Charles Le Gai Eaton, Former British Diplomat (part 1 to 6)
EsinIslam
Heralding New Muslims:
A Personal Account
Of Revert Muslim:
The search for the truth of a
philosopher and writer, faced with a constant internal
struggle of harmonizing belief and action. Part 1: A
secular childhood and a mention of Arabia.
By Gai Eaton
Charles Le
Gai Eaton, Former British Diplomat (part 1 of 6)
I was born in
Switzerland of British parents, a child of war. At
the time of my birth, the final peace treaty ending
the first world war, the treaty with Turkey, was being
signed close by in Lausanne. The greatest tempest
which had changed the face of the world had
temporarily exhausted itself, but its effects were
everywhere apparent. Old certainties and the morality
based upon them had been dealt a mortal blow. But my
family background was stained with the blood of
conflict. My father already 67 when I was born, had
been born during the wars against Napoleon Bonaparte.
Both had been soldiers....
Even so, I might
at least have had a homeland. I had none. Although
born in Switzerland, I was not Swiss. My mother had
grown up in France and loved the French above all
others, but I was not French. Was I English? I never
felt so. My mother never tired of reminding me that
the English were cold, stupid, and sexless without
intellect and without culture. I did not want to be
like them. So where-if anywhere-did I belong? It
seems to me in retrospect, that this strange childhood
was a good preparation for adherence to Islam.
Wherever he may have been born and whatever his race,
the Muslim's homeland is the Dar-ul-Islam, the House
of Islam. His passport, here and in the Hereafter, is
the simple confession of Faith, La ilaha ill-Allah.
He does not expect - or should not expect - security
or stability in this world and must always keep in
mind the fact that death may take him tomorrow. He
has no firm roots here in this fragile earth. His
roots are above in that which alone endures.
But what of
Christianity? If my father had any religious
convictions he never expressed them, although - on his
death bed, approaching 90 - he asked: ‘Is there a
happy place?' My upbringing was left entirely to my
mother. By temperament, she was not, I think,
irreligious, but she had grown up within a religious
framework, and she was hostile to what is commonly
called organized religion. Of one thing she was
certain; her son must be left free to think for
himself and never be forced to accept second-hand
opinions. She was determined to protect me from
having religion ‘crammed down my throat'. She warned
a succession of nursemaids who came and went in the
house and accompanied us to France during the holidays
that, if they ever mentioned religion to me, they
would at once be dismissed. When I was five or six,
however, her orders flouted by a young woman whose
ambition it was to become a missionary in Arabia,
saving the souls of those benighted people who were -
she told me - lost in a pagan creed called ‘moslemism'.
This was the first I had heard of Arabia, and she drew
me a map of that mysterious land.
One day she took
me for a walk past Wandsworth Prison (we were living
in Wandsworth Common at the time). I must have
misbehaved some way, for she gripped me roughly by the
arm, pointed to the prison gates and said: ‘There's a
red haired man in the sky who will shut you in there
if you're naughty!' This was the first I had heard of
‘God', and I did not like what I heard. For some
reason I was afraid of men with red hair (as she must
have known), and this particular one living above the
clouds and dedicated to punishing naughty boys sounded
very frightening. I asked my mother about him as soon
as we got home. I do not remember what she said to
comfort me, but the girl was promptly dismissed.
Eventually, much
later than most children, I was sent to school or
rather to a series of schools in England and in
Switzerland before arriving, aged 14, at
Charterhouse. Surely, with services in the school
chapel and classes in ‘Scripture', Christianity should
have made some impact upon me? It made no impact at
all, either upon me or upon my school friends. This
does not seem to me surprising. Religion cannot
survive, whole and effective when it is confined to
one single compartment of life and education.
Religion is either all or it is nothing; either it
dwarfs all profane studies or it is dwarfed by them.
Once or twice a week we were taught about the Bible
just as we were instructed in other subjects in other
classes. Religion, it was assumed had nothing to do
with the more important studies which formed the
backbone of our education. God did not interfere in
historical events, He did not determine the phenomena
we studied in science classes, He played no part in
current events, and the world, governed entirely by
chance, and by material forces, was to be understood
without reference to anything that might -or might not
-exist beyond its horizons. God was surplus to
requirements....
And yet I needed
to know the meaning of my own existence. Only those
who, at some time in their lives, have been possessed
by such a need can guess at its intensity, comparable
to that of physical hunger or sexual desire. I did
not see how I could put one foot in front of the other
unless I understood where I was going and why. I
could do nothing unless I understood what part my
action played in the scheme of things. All I knew I
knew was that I knew nothing - nothing, that is to
say, of the slightest importance - and I was paralyzed
by my ignorance as though immobilized in a dense fog.
