Why did they become Muslims? |
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INTRODUCTION
The Islamic religion is the final religion and is
therefore at the zenith of perfection. This fact is acknowledged even by
(George) Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) [Shaw's clever plays, e.g. Pymalion, are
based on faults in moral attitudes and in society.], the well-known Irish
writer and critic, whose personal comments on Islam can be summarized as,
"Were we to choose a common religion for the entire world, it would definitely
be the Islamic religion." This conclusion is quite natural. For the Islamic
religion is the sole religion that has preserved its intact purity owing to
the promised protection against the interpolations suffered by all the
religious systems previous to it. Judaism, one of the greatest monotheistic
cults, had foretold about the advent of a Messiah. Issa a.s. (Jesus) was
hailed as the promised Messiah, yet the Injil (Bible), the heavenly book of
the religion he spread, was lost. Later, various gospels were written in the
name of Injil, and these new gospels, which were no more than interpolations
themselves, were interpolated again and again. All these facts, along with
various other portents, announced the coming of a final prophet, the real
Messiah s.a.s. As a matter of fact, the name of this Messiah is literally
written in the Gospel of Barnabas. Then, the Islamic religion is the last, the
most true, the most perfect religion wherein all the true religions converge
and which, therefore, reflects the full approval of Allahu ta'ala. A friend of
ours, [namely, Dr. Nuri Refet Korur], who had spent his entire youth among
Christians in Europe, said to us: "I am a Muslim born from Muslim parents. I
spent my life in Europe, where I had the chance and time to study all
religions and to compare them with each other. If I had seen that another
religion was superior to Islam, I would have given up Islam and accepted that
religion. For there was no one to force me to remain a Muslim. Yet, all the
research and the comparative studies I carried on, reinforced by the debates
that I, in the meantime, indulged in with Christians, revealed the fact that
Islam is by far superior to all the world's present religions and that it is
the only intact true religion, so clearly that I became attached to Islam with
all my heart."
Sad to say, today's western world still accommodates Christians who insist on
the wrong and call Muslims "heretics", "idle-minded", "devil-worshipers",
"irreligious". These misconceptions are inculcated in the minds of Christian
children by priests, whose real purpose is to distract their young and
inquisitive brains. These interceptive activities are fed with the slanderous
propaganda that the Islamic religion embodies aspects dIssagreeable with
modern civilization. The fact, on the other hand, is that Islam is the only
religion suitable for today's civilized world. Our book Islam and Christianity
deals with and refutes these misconceptions. In addition to English, we
translated that book into French and German and sent the translated versions
to countries all over the world. Thereby we tried to countermand the
falsifications spread by priests and thus to state the actual facts. It did
not take us long to see how appropriate and useful our work had been. No
sooner had we distributed the books to the world than they gave their fruits.
We received a letter from India, in which wrote an Indian Christian: "When I
read your book Islam and Christianity, I realized that Islam is the true
religion and I decided to become a Muslim." We have been receiving similar
letters from young Africans. Anyone who has the opportunity to study the pure,
clean, civilized and humane aspects of Islam will feel an irresistible
attraction to this religion. The Islamic religion is spreading over the world
without any such media as propagation and organization. On the other hand, the
missionary organizations belonging to those countries whose primary objective
is to spread Christianity are spending huge amounts of money and offering
various types of social aid, and yet achieving very little success in
comparison with their tremendous efforts.
Despite all this wrongful and inimical volley of vituperations carried on
against Islam and all the stupendous efforts put forth for the spreading of
Christianity, there has been an ever growing increase in the number of Muslims
on the earth. Later ahead you will find more extensive information on this
subject. Some of these Muslims remained Muslims because they had been born in
Muslim families. However, besides these people there are also people who
accepted Islam although their parents had been in other religions and they
therefore had been given their family education in other religions. Among
these people are universally renowned diplomats, statesmen, scientists,
scholars, men of letters, writers, and even men of religion. These people
studied Islam well, admired its greatness, and became Muslims willingly. In
addition to these people, many other universally known celebrities met the
Islamic religion with deep respect and admiration although they did not
officially become Muslims; they even believed in the fact that Islam is the
true religion and did not hesitate to express this belief of theirs.
Scientists, philosophers, and politicians, admired by the entire world, first
of all believe in the fact that Allahu ta'ala exists and is One and that He is
the Creator of all beings. In this chapter you will find the statements and
observations belonging to some of these celebrities.
Among the people who accepted Islam, there may be those who became Muslims of
necessity, for the sake of some advantages, or for advertisement. For
instance, a non-Muslim woman may have accepted Islam without studying and
learning Islam well for the purpose of marrying a certain man who happened to
be a Muslim, or an Indian pariah may have done so in order to regain his lost
civic rights. However, the fact that well-known scholars, scientists and
writers accept the Islamic religion only after a long observation bears a
lofty import. Selections from the explanations given by these cultured people
on why they abandoned their religions and embraced Islam have been compiled
from various sources and books and listed in the following pages. As you read
them you will hear from the very tongues of these respectable people why the
Islamic religion is superior to other religions. Perhaps a person who was born
a Muslim and has spent his life among Muslims is totally oblivious of these
superiorities. Yet when a person belonging to another religion studies Islam,
he will see the difference clearly and will admire Islam. In fact, reading
these explanations will provide you with an opportunity to see and admire once
again the high merits of our religion, and thus feel and offer gratitude to
Allahu ta'ala for having been Muslims.
A conclusion drawn from all these explanations, in other words, a summary of
the reasons why Islam is superior to the other religions, has been added in an
independent chapter.
We hold the belief that this work will give you fresh information about the
Islamic religion and will confirm once again that Islam is a great and true
religion.
A FEW WORDS
Allahu ta'ala created mankind. All people are the born slaves of Allahu ta'ala.
Allahu ta'ala is the creator, the Rabb, not only of a certain nation or race
or only of the world, but also of the entire humanity as well as of all the
worlds of existence. In the view of Allahu ta'ala, all people are the same,
and no one is different from another. In addition to a body, He has given a
soul to each one of them. He has sent them Prophets 'alaihimus-salawatu
wattaslimat' to lead them to spiritual and physical perfection and to guide
them on the right way. The greatest ones of these Prophets are Adam, Nuh
(Noah), Ibrahim (Abraham), Musa (Moses), Issa (Jesus), and Muhammad s.a.s. The
tenets of belief that they taught are the same. The final and the most perfect
system is Islam, taught by Muhammad a.s.. No Prophet will come after Muhammad
a.s.. For the religion he brought is at the uppermost point of perfection and
has no deficiency to be made up; and Allahu ta'ala has declared that mankind
will never be able to change or interpolate this religion. The well-known
German Writer Lessing (1729-1781), in his book Nathan der Weise (Nathan the
Wise), likens the three (heavenly) religions to three identical rings made of
sapphire. Yet he feels uncertain as to "whether one of them is genuine and the
other three false?" Yet the fact is that all three of them are genuine
essentially.
However, as a result of various personal interests, advantages, sordid and
biased considerations, jealousies, superstitions, misinformation and
misconstructions, men failed to understand this reality, inserted numerous
wrong beliefs and ideas into the Musawi and Nasrani religions, and thus
changed, defiled these true religions, which were based on Tawhid (unity,
oneness of Allahu ta'ala). Only Islam remained in its original purity.
Consequently, adherents of these three religions became hostile to one
another. This hostile attitude they have assumed means to oppose to the Will
of Allahu ta'ala. For, as we have already stated, Allahu ta'ala invites all
people to the true religion. In the view of Allahu ta'ala, all people,
regardless of race, are equal. All people are Ummat-I-da'wat. And the true
religion is Islam, which is the only continuation of the original forms of
Judaism and Christianity.
The following passage, which we have paraphrased from Prof. Robinson, reflects
the opinions formed in the minds of today's people who are stuck fast in
materialism:
"I joined a tour of Israel organized for the teaching staff and students of
the University of Orel Roberts. Orel Roberts, the founder of the university
and one of the notables of the Catholic Church, was with us. During our
scheduled visit to Ben Gurion, a former premier of Israel, Orel Roberts
presented a copy of the Holy Bible to Mr. Gurion. The first portion of the
Holy Bible was the Old Testament, that is, the Torah. Roberts requested Ben
Gurion to read the passage he liked best of that holy book. Ben Gurion met his
request with a smile. We sat under a tree in the small yard in front of his
house. We were all quiet and ready to listen intently. Ben Gurion opened the
Holy Bible, turned one or two pages, and read the following passage: "So God
created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him; male and
female created he them." [Gen: 1-27] I thought to myself, 'good Gracious! Is
this the statement he has found after all?' I frowned because I had been
expecting him to read a passage from one of the Pentateuchal parts with
meanings of a higher level, such as a verse telling about creation or a
passage from the Ten Commandments. I beckoned to the television cameraman
shooting the event. This beckoning meant: 'Don't bother! These statements are
not worth being televised the world over.'
"Sometime afterwards, however, Ben Gurion explained with enthusiasm verging on
ecstasy why he had picked up this statement, as follows: 'Quite a long time
before we became Americans, Russians, Israelis, Egyptians, or Christians,
Muslims, Magians, Jews, etc., that is, before the formation of differences
separating today's people from one another, such as nationality, state,
religion, belief, and the like, we were all a man and a woman created by
Allahu ta'ala. This is the greatest fact which all religious systems are
primarily trying to teach us. Why don't we realize this and why are all these
hostilities among us? Let us join hands and supplicate Allahu ta'ala to help
us realize this fact.'
"We all hung our heads. Roberts, being a religious man, said, 'Amin,' on
behalf of us all. The statement that Ben Gurion picked up really was the
wisest choice.
"Throughout my way back from Israel this statement completely occupied my
mind. We human beings are all the same. We are the born slaves of Allahu
ta'ala. There is only one way leading to Him. This way is the way of belief
guided by Abraham (Ibrahim), by Moses (Musa), by Jesus (Issa), and finally by
Muhammad s.a.s. People who follow this way shall attain to salvation. By
abandoning the way guided by Prophets, mankind has made the gravest error. It
is for this reason that they have lost their way and their moral qualities and
have even forgotten Allahu ta'ala. The earth's resuming its peace and
salvation is dependent upon men's realizing that they have been on the wrong
way and returning to the right way."
