The remarkable, powerful testimony,
full on insights, of a black American Christian girl
whose studies of the Bible and Church history studies
left her shocked at the "hypocrisy, blasphemy, and
human tampering with holy scriptures". Impressed by
the respect Islam shows to women, she became a Muslim
at the age of only 18.
By Phreddie
I will say right
away that I am very young. I am only 18, and that
fact seems to astound most people. I think it is
proof that we are never too young to begin looking for
God, or to understand His truth.
I was raised
Christian, nondenominational. We were never big
church goers, but we always knew who our God was and
what our obligation was to Him. In my living room, to
this day, hangs a big velvet painting of Jesus as a
black man. That left a huge imprint on me, because it
made God real to me. Not only did he come to earth as
a man, but he was black like me.
In my preteen
years I was a crusader for Christ. I wanted to
convert the world and save souls. I believed blindly
100% in everything that was given to me by the Bible
and my pastor/youth leader. Then one day I ran across
something in the Bible that didn't sound anything like
the God who I had learned to love and obey. I thought
perhaps I was just too young to understand and took it
to a more knowledgeable Christian who confirmed that
it was what I thought it was. My world fell apart.
I read the
Bible, cover to cover, and marked along the way all of
the things that were contradictory or ungodly. By the
time I got to Revelations I had a large segment of the
Bible marked as invalid. So, thinking maybe I needed
to look at it in a historical perspective I did my
history work. There I found even more hypocrisy,
blasphemy, and human tampering with Holy Scriptures.
What shocked me was the story of the Council of Nicea
where men "divinely guided" decided which text would
be in the Bible and which ones needed editing.
I also had to
ask myself how God could be three and one at the same
time. What happens to a good man like Ghandi when he
dies without Jesus? Does Hitler get to go to heaven if
he accepts Christ as his Lord and Savior? What about
those who have never been exposed to Christianity? I
was once told that the Trinity was part of the essence
of God and that since the breadth and scope of God is
beyond my understanding I should simply believe. I
couldn't worship a God I couldn't understand.
I never lost my
faith in God, I just decided that Christianity was not
the right path for me to travel. I felt no kinship
with fellow believers. I never felt anything special
while attending service except that I was doing an
obligatory service to God. So I wandered faithless,
looking for something to hold on to. In my search I
found Wicca, the Bahai faith, and finally Islam.
I studied Islam
quietly, on my own, in secret, for two years. I
wanted to be able to separate fact from fiction. I
did not want to confuse Islam with the cultures who
claim to practice Islam while instituting things that
are clearly against all that Allah has revealed to
us. I wanted to make the distinction between the
religion and the societies that adopted it. That took
time and patience. I met a lot of helpful brothers
and sisters via e-mail who answered all of my
questions and opened their lives up for me to
examine.
I never liked
the image that I was handed as to what a woman was.
In popular culture we are portrayed as very sexy, lady
like, independent enough so that men have no real
responsibility toward us or the children they help
create, but dependant enough that we are continually
in search of a new man. The average woman on the
street is honked at, whistled at, has had her butt or
breasts pinched, slapped, rubbed, or ogled by some
strange woman. I never agreed with any of that and
never found a "come on" flattering.
In Christianity
I was taught that as a woman I should not teach in
church or question the authority of any man in
public. The picture painted of women in Christianity
was one of inferiority. We were supposed to be chaste
and silent with children about our feet. In Islam I
found a voice, a system that gave me ultimate respect
for being a mother and acknowledged the fact that I
was equal to man in every way except one: physical
strength. The hadith are filled with stories of women
who spoke publicly and Islamic history is full of
women who were leaders. It was a theology that I
could respect because it respected me.
I had to ask
myself if I really wanted to be like all of the people
I saw around me. Who was really oppressed? The girl
wearing skin tight jeans getting cat calls from boys
rolling by in cars was not free. She was society's
whore and she got no respect. I was thankful that my
mother had never allowed me to wear such things, not
that I ever wanted to, but her disapproval was an
added incentive. After examining the position of the
Muslim woman and what I felt to be truth in my heart,
how could I deny Islam?
Six weeks ago I
made the decision to convert to Islam. I did so and
have not looked back since. My friends respect it
because they see that it has not changed who I am and
what I stand for, in fact it has backed it up. My
advice to any woman out there is to ask herself these
questions:
What do you want
your daughter to believe about herself?
How should she
allow herself to be treated?
Is she really
born with evil tendencies because she is a descendant
of Eve?
How do you want
her to feel about her body?
What are you
modeling for her?
What image of
womanhood are you promoting?
How do men treat
you and how do you allow yourself to be treated?