Charles Le
Gai Eaton, Former British Diplomat (part 2 of 6)
Where should I
seek for knowledge? By the time I was 15, I had
discovered that there was something called
‘philosophy' and that the word meant ‘love of
wisdom'. Wisdom was what I sought, so the
satisfaction of my need must lie hidden in these heavy
books written by wise men. With a feeling of intense
excitement, like an explorer already in sight of the
undiscovered land, I ploughed through Descartes, Kant,
Hume, Spinoza, Schopenhauer and Bertrand Russell, or
else read works which explained their teachings. It
was not long before I realized that something was
wrong. I might as well have been eating sand as
seeking nourishment from this quarter. These men knew
nothing. They were only speculating, spinning ideas
out of their own poor heads, and anyone can speculate
(including a school boy). How could a 15 or
16-year-old have had the impudence to dismiss the
whole of Western secular philosophy as worthless? One
does not have to be mature to distinguish between what
the Quran calls dhann (‘opinion') and true Knowledge.
At the same time my mother's constant insistence that
I should take no notice of what others thought or said
obliged me to trust my own judgment. Western culture
treated these ‘philosophers' as great men, and
students in universities studied their works with
respect. But what was that to me?
Some time later,
when I was in the sixth-form, a master who took a
particular interest in me made a strange remark which
I did not at understand. ‘You are', he said, ‘the
only truly universal skeptic I have known'. He was
not referring specifically to religion. He meant that
I seemed to doubt everything that was taken for
granted by everyone else. I wanted to know why it
should be assumed that our rational powers, so well
adapted to finding food, shelter and a mate, had an
application beyond the mundane realm. I was puzzled
by the notion that the commandment ‘Thou shalt not
kill' was supposed to be binding on those who were
neither Jews nor Christians, and I was no less baffled
as to why in a world full of beautiful women, the rule
of monogamy should be thought to have a universal
application. I even doubted my own existence. Long
afterwards I came across the story of the Chinese
sage, Chuangtzu, who, having dreamed one night that he
was a butterfly, awoke to question whether he was in
fact the man Chuangtzu, who had dreamed that he was a
butterfly, or a butterfly dreaming that it was
Chuangtzu. I understood his dilemma.
Yet, when my
teacher made this remark, I had already discovered a
key to what might be a more certain knowledge. By
chance - although there is no such thing as ‘chance' –
I had come across a book called ‘The Primordial Ocean'
by a certain Professor Perry, an Egyptologist. The
professor had a fixed idea that the ancient Egyptians
had traveled to part of the world in their papyrus
boats spreading their religion, mythology, far and
wide. To prove his case, he had spent many years
researching ancient mythologies, and also the myths
and symbols of ‘primitive' peoples in our own time.
What he revealed was an astonishing unanimity of
belief, however different the images in which that
belief was expressed. He had not proved his theory
about the papyrus boats; he had, I thought, proved
something quite different. It seemed that, behind the
tapestry of forms and images, there were certain
universal truths regarding the nature of reality, the
creation of the world and of mankind, and the meaning
of the human experience; truths which were as much a
part as our blood and our bones.
One of the
principal causes of unbelief in the modern world is
the plurality of religions which appear mutually
contradictory. So long as the Europeans were
convinced of their own racial superiority, they had no
reason to doubt that Christianity was the only true
Faith. The notion that they were the crown of the
‘evolutionary process' made it easy to assume that all
other religions were no more than naive attempts to
answer perennial questions. It was when this racial
self-confidence declined that doubts crept in. How
was it possible for a good God to allow the majority
of human beings to live and die in the service of
false religions? Was it any longer possible for the
Christian to believe that he alone was saved? Others
made the same claim - Muslims, for example - so how
could anyone be sure who was right and who was wrong?
For many people, including myself until I came to
Perry's book, the obvious conclusion was that, since
everyone could not be right, everyone must be wrong.
Religion was an illusion, the product of wishful
thinking. Others might have found it possible to
substitute ‘scientific truth' for religious ‘myths'.
I could not, since science was founded upon
assumptions regarding the infallibility of reason and
the reality of sense-experience which could never be
proved.
