I
sat in my night class, in my first semester at the community
college, daydreaming as usual. I thought about my future and
wondered where it would take me. Suddenly I had a
revelation. I wanted to become a minister. I wanted to
devote my life to spreading God’s Word.
Two
years later, in 1976, I transferred to a state university
two hundred miles away from home. Still pursuing my dream, I
immediately contacted the pastor of the local Lutheran
church and told him I wanted to help in whatever way I
could. For my first assignment, he sent me as his
representative to a welcoming picnic for new international
students. At that picnic, I met my first Muslim.
I
learned that Abdul-Mun'im came from Thailand. He had a nice
smile, and he was polite. As we talked, he often mentioned
God.
That
seemed very strange to me. I had always been told that
anyone who was not a Christian would go to hell. I wondered
how someone who believed in God, and had good manners, could
be condemned to eternal punishment. I felt sorry for
Abdul-Mun'im. So I set out to convert him.
I
invited him to attend church with me. He came, but he
brought his copy of the Qur’an. I was so embarrassed.
After the service, he told me a little about Islam and the
Qur’an. I had never heard those words before. I had heard
the word “Muslim,” but only in a negative sense. During
the 60s, many whites across America believed that Black
Muslims planned to overthrow white American society.
Over
the next two years I stayed in contact with Abdul-Mun'im,
and a few other Muslim men, through my involvement with the
International Club. I continued in my crusade to convert
them, and remained steadfast in pursuing my goal of becoming
a minister.
In
the 1970s, many churches refused to ordain women. I received
a letter from one seminary informing me, in no uncertain
terms, that women were “not allowed to speak in church.”
It’s in the Bible, in one of the epistles of St. Paul. I
wondered if the passage had been revealed by God, or simply
reflected the personal bias of Paul.
Anyway,
times were changing. I found a Lutheran seminary which
accepted me. After graduating from the university, I packed
up and headed to Chicago to begin my training for the
ministry.
I
had some very positive experiences in Chicago. I got along
well with my two roommates, and made other friends. I
studied Latin with a Polish priest who couldn’t hide his
excitement when he learned that the newly-selected pope was
Polish. I listened to lectures by scholars at the nearby
University of Chicago, and even landed a job dusting the
apartment of one old professor. I heard Handel’s Messiah
performed in an old cathedral by a professional choir. I
soaked up the atmosphere of life on the Southside of
Chicago.
But
my studies were disappointing. One professor told us that
while Christian scholars had determined that the Bible was
not infallible, we should not tell our parishioners this.
When I asked questions, I was told to “simply believe.”
Then there was the seminary social life–parties, drinking.
I packed up and left Chicago after one semester, extremely
disillusioned.
My
parents, though disappointed, welcomed me back into their
home. I decided to spend some time searching.
I
knew that Muslims did not believe in original sin. I had a
baby sister, born a few days before I received my
undergraduate degree, and I watched her. I tried to see the
sin in her. But I couldn’t, because it wasn’t there.
While
trying to decide my next course of action, I signed on with
a temp agency and took secretarial jobs. Some of my
assignments were in downtown St. Louis, a long bus ride away
from my parents’ suburban home. I used my commute time for
reading.
One
day I walked into a bookstore and bought a paperback
translation of the Qur’an. I had a B.A. in Philosophy and
Religion, and a semester of seminary training, so surely I
possessed the skills I needed to expose the errors in the
Qur’an. Then I would be able to persuade my poor Muslim
friends how very wrong they were.
I
read, looking for mistakes and inconsistencies, and found
none. I became impressed when I came to Surat Al-An`am 6,
verse 73.
When
I was a little girl, attending Sunday School and Vacation
Bible School, I learned about how God created the world.
“God said, ‘Let there be light’,” the Bible says.
“And there was, and it was good.” Be, and it is. I
started to wonder if Allah was the same God I had always
worshiped.
I
paid closer attention after reading that verse. For the
first time, I wanted to know more about Islam.
I
decided to return to my old university to study for my
master’s degree in Philosophy and Religion. I began
attending some of the Friday prayers, just to observe. I
also continued to go to church and eat ham and cheese
sandwiches. I wasn’t ready to become a Muslim. But I felt
adrift. I needed answers.
|
I felt as if I had been treading water, and I finally found land. |
I
searched in earnest. My Muslim friends at the university
clarified some issues, such as how Jesus could have been
born of a virgin and not be divine. I wrote a paper for my
one of my classes in which I explored the concept of
“logos”. In the Bible, the Gospel of John, it says,
“In the beginning was the Word (Logos), and the Word was
with God, and the Word was God.” This verse is often used
to support the divinity of Jesus. So I explored the concept,
tracing it back to ancient Greece and the writings of Plato.
