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Why I am a
Muslim
Ibrahim, a
Pennsylvania teenager, explains how difficulties with church teaching about
Jesus as God led him from Catholicism to Islam.
A time comes in everyone's
life, or at least I hope it comes, when they realize that they have to not only
believe what they believe in, whatever it may be, but get out there and proclaim
it to the world. Luckily, that time came early for me. I am 17, and Islam is the
belief that I’m proclaiming.
I was raised Catholic.
Not internally as much as externally. I went to Catholic Sunday school, called
CCD, but the Catholic view of God never played a major roll in my childhood. It
was a Sunday thing. Anyhow, I started to enjoy Mass around 7th grade. It made me
feel good to do the right thing. I was always a rather moral person, but I never
really studied the fundamentals of Catholicism. I just knew that I felt good
worshipping my creator.
I really liked
Catholicism, but I always saw it as us (the Catholics) with Jesus worshipping
God, not us worshipping God and Jesus as one. I saw Jesus (peace be upon him) as
my example on how to be a good follower of and submitter to God's will, but not
as God himself.
Before I was confirmed
in 8th grade, in the fall of 1999, I learned a lot about what Catholicism was.
The Catholicism of the Church had a lot on viewing Jesus as God in it. Nothing
like my “undivided God being worshipped by me with Jesus as an example” train of
thought. It was like they just opened up a can of cold, illogical confusion and
tried to feed it to me. It didn’t feel right.
I continued with
Catholic church, and kept on worshipping. But I talked to many in the church
about my feelings that Jesus wasn't God but more of a Prophet, an example. They
told me that I had to accept him as God and as a sacrifice, and so on. I just
wasn't buying it. I tried to buy it but I guess God withhold the sale for my own
benefit. There was a better car out there for me. I continued at the church.
Sometime in
mid-December of 1999, for no reason that I can recall I started reading up on
Islam in encyclopedias. I remember making a list of bolded words in the entry
for "Islam" in an old 1964 Grolier World Book that I found in my closet, and
studying them. For some reason I was amazed by this faith and that it was all
about God and that it was everything that I believed all my life - right here.
Previously, I had accepted that there was no faith like I felt inside of me. But
I was amazed that I had found this faith. I found out that "my" faith had a
name, and millions of other adherents!
Without ever reading a
Qur'an or talking to another Muslim, I said shahada (declaring your belief in no
god but God) on 31 December 1999. As the months passed, I learned more. I went
through many periods of confusion, happiness, doubt and amazement. Islam took me
on an enlightening tour of me, everyone else, and God.
The transition was
slow. I was still attending Mass five months into my change of faith. Each time
I went, I felt more and more distant from the congregation, but closer and
closer to Prophet Jesus and God.
During Ramadan 2001,
the second time I fasted (the first year, I converted during Ramadan and did not
fast), I went to the library during lunch period. It was better than sitting at
a table with my friends, because I got work done in the library. I swear my
grades went up. Anyways, I started talking to the only other Shmuzlim at my
school, John. We talked about Islam a little more each day. He's an awesome
brother and he took me to the mosque on the last Friday of Ramadan. Going was
one of the best things I ever made in my life. God really answered my prayers
this time. I thought I would be nervous, but I wasn't at all. It was the most
natural thing I ever did in my life. I felt home. I realized something before
leaving. As I sat there on the floor, praying to God, I realized that the room
was full of others but it was OK. See, at home when someone asks me what I am
doing, I never say I am praying. I never admit it to anyone. It is too awkward.
But there, at the masjid, I was praying to God in front of a score of other
Muslims and I felt perfectly fine. Better than fine! I felt secure and safe. It
was the most liberating thing since I accepted God into my heart that cold New
Year's Eve almost two years ago.
I never told my parents
right out. In fact, I don't plan to. The most significant clue that I gave came
around
1:00 AM
on
16 December
2001, when I finally told my dad I was going to the mosque in the morning with a
friend when he asked me why I was setting my alarm. He told me how he can't wait
for me to move out of the house, how displeased he is with me and how stupid the
choices I make are to him. I never told them straight out because I figured it
was best to test the waters by revealing clues bit by bit; I didn't want to send
a shockwave through the family. I can only imagine what my dad would do if he
knew I was actually a practicing Muslim. He seems to hate my guts just for
studying the faith, which he thinks is all I am doing. I understand that my dad
is a depressed man, so I don't really hold this all against him. I mean, it is
his fault for thinking himself so smart that he doesn't need God. That thought
is what got him so depressed. But I don't think he realized how hard one's heart
can be when you deny your human need for a relationship with your Creator. So I
don't hold it all against him. He didn't know what he was getting into. My mom
doesn't know that I am a Muslim, but at least she hasn't shown her anger over me
going to the mosque. She is upset over it but never told me that I displease
her, at least. As God commands, I'll continue to try my best to be nice to my
parents as long as they don't attempt to take away my Islam. The best thing that
I can do for them is to be a good example so that maybe one day, inshallah, they
can see that there is a better way of living than living in the dark world of
God-denial.
I've never been to the
Mid-East, but I am studying Islam every day. I read books from every point of
view. Sufi, Shia, Sunni, books on the Qur'an alone... The Muslims view sects as
haram, so no matter what you believe you are always a Shmuzlim and nothing extra.
You may have completely different views than another Muslim, but as long as you
both believe that there is no god but God, you are both Muslims and that's that.
I read a lot on-line, and discuss a lot with other Muslims on-line and on the
phone. I've met some really great people on-line who have taught me a lot about
life, Islam and God.
Right now, I am 100% a
Shmuzlim and that will never change, inshallah. I thank God that I've gone through
so many periods of doubt. When I look back I see that it was not God leaving me
but God telling me that it was time that I asked myself how much I loved God,
and what I was willing to go through to understand my faith. A week of crying,
depression, prayer, reading to the extreme, and ignoring most other things in
life sounds harsh...but the reward - knowing so much more about yourself, God,
and the relationship between you (Islam) - is worth more than any material
things. Through my interrogation of Islam I gained God’s most precious gift -
Islam, or surrender to the peace. I've heard Christians say that with
Christianity you "know God on a personal level." In Islam, your relationship
with God is so much deeper than that. God is with me every moment, guiding me,
teaching me, loving me, protecting me, liberating me, enlightening me,
comforting me... Alhamdulilah for Islam!
Islam has done a lot
for me. More than I could have ever guessed. And every day, it just gets better.
I went from living my life on a trial-and-error basis to embracing guidance, and
now knowing what the best choices are for me to make. From seeking who I am and
spending a life in confusion, I am being guided. I can't find the words to say
what its like, but I'll try again: God reveals to me what life is. I don't have
to guess anymore.
- -- -
Sura 93, “The Morning
Hours”
By the morning hours
By the night when it is still
Your lord has not abandoned you
and does not hate you
What is after will be
better
than what came before
To you the lord will be giving
You will be content
Did he not find you
orphaned and give you shelter
Find you lost and guide you
Find you in hunger and provide for you
As for the orphan, do not
oppress him
And one who asks, do not turn him away
And the grace of your lord -- proclaim
- -- -
That is what I went
through, what God did for me - what I am. So here is my proclamation to the
world. Islam is more than you think it is, in fact more liberal than most would
wish it to be. But do not only listen. Study all views for yourself...and come
to your own conclusion. God says “let there be no compulsion in religion”
because faith in God is a choice made by the heart, and it can't be forced.
Ibrahim
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