How right Prof. Robinson is in his statements paraphrased above! Today most
people have left the way prescribed by the religions, and material values have
become their only concern. These poor people do not know that material values
are a mere nothing. They are doomed to destruction and extinction. What is
immortal in man is his soul. And the soul, in its turn, will not feed on
material nutritives. The soul's primary diet is a correct belief in Allahu
ta'ala, who created all from nothing; next comes worshipping Him, observing
the duties required from His born slaves. Today, all scholars, scientists and
state presidents believe in the existence of Allahu ta'ala. Yet in matters
pertaining to belief and worship they mostly get stuck in wrong and misguided
thoughts and ideas and thus deviate from the right way. A beautiful
description of this case is given by Prof. White, a brain surgeon who has won
many scientific awards and has attained international fame for the various
operational methods he has found, and who is presently a professor at the
University of Cleveland and at the same time the director of the Clinic of
Brain Surgery founded in the same city. See what he says, (as paraphrased):
"The child that was brought in for a surgical operation was a six-year-old
lovely girl. She was very graceful, lively, intelligent, and cheerful. Yet
after examination we spotted a big tumour in her brain. We took her in for
operation. A cyst attached to the tumour had made It grow very big. I began to
operate on the sac containing liquid. But, alas, the global cystic tumour
suddenly contracted and the wide veins on its surface tore. blood was gushing
out unto the operation bench. My friends and I were doing our utmost to stop
the blood flowing as if from a water pump. It was of no avail. We saw in
despair that we were losing the battle. The child was dying in our hands. We
were under the hopeless oppression of profound sadness. I was trying to stop
the bleeding by putting pieces of cotton on the torn veins. The bleeding
seemed to come to an end. Yet I could not lift my hand off. For I knew that if
I did so the bleeding would begin again and in that case nothing could be done
any more. My assistants began to inject blood into the child's body. My
fingers were still on the pieces of cotton. How incapable and powerless I
felt! poor me, how did I dare to cut off a tumour formed in a small girl's
brain? How on earth could I assume the responsibility of so tremendous a job?
How could a pitiable human being even touch that stupendous work of art, which
we call 'brain', which manages all the so many various functions, provides
humankind with their personality and equips them with a variety of faculties
such as intellect, memory, emotions, feelings, tastes, pains, thoughts and
fancies, and which Allahu ta'ala, alone, could create? We term this tiny
object 'brain'. Yet, in actual fact, it was this very child that lay helpless
before us.
"Half an hour later. Utter silence reigned in the operation room. We were all
extremely tense with anxiety. Everybody, and I myself, knew that were I to
lift my hand the flood of blood would begin again, which meant the death of
the child. At that moment I began to supplicate to Allahu ta'ala and trusted
myself to His help. I begged, 'O my Allah, do give my fingers the strength I
need so that I can prevent the bleeding!' Presently a strong feeling of relief
suffused me. For I had now committed my trust to Allahu ta'ala. I had the
belief that I could now lift my fingers off and there would be no bleeding any
longer. I felt the existence of Allahu ta'ala with all my soul. Slowly, I
lifted my fingers. The bleeding had stopped.
"It was now easy to perform the operation. The operation lasted for exactly
four and a half hours. I did not leave the child for a whole week. I felt so
happy as I observed that the child was gradually recovering. As of today, the
child is ten years old, a perfectly healthful, cheerful and happy little dear.
"In 1974 I examined a child who had had a brain haemorrhage and I saw that
there was a small tumour in the middle of its brain. Yet the tumour had begun
to bleed and suppurate. The situation was dangerous and hopeless. We opened
the skull, placed tubes on both sides of the brain, and began to wash the
brain with antibiotics. This was quite a new method and I was the first to use
it. Because the child was burning with fever, we placed it in a respirator and
covered it with cold blankets. In the meantime we continued to wash the brain.
This hopeless situation lasted for weeks. I kept praying and supplicating
Allahu ta'ala to help me. In my supplications, I was begging Allahu ta'ala not
only to have mercy on the child and its parents, but also to give energy and
strength to those people who had undertaken this heavy responsibility and who
had been working with me continuously for weeks.
"Eventually, the divine help reached us. This event, which had seemed to be a
total hopelessness, ended in success. The child recovered. My friends were
happy and they were saying that the new method we had used had 'yielded a very
good result.' They thought that I did it and they prided on it. Yet I did not
think so. I was of opinion that, no matter how hard we worked, no matter how
new methods we found, no matter how new techniques we applied, success in
operations of that sort depended only on the help of Allahu ta'ala. I have
always felt this in my heart in the numerous operations I have performed up to
now. However improved our technology may be, the result of a brain operation,
like all other things, is within the power of Allahu ta'ala, and success is
possible only with His help.
"During the brain operations I have performed for years, I have felt great
excitement before the human brain. As I have dealt with the brain, and each
time I have seen the brain, I have felt in my heart that it is impossible to
solve the mystery of this tremendous work of art, that the power which created
it is very great, and that it is necessary to believe in the existence of
Allahu ta'ala. Even the most perfect computers made by people today can be
only toys when compared to the tiniest brains.
"Now I believe that the brain is a case in which the human soul is preserved.
As we perform an operation around this case we perform a religious rite. A
brain operation, in my personal credo, is a religious rite, identical with
performing an act of worship. The operator's technical knowledge and skill are
not the only requirements. He should, at the same time, believe in the
existence of Allahu ta'ala and beg Him for help and mercy for a successful
operation.
"What happens to the soul kept in the case of the brain when a person dies?
The soul is not in the body now, but definitely it is not dead. Where does it
go, then? It is not for me as a doctor to speculate on where the soul goes or
where it stays. For physical areas of knowledge cannot answer this question.
The only guide that will help us in this respect is a religious book. I
believe that inasmuch as their brains and souls possess the faculty for
reasoning, the humankind should leave aside the material values, attach
themselves to the religion with all their hearts and believe in the teachings
written in religious books."
This comes to mean that even the world's famous and greatest surgeon sincerely
expresses that he believes in the existence of Allahu ta'ala and that without
His help nothing can be done.
Now let us lend an ear to a scientist:
You all know Edison,[Edison (Thomas Alva) died in 1350 [1931 A.D.]] the
well-known American scientist. About this renowned inventor who, in addition
to various discoveries, made the first electric bulb and thus illuminated the
world, his closest colleague relates the following memory in a book published
several years ago:
"One day, as I entered the room, I found Edison deeply plunged in thought,
motionless, looking at some container which he was holding in his hand. An
expression of utter astonishment tinted with deep signs of respect, admiration
and adoration had suffused his face. He did not even notice me till I was
quite near him. When he saw me he showed me the container in his hand. It was
full of quicksilver. 'look at that,' he said. 'What a tremendous work of art!
Do you believe that quicksilver is extraordinary?' I replied, 'Quicksilver is
really wonderful substance.' Edison's voice quivered as he spoke. He murmured
to me, 'As I look at quicksilver, I admire the greatness of its Creator. So
many varying properties He has given to it! As I think of these I almost lose
my mind.' Then he turned to me again, and said, 'People world over admire me.
They presume that all these various inventions and discoveries I have managed
are wonders and great accomplishments. They want to look on me as a
superhuman. What a great error it is! I am a person who is not even worth a
penny. My discoveries consist in uncovering only an infinitesimal part of the
great wonders that actually exist in the universe but which people have not
noticed so far. A person who says, "I made this," is the most abject liar, the
most drivelling idiot. Man is an incapable creature who can do nothing by
himself. Man is a creature who can talk a little and who can think a little.
If he thinks well, he will, let alone being proud, see how void he is. So, as
I think of these facts, I realize what a powerless, incompetent and weak
creature I am. Me, an inventor? [He raised his hand and pointed to the sky.]
The real inventor, the real genius, the real creator is He, Allah!' "
As is seen, scientists believe in the existence of Allahu ta'ala and hold fast
to His religion with both hands. Materialists mostly cannot find solutions to
their problems and give up hope. This is because their souls are empty. The
human soul, like the body, needs food. And this, in its turn, is possible only
when one has iman, and the only way leading to Allahu ta'ala is the religion.
Even those who deny Allahu ta'ala will some day feel this need.
The famous Russian writer (Alexander) Solzhenitsyn (1918 - -), when he settled
his home in the U.S., thought he would now be free from great troubles, mental
depressions, and from the state of being only a mechanical tool. One day he
summoned a group of American youth around himself in a university and said to
them, "When I came here, I thought I would be very happy. Unfortunately, here,
too, I feel myself in a vacuum. For we have become the slaves of material
values. Yes, there is freedom here, and one can do whatever one wishes. But
material values are the only important things. The souls are empty. However,
what makes a human being a real human is its matured, refined soul. My piece
of advice to you is this: Try to improve and beautify your soul! In that case
only will those monstrosities that have infested your country and which have
been worrying you begin to disappear. Pay the religion its due importance! The
human soul is fed on religion. People adherent to their religion will be your
greatest helpers in whatever you do. For the fear of Allah will keep them on
the right way. On the other hand, your police forces, no matter how powerful,
cannot establish a twenty-four-hour control over everybody. What deters people
from iniquities is not the concept of police, but the fear that they feel in
the permanent presence of Allah."
As we have stated above, religion is the only source of nutriment for the
human soul. Of all the existent religions, Islam is the truest, the newest,
and the most comprehensive so that it provides its adherents with an ever
during adaptability to the world's changing conditions. In this booklet you
will read selections from the autobiographical documents in which some
cultured people, who, while formerly belonging to some other religion during
their childhood, studied various religions and their books and finally
embraced Islam on their own volition and without even any marginal outside
influence, give their personal accounts on why they decided to change their
religion and become a Muslim.
In addition to these highly cultured people, there are quite a number of
celebrities who believe in the existence of Allahu ta'ala and who admire Islam
for its greatness. There is mention of these people in the next chapter. In
the so-called chapter, we shall paraphrase paragraphs from the reflections on
the existence of Allahu ta'ala and the superiority of Islam selected from the
statements of Emperor Napoleon (Bonaparte, 1769-1821), (Thomas) Carlyle
(1796-1881), Prof. (Ernest) Renan (1823-1892), and the Indian hero (Mahatma)
Ghandi (1869-1948), and the statements made by (Alphonso Marie de) Lamartine
(1790-1869) about our darling Prophet Muhammad a.s..
As all these indicate, the religion is the most vital necessity for mankind.
Those unfortunate people who do not believe in their own religion, and who
have not had the chance to study Islam, either, will remain hollow-souled and
will get hold of false credos fabricated by liars. For a person definitely
needs to believe in the existence of a being superior to him and to attach
himself to that being. Even those people living in the most improved and
developed countries have sought ways to satisfy this need and finally attached
themselves to aberrant ideas and fabricated beliefs. On November 17, 1978,
nine hundred votaries of a heretical sect were taken to Guyana in North Africa
by a miscreant priest named Jim Jones, the founder of the sect, which he
called People's Religion, and thence to a camp which this eccentric priest,
again, called Jonestown,[This event is widely known as the "Jonestown
Massacre."] where he induced them to poison themselves (by drinking poison
together). In Italy, a pair of parents who believed another similar priest
killed their own child with their own hands because the heretic priest had
told them to kill their child and the child would come back to life and would
become even healthier than before upon his sending his prayers; it goes
without saying how ruined the parents felt when they saw that the child would
never return to this life. If these people, who had left their religion, had
studied the Islamic religion like those people who embraced Islam, and whom
you will get to know more closely further ahead, they would have found in it
what they had been looking for, and the Islamic religion, whose lexical
meaning also is 'peace and tranquillity, salvation, trusting oneself to
Allah', would have given them the spiritual serenity they had been yearning
for.
Very sad to say, we Muslims cannot propagate our brilliant religion to the
world as efficiently as we wish to do. One of the deciding factors
contributing to this failure is our own slackness in paying our religion due
attachment and our contagious remission in carrying out its commandments. The
Islamic religion enjoins, first of all, physical and spiritual cleanliness.