When I read
Perry's book I knew nothing of the Quran. That came
much later, and what little I had heard of Islam was
distorted by prejudices accumulated during a thousand
years of confrontation. And yet, had I but known it,
I had already taken a step in the direction of
Christianity's great rival. The Quran assures us that
no people on earth was ever left without divine
guidance and a doctrine of truth, conveyed through a
messenger of God who always spoke to the people in
their own ‘language', therefore in terms of their
particular circumstances and according to their
needs. The fact that such messages become distorted
in the course of time goes without saying, and no one
should be surprised if truth is distorted as it passes
from generation to generation, but it would be
astonishing if no vestiges remained after the passage
of the centuries. It now seems to me entirely in
accordance with Islam to believe that these vestiges,
clothed in myth and symbol (the ‘language' of the
people of earlier times), are directly descended from
revealed Truth and confirm the final Message.
Charles Le
Gai Eaton, Former British Diplomat (part 3 of 6)
From
Charterhouse I went on to Cambridge, where I neglected
my official studies, which seemed trivial and boring,
in favor of the only study that mattered. The year
was 1939. War had broken out just before I had gone
up to the University and, in two years time, I would
be in the army. It seemed likely, after all, that the
Germans would succeed in killing me as I had always
thought they would. I had only a little time in which
to find answers to the questions which still obsessed
me, but this did not draw me to any organized
religion. Like most of my friends, I was contemptuous
of the Churches and of all who paid lip-service to a
God they did not know; but I was soon obliged to
moderate this hostility. I remember the scene clearly
after more than half-a-century. A few of us lingered
on, drinking coffee, after the evening meal in the
Hall of King's College. The conversation turned to
religion. At the head of the table sat an
undergraduate who was universally admired for his
brilliance, his wit and his sophistication. Hoping to
impress him and taking advantage of a brief silence, I
said: ‘No intelligent person nowadays believes in the
God of religion!' He looked at me rather sadly before
answering: ‘On the contrary, nowadays intelligent
people are the only ones who do believe in God,' I
would willingly have sunk out of sight under the
table.
I had, however,
a wise friend, a man forty years my senior, whom I
found totally convincing. This was the writer L. H.
Myers, described at that time as ‘the only
philosophical novelist England has produced'. Not
only did his major work, ‘The Root and the Flower',
answer many of these questions that gnawed at me, but
they conveyed a marvelous sense of serenity united
with compassion. It seemed to me that serenity was
the greatest treasure that one could possess in this
life and that compassion was the greatest virtue.
Here, surely, was a man whom no tempest shake and who
surveyed the turmoil of human existence with the eye
of wisdom. I wrote to him, and he replied promptly.
For the next three years we wrote to each other at
least twice every month. I poured my heart out to
him, while he, convinced that he had at last found in
this young admirer someone who truly understood him,
replied in the same vein. Eventually we met, and this
cemented our friendship.
Yet everything
was not as it seemed. I began to detect in his
letters a note of inner torment, sadness and
disillusionment. When 1 asked him if he put all his
serenity into his books, leaving nothing for himself,
he replied: ‘I think your comment was shrewd and
probably true'. He had given his whole life to the
pursuit of pleasure and of ‘experiences' (both sublime
and sordid, so he said). Few women, in high society
or low, had been able to resist his astonishing
combination of wealth, charm and good look, He, for
his part, had no reason to resist their seductions.
Fascinated by spirituality and mysticism, he adhered
to no religion and obeyed no conventional moral law.
Now he felt that he was growing old, and he could not
face the prospect. He had tried to change himself and
even repent his past, but it was too late. Little
more than three years after our correspondence had
begun, he committed suicide.
My affection for
him endured and, in due course, I named my eldest son
after him, but Leo Myers' death taught me more than I
could ever learned from his books, although it
required some years for me to understand its full
significance. His wisdom had been only in his head.
It had never penetrated his human substance. A man
might spend a life reading spiritual books and
studying the writings of the great mystics. He might
feel that he had penetrated the secrets of the heavens
and the earth, but unless this knowledge was
incorporated into his very nature and transformed him,
it was sterile. I began to suspect that a simple man
of faith, praying to God with little understanding but
with a full heart, might be worth more than the most
learned student of the spiritual sciences.
Myers had been
profoundly influenced by a study of Hindu Vedanta, the
metaphysical doctrine at the core of Hinduism. My
mother's interest Raja Yoga had already pointed me in
this direction. Vedanta now became my principal
interest and, ultimately, the path that led me to
Islam. This would seem shocking to most Muslims and
astonishing to anyone who is aware that the very basis
of Islam is an uncompromising condemnation of
idolatry, and yet my case is by no means unique.
