working in.

- Then two days later, she sent another mail saying, I have given up the beauty contest and won't go on with it.

- Two days later, she sent, would you send me the Fateha on a tape so I can study it?

- Two days later she sent, can you teach me how to pray?

All this took place just three weeks ago.

So we taught her how to pray.

- She disappeared for a whole week, then she sent us an e-mail last week saying, I have studied Surat Ar-Rahman (The Most Glorious) and Surat An-Nabaa' (The Great News).

- Two days later she called with a surprise, I donned the Hijab (the headscarf).

Honestly I was surprised. I feared that she was doing all this out of haste. I feared she might rebound.

- What makes me even more surprised it that she called today and said that one day after she donned the Hijab, just one day, she went to the doctor to see about some pains she was suffering from. There she learned that she had a malignant brain tumor and that she has a maximum of one more year to live.

She said, I am so glad that I knew Allah before learning about my illness. I feel that he loves me so much that he made me come to know Him before knowing about my illness. If I die, then I will go to Him. I am so happy I came to know Allah.

- In continuation to the story related by Mr. Amr Khaled, it was mentioned on his website that this girl, Sarah, was admitted to surgery in Australia the following Friday (after the seminar) to undergo a very serious brain operation where the odds were 20:100 according to the doctors. She sent a message before her surgery saying: “I am happy to be meeting Allah. I am happy because I repented before learning about my illness. I don't know if my father or mother will know what happened to me because they rarely call, but I repented three weeks ago, only three weeks ago… I have disobeyed Allah for twenty years. I ask Allah to reward me with Heaven and I ask Him to make me serve Islam one day through your website. This website has been my window to Islam”.

- Several days later, after the operation, Mr. Amr Khaled wrote again on his website:

“Truly to Allah we belong, and truly to him shall we return.” (Al-baqara:156). Allah, we ask Thee, to support us in our calamity and to bestow upon us a better substitute.

Sarah died, 22 years old, and was buried in the Muslims graveyard in New Zealand. They prayed for her soul (Al-Jumu'a, Friday prayer) and she managed to send me a small message just before her operation saying, “I lived so far from Allah for 22 years, but have repented to Him only 3 weeks ago. But I ask you to be my witness that I have left my boy friend, given up the beauty contest, donned the headscarf and took to praying. I ask you to be my witness that I did all that for my Allah. I know no Muslims but you and this forum so please pray to Allah for me so He Would Have Mercy on me and Forgive me. Call Him to Guide my mother who knows nothing about me”.

http://www.amrkhaled.net/articles/articles542.html
 
Top