Spiritual cleanliness is obtainable by believing first in the existence of
Allahu ta'ala and then in the totality of His commandments and prohibitions
which He sent to humankind through Muhammad a.s., His final Messenger. That
the soul has been likewise cleansed is identifiable from the presence of
certain characteristic signs, such as never lying, never deceiving anybody,
habitual rectitude, not holding heretical dogmas, readiness to help others
without discriminating among them, and full submission to the commandments of
Allahu ta'ala. This is the sole behaviour expected from a Muslim. Then, if a
person means to propagate the Islamic religion, first of all he himself has to
be a model Muslim. If we exhibit this model and modest behaviour, people
belonging to other religions will observe us with admiration, which in turn
automatically prompt them to study the Islamic religion. Our newly converted
Muslim brothers explained in their answers to the question, "Why did you
become a Muslim?" that they decided to become a Muslim upon seeing true
Muslims and their life-styles. These Muslims request us to try to spread and
publicize the Islamic religion and to set an example, a model Muslim for
others by holding fast with both hands to the commandments of our religion.
For all our faults and our insufficient capacity of propaganda, the Islamic
religion is growing piecemeal and spreading over the world. In 1954 the
population of the world was 2.4 billion. By 1978 it reached 3.8 billion.
Between 1954 and 1978 the number of Christians reached 150 million, while that
of Muslims became 220 million. According to the statistics of the year 1978
written in the World Almanac, published by an international statistics center,
there are 1.7 billion Buddhists and Magians, 950 million Christians
(Catholics, Protestants and Orthodox Christians), 10 million Jews, 538 million
Muslims 1,5 billions - 1996 - UNO statistics) on the earth. On the other hand,
Time, (an American magazine), allotted its April 1979 issue to Islam. It was
recorded in this issue that the real number of Muslims was 750 million and the
existing statistics were incorrect. Christian statisticians make every
endeavour to represent a lower number of Muslims on the earth.
- 2 - SELECTIONS FROM THE EXPLANATIONS MADE BY CELEBRITIES WHO WERE FORMERLY
NON-MUSLIMS AND WHOSE ADMIRATION FOR ISLAM EVENTUALLY LED THEM TO BELIEVING IN
Allahu TA'ALA
The following chapter contains a few paraphrased selections from the
statements made by some of the many non-Muslim celebrities who believed in
Allahu ta'ala and admired Islam; these statements reflect their views of
Islam. So many are the people who share the same opinions that we have had to
pick out only the famous ones. Among our selections are great commanders,
statesmen and scientists whom you all know very well. Now let us read with
attention to what they said:
NAPOLEON (BONAPARTE):
Napoleon I (1769-1821 [1237 A.H.]), who went into history as a military genius
and statesman, when he entered Egypt in 1212 [C.E. 1798], admired Islam's
greatness and genuineness, and even considered whether he should become a
Muslim. The following excerpt was paraphrased from Cherfils's book (Bonapart
et Islam):
"Napoleon said:
The existence and unity of Allahu ta'ala, which Musa a.s., had announced to
his own people and Issa a.s. to his own Ummat, was announced by Muhammad s.a.s.
to the entire world. Arabia had become totally a country of idolaters. Six
centuries after Issa a.s., Muhammad a.s. initiated the Arabs into an awareness
of Allahu ta'ala, whose existence prophets previous to him, such as Ibrahim
(Abraham), Ismail, Musa (Moses) and Issa (Jesus) a.s. had announced. Peace in
the east had been disturbed by the Arians, [i.e. Christians who followed Arius],
who had somehow developed a degree of friendship with the Arabs, and by
heretics, who had defiled the true religion of Issa a.s. and were striving to
spread in the name of religion a totally unintelligible credo which is based
on trinity, i.e. God, Son of God, and the Holy Ghost. Muhammad a.s. guided the
Arabs to the right way, taught them that Allahu ta'ala is one, that He does
not have a father or a son, and that worshipping several gods is an absurd
custom which is the continuation of idolatry."
At another place in his book he quotes Napoleon as having said, "I hope that
in the near future I will have the chance to gather together the wise and
cultured people of the world and establish a government that I will operate
[in accordance with the principles written in Qur'an al-karim.]"
Prof. (THOMAS) CARLYLE:
Thomas Carlyle of Scotland (1210 [C.E. 1795]-1298 [C.E. 1881]), one of the
greatest men of knowledge known world over, entered the university when he was
only fourteen years old, studied jurisprudence, literature and history,
learned German and oriental languages, exchanged letters with, and even
visited, the well-known German writer (Johann Wolf-gang von) Goethe
(1749-1832), was awarded by the King of Prussia with the medal of honour
called 'pour le mérite', and was elected president by the University of
Edinburgh. Among Carlyle's works are Sartur Resartus, The French Revolution,
On Heroes, Hero Worship And the Heroic in History, Past and Present,
Latter-Day Pamphlets, The Life of Friedrich Schiller, and Critical and
Miscellaneous Essays.
The following passage was selected from one of his works:
"The Arabs, Muhammad a.s., and his age: Before the advent of Muhammad a.s.,
(the Arabs were in such a state that) if a big piece of fire spurted out at
the place where the Arabs lived, it would have dIssappeared on the dry sand
without leaving any traces behind itself. But after the advent of Muhammad a.s.
that desert of dry sand turned into, as it were, a barrel of gunpowder. From
Delhi to Granada, everywhere became rapidly rising flames. This great person
was, so to speak, lightning, and all the people around him became explosives
catching fire from him."
From his conference:
"As you read the Qur'an al-karim, you will presently realize that it is not an
ordinary tome of literature. The Qur'an al-karim is a work of art that springs
from a heart and instantly penetrates all the other hearts. All the other
works of art are quite dull when compared with this tremendous masterpiece.
The most striking characteristic of the Qur'an al-karim is that it is a
truthful and excellent guide. To me, this is the greatest merit of Qur'an al-karim.
And it is this merit that begets other merits."
From his memoirs of a trip:
"In Germany I told my friend Goethe about the facts I had gathered concerning
Islam and added my personal reflections on the subject. After listening to me
with attention, he said, 'If that is Islam, we are all Muslims.' "
MAHATMA GANDHI (Mohandas Karam-chand):
Gandhi (1285 [C.E. 1869]-1367 [C.E. 1948]) descends from a West Indian
Christian family. His father was the chief ecclesiastic of the city of
Porbtandar, and he was very rich. Gandhi was born in the city of Porbtandar.
He went to Britain for his high school education. After completing his
education he went back to India. In 1893 he was sent to South Africa by an
Indian firm. Upon seeing the heavy conditions under which the Indians working
there were and the utterly inhumane treatment they were being subjected to, he
decided to put up a struggle for the betterment of their political rights. He
dedicated himself to the Indian people. As he was conducting a vigorous
campaign against the South African government for the protection of the
Indians' rights, he was arrested and imprisoned. Yet he was too undaunted to
give up struggle. He stayed in Africa till 1914. Then, quitting his perfectly
lucrative job there, he returned to India to carry on his struggle. He waged a
struggle in co-operation with the Indian Muslims Unity, which Muslims had
established in 1906 for the liberation of India. All his personal property and
his father's property he spent for the promotion of this cause.
When he heard that the British were going to launch a second operation of
violence and cruelty similar to the one they had perpetrated in the state of
Pencap in 1274 [A.D. 1858], he co-operated with the Muslims, induced his
friends to withdraw from the civil service, and waged a silent protest and a
passive resistance. By wrapping a white piece of cloth around his naked body
and contenting himself with the milk of a goat which he continuously kept with
him, he carried over his passive resistance. The first reaction on the part of
the British was to laugh at him. It did not take them long, however, to see
with astonishment and dismay that this man, who believed his own ideals with
all his heart and who was ready to sacrifice all his existence with alacrity
for the sake of his country, was with the entire India in tow and resounding
with his speechless struggle. Imprisoning him proved to no avail. Gandhi's
efforts resulted in India's attaining its independence. The Hindus gave him
the name 'Mahatma', which lexically means 'blessed'.
Gandhi studied the Islamic religion and Qur'an al-karim with meticulous
attention and finally found himself a sincere admirer of Islam. The following
is his observation concerning this subject:
"Muslims have never indulged themselves in bigotry even in times of greatest
grandeur and victory. Islam enjoins an admiration for the Creator of the World
and His works. As the West was in a dreadful darkness, the dazzling star of
Islam shining in the East brought light, peace and relief to the suffering
world. The Islamic religion is not a mendacious religion. When the Hindus
study this religion with due respect, they, too, will feel the same sympathy
as I do for Islam. I have read the books telling about the life-style of the
Prophet of Islam and of those who were close to him. These books generated
profound interest in me, so much so that when I finished reading them I
regretted there being no more of them. I have arrived at the conclusion that
Islam's spreading rapidly was not by the sword. On the contrary, it was
primarily owing to its simplicity, logicality, its Prophet's great modesty,
his trueness to his promises and his unlimited faithfulness towards every
Muslim that many people willingly accepted Islam.
"Islam has abrogated monastic life. In Islam there is no one to intervene
between Allahu ta'ala and His born slave. Islam is a religion that commands
social justice from the outset. There is not an institution between the
Creator and the created. Anyone who reads Qur'an al-karim, [i.e. its
explanations and books written by Islamic scholars], will learn the
commandments of Allahu ta'ala and will obey Him. There is no obstruction
between Allahu ta'ala and him in this respect. Whereas many ineluctable
changes were made in Christianity on account of its shortcomings, Islam has
not undergone any alterations, and it preserves its pristine purity.
Christianity lacks democratic spirit. The need to equip that religion with a
democratic aspect has necessitated an increase in the Christians' national
zeal and the concomitant reforms."
Prof. ERNEST RENAN:
Now let us make mention of a French man of ideas: Ernest Renan was born in
1239 [C.E. 1923] in the Treguier city of France. His father was a captain. He
was five years old when he lost his father. He was raised by his mother and by
his elder sister. Because his mother wanted him to be a man of religion, he
was sent to the church college in his hometown. Here he was given an efficient
religious education. His strong interest in the oriental languages won him a
full command of the Arabic, Hebrew and Syrian languages. Later he entered the
university, where he studied philosophy. As he made progress in educational
areas and carried on very minute comparative studies on the German philosophy
and the oriental literature, he observed some flaws in Christianity. By the
time he was graduated from the university in 1848, at the age of twenty-five,
he was entirely defiant towards the Christian religion, and he compiled his
thoughts in his book titled 'The Future of Knowledge'. Yet, because the book
was of a rebellious nature, no printhouse dared to print it, and it was only
forty years later, in 1890, that the book was printed.
Renan's primary objection was against the belief that Issa a.s. was the 'Son
of God'. When he was appointed as a professor of philosophy in the university
of Versailles, he began to gradually explain his thoughts on this subject.
However, it was not till after he was appointed as a professor of the Hebrew
language for the university of College de France that he voiced his most
vigorous protest. By the time he finished his first class he had had the
courage to say, "Issa a.s. was a respectable human being superior to the other
human beings. Yet he was never the son of Allahu ta'ala." This statement had
the effect of a bomb. All the Catholics, and especially the Pope, rose up. The
Pope officially excommunicated Renan before the entire world. The French
government had to dismiss him from office. Yet the world was already
resounding with Renan's statements. Great numbers of people sided with him. He
wrote books, such as 'Essays on the History of Religions', 'Studies on
Criticism and Morals', 'Discourses on Philosophy' and 'Life of Jesus', and his
books sold like hot cakes. Upon this the French Academy accepted him as a
member (in 1878). Also, the French government invited him back to office and
appointed him as the director of college de France.
