Muhammad
Alexander Russel Webb (U.S.A.)
Diplomat, Author & Journalist
About
the Author:
Muhammad
Alexander Russel Webb was born in 1846 at Hudson, Columbia
county, New York. Educated at Hudson and New York he became
an essayist and a short-story writer. He took to journalism
and became the editor of St. Joseph Gazette
and of Missouri Republican. In 1887 he
was appointed United States Consul at Manila, Phillipines.
It was during this assignment that he studied Islam and
joined its fold. After becoming Muslim he extensively
toured the world of Islam and devoted the rest of his
life to Missionary work. He also became the head of the
Islamic Propaganda Mission in U.S.A. Mr. Webb died on
1st October 1916.
I have
been requested to tell you why I, an American, born in a
country which is nominally Christian, and reared under the
drippings, or more properly perhaps the drivelling, of an
orthodox Presbyterian pulpit, came to adopt the faith of
Islam as my guide in life. I might reply promptly and truthfully
that I adopted this religion because I found, after protracted
study, that it was the best and only system adapted to the
spiritual needs of the humanity. And here let me say that
I was not born as some boys seem to be, with a fervently
religious strain in my character. When I reached the age
of 20, and became practically my own master, I was so tired
of the restraint and dullness of the Church, that I wandered
away from it and never returned to it ... Fortunately I
was of an enquiring turn of mind --- I wanted a reason for
everything, and I found that neither laymen nor clergy could
give me any rational explanation of this faith, but either
told me that such things were mysterious or that they were
beyond my comprehension. About eleven years ago I became
interested in the study of Oriental religions.. I saw Mill
and Locke, Kant, Hegel, Fichte, Huxley, and many other more
or less learned writers discoursing with a great show of
wisdom concerning protoplasm and monads, and yet not one
of them could tell me what the soul was or what became of
it after death... I have spoken so much of myself in order
to show you that my adoption of Islam was not the result
of misguided sentiment, blind credulity, or sudden emotional
impulse, but it was born of earnest, honest, persistent,
unprejudiced study and investigation and an intense desire
to know the truth.
The
essence of the true faith of Islam is resignation to the
will of God and its corner stone is prayer. It reaches universal
fraternity, universal love, and universal benevolence, and
requires purity of mind, purity of action, purity of speech
and perfect physical cleanliness. It, beyond doubt,
is the simplest and most elevating form of religion known
to man.
From
"Islam, Our Choice"
From:
www.islamicweb.com