|
ISLAM ATTRACTS
CONVERTS BY
THE THOUSANDS,
DRAWN BEFORE
AND AFTER ATTACKS
By Jodi Wilgoren, The New York Times
ALLWIN, Mo., Oct. 20 -
Since she became a Muslim six months ago, Angela Davis has
given up many things. She stopped listening to music,
started sleeping on the floor, put away her 100 Disney
videos and traded her porcelain doll collection for velvet
posters with verses from the Koran.
Now, in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks,
Ms. Davis may have to give up her children.
After her photograph, in full veil, appeared in the local
newspaper on Sept. 30, Ms. Davis's soon-to-be-ex-husband
refused to return their children, 5 and 2, from a weekend
visit. She has not seen them since.
"It's a test that is given to me from Allah to see if my
faith is strong enough," said Ms. Davis, 27, who
discovered Islam in an Internet chat room this spring and
now teaches pre-kindergarten at the Al-Salam Day School in
this St. Louis suburb. "I'm asked to give up my religion
for my kids, but I won't do it. On Judgment Day, as much
as I love my kids, they won't be there with me."
Though her situation is extreme, Ms. Davis is one of
thousands of new Muslim converts struggling with their
identities amid anti-Muslim fervor and declarations of an
Islamic holy war being broadcast on television. Already
estranged from relatives and friends, some of whom accuse
them of joining a cult, these new Muslims face catcalls
and fresh challenges to their faith.
Many say the events of Sept. 11 only confirmed their
commitment. Shannon Staloch is not sure why, but upon
hearing of the hijackings, she immediately grabbed a book
from her backpack and recited the Arabic declaration of
belief; she made the conversion official 12 days later.
"You know how the world changed when that happened and
everyone was shaky?" Ms. Staloch said. "I wanted something
steady."
With some 6 million adherents in the United States, Islam
is said to be the nation's fastest-growing religion,
fueled by immigration, high birth rates and widespread
conversion. One expert estimates that 25,000 people a year
become Muslims in this country; some clerics say they have
seen conversion rates quadruple since Sept. 11.
Experts say Islam is attractive because of its universal
message - the faithful believe that everyone is born
Muslim and thus call the transformation reversion, not
conversion - and because its teachings incorporate other
traditions, honoring Jesus Christ, the Jewish patriarch
Abraham and other Biblical figures as prophets. Though
missionary work is rare in Islam, spreading the message is
demanded by the Koran. Conversion is as simple as reciting
one sentence - "I bear witness that there is no deity
except Allah and that Muhammad is his messenger" - in
front of witnesses, a ceremony known as Shahadah.
"There's no class," said Khalid Yahya Blankinship,
chairman of the religion department at Temple University.
"There isn't really a formalized requirement, you don't
have to be tested." Mr. Blankinship, who converted to
Islam in 1973 and has since witnessed 100 Shahadahs,
added: "It's very important that Islam should spread. The
idea is that one should want other souls to be saved."
The vast majority of converts are African-Americans, who
make up about a third of Muslims in the United States.
Thousands find Allah while in jail or in recovery from
drug or alcohol addiction. Less familiar are the lapsed
Catholics and lost Jews, often highly educated
professionals, who come to the mosque.
Many convert because they want to marry a Muslim who
demands it, a common reason for conversions in any
religion.
"I would never have changed if it wasn't for Rania," David
Nerviani, a St. Louis police officer, said of his
Egyptian-born wife, a bartender he met on patrol. "It's
probably not that deep for me."
Others find Islam through friendships on college campuses,
research papers on world religions or trolling the
Internet.
Some just feel called. Abdullah Reda of Reston, Va., said
the news of Susan Smith, the South Carolina woman who
drowned her two sons, brought him to Islam. A 13-year-old
California girl had an epiphany during a sunset drive
through the red rocks of Arizona. Katie Mathews, a
graduate student at Washington University in St. Louis,
who plans to make her Shahadah on her 23rd birthday in
November, prayed for a sign and soon saw a license plate,
"4 ALLAH."
Nine years ago, Jim Hacking was in training to be a Jesuit
priest. Now, he is an admiralty lawyer in St. Louis who
has spent much of the last month explaining Islam at
interfaith gatherings. Mr. Hacking's search began in the
12-step program Overeaters Anonymous and intensified when
he befriended an Egyptian-born woman, Amany Ragab, at the
law review at St. Louis University. He made the Shahadah
on June 6, 1998, and proposed marriage to her the next
day. This summer, the couple traveled to Mecca.
"The thing I've always latched to is that there's one God,
he doesn't have equals, he doesn't need a son to come do
his work," Mr. Hacking, 31, said. "Giving up the pork and
the alcohol was the easy part - I never drank much, but I
did like bacon. The hard part, and the part I still
struggle with every day, is being a good person, and
living a good clean life."
To help with the social transition, the All Dulles Area
Muslim Society in Sterling, Va., pairs converts with
mentors. Other mosques offer seminars in the basics of
Arabic prayer. Web sites like jews-for-allah.org and
understandingislam.tripod.com provide glossaries to common
Muslim expressions, step-by-step guides to ritual washing,
interactive games to teach Arabic, and profiles of fellow
converts, organized alphabetically, by county of origin
and by former religion.
Perhaps the greatest challenge is maintaining family
relationships, as parents often view conversion as a
betrayal. One Web site offers a how- to guide for telling
relatives. "Do not allow them to drag you into a conflict
regarding religion at all," it lectures.
Ms. Stolach, who teaches middle- school literacy, said her
mother had helped her shop for hijab, the traditional
Muslim head covering, but Ms. Mathews says the main reason
she has delayed her Shahadah is that she is living with
her parents.
"My mom, she's Christian and she's very upset," Ms Mathews
said. "I told her about my signs. She said, how do I know
it's not the Devil?"
"The Koran says you have to obey your parents, heaven is
at the foot of your mother," she added. "I have to obey
God before I obey my mother."
On Sept. 11, Ms. Davis's mother exhorted her to remove the
hijab, saying it would endanger her grandchildren. (Ms.
Davis's divorce lawyer, and her husband, did not return
telephone calls.) Ms. Davis, who wears a shoulder-to-ankle
robe over her clothes, also faces resistance from her
older two daughters, from a previous marriage, whom she
enrolled in an Islamic school this fall, but who have
lately said they would prefer to live with their father.
As the afternoon call to prayer sounded from the mosque
above Ms. Davis's classroom, the girls, white scarves
around their heads, scrambled up to the women's balcony,
where they bowed and knelt like old pros. They murmured "bismillah"
("in the name of Allah") before starting a game, "astaghfirullah"
("I beg Allah for forgiveness") after a misstep. But they
say their father says their mother worships Satan.
"I got one person saying they want me to be Muslim and
then I got my dad saying no Muslim," said Krashanna Agers,
9. "I don't know, I'm not grown up yet." |