Renan observed Issa a.s. as a human being in his work 'Life of Jesus'.
According to Renan, "Issa a.s. is a human being like us. His mother Maryam
(Mary) was betrothed to a carpenter named Yusuf (Joseph). Issa a.s. was a
superior human being, so much so that, the statements that he made when he was
only a small child were a source of astonishment for many a scholar. Allahu
ta'ala deemed him as worthy of prophethood and gave him this duty. Issa a.s.
never said that he was the 'Son of God'. This is a slander fabricated by
priests."
The contention between Catholic priests and Renan continued for a long time.
While the Catholics accused him of blasphemy, he in his turn indicted them for
their mendacity and hypocrisy. Renan was saying, "The real Nazarani religion
is based on the belief that Allahu ta'ala is one and that Issa a.s. is only a
human being and a prophet." Before Renan had died, he had prepared a written
will enjoining from a religious ceremony in the church and prohibiting priests
from attending his funeral procession. So, when he died in 1892, a crowded
congregation containing only friends who loved him and people who admired him
attended his funeral procession.
LAMARTINE (Alphonso Marie Louis de):
One of France's universally known poets and statesmen, Lamartine (1204 [C.E.
1790]-1285 [C.E. 1869]) made official journeys through Europe and America,
which gave him the opportunity to have been to Turkey, in the time of Sultan
Abd-ul-majid Khan. He was admitted in an utterly friendly manner by the
Padishah (Ottoman Emperor), and was also presented with a farm within the
state of Aydin, (which is in the western part of Turkey). See what he says
about Muhammad a.s. in his book Histoire de Turquie (History of Turkey):
"Was Muhammad 's.a.s. a false prophet? We cannot think so after studying his
works and history. For false prophethood means hypocrisy. As falsehood does
not have the power of trueness, likewise hypocrisy does not have convincing
capacity.
"In mechanics the range of something thrown depends on the power of the
thrust. By the same token, the power of a certain source of spiritual
inspiration is assessed with the work it accomplishes. A religion, (i.e.
Islam), which has carried so heavy a burden, which has spread to such
distances, and which has maintained its full power for such a long time,
cannot be a lie. It has to be genuine and convincing. Muhammad's a.s. life;
his efforts; his courage in attacking and destroying the superstitions and
idols in his country; his bravery and valour in standing against the fury of a
fire-worshipping nation; his thirteen year endurance to the various attacks,
insults and persecutions inflicted on him in Mecca, among his own citizens;
his migration to Medina; his incessant encouragements, preaches and
admonitions; the holy wars he fought against overwhelmingly superior enemy
forces; his spirit for victory; the superhuman confidence he felt at times of
greatest afflictions; the patience and trust he displayed even in victory; the
determination he showed in convincing others; his endless devotion in
worships; his sacred communings with Allahu ta'ala; his death, and the
continuation of his fame, honour and victories after his death; all these
factual events (and many others untold) indicate that he was by no means a
liar, but, on the contrary, an owner of great belief s.a.s.
"It was this belief and this trust in his Creator that made him put forward a
two-staged credo: The first stage consisted of the belief that 'there is one
eternal being, who is Allah;' and the second stage inculcated that 'idols are
not gods.' In the first stage he informed the Arabs about the existence of
Allahu ta'ala, who is one and whom they had not known until that time; and in
the second stage he shook from their hands the idols which they had looked on
as gods until that time. In short, at a single stroke with the sword he broke
the false gods and idols and replaced them with the belief in 'One Allah'.
"This is Muhammad a.s., the philosopher, the orator, the Prophet, the
law-giver, the warrior, the enchanter of human thoughts, the maker of new
principles of belief, the great man who established twenty gigantic world
empires and one great Islamic empire and civilization s.a.s.
"Let all the criteria used by humanity for the judgement and evaluation of
greatness be applied. Will anyone be found superior to him? Impossible." s.a.s.
I wish to free myself from fancies and whims;
My eccentric nafs will not leave me alone.
I wish to free what is good from the bad;
My eccentric nafs [1] will not leave me alone.
I wish to discipline my essence;
I wish to know what's good for me, 'n what's bad;
I wish to come to my senses;
My eccentric nafs will not leave me alone.
FOOTNOTES
1. Nafs is a malignant force in human nature. It is recalcitrant, stupid, and
evil. It always urges man to behave against the commandments of Allahu ta'ala.
It is the only creature whose all wishes are against itself.
If we behave in a manner befitting a true Muslim, the number of Muslims will
increase even more rapidly, which in its turn means that, as will be stated in
the following explanations made by people who converted to Islam from other
religions, wrong beliefs will gradually disappear from the earth and the human
race will attain their long-awaited peace and happiness.
PEOPLE WHO CHOSE ISLAM
There are a number of people who abandoned their former religion and accepted
Islam. These people belong to various races, countries, nationalities, colours
and professional groups. Forty-two of these people were asked several
questions, such as, "Why did you become a Muslim?" "What are the aspects of
Islam that you like best?" by some magazines or societies, or by their own
friends. Their answers were quite clear and sincere. These noble people
decided to embrace Islam after thinking over the matter for a long time and
studying the Islamic religion with meticulous attention. Each and every one of
their answers, which we have compiled from various books and magazines and we
will paraphrase in the following passages, is of documentary value. There are
many lessons to be taken from these answers, and those who read them will once
again feel in their hearts the sublime nature of our religion.
These documents have been arranged in an alphabetical order of the initial
letters of the nationalities to which our new Muslim brothers belong. These
countries are:
America, Austria, Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain, Holland, Hungary,
Ireland, Japan, Malaya, Poland, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Zanzibar.
1 - MUHAMMAD ALEXANDER RUSSEL WEBB (American)
Diplomat, Author & Journalist
(Muhammad Alexander Russel Webb was born in 1262 [1846 C.E.], in Hudson,
United States of America. He studied in the university of New York. In a short
time he was a very much loved and admired writer and columnist. He published
magazines named 'St. Joseph Gazette' and 'Missouri Republican'. In 1887 he was
posted as the American consul in the Philippines. After embracing Islam, he
thoroughly dedicated himself to the promulgation of Islam and presided over
the organization in the United States. He passed away in 1335 [1916 C.E.].)
I was asked by quite a number of people why I, as a person who was born in the
United States, a country with an overwhelmingly numerous Christian population,
and who listened to the preaches, or, rather, foolish talks, made by Christian
priests throughout his growing years, changed my religion and became a Muslim.
The brief account I gave them on why I had chosen Islam as my guide in life: I
became a Muslim because the studies and observations I carried on indicated
that men's spiritual needs could be filled only with the sound principles
established by Islam. Even as a child I had never had a disposition to
completely dedicate myself to Christianity. By the time I reached the adult
age of twenty, I was completely defiant towards the mystical and annoying
church culture which interdicted everything in the name of sin. Gradually I
disengaged myself from the church, and finally abandoned it for good. I had an
inquisitive and curious character. I would always search for causes and
purposes for everything. I would anticipate logical explanations for them. On
the other hand, the explanations provided by priests and other Christian men
of religion did not satisfy me. Most of the time, instead of giving
satisfactory answers to my questions, they would dismiss the matter with
evasive prevarications such as, "We cannot understand these things. They are
divine secrets," and "They are beyond the grasp of human mind." Upon this I
decided to study, on the one hand, oriental religions, and on the other hand,
books written by famous philosophers. I read various works on philosophy, such
as those written by John Stuart Mill (1806-73), English thinker; On Liberty.],
by John Locke (1632-1704), English Philosopher], by Immanuel Kant (1724-1804),
German philosopher; Critique of Pure Reason], by George Wilhelm Friedrich
Hegel (1770-1831), German thinker], by Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762-1814),
German philosopher], by Aldous Huxley (1894-1963), British writer; Brave New
World.], and others. The books written by these philosophers always dealt with
such subjects as protoplasms, atoms, molecules, and particles, and did not
even touch on reflections such as "What becomes of the human soul?" "Where
does the soul go after death?" "How should we discipline our souls in this
world?" The Islamic religion, on the other hand, treated the human subject not
only within the corporeal areas, but also along the spiritual extensions.
Therefore, I chose Islam not because I had lost my way, or only because
Christianity had incurred my displeasure, or as a result of sudden decision,
but, on the contrary, after very minutely studying it and becoming thoroughly
convinced about its greatness, singularity, solemnity and perfection.
Islam is based on belief in the existence and the unity of Allahu ta'ala,
entire submission to Him, which spontaneously entails worshipping Him and
thanking Him for His blessings. Islam enjoins fraternity, goodness, and
friendliness upon all the human race, and advises them to be cleanly,
spiritually, physically, verbally, and practically. Definitely, the Islamic
religion is the most perfect, the most superior and the most conclusive of all
the religions known to humanity so far.
2 - Colonel DONALD S. ROCKWELL (American)
Why did I accept Islam? For a long time I had been greatly impressed by
Islam's clear logic and formal simplicity, by the magnetizing attraction felt
towards its mosques, by the great solemnity and deep affection with which the
adherents of that religion had devoted themselves to their faith, by the
profound respect and pure sincerity in which Muslims all over the world had
been prostrating themselves simultaneously five times daily. However, all
these things were short of causing me to become a Muslim. Only after a
thoroughgoing analysis of the Islamic religion, which resulted in my exploring
a myriad of beautiful and useful aspects in it, did I become a Muslim. A
solemn and, at the same time, sentimental, attachment to life, [which was
Muhammad's a.s. personal approach]; a mutually consultative method in doing
daily chores; a habitually soft behaviour flavoured with mercy and compassion
in social lives, indiscriminately; charity for the poor; property rights,
which women had been given for the first time; all these things, which were
only a few of the many other revolutions that could only be evaluated as 'the
most tremendous', and how aphoristical and concise a language it is through
which Muhammad a.s. expresses these concepts! By cautioning, "Place your trust
in Allahu ta'ala; yet do not forget to tie your camel!", Muhammad a.s. conveys
also that Allahu ta'ala commands His born slaves to put their trust in Him
only after taking all sorts of necessary precautions. Then, contrary to
Europeans' assertions, the Islamic religion is not a religion for those idlers
who expect everything from Allahu ta'ala without doing anything for their
part. The Islamic religion commands everybody first to do their best and only
then to put their trust in Allahu ta'ala.
The justice which Islam rendered to people of other religions was one of its
aspects which had had a great impact on me. Muhammad a.s. commands Muslims to
be benign towards Christians and Jews. Qur'an al-karim acknowledges the
prophethoods of the other prophets as well, beginning with Adam a.s. and
including Musa and Issa 'a.s. This is an exalted sense of faith and a great
model of justice, which other religions do not possess. While the believers of
other religions are casting inconceivable aspersions on Islam, Muslims are
answering them favourably.
