Malaak
I am a new Muslim
woman from Richmond, VA. I had never even met Muslims before
last year, and had no idea that there was an Islamic center
in my own city. However, at that time, I was very interested
in Islam, but I could find nothing to read. I read encyclopedias
and any books I could get my hands on, but they were all
written by non-Muslims. They said that Muhammad (saws) wrote
the Qur'an in the 7th centruy, that Muslims worshipped the
black stone, and that Islam bred hatred towards women. They
also said that Muhammad (saws) copied the Bible, that Islam
was spread with the Qur'an in one hand and the sword in
the other, and implied (if not stated directly) that all
Muslims were Arab. One book even said that the word "Allah"
came from al-lot, the moon god of the pagan Arabs. These
are just some of the lies I read.
Then, one day,
two Pakistani Muslim women (who were also muhajjabas [wearing
hijab -ed.]) came to my college. I befriended them,
and then I started asking them all kinds of questions. I
had already left Christianity when I was 12, so I felt no
challenge to my personal beliefs. I was a biology major
and had basically no religion. I was amazed at what they
told me, and I realized that all of my previous knowledge
was lies.
Then, I came
home for the summer. I got my own apartment and started
working at 7-11. While I was working, a black muhajjaba
came in the store. I asked her where she worshipped and
when she told me there was an Islamic center on the same
street I was working on, I was amazed.
I went the next
day, but no one was there. So I went the day after that
day (which happened to be Friday) and found some people
there. A man told me to come the next week at noon so I
could meet some of the ladies. But when he said "noon,"
he meant "dhuhr," not 12. I didn't know that. So I came
at 12 the following week, but no one was there. For some
reason, I decided to wait, Subhan-Allah. And wait I did,
for an hour and a half (jumaa' [Friday prayer -ed.]
is at 2), and finally I meet some people. A lady there gave
me a copy of Maurice Bucaille's The Bible, Qur'an,
and Science. When I read it, I knew that I wanted
to become a Muslim. After all, I was a biology major. I
knew that the things in the Qur'an had to be from Allah
(swt), and not from an illiterate, uneducated man. So
I went the next week and took shahaada [i.e. stated and
accepted the creed of Islam -ed.]
When my dad found
out, he went crazy. He came to my apartment and tore up
everything in it, including my Qur'an. I called the police,
and they came out. But they refused to help. They said "Don't
you think he's right?" and so on. So I fled to Nashville,
TN.
I have continued
to talk with my dad, though, because the Qur'an says to
honour your parents (it does not distinguish between Kaafir
and Muslim parents), and because I remember the story of
Umar Ibn Al-Khattab (raa). He hated Islam so much that he
used to beat his slave girl until his arm grew tired. Al-Hamdu
Lillah, Allah (swt) has rewarded me for my efforts. I saw
my father for the first time this summer, in full hijaab.
He accepted it without too much commentary. I think he realizes
now that he can't bully me into renouncing Islam.