From a broken family and society, a
woman finds support from some Muslim friends.
By Angel
Every Muslim has
a story about their journey to Islam. Each one is
interesting and curious to me. God truly guides who
he wants and only who he wants. I feel so blessed to
have been one of the chosen. Here is my story.
I always
believed in one God. My entire life during hardship,
I asked God for help even as a child. I remember
crying on my knees in the kitchen, screaming and
crying all around me. I was praying for God to make
it stop. Religion on the other hand never did make
sense. The older I got, the less it really made sense
to me. People thinking they were the negotiator
between you and God.
I felt the same
about Jesus, [may the mercy and blessings of God be
upon him]. How does it work that this man would save
us all from our sins? Why do we have the right to sin
just because of him? I refused the bible in all of
its versions, believing something translated and
rewritten so many times could not to be the real words
of God. Around the age of fifteen I had given up on
the idea of finding God.
Growing up, my
family was the average American family. Everyone I
knew had similar problems growing up. My dad was a
hardworking blue collar alcoholic. As time progressed
his condition worsened, and so did his perversion.
Sexual abuse, physical abuse, and fear made an imprint
on my childhood that would reflect the rest of my
life. He passed away when I was in the sixth grade.
My parents had divorced by then. I was the youngest
of eight children. My mother would go to work to
support us, and I was home alone a lot.
Here I was, one
of those kids who pull from society, who scare people
when they walk into a room. I began wearing black
clothing and the dark makeup. I listened to the
gothic music and fantasized about death. Death seemed
to be less of fear and more of solution to this
growing problem. I felt alone all time, even around
friends. I tried to fill the gap with cigarettes,
then alcohol, sex, drugs and then anything that would
take me from my own thoughts. I tried to kill myself
at least fifteen times. No matter what I tried this
pain inside of me never seemed to subside.
I was in college
when I became pregnant with my son, I feared for my
son's health and could not dream of giving him away.
I worked endlessly to provide for my son. Squeezing
all the pain and anger into my heart, I changed my
life some. By this time, I trusted no one. Three
years later, I started to date again. I got engaged.
I truly wanted to have the something more. As with
all of my past experiences, my world came crashing
down. I was 25 and pregnant with my daughter and
ended the relationship with my fiancé after he
repeatedly cheated and physically hurt me. I had no
idea what was next.
During this time
I was working for a Pakistani guy who was Muslim. I
never watched the news or even cared really what was
going on. Being Muslim to me was no different than
any other religion. As time moved on I became friends
with several Muslim men. I began to notice something
dramatically different. They had these unquestionable
morals. A devotion to God in a way that required them
to pray five times a day. Let alone the fact that
they did not drink or do drugs. For my generation
this was old school morals, maybe your grandparents
might have followed.
When my daughter
was born, you can't imagine my surprise when one of
these guys came in and brought gifts. I was shocked
stupid he held her and spoke to her. I had never seen
men behave this way over a baby. The kindness only
increased with time over the next four months. I
can't express the love that was shown to us. Slowly
my interest in their religion grew. I was curious as
to what kind of religion could instill these kinds of
values into people.
I was sharing a
home with seven people when one night I decided to
borrow my roommate's computer. I was too afraid to
offend my friends by asking them questions, so I
turned to the internet. The first site I opened was
http://www.islam-brief-guide.org. I was dumb
founded. It was if a black cloth had been lifted from
my body, and I swear to you that I had never felt so
close to God. Within twenty-four hours, I took my
Shahadah.
To this day the
majority of my time is spent on research. For the
first time in my life something had stopped the anger,
and the pain. I truly felt the love and fear of God.
God had replaced the pain inside of me with his light,
and faith in him. Since my conversion, God has truly
blessed me. God gave me the strength to quite
smoking, drinking and have not used drugs in almost
two years. I am married to a wonderful Muslim man.
He has taken my children and made them ours. I have
something that I always wanted - a family, [all praise
is due to God].