One of the most beautiful aspects of Islam is that it has completely purified
itself of idols. Whereas pictures, icons and signs are still being worshipped
in Christianity, things of this nature do not exist in Islam. This is an
indication of how pure and unstained a religion Islam is.
The facts stated and taught by Muhammad a.s., the Messenger of Allahu ta'ala,
have reached our time without any interpolation. And the Qur'an al-karim,
which is the Word of Allah, has been preserved in its pristine purity, exactly
as it was revealed, without losing anything from the limpidity it had in the
time of Muhammad a.s.. The fabricated superstitions and legends with which
Christians have defiled the religion of Issa a.s. are not the case with Islam.
Of the determinants that motivated me to become a Muslim, the last one was the
fortitude and the will power that I observed in Islam. Islam induced an
overall cleanliness, not only spiritually, but also physically. Examples of
the features that make up this superior nature are not to overload the stomach
when eating, to fast for one month every year, to be moderate in every
respect, to be neither extravagant nor parsimonious in spending money, etc. In
an exquisite style, facts that would guide humanity not only temporarily but
also ever after were being inculcated into individuals. I visited almost all
of the Muslim countries. I saw in person how all the Muslims in Istanbul, in
Damascus, in Cairo, in Algeria, in Morocco, and in the other Muslim cities
observed all these rules and thereby led a peaceful life. They did not need
ornaments, pictures, icons, candles, music, or other trivialities of the same
sort to initiate themselves into the life-style leading to the sympathy of
Allahu ta'ala. The sense of awareness of the fact that they were the born
slaves of Allahu ta'ala and their acts of supplication before Him afforded
them the greatest source of spiritual peace, happiness and flavour.
The qualities of freedom and equity inherent in the Islamic religion have
always magnetized me towards it. Among Muslims, a person occupying the highest
rank position and the poorest member of the society are equal before Allahu
ta'ala, and they are merely two individuals in the general recognition of
fraternity. Muslims perform their acts of worship side by side in mosques.
There are not any special places allotted for the leadership.
Muslims hold the belief that there is not a third person to act as an
intermediary between Allahu ta'ala and His born slave. The Islamic acts of
worship are performed between Allahu ta'ala and the slave. They do not appeal
to men of religion for the forgiveness of their wrongdoings. Every Muslim is
the only person responsible for his personal behaviour.
The mutual fraternity among Muslims has always been helpful in my personal
life. This fraternity was one of the factors whereby I was charmed towards
Islam. I know that, wherever I go, a Muslim brother of mine will help me and
sympathize with me. All Muslims the world over, of different races, colours
and political views as they may be, are brothers and they look on it as an
obligation to help one another.
These are the causes for my becoming a Muslim. I wonder if it could be
possible to conceive of causes more beautiful or more exalted than these?
3 - SALAHUDDIN BOART (American)
In 1338 [1920 C.E.], I was in the waiting-room of a doctor's office where I
had gone for a medical examination, when I saw two magazines printed in
London, namely 'Orient Review' and 'African Times'. As I was skimming through
them I read a statement that said, "There is only one God," which impressed me
deeply. Christianity dictated three gods, which we were compelled to believe
although we could never explain it to our own minds. From that time on, that
statement, "There is only one God," never left my mind. This holy and sublime
belief, which Muslims bear in their hearts, is an invaluable treasure.
Now I grew more and more deeply interested in Islam. By and by, I decided to
become a Muslim. After embracing Islam I assumed the name Salahuddin. I
believed in the truth that Islam is the truest religion. For Islam is based on
the fact that Allahu ta'ala does not have a partner and that Allah, alone, has
the authority to forgive sins. How compatible this law is with the laws of
nature! In a field, on a farm, in a village, in a city, in a school, in a
government, in a state and, in short, everywhere, there is one single ruler.
Dualism has always brought about separatism.
The second proof that showed me the fact that Islam is the truest religion was
that the Arabs, who had been leading a completely barbarous life before Islam,
had developed into the world's most civilized and the most powerful state in a
very short time and carried the most ideal concepts of love of mankind from
the Arabian deserts all the way up to Spain, and all this was owing to Islam.
The Muslim Arabs had found Arabia as a wilderness. And they cultivated it into
a rose-garden. John W. Draper (1226 [1811 C.E.]-1299 [1882 C.E.]), an honest
historian, in his book 'The Intellectual Development of Europe', enlarges on
the extremely great and important part that Islam played in the development of
contemporary civilization, and adds, "Christian historians, on account of the
grudge they have been nursing against Islam, try to cloak this truth and
cannot seem to get themselves to acknowledge how indebted Europeans are to
Muslims."
The following passage is (the paraphrase of) an excerpt from Draper's writings
on how Muslims found Spain:
"Europeans of that time were completely barbarians. Christianity had proved
short of delivering them from barbarism. They would still be looked on as wild
people. They lived in filth. Their heads were full with superstitions. They
did not even have the ability to think properly. They lived in roughly-made
huts. A rush mat laid on the floor or hanging on the wall was the sign of
great wealth. Their food consisted of vegetables like wild beans and carrots,
some oats and, sometimes, even barks. In the name of garments, they wore
untanned animal hides because they lasted longer, and therefore they stank
awfully."
"Cleanliness was the very first thing that Muslims taught them. Muslims washed
five times daily, which caused these people to wash at least once a day. Later
on, they took the stinking, tattered, lice-infested animal hides off their
backs, dumped them, and gave them their own garments, which had been made from
textures woven with coloured threads. They taught them how to cook, and how to
eat. They built houses, mansions and palaces in Spain. They established
schools and hospitals. They instituted universities, which in the course of
time became sources of light illuminating the entire world. They improved
horticulture everywhere. The country was soon awash with rose and flower
gardens. Gaping in astonishment and admiration, the uncivilized Europeans
watched all these developments, and gradually began to keep pace with the new
civilization."
Educating so wild a nation; imbuing them with sentiments of civilization;
rescuing them from the depths of darkness, nascence and superstitions; all
these inconceivably tremendous tasks were accomplished by the Arabs owing only
and only to the Islamic religion. For the Islamic religion is the most genuine
religion. Allahu ta'ala helped them for their success.
The Islamic religion, commanded by Allahu ta'ala and taught and publicized by
Muhammad a.s., and the Qur'an al-karim, which is the Word of Allahu ta'ala,
changed the course of the world's history and freed it from the fetters of
darkness. Had it not been for the Islamic religion, humanity would not have
attained the present heights of civilization, nor would knowledge and science
be in such advanced levels today. Muhammad a.s. states, "Even if knowledge is
in China, (go and) acquire it." This is the Islamic religion which I accepted
willingly.
4 - THOMAS MUHAMMAD CLAYTON (American)
It was almost noon time. Dazed with the sweltering heat of the day, we were
trudging along a dusty road, when, from afar, a singularly mellifluous voice
began to caress our auditory senses. So rich a voice it was that the entire
space seemed to be sated with it. As we walked past a cluster of trees, a
bewildering scene came into sight. It was such a scene that we hardly believed
what we saw. Mounted on a small, wooden tower, an elderly Arab in an extremely
clean long robe and wearing a white turban was performing (calling) the adhan
(or adhan). As he performed the adhan, he was in a trance, almost completely
isolated from the world, and in the presence of his Creator, Owner. As if
hypnotized by this noble sight, we halted, and then, slowly, sat down on the
ground. We did not know what the sounds and words reaching our ears meant, yet
they somehow moved us and instilled a mood of elation, relief into our souls.
Afterwards, we learned that the sweet words uttered by the Arab meant, "Allahu
ta'ala is the greatest. There is no god to be worshipped other than Allahu
ta'ala." All of a sudden, many people appeared around us. Till hardly a moment
before, however, we had seen no one around us. We did not know whence these
people came, and there was an expression of great deference and love on their
faces. There were people of all age-groups and classes among them. They were
different in their clothing, in their manners of walking, and in their
appearances. Yet they all had the same expression of earnestness, great
dignity and, at the same time, geniality on their faces. The number of comers
increased incessantly, so that we felt as if the process of their increasing
would never come to an end. At last the comers assembled. They all took off
their shoes and clogs and stood in rows. To our great amazement, no
segregation of any sort was observed in the formation of the lines. White
people, yellow people, black people, rich people, poor people, tradesmen,
civil servants, workers stood side by side without any discrimination between
their races or ranks, and performed their worship together.
I admired so many different people's brotherly coming together. It is three
years now since I saw that sublime scene for the first time. In the meantime,
I began to gather information about that lofty religion which brought people
so closely together. The information that I collected about Islam brought me
all the closer to this religion. Muslims believed in one Allah and professed
that men were not sinful by birth, which was quite contrary to the Christian
inculcation. They looked on them only as born slaves of Allahu ta'ala,
displayed profound compassion towards them, and wished them to abide by the
right path and thus lead a comfortable, peaceful and happy life. Whereas in
Christianity even an evil thought was deemed as a sin, Muslims defined sin
only as a result of disobeying Allahu ta'ala or violating the rights of born
slaves, and acknowledged man free as to his thoughts. According to the Islamic
religion, man was responsible "only for what he has done."
For the reasons I have cited above, I accepted Islam willingly. Despite the
three years' time since, I sometimes dream of the Arab muezzin's touching and
effective voice and multifarious people's running from all directions and
standing in lines. It is a doubtless fact that these people, who prostrate
themselves altogether and indiscriminately, are doing so sincerely to worship
Allahu ta'ala.
Haqq ta'ala avenges Himself on the slave through the slave,
In the ignorant's eyes the avenger is the poor slave.
Everything belongs to the Creator, the slave's a mere tool,
Without the Creator's command you cannot move a leaf!
5 - DEVIS WARRINGTON (Austrian)
As the Spring's mellow, warm hand thaws out the earth after an awfully frigid
winter, likewise Islam had a similar effect on me. It warmed my heart and
clothed me with a new and lovely dress of knowledge. How beautiful, how true,
and how logical Islam's teachings are! How clear, how genuine, and how
charming a word it is to say that "Allahu ta'ala is one, and Muhammad a.s. is
His Messenger." How could one ever compare it with the unbelievable,
unintelligible Christian credo which imposes the absurdity of "Father, Son,
and the Holy Spirit"? In contrast with these formidable, fearful and never
satisfactory tenets of Christianity, this simple and logical belief draws you
towards itself. Islam is an undefiled heavenly religion. Despite the centuries
that have elapsed since its advent, it answers all the material and immaterial
needs of humanity, not only today, but also forever. For instance, Islam
clearly states that men are equal and that before Allahu ta'ala there is no
difference of rank and position among men, and it enforces this equality in
actual life. The Christian churches profess the same equality, yet there are
various echelons among them, such as priests of different ranks, archdeacons,
deacons, bishops, and many other ecclesiastics. These people intervene between
Allahu ta'ala and the slave and use the name of Allahu ta'ala for their
personal advantages. In Islam, on the other hand, no one can intervene between
Allahu ta'ala and the slave. Allahu ta'ala communicates His commandments
through the Qur'an al-karim to His slaves. In the following lines, I will
quote a commandment of Allahu ta'ala. It is only an example. This example
shows very explicitly how simple and clear the commandments are.