Whatever may be the beliefs of the Hindu masses,
Vedanta is a doctrine of pure unity, of the unique
Reality, and therefore of what, in Islam, is called
Tawheed. Muslims more than others, should have little
difficulty in understanding that a doctrine of Unity
underlies all the religions which have nourished
mankind since the beginning, whatever idolatrous
illusions may have overlaid ‘the jewel in the lotus'
just as, in the individual, personal idolatry overlays
the heart's core. How could it be otherwise, since
Tawheed is Truth and, in the words of a great
Christian mystic, ‘Truth is native to man'?
All too soon my
time at Cambridge was ended and I was sent to The
Royal Military College, Sandhurst, emerging after five
months as a young officer supposedly ready to kill or
be killed. To learn more about the arts of war I was
then dispatched on what was called ‘attachment' to a
regiment in the north of Scotland. Here I was left to
my own devices and occupied my time either reading or
walking on the granite cliffs above the raging
northern sea. This was a stormy place, but I felt at
peace as I had never done before. The more I read of
Vedanta and also of the ancient Chinese doctrine of
Taoism, the more certain I was that I at last had some
understanding of the nature of things and had
glimpsed, if only in thought and imagination, the
ultimate Reality beside which all else was little more
than a dream. As yet I was not prepared to call this
Reality ‘God', let alone Allah.
Charles Le
Gai Eaton, Former British Diplomat (part 4 of 6)
When I left the
army I began to write, needing to express my thoughts
as a way of putting them in order. I wrote about
Vedanta, Taoism and Zen Buddhism, but also about
certain Western writers (including Leo Myers) who had
been influenced by these doctrines. Through a chance
meeting with the poet T. S. Eliot, who was at that
time head of a publishing firm, these essays were
published under the title ‘The Richest Vein', a
quotation taken from Thoreau: ‘My instinct tells me
that my head is an organ for burrowing, as some
creatures use their snouts or forepaws, and with it I
would burrow my way through these hills. I think that
the richest vein is somewhere hereabout…' But by now I
had a new guide through the hills. I had discovered
Rene Guenon, a Frenchman who had lived the greater
part of his life in Cairo as the Sheikh Abdul Wahed.
Guenon
undermined and then; with uncompromising intellectual
rigor, demolished all the assumptions taken for
granted by modern man, that is to say Western or
westernized man. Many others had been critical of the
direction taken by European civilization since the
so-called ‘Renaissance', but none had dared to be as
radical as he was or to re-assert with such force the
principles and values which Western culture had
consigned to the rubbish tip of history. His theme
was the ‘primordial tradition' or Sofia perennis,
expressed-so he maintained-both in ancient mythologies
and in the metaphysical doctrine at the root of the
great religions. The language of this Tradition was
the language of symbolism, and he had no equal in his
interpretation of this symbolism. Moreover he turned
the idea of human progress upside down, replacing it
with the belief almost universal before the modern
age, that humanity declines in spiritual excellence
with the passage of time and that we are now in the
Dark Age which precedes the End, an age in which all
the possibilities rejected by earlier cultures have
been spewed out into the world, quantity replaces
quality and decadence approaches its final limit. No
one who read him and understood him could ever be
quite the same again.
Like others
whose outlook had been transformed by reading Guenon,
I was now a stranger in the world of the twentieth
century. He had been led by the logic of his
convictions to accept Islam, the final Revelation and,
as it were, the summing-up of all that came before. I
was not yet ready for this, but I soon learned to
conceal my opinions or at least to veil them. No one
can live happily in constant disagreement with his
fellow men and women, nor can he engage in argument
with them since he does not share their basic,
unspoken assumptions. Argument and discussion
pre-supposes some common ground shared by those
involved. When no common ground exists, confusion and
misunderstanding are unavoidable, if not anger. The
beliefs which are the very basis of contemporary
culture are held no less passionately than
unquestioning religious faith, as was illustrated
during the conflict over Salman Rushdie's novel, ‘The
Satanic Verses'.
Occasionally I
forgot my resolve not to become involved in fruitless
argument. Some years ago I was a guest at a
diplomatic dinner party in Trinidad. The young woman
beside me was talking with a Christian Minister, an
Englishman, seated opposite. I was only half
attending to their conversation when I heard her say
that she was not sure she believed in human progress.
