I
am a 45-year-old Jordanian woman of Palestinian origin. I was
born to a Christian family and used to work as an office
manager. I followed Christianity until January 15, 2006, when
I converted to Islam, thanks be to God.
I
grew up in a Christian family that wasn't very committed to
religion. My father was an atheist, although he never tried to
influence us or interfere in our choices. My mother was a
Christian by birth and tradition, and she brought us up this
way.
We
went to schools run by nuns. Therefore learning about
Christianity was a must, and we had to attend mass on Sunday
with the rest of the parish, in addition to a special mass on
Wednesday for the students. I never liked the rituals of the
mass and never felt connected with God through those rituals,
yet I used to practice it with interest because of my
conviction that prayer is the only connection with God, the
only way to express my appreciation and do my supplications.
Despite
this, deep inside of myself, I never felt warm in heart with
the process, maybe because of all the festive appearance in
the church and its visitors, but also because the method of
praying through the priest did not appeal to me. Why did I
need a third party to connect me to God, especially when that
third party was as human as I was?
Ever
since I was a child, we had a Muslim cleaning lady who used to
come help my mother in the house. When she prayed, I would
watch her with fascination. I often noticed that she shone
with faith, even though she was praying alone and not in a
house of worship. I once asked her, "Do you feel God
close to you when you pray?" She said, "Yes, when
you pray, you feel Allah's presence." As simple as her
reply was, it touched the core of my heart. Ever since that
time, I would envy Muslims when the Adhan was called, thinking
they were praying at that time and were feeling the spirit of
God close to them.
I
grew up with Christianity and stayed like that, sort of
accepting it, until my early 30s when I joined the communist
party and then stepped away from religion. My thoughts of God
brought me close to being an atheist. But I never could deny
God's existence as a whole and stayed like that for few years
until I quit the communist party. My relation with God was
abrupt, and I only went to church for Christmas and Easter and
to participate in social occasions.
With
time, I started feeling that it was not enough to only believe
in God. I was tired of the cut-off relationship I had with
Him. So I concluded that I could only strengthen my tie with
God by strengthening my relationship with my religion. It was
then that the agony started again; every time I came closer to
the religion and its teachings, I faced the same questions
torturing me.
Who
is God?
Is
He the Father?
Is
He the Son?
Or
is He the Holy Spirit?
God-in-one
in all those three
was the same answer
I always got, but it never convinced me. How could God have a
son? And how could He say that son is Him? Why did He need a
son to prove that He was God?
Why
did I, as a Christian, need to connect with God through Jesus?
If Jesus was a prophet, then he was as human as I was, albeit
of a higher rank of spirituality. But I didn't need Jesus to
connect me with God; after all, he was only God's messenger.
But if he was a god, then how could I worship two gods?
I
started reading more during these desperate times, trying to
come closer to God through Christianity, the religion in which
I was born. But then I started to worry, I couldn't accept
most of its teachings, especially the basics, and I started to
feel that the Bible was not the words of God that He had
originally sent down. In the Bible, I found many signs that
showed that Jesus was only a prophet sent with a message to
finish what came before him.
For
the Son of man is come to save that which was lost.
(Matthew 18:11)
For
I have not spoken of myself; but the Father which sent me,
he gave me a commandment, what I should say, and what I
should speak. (John 12:49)
Think
not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I
am not come to destroy, but to fulfill. (Matthew 5:17)
And
Jesus said unto him, Why callest thou me good? There is
none good but one, that is, God. (Mark 10:18)
Whosoever
shall receive one of such children in my name, receiveth
me: and whosoever shall receive me, receiveth not me, but
him that sent me. (Mark 9:37)
And
this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only
true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent. (John
17:3)
There
are also many other examples from the Bible that illustrate
how Jesus never claimed to be God, although he always affirmed
that he was the son of a human.
So
where did the idea of the Trinity come from, and that Christ
is God, the son of God? These questions perplexed me for
years.