The two hundred and sixty-seventh ayat of Baqara sura purports: "O ye who
believe! Give of the good things which ye have (honourably) earned, and of the
fruits of the earth which We have produced for you, and do not even aim at
getting anything which is bad, in order that out of it ye may give away
something, when ye yourselves would not receive it except with closed eyes.
And know that Allahu ta'ala is free of all wants, and worthy of all praise."
(2-267) As I read and learned these profound and beautiful commandments of the
Qur'an al-karim, my soul attained peace and I embraced Islam willingly.
6 - Mrs. CECILLA CANNOLY [Rashida] (Austrian)
Why did I become a Muslim?
Let me tell you sincerely that I became a Muslim without even noticing it
myself. For, at a very young age I had already completely lost my confidence
in Christianity and had begun to feel apathy towards the Christian religion. I
was curious about many religious facts. I was disinclined to believe blindly
the creed they were trying to teach me. Why were there three gods? Why had we
all come to this world sinful, and why did we have to expiate it? Why could we
invoke Allahu ta'ala only through a priest? And what were the meanings of all
these various signs that we were being shown and the miracles that we were
being told? Whenever I asked these questions to the teaching priests, they
would become angry and answer, "You cannot inquire about the inner natures of
the church's teachings. They are secret. All you have to do is to believe
them." And this was another thing that I would never understand. How could one
believe something whose essence one did not know? However, in those days I did
not dare divulge these thoughts of mine. I am sure that many of today's
so-called Christians are of the same opinion as I was; they do not believe
most of the religious teachings imposed on them, yet they are afraid to
disclose it.
The older I became the farther away did I feel from Christianity, finally
breaking away from the church once and for all and beginning to wonder whether
there was a religion that taught "to worship one single God." My entire
conscience and heart told me that there was only one God. Then, when I looked
around, the events showed me how meaningless the unintelligible miracles that
priests had been trying to teach us, and the absurd stories of saints they had
been telling us, were. Didn't everything on the earth, human beings, beasts,
forests, mountains, seas, trees, flowers indicate that a great Creator had
created them? Wasn't a newly born baby a miracle in itself? On the other hand,
the church was striving to indoctrinate the people with the preposterous
belief that every newly born baby was a wretched, sinful creature. No, this
was impossible, a lie. Every newly born child was an innocent slave, a
creature of Allahu ta'ala. It was a miracle, and I believed only in Allah and
in the miracles He created.
Nothing in the world was inherently sinful, dirty, or ugly. I was of this
opinion, when one day my daughter came home with a book written about Islam.
My daughter and I sat together and read the book with great attention. O my
Allah, the book said exactly as I had been thinking. Islam announced that
there is one Allah and informed that people are born as innocent creatures.
Until that time I had been entirely ignorant of Islam. In schools Islam was an
object of derision. We had been taught that that religion was false and absurd
and infused one with sloth, and that Muslims would go to Hell. Upon reading
the book, I was plunged into thoughts. To acquire more detailed information
about Islam, I visited Muslims living in my town. The Muslims I found opened
my eyes. The answers they gave to my questions were so logical that I began to
believe that Islam was not a concocted religion as our priests had been
asserting, but a true religion of Allahu ta'ala. My daughter and I read many
other books written about Islam, were fully convinced as to its sublimeness
and veracity, and eventually embraced Islam, both of us. I adopted the name 'Rashida',
and my daughter chose 'Mahmuda' as her new name.
As for the second question that you ask me: "What aspect of Islam do you like
best?" Here is my answer:
What I like best about Islam is the nature of its prayers. In Christianity
prayers are said in order to ask for worldly blessings such as wealth,
position and honour from Allahu ta'ala through Issa a.s.. Muslims, in
contrast, express their gratitude to Allahu ta'ala and they know that as long
as they abide by their religion and obey the commandments of Allahu ta'ala,
Allahu ta'ala will give them whatever they need without them asking for it.
7 - MUHAMMAD ASSAD LEOPOLD WEISS (Austrian)
This is a note from the webmaster - The file on Muhammad
Assad /Leopold Weilss might contain errors. A brother has written with some
facts that does not match these in this revert story. I'm not going to dig
into this, but if anybody has any facts in either direction - please contact
me!
/Ibrahim
(Weiss was born in 1318 [A.D. 1900] in the Livow city of Austria [in Poland
today], visited Arabic countries as a newspaper correspondent when he was
twenty-two years old, admired and professed the Islamic religion, then visited
all the Islamic countries, including India and Afghanistan, and published his
impressions in 'Frankfurter Zeitung', one of the greatest newspapers world
over. Weiss worked as the publication director for Frankfurter Zeitung for
some time, then, after Pakistan's winning its struggle for liberation, he went
to Pakistan with a view to co-operating with that country's government in the
establishment of a system of a religious education, and later he was sent to
the United States Center to represent Pakistan. He has two books, one entitled
'Islam at Cross-Roads', and the other 'The Way Leading to Mecca'. Recently he
has rendered the Qur'an al-karim into English. His attempt to write a tafsir
(translation of Qur'an al-karim) without the indispensably required background
in the basic Islamic sciences indicates that he is not in the Madhhab of Ahl
as-sunnat and that, consequently, his tafsirs and other (religious) writings
may be harmful. Wahhabis and other groups outside (the right way guided by the
four) Madhhabs present this ignorant heretic as an Islamic scholar.)
The newspapers for which I worked as a correspondent and writer sent me to
Asia and Africa in the capacity of 'special correspondent' in 1922. In the
beginning, my relations with the Muslims were no more than ordinary relations
between two parties of foreigners. However, my long stay in the Islamic
countries enabled me to know the Muslims more closely, which in turn made me
realize that they had been looking at the world and the events taking place in
the world from angles quite dissimilar to those of Europeans. I must
acknowledge that their extremely dignified and composed attitude towards the
events, and their approach that was much more humanistic than our own, began
to stir up my interest. I was from a fanatical Catholic family. Throughout my
childhood I had been inculcated with the belief that Muslims were irreligious
people worshipping the devil. When I came into contact with Muslims I realized
that they had been lying to me and I decided to study the Islamic religion. I
acquired a number of books written on this subject. When I began to read these
books with close attention, I saw in amazement how pure and how valuable a
religion it was. Yet the manners and behaviours of some Muslims I had been in
contact with did not conform to the Islamic principles that I was reading
about. First of all, Islam dictated cleanliness, open heartedness,
brotherhood, compassion, faithfulness, peace and salvation and, rejecting the
Christian doctrine that "men are ever sinful," it substituted it with quite an
opposite belief which tolerated "all sorts of worldly pleasures with the
proviso that they should not cost someone else's harm and that they should not
overflow the free area defined by Islam." But I also met some dirty and
mendacious Muslims. To understand the matter better, I began to run an
experiment on it, putting myself in the place of a Muslim and adapting myself
to the principles I had been reading in the books, and thus examining Islam
from within. I came up with the conclusion that the main reason for the
increasing degeneration and decline of the Islamic world, which was already on
the brink of a collapse, was Muslims' becoming increasingly indifferent
towards their religion. As long as Muslims preserved their perfection as true
Muslims, they always made progress; and a downfall began the very moment they
relaxed their grips of Islam. In actual fact, Islam possesses all the
qualifications required for a country's or a nation's progress. It contains
all the essentials of civilization. The Islamic religion is both extremely
scientific and very practical. The principles it lays down are completely
logical, intelligible to everybody, and do not contain one single element that
would run counter to knowledge, to science, or to human nature. There is
nothing unnecessary in it. The grotesque passages, the sophistries, and the
superstitious mysticisms, which are the common properties of other religious
books, do not exist in Islam. I discussed these subjects with most Muslims and
castigated them, saying, "Why don't you adhere more tightly to this beautiful
religion of yours? Why don't you hold fast to it with both hands?" Eventually,
in 1344 [A.D. 1926], as I was discussing these matters with a governor in
Afghanistan, he said to me, "You have already become a Muslim without you
yourself noticing it. Only a true Muslim would defend Islam as earnestly as
you are doing now." Upon these words of the governor's a lightning flashed in
my brain. When I was back home I plunged into deep thoughts, finally saying to
myself, "Yes, I am a Muslim now." Presently I pronounced the statement called
Kalima-i-sahadat.[The statement called Kalima-i-shahadat is: "Ash-hadu an-la-ilaha
il'l'Allah, wa ash-hadu anna Muhammadan abduhu wa Rasuluhu," which means, "I
testify to the fact that there is no god but Allah, and I testify, again, that
Muhammad a.s. is His born slave and Messenger." Every Muslim has to make this
statement at least once in his lifetime and has to believe in its meaning.] I
have been a Muslim ever since.
You ask me, "What aspect of Islam attracted you most?" I cannot answer this
question, for Islam has penetrated and invaded my entire heart. There is not a
specific aspect, therefore, which affected me more than the others did.
Everything I had not found in Christianity I found in Islam. I cannot tell
what principle of Islam I feel closer to me. I admire each and every one of
its principles and essentials. Islam is a gorgeous monument. It is impossible
to separate any of its parts from its entirety. All its parts are pivoted,
clenched on one another in a certain order. There is a tremendous harmony
among the parts. There is not a single part missing. Each and everyone of its
parts is in its proper place. Perhaps it was this extremely admirable order
which attached me to the Islamic religion. No. What attached me to the Islamic
religion was the love I had for it. You know, love is composed of various
things: Desire, loneliness, ambition, elevation, zeal for progress and
improvement, our weaknesses mixed with our strength and power, the need for
someone to help and protect us, and the like. So I embraced Islam with all my
heart and love, and it settled in my heart so as to never leave there again.
8 - Dr. 'UMAR ROLF FREIHERR VON EHRENFELS (Austrian)
(Rolf Freiherr (baron) von Ehrenfels is the only son of Prof. Dr. Baron
Christian Ehrenfels, who is known as the founder of Gestalt psychology all
over the world. He belongs to a well-known family. He was only a small child
when he felt a growing concern for the orient and began to study the Islamic
religion. His sister Imma von Rodmesrhof writes about this inclination of her
brother's in detail in a book of hers, which was published in Lahore in 1953.
At a very young age, Rolf travelled in Turkey, in Albania, in Greece, and in
Yugoslavia, and joined prayers in mosques although he was a Christian.
Eventually, the warm feelings of closeness that he had been harbouring towards
Islam resulted in his embracing Islam in 1927, from then on he chose the name
'Umar for himself. In 1932 he visited India, and published a book entitled
'The Place of Woman in Islam'. When the Germans invaded Austria during the
Second World War, Rolf fled to India. Accepted and supported by Akbar Haydar,
he carried on anthropological studies in Assam, was appointed as a professor
of anthropology for the University of Madras in 1949, and was awarded with a
gold medal by the 'Royal Asiatic Society', which was located in Bengal. His
books were also published in the Urdu language.)
You ask me why I became a Muslim. In the following lines I shall give an
account of the factors that formed the cause of my becoming a Muslim and
realizing that Islam is a true religion:
1) Islam contains the good aspects of all the world's religions known to us.
All religions are intended for men's living in peace and tranquillity. Yet no
other religion has managed to teach it to people as explicitly as Islam does.
No other religion has been successful in imbuing with such deep love towards
our Creator and towards brothers of the same faith.
