|
My
Journey to Allah
Sr.Heather
I am a new
Muslimah. I took shahada on August 15, 2002. I am so glad I did.
Life is much better with Islam. I had been searching all my life for
a way to Allah. I was raised Christian. I explored many different
faiths looking for Truth and guidance and now I have found it.
First of all, a
bit of background about me. I was born and mostly raised in
Wisconsin in the United States. When I was born, my parents belonged
to the Quakers. So that was my first experience with religion. The
Quakers are very open-minded, so I was exposed to many different
people and faiths. I was raised with very few prejudices. My parents
divorced when I was 9 years old. I think due to the divorce, my
parents both began going through some sort of spiritual crisis.
Every weekend, my brother and I alternated which parent we were
with. Due to their searching, we went to many different
churches, all Protestant Christian.
My mother
brought us to a group of Pentecostals, where they spoke in tongues
(an angelic language believed to be sent through them by God) and
healed people by praying. I remember having to stand on the chairs
to see over all the people to catch the action.
My father
brought us to a Congregational church (the exact opposite of the
Pentecostals), a Dutch Reformed (where my new step-mother went), and
a group of divorced Christians that met for worship.
Eventually my
mother worked her way back to the church of her childhood. The
Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod. For any of you that know
anything about Lutherans, these guys are the strictest. They
aren’t allowed to pray with anyone besides other Wisconsin Synod
Lutherans, even other Christians, because they do not believe the
same. I personally believe they are near cult status (though I would
never say that in front of my grandmother!)
In that church
I went through Catechism classes (where you are taught, once a week
after school for 3 years, what the Church teaches) and was confirmed
(graduation). But it all never added up for me. I was still
searching.
In high school
I made friends with other Christians who actually observed their
faith (where I am from, everyone is Christian, they just don’t
necessarily practice it). We met for Bible study and on weekends
visited various churches. I studied every denomination I could
looking for the Truth. Baptist, Pentecostal, Assembly of God,
Unitarian, Methodist, Non-denominational, Snake handlers, World Wide
Church of God, Shakers, Amish, Presbyterian, United Church of
Christ. And the list goes on. I have either studied and met a member
and/or attended worship in all of these (and more) denominations.
Then I found
the Catholics. I was convinced I wanted to be a nun. I even went
through the conversion classes. But something stopped me before I
officially converted.
In college I
was a Theology major with an emphasis in Comparative Religions. I
made studying religions my life, not just my hobby. The more I
studied, the more holes I found.
I went on and
started to search outside of Christianity. I studied and/or
practiced Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, Neo-paganism, Witchcraft,
Voodoo, Santeria, Ba‘haism and Judaism. About the only thing I
have stayed away from was Satanism!
How I found
Islam is a miracle brought about by the horrible tragedy of Sept.11.
Before then, I thought, as many still do, that Islam was a
controlling, misogynistic, violent religion. In all my religious
studies, I hadn't spent any more time on it then needed for my
theology classes in college.
Though it still
seems that the media doesn't portray us in the kindest light, news
reports and articles did begin to open my mind to a new way of
thinking about Islam.
In a
conversation with my mother-in-law, we began to discuss Islam. She
made the comment "All Muslims, by the very nature of their
religion, are violent". Let me say, and I say this as fact, not
as insult, that she is a very closed-minded person and does not
educate herself on religions outside her narrow view of Protestant
Christianity. So when she made the comment, I didn't believe what
she said. But it did occur to me, that I was unable to agree or
disagree based on any knowledge that I personally had. I felt the
need to change that. In classes in college I had learned the Five
Pillars, and that Muslims prayed toward Mecca because Muhammad was
from there (textbooks don’t have to be correct do they?)
Soon after I
had the chance to receive some free pamphlets about Islam from a
web-site why-islam.org. I sent for them, thinking that if we were
going to be at war with these people, I should know something about
them.
The pamphlets
came. I read them and was amazed. This religion was nothing like
what I had previously thought! A volunteer from the web-site
e-mailed me and offered me an English translation of the Qur'an.
I thought "Why not?" I had read the Bible, some of
the Hindu Vedas, much of the Talmud, and the Book
of Mormon. So in the interest of education, I accepted the
offer.
When the book
came, I found that he had generously sent me two other books. An
Illustrated Guide to Islam and Towards Understanding Islam.
I read them first. Then I began the Meaning of the Qur'an. It
was if scales had fallen off my eyes, and off of my heart. I felt in
my heart that I had found how to please God.
I promised
myself I would not take shahada until I had read the entire Qur'an.
Even though I spent hours studying other aspects of Islam on the
internet. There was nothing that I learned that turned me off the
faith. Instead, there were so many ideas that I had believed
already. It was if Allah had been leading me to Islam all of my
life.
I prayed. I
searched my heart. I tried to think of some excuse why I couldn’t
convert to Islam. I thought about how my family and friends would
take it. I thought about how hard it would be to wear hijab around
here (and I felt that wearing hijab was fard).
No matter what excuse I came up with, I knew they didn’t matter.
Allah was calling me.
On the evening
of August 15, 2002 I repeated after my internet friend, “La
ilaha illa Allah Muhammadur rasoolu Allah (There is no true god
but God, and Muhammad is the Messenger of God)”. I was Muslim. I
felt great! Now I had to break the news to my husband.
I actually
hadn’t expected to convert so quickly. But when something is
right, it happens.
I told my
husband and he was supportive. We had some difficulty over the next
couple weeks, but we worked it out. He was just worried about me.
Worried about violence from people because of 9/11. Worried I was on
an emotional high and would come down and feel I had made a mistake.
He had watched me explore many other religions over the course of
our marriage. He was afraid this was another of my “phases”. Of
course, he didn’t say this all so bluntly. He was very kind and
considerate.
I haven’t
been a Muslim that long yet. Maybe this is another phase. But is
that any excuse not to follow Allah? I had read an article on
excuses of why women don’t wear hijab. One was because they were
worried they would take it off at some later point and then would
cause more harm then good. The response was that you cannot predict
the future. Maybe you will take off your scarf. Maybe you
wouldn’t. Is that any reason not to wear it now?
So I feel the
same about being Muslim. Maybe someday I will fall away. I pray not.
But is that any reason to not follow Allah today?
|