The Minister answered her so rudely and with such
contempt that I could not resist the temptation to
say: ‘She's quite right - there's no such thing as
progress!' He turned on me, his face contorted with
fury, and said: ‘If I thought that I would commit
suicide this very night!' Since suicide is as great a
sin for Christians as it is for Muslims, I understood
for the first time the extent to which faith in
progress, in a ‘better future' and, by implication, in
the possibility of a paradise on earth has replaced
faith in God and in the hereafter. In the writings of
the renegade priest Teilhard de Chardin, Christianity
itself was reduced to a religion of progress. Deprive
the modern Westerner of this faith and he is lost in a
wilderness without signposts.
By the time ‘The
Richest Vein' was published, I had left England for
Jamaica where I had a school friend who would, I knew,
find me work of some kind. I had been described on
the book's cover as ‘a mature thinker'. The adjective
‘mature' was singularly inappropriate: as a man, as a
personality, I had barely emerged from adolescence,
and Jamaica was an ideal place to work out adolescent
fantasies. Only those with some experience of West
Indian life in the immediate post-war years could
understand the delights and temptations which it
offered to those seeking ‘experience' and sexual
adventure. Like Myers, I had no moral print such as
might have restrained me. I was embarrassed when I
began to receive letters from people who had read my
book and imagined that I was an old man –‘with a long
white beard', as one of them wrote - full of wisdom
and compassion. I wished I could disillusion them as
quickly as possible and be rid of the responsibility
they were putting upon me. One day a Catholic priest
arrived in the Island to stay with friends; he had, he
told them, just been reading a ‘fascinating book' by
someone called Gai Eaton. He was astonished to hear
that the author was actually in Jamaica and asked how
he could meet me. His friends took him to a party at
which they were told I might be found. He was
introduced and, seeing before him such a foolish young
man, gave me a long hard look. Then he shook his head
in amazement and said quietly: ‘You couldn't have
written that book!'
Charles Le
Gai Eaton, Former British Diplomat (part 5 of 6)
He was right,
and I faced, as I had done in Leo Myers' case and have
done on many occasions since then, the extraordinary
contradictions in human nature and, above all, the
gulf that often separates the writer setting down his
ideas on paper from the same man in his personal
life. Whereas the aim in Islam is to achieve a
perfect balance between different elements in the
personality so that they work harmoniously together,
point in the same direction and follow the same
straight path, it is common enough in the West to find
people who are completely unbalanced, having developed
one side of themselves at the expense of all the
others. I have sometimes wondered whether writing or
speaking about wisdom may not be a substitute for
achieving it. This is not exactly a case of hypocrisy
(although the saying, ‘Physician, heal thyself!'
applies) since such people are entirely sincere in
what they write or say, indeed this may express what
is best in them; but they cannot live up to it.
After
two-and-a-half years I returned to England for family
reasons. Among those who had written to me after
reading my book were two men deeply versed in Guenon's
writings who had followed him into Islam... I met
them. They told me that I might find what I was
obviously seeking, not in India or China but closer to
home and within the Abrahamic tradition... They asked
when I intended to start practicing what I preached
and seek a ‘spiritual path'. It was time, they
suggested gently but firmly, for me to think about
incorporating into my own life what I already knew
theoretically. I answered politely but evasively,
having no intention of following their advice until I
was much older and had exhausted the possibilities of
worldly adventure. I did however begin to read about
Islam with growing interest.
This interest
aroused the disapproval of my closest friend who had
been working in the Middle East and had developed a
strong prejudice against Islam. The notion that this
harsh religion had a spiritual dimension seemed to him
absurd. It was, he assured me, nothing more than
outward formalism, blind obedience to irrational
prohibitions, repetitive prayers, narrow bigotry and
hypocrisy. He told me stories of Muslim practices
which, he thought, would convince me. I remember in
particular the case he mentioned of a young woman
dying painfully in hospital who had summoned the
strength to get to her feet and move her iron bedstead
so that she could die facing Mecca. My friend was
sickened by the thought that she had added to her own
suffering for the sake of a ‘stupid superstition'. To
me, on the contrary, this seemed a wonderful story. I
marveled at this young woman's faith, distant as it
was from any state of mind that I could imagine.
Meanwhile, I
could not find work and was living in poverty. I
applied for almost every job that I saw advertised,
including the post of Assistant Lecturer in English
Literature at Cairo University. This was foolish or
so I thought. I had taken my degree at Cambridge in
History and knew nothing of literature before the
nineteenth century. How could they consider employing
someone so unqualified? But they did consider it and
then employed me. In October of 1950, at the age of
29, I set off for Cairo the very moment when my
interest in Islam was taking root.