2) Islam enjoins a perfect submission to Allahu ta'ala in a mood of peace and
tranquillity.
3) A retrospective look into history will automatically expose the fact that
the Islamic religion is the final true, heavenly religion and that no other
religion will appear.
4) Muhammad a.s., who communicated the Qur'an al-karim, is the final prophet.
5) It is doubtless that a person who enters the Islamic religion will
automatically have separated himself from his former religion. Yet this
separation is not so big as it may be anticipated. The tenets of belief are
the same in all the heavenly religions. Qur'an al-karim acknowledges the
heavenly religions before itself. Yet it rectifies the wrong beliefs inserted
into these religions afterwards, exposes the religion of Issa a.s. in its
essential form, and declares that Muhammad a.s. is the final prophet and that
no prophet will come after him. In other words, Islam is the true and perfect
form of other religions. Various clashes of interests and contrasting
ambitions have made men inimical towards one another. And this animosity, in
its turn, has been exploited by other people, who have tried to change
religions into rival camps and thus to build their worldly advantages on
religions, which, in actual fact, are essentially paths guiding to knowing
Allahu ta'ala. In fact, it takes a little alertness to see that the Islamic
religion acknowledges the other heavenly religions and that it purifies them
of the human interpolations that they had been subjected to in the course of
time. To accept Islam, therefore, means to render a spiritual and material
service which is needed by all people, men and women alike.
6) In no other religion has the concept of brotherhood among people been
stated so expressly as it has been in Islam. All Muslims, regardless of their
race, nation, colour and language, are brothers of one another. Whatever their
political views are, they are brothers of one another. No other religion
possesses this beauty.
7) Islam is a religion which gives women great rights. The Islamic religion
has allotted women the most proper place. Muhammad a.s. stated, "Paradise is
beneath a mothers' feet."
The Islamic religion respected the works of art made by people of other
religions, and did not demolish them like barbars. As they were building
mosques like Fatih and Sultan Ahmad (Blue Mosque) in Istanbul, they did not
feel averse to modelling some of their architecture after that of Saint
Sophia. Throughout history, Muslims have displayed greatest justice and mercy
towards people of other religions.
For reasons such as these, I chose Islam for my faith.
9 - THOMAS IRVING (Canadian)
To tell you why I became a Muslim, I have to explain what I felt before and
after embracing Islam, my first contact with Islam and the faith that it
inspired into me. First of all, let me tell you that thousands of Canadians
and Americans think exactly as I used to think before becoming a Muslim; they
have the same feeling of dissatisfaction; and they are awaiting the scholars
of Ahl as-sunnat who will teach them the essence of Islam.
As I was a child, I held fast to my faith, Christianity, with both hands. For
I needed a religion to feed my soul. However, as I grew older, I began to see
a number of faults in Christianity. The stories told about the life of Issa
a.s. and his being the son of God, -may Allahu ta'ala protect us against
saying so,- sounded like superstitious tales to me. My personal logic would
never accept them. I began to ask myself questions, such as, "If Christianity
is the true religion, why are there so many non- Christians in the World?"
"Why do Jews and Christians share the same basic religious book and differ in
other respects?" "Why are non-Christians doomed to perdition though they have
no other apparent faults?" "Why do many nations choose not to become
Christians?"
It was in those days when I met a missionary who had been serving in India. He
complained to me, "Muslims are very obstinate. They insist that the true
religion is Islam, and not Christianity. So all my efforts to Christianize
them end up in failure." These statements were at the same time the first
definition I had heard of Islam. A sensation of curiosity towards Islam,
seasoned with a high degree of admiration for Muslims who had been so
staunchly attached to their religion, began to blossom in my heart. I felt
that I should observe Islam more closely, and began to attend lectures on
'Oriental Literature' in the university. I saw that what the oriental people
had been rejecting in our belief was the doctrine of 'trinity', and that they
accepted the belief of 'One God', which was perfectly agreeable with common
sense. It was certain that Issa a.s. had announced his religion as one based
on belief in One God, and himself as a mere born slave and Messenger of that
One God. The God he had mentioned should be a merciful God. Nevertheless, that
beautiful and true belief had been smothered with meaningless legends,
superstitions and heresies inserted into Christianity by idolaters, and the
pure belief in the One Merciful, Compassionate God had been adulterated into a
tripartite godhood, which was accessible only to priests and which, so to
speak, created mankind with a share from the original sin. Then, a new
religion with a new prophet was necessary to restore the humanity with that
pure and intact belief in One God. Europe, on the other hand, was awash in
semi-barbaric cruelty in those days. As savage tribes were invading countries,
on the one hand, a small minority was perpetrating all sorts of vices under
the mask of religion, on the other. The human race was moaning desperately
under the talons of idolatry and irreligiousness, when, [according to
historians], seven centuries after Issa a.s., in the oriental horizons, there
rose Muhammad s.a.s. the final Prophet of Allahu ta'ala, and he began to
communicate to people the true religion of the true God, which was based on
belief in One God.
When I read and learned all these facts, I believed in the fact that Muhammad
s.a.s. was the final true Messenger of Allahu ta'ala, because:
1) As I have said above, people needed a new prophet;
2) All my thoughts concerning Allahu ta'ala conformed with the religion spread
by that great Prophet s.a.s.
3) As soon as I read the Qur'an al-karim, I sensed that it was the Word of
Allahu ta'ala. The facts communicated by the Qur'an al-karim and the hadith
ash-Sharifs [utterances] of Muhammad s.a.s. satisfied me in every respect and
infused a sense of peace into my soul. And this is the reason why I became a
Muslim.
You can be sure that, as I have already said, thousands of Americans and
Canadians sense the same deficiencies and errors in Christianity. Sad to say,
though, they have not had the same chance I had to do a thorough research into
the Islamic religion; they need a guide.
After attaining that belief in Islam, I embarked on a study of the books
published about Islam. I would like to touch upon a few of the works that I
could recommend in this connection. An Indian well-wisher sent me a book
captioned 'What Is Islam?', written by Q.A. Jairazby H.W. Lovlegrove. I would
specially recommend the book. It is a book that describes Islam in the best
way. Spreading the book world over would be a useful service for the
promulgation of Islam. I read an English version of Qur'an al-karim rendered
by Maulvi Muhammad Ali, and I liked it. In addition, I read some other books,
and I did not neglect magazines publicizing Islam. In Montreal, I found many
works published in French about Islam. Some of them praised Islam, while
others were intended against it. But Islam's greatness could not be buried
even under books written for the purpose of reviling it. Instead, they were no
more than other sources of evidence corroborating for me the fact that Islam
is the true religion.
10 - Dr. BENOIST [ALI SALMAN] (French)
I am a doctor and I come from a fanatically Catholic family. Yet my vocational
choice, medicine, provided me a career in positive, experimental, and natural
sciences, which in turn caused me to develop a growing hatred against
Christianity. With respect to religion, I was at complete loggerheads with the
other members of my family. Yes, there was a great Creator, and I believed in
Him, i.e. Allahu ta'ala. Yet the absurdities concocted by Christians,
especially by Catholics, various mysterious gods, sons, holy ghosts, the
preposterous fibs fabricated for the purpose of proving that Issa a.s. is the
son of God, a myriad of other superstitions, ceremonies and rites pushed me
away from Christianity, instead of attracting me towards it.
Because I held the belief in one God, I would never accept trinity, nor would
I by any means recognize Issa a.s. as the son of God. That means to say that,
long before knowing of Islam, I had already accepted the initial half of the
Kalima-i-Shahadat, i.e. the part that says, "La ilaha il'l'Allah... (There is
no God but Allah...)" When I began to study the Islamic religion and read the
Ikhlas Sura of Qur'an al-karim, which purported, "Lo; Allahu ta'ala is One. He
is not begotten, nor does He beget. There is no being bearing any likeness to
Him," I said, "O my Allah. My belief is exactly the same." I felt immense
relief. I realized that it was of paramount importance to study Islam more
deeply. And as I studied Islam I saw with admiration that this religion was
completely agreeable with my ideas. Islam looked on religious men, and even on
prophets 'alaihim-us-salawat', as ordinary people like us; it did not divinize
them. Giving a priest authority to forgive people's sins was something which
Islam would never accept. The Islamic religion did not contain any
superstitions, any irrational rules, or any unintelligible subjects. The
Islamic religion was a logical one, exactly as I wanted. Contrary to the
Catholics, it did not smudge human beings with the consequences of the
so-called original sin. It enjoined physical and spiritual cleanliness on
human beings. Cleanliness, which is an essential principle in medicine, was in
Islam a commandment of Allahu ta'ala. Islam commanded to clean oneself before
acts of worship, and that was a quality which I had never seen in any other
religion.
In some Christian rites, such as Baptism and the Eucharist, people consume the
bread and wine offered by the priest in the name of the flesh and blood of
Issa a.s., which is intended, so to speak, as a simulated unity with Issa
a.s., i.e. with God, [may Allahu ta'ala protect us from holding such
beliefs!]. I saw the resemblance between these rites and those of the most
primitive heathens, and hated them. My mind, which had improved under the
guidance of positive science, vehemently rejected these puerile rites which
did not suit to a true religion. Islam, on the other hand, did not accommodate
any of those things. There was only truth, love, and cleanliness in Islam.
Eventually, I made up my mind. I visited my Muslim friends and asked them what
I should do to become a Muslim. They taught me the (statement called) Kalima-i
Shahadat, how to say it and what it meant. As I have mentioned earlier, before
becoming a Muslim, I had accepted its first half, i.e. the part that meant,
"There is no God but Allah,..." It was not difficult, therefore, to accept the
remaining part, which said: "... and Muhammad a.s. is His (born slave and)
Messenger." I was now studying momentous books written about the Islamic
religion. When I read one of them, namely, 'Le Phénomène Coranique', a very
lovely book prepared by Malak Bannabi, I saw with amazement and admiration
what a tremendous book Qur'an al-karim was. The facts written in that book of
Allah which was revealed fourteen centuries before now are in precise
conformance with the results of today's scientific and technological research.
Both from scientific and technological points of view and with respect to
sociological activities, the Qur'an al-karim is a guide book not only today,
but also forever.
On the twentieth day of February, 1953, I went to the Paris mosque and
accepted Islam officially in the presence of Mufti Effendi and the witnesses,
and I was given the name Ali Salman.
I love this new religion of mine. I am very happy and I emphasize the firmness
of my belief in Islam by frequently saying the (statement called)
Kalima-i-Shahadat and pondering over its meaning.
11 - CAPTAIN (JACQUES) COUSTEAU (French)
[In France Islam has been spreading at a high velocity among people who have
made fame in various areas. The number of people who have abandoned
Christianity and chosen Islam have reached one hundred thousand already. This
score has been confirmed by the Archbishop of Paris, the highest Catholic rank
in France.
It is noteworthy that people who have preferred Islam are not only from among
workers and civil servants but also from among people renowned in every
respect.
Among people who have chosen Islam is Captain Cousteau, whom the whole world
closely knows for his explorations about life under water.
As the groundswell of embracing Islam was spreading among France's universal
celebrities, Captain Cousteau, the world's most eminent undersea explorer,
announced that by accepting Islam he had made the most correct decision of his
life.