Another
important issue puzzled me, namely, why did God have to come
down to earth in the form of a human? Why did He have to kill
"His son" to take away our sins? Why did He have to
bribe us to love Him? Weren't we bound to Him due to our
existence and creation? What would be the purpose of our life
if we lived without sins? And where is the divine justice in
having one person take the burden of others' sins and
mistakes?
And
if Christ died while on the cross, then does this mean that
God died? How could this be?
The
only answer I got from people who tried to prove Christ's
divinity was their saying that he performed miracles. But
other prophets did too! Rising from the dead after three days
is something only gods can do, but wasn't Elias carried to
heaven on a carriage of light, as narrated in the Hebrew
Bible?
I
was never convinced with the answers. The only answer that I
could believe and be convinced with was coming from my inside:
namely that the ideas of salvation and Trinity were added to
Christianity for the purpose of convincing people easily of
following that new religion, where the idea of one god was not
common, so making them three would be easier for people to
grasp and that new religion would take away all their sins.
Another
important point I questioned was whether the Bible was the
words of God. Because there are so many different versions of
the Bible, my doubts were raised about its authenticity as the
words of God. Thus, I started researching the issue until I
heard a debate by Ahmad Deedat with an American preacher. The
debate was entitled "Is the Bible the Word of God?"
and all the points Deedat raised made so much sense to me.
Through Deedat's works, I noticed how so many verses from the
Hebrew Bible, which are totally ignored, refer to Prophet
Muhammad. From here, my journey to Islam began.
As
the attack on Islam in the international arena got stronger,
it helped me explore it more. I had heard so many
interpretations from within various Islamic factions, which
seemed to me to be contradictory to what I learned about Islam
from having lived all my life in a Muslim society. So I
started digging for the truth and the basis for such
interpretations, only to find out the truth of Islam and a
religion that can absorb everyone, that calls for the worship
of one and only one God, for peace and forgiveness, and that
addresses every single aspect of life. These tenets made Islam
a more realistic religion for me, as opposed to Christianity,
which I found otherworldly for my taste. In addition, there
were many other essential differences that I could not accept
or comprehend in Christianity.
I
found that Islam is a religion that calls for people to
appreciate God for what He is and for what they are. There is
no need for any mediators with clear-cut instructions to
govern the lives of Muslims.
Instinctively,
I felt Islam settle in my heart without any resistance, and my
mind was at ease. I found myself fitting into Islam as if I
were born into a Muslim family. Prayer satisfied me and my
need to get closer to God, and I fasted last Ramadan and read
the whole Qur'an. I found myself spiritually involved in Islam
and accepted it from all angles, I felt so much inner peace in
it.
After
Ramadan, Christmas came, followed by `Eid Al-Adha, which was a
good test of my conviction. At Christmas, I didn't feel any
kind of spiritual attachment or connection, while at `Eid
Al-Adha, I found myself fasting on the day of `Arafah. I
surprised myself on this day, January 9. I couldn't wait
anymore. On that day, I pronounced the Shahadah by myself, but
I still wanted my Islam to be witnessed. I had to wait until
everybody finished their `Eid celebration to be free to
witness my Shahadah. On January 15, 2006, I confirmed that
Islam was the religion for me, and I pronounced the Shahadah, al-hamdu
lillah.
The
day of my conversion was one of best days of my life. I was
contemplating and studying Islam and was thinking of
converting to it, but I had thought that it would take me one
more year or so to do that. I didn't want to alter my official
papers, so a sheikh advised that pronouncing the Shahadah was
enough but that I could do it in front of two other Muslims as
witnesses if that would help me. And so I did, two of my best
friends came and witnessed my Shahadah, and then I became a
full Muslim.
I
can't describe the feelings that I felt during the day. I felt
so overwhelmed, like someone who had been stuck in a big well
and would be saved at a certain moment and couldn't wait for
that moment to come.
Once
things were finalized and I was officially a Muslim, a big
wave of relief, peace, and contentment washed all over me. The
first thing I did after my conversion was to prayed two rak`ahs
to thank Allah Almighty.