Among my
colleagues was an English Muslim, Martin Lings, who
made his home in Egypt. He was a friend of Guenon, a
friend also of the two men with whom I had talked in
London, and he was unlike any I had ever met before.
He was the living embodiment of what, until then, had
been no more than theories in my mind, and I knew that
I had finally met someone who was all of a piece,
whole and consistent. He lived in a traditional home
just outside the city and to visit him and his wife,
as I did almost every week, was to step out of the
noisy bustle of modern Cairo and enter a timeless
refuge in which the inward and the outward were
undivided and in which the supposed realities of the
world to which I was accustomed had but a shadowy
existence.
Charles Le
Gai Eaton, Former British Diplomat (part 6 of 6)
I needed a
refuge. I had fallen in love with Jamaica, if it is
possible to fall in love with a place, and I hated
Egypt simply because it was not Jamaica. Where were
my Blue Mountains, my tropical sea, my beautiful West
Indian girls? How could I ever have left the only
place that had ever felt like home to me? But that was
not all, far from it; I had left not only a place also
a person, a young woman without whom life now seemed
empty and hardly worth living. I learned then what
the word ‘obsession' really means; a painful lesson
but a useful one for those who try to understand
themselves and others. Nothing in my previous life
had any value; the reality was my need for the one
person who occupied my thoughts morning to night and
stepped into my dreams. When, in the course of my
duties, I read love poetry aloud to my students, tears
ran down my cheeks and they told each other: ‘Here is
an Englishman with a heart. We thought all Englishmen
were cold as ice!'
These students,
particularly a small senior group of five or six, were
also a refuge. I might hate Egypt for being 8,000
miles from where I wanted to be, but I loved these
young Egyptians. I rejoiced in their warmth, openness
and the trust they placed in me to teach them what
they needed to know; and soon I began to love their
faith, for these young people were good Muslims. I
had no more doubts. If I ever found it possible to
commit myself to a religion - to imprison myself in a
religion - this could only be Islam. But not yet! I
thought of St. Augustine's prayer: ‘Lord, make me
chaste, but not yet', knowing that throughout the ages
other young men, thinking that they had an ocean of
time before them, had prayed for chastity or piety or
a better way of life, but with the same reservation;
and many had been taken by death in this same state.
All things being
equal, I might never have overcome my hesitations.
Intending eventually to accept Islam, I might have
postponed the decisive act year after year and still
been saying ‘Not yet!' when age crept up me. But all
things were not equal. The longing for Jamaica and
for that person grew instead of diminishing as the
months passed, as though feeding upon itself. I awoke
one morning to the realization that only lack of money
prevented me from returning to the Island. I made
enquiries and found that, if I traveled on the deck of
a steamer, I could make the journey for £70. I was
sure I could save this sum by the end of the
university term, and my life was at once transformed.
Knowing that escape was close, I could even begin to
enjoy Cairo. But one question now demanded a firm
answer, and the answer could no longer be postponed.
The opportunity to enter Islam might never come
again. Before me was an open door. I thought that,
if I did not walk through it, that door might close
forever. Yet I knew what kind of life I would be
living in Jamaica and doubted whether I would have the
strength of character to live as a Muslim in that
environment.
I made a
decision that must, with good reason, seem shocking to
most people, and not only to my fellow Muslims. I
decided-as I put it to myself -to ‘sow a seed' in my
heart, to accept Islam at once in the hope that the
seed would one day germinate and grow into a healthy
plant. I will offer no excuses for this, and I would
blame no one for accusing me of insincerity and a
false intention. But it is possible that they may be
underestimating God's readiness to forgive human
weakness and His power to bring forth plant and fruit
from a seed sown in barren ground. In any case, I was
under a kind of compulsion and knew what I had to do.
I went to Martin Lings, poured out my story and asked
him to give me the Shahadah, in other words to accept
my Testimony of Faith. Although hesitant at first, he
did so. Full of fear and yet joyful, I prayed for the
first time in my life. Next day, for this was
Ramadan, I fasted, something that I could never have
imagined myself doing. Soon afterwards I told my
senior students the news and their delight was like a
warm embrace. I had thought previously that I was
close to them, but now I understood that there had
always been a barrier between us. Now the barrier was
down, and I was accepted as their brother. In the six
weeks that remained before my secret departure (I had
not told my Head of Department that I was leaving) one
of them came every day to teach me Quran. I looked at
my reflection in the mirror. The face was the same,
but it masked a different person. I was a Muslim!
Still in a state of amazement I boarded ship in
Alexandria and sailed away to an uncertain future.