I studied the evolution of the doctrine of the Trinity,
researching the various Christian opinions on this issue
before it was codified at the Council of Nicaea in 325. I
read the Bible from Genesis to Revelations. I had many
questions, and I needed to know.
I
studied other religions also. I read the Bhagavad Gita,
examined the life and teachings of Buddha and talked about
peace with Baha’is. I needed to find the truth.
By
the summer of 1980, I had come to appreciate many of the
teachings of Islam. But some things still bothered me. One
of the greatest was the need to make ablutions before
prayer. God should be accessible at all times, I thought.
Why did Muslims feel the need to perform a special cleansing
ritual? I couldn’t see the logic in it.
On
the night I accepted the necessity of wudu', I was
ready to accept Islam. I walked over to the small mosque
near the university, on the night of the nineteenth of
Ramadan, and told the men there about my discovery. One of
them, Adel, gave me shahadah.
It
took a few days, but I started to feel at peace. I had been
searching for so long. I felt as if I had been treading
water, and I finally found land.
But
my struggles weren’t over. For one thing, I had no idea
about hijab. The three men who were present at my shahadah
were from Jordan, Egypt and Thailand, and they told me
nothing about it. In those days, most of the women in their
countries didn’t cover. On the day before `Eid I traveled
with them to a larger town, and they took me to the
apartment of a Sudanese woman. Soon after my arrival, she
handed me a robe and a scarf and told me to put them on. I
was stunned. She was very nice, though, so I did as she
said.
When
we returned to our small town, I took off the robe and
scarf. That was not for me. It was hot—this was in
August—and I felt strange. And, besides, I didn’t want
one of my professors to know that I was a Muslim. I knew he
would be displeased.
My
next challenge was trying to figure out how to tell my
parents. Three weeks after my conversion, I wrote them a
letter. I tried to explain my struggle and years of
searching. They were shocked. They hoped I was just going
through a phase. They worried that I had joined a cult. They
didn’t understand. But they never turned their back on me.
A
few months after my conversion, I began to wear the scarf.
First, I wore it to keep my ears warm on winter mornings in
northern Missouri. Then one day, after being treated rudely
by one of the men on campus, I decided to wear it full-time.
My professor wasn’t happy, but he didn’t say too much.
Seven
or eight months after my shahadah, I met another
student who was interested in Islam. She already knew
something about it, and wanted to learn more. We talked and
talked. One night she told me she was ready. I gave her shahadah.
|
Even though some Muslims degrade women, Islam elevates us. |
All
during this time, I kept in contact with Abdul-Mun’im. He
was one of the three present when I made shahadah,
and he helped me adjust to my new faith. A month after my
conversion he left to pursue his doctorate in Indiana, but
we continued to write. When I told him about Sr. Aisha’s
conversion, he invited both of us to travel with him and his
friends up to Ann Arbor. A brother and sister with a large
family hosted Aisha and me. Community members gave us
Islamic clothes and books. We felt very welcome.
In
the spring, Abdul-Mun’im invited me to apply to his
university. I was accepted, and they offered me a doctoral
fellowship. In the summer, Aisha and Fauzia, a Pakistani
sister, helped me move to Indiana. They stayed there with me
during Ramadan. At the end of Ramadan, Aisha and Fauzia
moved back to Missouri. Abdul-Mun’im asked me to marry
him.
We
have been married for twenty-four years. We have six sons
and, in sha' Allah, we will soon have our first
grandchild. During most of our years together we have worked
to establish and strengthen Islamic education.
Even
though I have been a Muslim for twenty-six years now, I
still feel new. My Arabic lessons stopped after my first son
was born, and even though our youngest is now ten I have not
returned to them. I have continued my studies in Islam, but
I never feel I know enough.
I
do know that I will always be an American. My early years
had a huge impact on my life, and America will always be my
country. I did try, for the first twenty years, to blend in
with the immigrant culture, but I realized that I was
denying who I really was. I can’t turn my back on my first
twenty-three years.
One
aspect of my conversion which my family still finds puzzling
is my willingness to renounce, as they see it, the feminism
of my youth. It is true that I no longer seek to become a
religious leader. But, in Islam, I have found a fuller
expression of what it means to be a woman. I do get
irritated when brothers from other countries try to impose
their cultural beliefs, suppressing women and not allowing
us to be heard. When that happens, I only need to turn to
the Qur’an or remember the example of the Prophet (peace
and blessings be upon him). Even though some Muslims degrade
women, Islam elevates us.
I
am still learning, and still struggling to be closer to my
Creator. And I am still working to integrate my American
self with my Muslim self. Life is a journey, and I’m still
on the road.
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