Captain Cousteau, who has revealed the secrets of oceans one by one with the
films that he made and which are being televised world over in a program
sub-headed The Living Sea, said that what actually prompted him to choose the
Islamic religion was, after observing that the waters of the Atlantic Ocean
and the Mediterranean did not mix with each other, his seeing that the same
phenomenon was written in the Qur'an al-karim which had been revealed fourteen
hundred years before.]
Captain Cousteau told of the event that had caused him to become a Muslim, as
follows:
"In 1962 German scientists said that the waters of the Red Sea and the Indian
Ocean did not mix with each other in the Strait of Bab-ul-Mandab where the
Aden Bay and the Red Sea join. So we began to examine whether the waters of
the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean mixed with each other. First we
analyzed the water in the Mediterranean to find out its natural salinity and
density, and the life it contained. We repeated the same procedure in the
Atlantic Ocean. The two masses of water had been meeting each other in the
Gibraltar for thousands of years. Accordingly, the two masses of water must
have been mixing with each other and they must have been sharing identical,
or, at least, similar properties in salinity and density. On the contrary,
even at places where the two seas were closest to each other, each mass of
water preserved its properties. In other words, at the point where the two
seas met, a curtain of water prevented the waters belonging to the two seas
from mixing. When I told Professor Maurice Bucaille about this phenomenon, he
said that it was no surprise and that it was written clearly in Islam's Holy
Book, the Qur'an al-karim. Indeed, this fact was defined in a plain language
in the Qur'an al-karim. When I knew this, I believed in the fact that the
Qur'an al-karim was the 'Word of Allah'. I chose Islam, the true religion. The
spiritual potency inherent in the Islamic religion gave me the strength to
endure the pain I had been suffering for the loss of my son."
12 - MUHAMMAD AMIN HOBOHN (German)
(Muhammad Amin Hobohn is both a diplomat and a missionary. He is a man of
knowledge and religion with a social career:)
Why are Europeans abandoning their religion and becoming Muslims? It has
various reasons. Among them is the 'Haqq=Truth; Right; Reality'. The
principles that Islam is based on are so logical, so true and honest that it
is out of the question for a wise and educated person seeking for truth and
reality in a religion not to accept them. For instance, the Islamic religion
professes the existence of one god. It appeals to the human common sense, and
never descends to inculcating people with superstitions. The Islamic religion
states that people all over the world, regardless of their races, are the born
slaves of Allahu ta'ala, equal and similar. We German people essentially
believe in the fact that Allahu ta'ala is a great creator who gives us power
and energy and who guides our souls to perfection. The concept of Allah
infuses security and peace into us. Yet the Christian religion falls short of
giving us this sense of peace. It is the Islamic religion, alone, that teaches
us the greatness of Allahu ta'ala and which, at the same time, guides us in
regard to where the human soul will go after death. The Islamic religion
guides us not only in the world, but also in the Hereafter. It teaches in a
plain and logical manner what should be done in the world in preparation for a
comfortable life in the Hereafter. An awareness of the fact that Allahu ta'ala
will subject human beings to an equitable interrogation in the Hereafter on
what they have done in the world, will urge them that they should abide by
justice and integrity in the world. For this reason, true Muslims never
attempt to do something before thinking well and being firmly convinced that
what they are going to do is really something useful. Thereby this great
religion establishes control over human beings in such a degree as could be
managed by no worldly police organization, and permanently keeps them on the
right way.
Another aspect that makes Islam an attractive choice in the eyes of Europeans
is its norms of worship. The namaz (the five daily ritual prayers) teaches
punctuality to people, and fasting drills a strong sense of will power into
them. What other factor could be as essential to success in life as
punctuality and determination? Great men owe their accomplishments only to
these two determinants. Now I come to a most beautiful aspect of the Islamic
religion: While educating people in the ethical and humanistic areas in the
most logical styles, the Islamic religion never compels them beyond their
capacities. On the contrary, it offers them many opportunities to lead a
prosperous and comfortable life. Allahu ta'ala wishes people to live in
comfort and happiness. To this end, He commands people not to commit sins.
Muslims believe that they are perpetually in the presence of Allahu ta'ala.
They avoid committing sins. Neither in the other religions nor in any of the
systems established in Europe is there another arrangement as lovely or as
useful as this.
I have been to many places and districts of the world on diplomatic and
religious missions. I have studied other religions and social systems
minutely. I have seen neither a religion nor a social system as faultless or
as immaculate as Islam. At first sight, communism may seem to be a correct
system of thoughts. Likewise, the western-born democracy, which has been
looked on as the most capacious administration system in worldly matters, and
Nazism may contain some factual aspects. And then none of these aspects is
complete in itself. All of them have a number of deficiencies. The one and
only perfect and faultless system is Islam. It is for this reason that many a
person with common sense and perfect reasoning accepts Islam without any
hesitation. And so did I. Islam is a practical religion, not a theoretical
one. Islam means submission to Allahu ta'ala, who is compassionate and
forgiving and who always shows the right way. What on earth could be more
beautiful?
13 - Dr. HAMID MARCUS (German)
(Dr. Marcus is a renowned man of ideas, a writer, and the founder of a
magazine, i.e. the magazine entitled Berliner Moslemische Revue.)
I was only a child when I took an interest in Islam and began to collect
information about Islam. In the library of my hometown I came across an old
translation of Qur'an al-karim that had been printed in 1164 [1750 C.E.].
According to a narrative, Goethe had read the same translation of the Qur'an
al-karim during his research on the Islamic religion and had expressed his
admiration for the book. As I read the Qur'an al-karim, I was deeply impressed
by its exceedingly logical and fascinating style of expression that penetrated
deep into the soul. How genuine and useful the principles formulated by Islam
were, was manifest in the fact that nations honoured with Islam had been
attaining the zenith of civilization in a very short time.
When I left my hometown and went to Berlin, I made friends with all the
Muslims living there, joined them and attended with rapt attention the
interesting and instructive conferences held by the members of the Islamic
Mission. The more friendly I became with the members of the Islamic Mission,
the more closely was I able to examine Islam. After a while I reached the
conclusion that Islam was the true religion I had been aspiring after,
believed in it, and accepted Islam.
According to Islam, Allah is One, and belief in One Creator is Islam's most
sacred credal tenet. The Islamic religion does not contain any irrational or
unbelievable tenet. There is not a creator besides Allahu ta'ala. In Islam you
cannot find a single dot dIssagreeable with or contradictory to modern
sciences. All its commandments and inculcations are entirely logical and
useful. In Islam, belief and logic do not contradict each other, which is the
common blemish of other religions. Consequently, for a person like me who has
dedicated all his life-time to natural sciences, what could be more natural
than preferring Islam, which is in full conformity with the scientific results
that he obtained from his lucubrations, to the other religions that are quite
the other way round?
Another reason I feel compelled to add is that the other religions are awash
in a score of grotesque and ridiculous ideas that suggest only a far-fetched
mood of spirituality. They have nothing to do with real life situations.
Islam, on the other hand, is a practical religion which guides man also in his
trek of life. Commandments of the Islamic religion lead a person to the right
way not only in the Hereafter, but also in the world, and, in the meanwhile,
they never restrict his freedom.
As a Muslim I have been studying my religion for many years. In every new
situation I see even more clearly how perfect a religion it is, and this in
its turn gives me all the more mental peace.
How exquisite a passageway it is that Islam lays between the individual and
the social life! Islam arranges these two lives. Islam is a religion of
perfect justice and its sole aim is to guide people to the good end. Islam
embodies all the good aspects of all the world's social trends.
14 - Mrs. AMINA MOSLER (German)
Why did I become a Muslim?
My son was asking me various questions, and I was unable to answer them. When
he asked me, for instance, "Mummy, why are there three gods?" I was at a loss
as to what to say because I myself did not believe in trinity, and yet I could
not find another answer to convince him. Eventually, it was sometime during
the year 1346 [C.E. 1928], and my son had reached a maturer age, when, one
day, my son came to me, his eyes welling up with tears. He begged, "Mummy, I
have been studying Islam. They believe in one creator. Their religion is the
truest one. So I have decided to become a Muslim. Join me!" Upon his request,
I, too, began to study the Islamic religion. I went to the Berlin mosque. The
imam of the mosque gave me a cordial welcome and told me the essentials of
Islam. As he spoke, I saw how right and logical his words were. Like my son,
I, too, began to believe in the fact that Islam was the truest religion. First
of all, Islam rejected trinity, which I had never been able to understand or
accept since my youth. After examining Islam thoroughly, I realized the
absurdity of such things as redemption, looking on the pope as an innocent
being never prone to sin, baptism and many other rites of the same sort, I
rejected all these falsities and embraced Islam.
All my ancestors were fanatical Catholics. I was raised in a Catholic
monastery. I grew up totally under Christian education. Yet this sheer
religious education that I had received helped me to choose the true religion
that would guide me to Allahu ta'ala. For, all the good things that I had been
taught throughout my education I found not in Christianity, but in Islam. I am
so lucky to have accepted Islam.
Today I am a grandmother. I am so happy because my grandchild has been born as
a Muslim. I know that Allahu ta'ala will always guide those people whom He has
brought to the right way.
15 - Hajji LORD AL-FARUQ HEADLEY (G.B.)
(Lord Headley possessed the title of excellency. Sir George Allanson was born
in 1855 and descended from the oldest British family. He occupied very
important political positions in Britain, and at the same time made fame as an
editor. He graduated from Cambridge University. In 1877 he won the title of
Lord. He served as a lieutenant colonel in the British army. He was an
engineer by vocation, but a powerful writer by avocation. Among his
publications, his work entitled 'A European's Eyes Are Being Opened And He Is
Becoming A Muslim'. Lord Headley became a Muslim in 1913, performed Hajj (the
Islamic pilgrimage), and adopted the name Shaikh Rahmatullah Faruq. In 1928 he
visited India.)
Why did I become a Muslim? Perhaps, some of my friends and acquaintances are
of the opinion that I became a Muslim as a result of persuasion on the part of
my friends and acquaintances. But it is not the fact. My accepting Islam was
the result of long-time research and contemplation. It was after a meticulous
examination and forming an opinion about Islam that I made contact with
Muslims and, seeing that their belief in their own religion was in conformity
with mine, I realized and became happy that I had entered into a good
religion.
The Qur'an al-karim commands that a person should accept Islam after his
heart's full confirmation, rejects a conversion under coercion. Likewise, Issa
a.s. said to his Apostles, "And whosoever shall not receive you, nor hear you,
when ye depart thence, shake off the dust under your feet for a testimony
against them. ..." (Mark: 6-11)
During my former life-time, I had seen many bigoted Protestants. They would go
to Catholic student hostels and try to force the Catholic students. These
unwanted efforts and coercive attempts would cause various fights, offenses
and controversies and would sow discord among people. The same meaningless
methods Christian missionaries used with Muslims. They ran all sorts of risks
for the purpose of Christianizing Muslims. They resorted to all sorts of
stratagems to trap Muslims.
They promised them money, work, and posts. Those poor ignoramuses did not know
that Islam was the religion where the commandments of Issa a.s. found the best
prac
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