A story of an American teenager who
discovers Islam from many signs that God has placed
for her.
By Valerie Wright
Valerie
Wright, Ex-Christian, USA (part 1 of 2)
I could say that
my journey to Islam began before I was even aware of
it. I was born with a progressive hearing loss. My
mother did not realize that I had difficulties hearing
until I was 4 years old. Once it was discovered, I
received my first hearing aids, and began attending a
school where hearing and deaf children were
integrated.
At first I was
placed in classes that contained only deaf children.
Then I began to attend some classes with hearing
children, and I had a teacher come to help me learn
how to integrate. I felt at home there. I did not
realize that I was being prepared to leave the school
and go to a mainstream public school.
Once I changed
schools, I had a very difficult time adjusting. My
constant moves to different homes also compounded the
issue. Finally, in middle school, I encountered some
stability. I lived in a very small Texas town called
Wylie. When I was about 12 years old, my English
teacher was special: She was from Turkey. Now, anyone
who knows Wylie knows that in those days this was
extremely unusual.
The teacher had
come to my small town on an exchange program. Of
course she never spoke with my class about religion,
but it was enough at the time just knowing her. She
got us involved in a pen pal project with students
from Turkey. My pen pal's name was Yasemin. I still
have a card she sent me, with a picture of mosques and
churches side by side. The significance of this was
not apparent to me at the time, but it was just one
among many signs that God had chosen for me.
During this
period of my life, I yearned to be close to God, to
please Him, and to receive His love. I became very
involved in the church of my grandfather. He and his
siblings were raised as Pentecostals, and both his
father and his brother were preachers.
Every afternoon
I would come home from school and play the piano. I
played it for God and for myself to feel peace. I was
taught that praise for God rises to heaven like the
smell of sweet incense. I would imagine this as I was
playing. Sometimes I would sing a little along with
the music, although the music usually expressed my
intense feelings more than my words ever could.
One day, I felt
God's presence in the room with me. It was immense
and overwhelming. The air felt extremely heavy with
the awesomeness and majesty of His Being. I suddenly
stopped singing, and my fingers froze over the piano.
I began to shake. I did not know what to do. Then,
slowly, by instinct (or, I should rather say by the
guidance of God), I turned away from the piano and
prostrated on my knees and my head.
Trembling and
longing flooded my soul. Flummoxed for words, I
simply thought, "God, please anoint me. Make me
special. Make me serve You." I remained prostrating
for a few more minutes, then, with a deep breath, I
got up and resumed my other usual activities.
Another time
around this same period of my life, I was at my school
where parents and students had gathered for an
academic awards assembly. My name was called, and I
went up to receive my award. Afterward, my mother
told me about something strange that had happened.
She said, "While you were walking up to take your
award, a strange woman came to me, someone I don't
know. She said, 'I just feel that when I look at your
daughter I have to tell you that God has a plan for
her.'" I wondered for the longest time what His plan
for me could possibly be.
I was feeling
depressed by the many restrictions of the Pentecostal
Church then. I couldn't comprehend their purpose very
clearly. I also was quite disturbed by things I would
read in the Bible, and when I asked about them, I did
not get satisfactory answers. In fact, my questions
were met with disapproval. So my mother and I started
attending a different church together and, again, on
two separate occasions, two different strangers
approached my mother and told her that God had a plan
for me.
I recall that I
requested a private meeting with a preacher to discuss
something. One of the questions I asked him was, "Am
I going to heaven?" "Well, do you believe in Jesus?"
he asked. "Ye-e-e-s ... ," I answered. "Then you
are going to heaven," he said. Inside myself I was
not satisfied with his answer. I felt doubtful.
Summer came, and I went to church camp, where two
momentous events occurred.
First, the
preacher who was speaking to us told all of the youth
who were present to come to the front of the room if
they wanted him to pray for them. "If you feel like
you have any barriers between you and God, and you
want me to pray that those barriers will be removed so
you can get closer to God, come up," he said. I was
among many others who formed a line in the front. We
stood up, and he started to place his hand on each
person's forehead and make a supplication. That's
when something very odd happened: They all fell flat
on their backs without even bending their knees, like
dominoes! I began to feel a trifle nervous. "What's
happening?" I wondered.
The preacher
came to me. He slapped his hand on my forehead and
pushed me a little. I rocked on my feet and remained
standing, while he went on down the line and the
others continued to fall. At the end, only a few of
us were still standing. I was left wondering what had
happened to those who fell and why I was different.
Had I missed out on something?
Another
experience happened when the preacher of my youth
class was giving a very emotional lesson to hundreds
of young people. Then unexpectedly he looked directly
at me and said, "Valerie, stand up." I stood, and he
continued, "I want you to know that God wants to heal
your ears." He thought he was moved by the "Holy
Spirit" to say this with authority.
He placed his
hands over my ears and prayed. Nothing happened. I
was very embarrassed. The following Sunday, one of
the students in my class asked him why, if anything
was possible in the name of Christ, sometimes prayers
weren't answered. The preacher did not look at me,
but he threw a pen in my general direction. "God
answers prayers," he replied, "but sometimes people do
not have enough faith to receive it." My mother and I
were of course very upset by this, and we left that
church.
I drifted for a
while, not really attending any church on a regular
basis. I felt lost. I felt that I kept failing, and
that somehow I was getting it all wrong. I knew I
could never be perfect, but I still did not feel all
right. An indefinable sensation always lingered in
the back of my mind.
Valerie
Wright, Ex-Christian, USA (part 2 of 2)
When I was 15, I
went to live with my father. I stayed with him for
two and a half years, and during that time I became
regularly involved in a Methodist church. I also
sometimes attended the Baptist church that my
stepmother went to. At each church that I visited, I
always felt that something was missing. And even
though everyone was friendly to me, I always felt that
I did not belong among those people, especially my age
peers. Still, it never occurred to me to look for
another religion.
When I was 17, I
had a dream one night. I was standing beside a green
bush with small leaves and small yellow flowers. An
angel swooshed before me, but I couldn't see it,
except for a kind of clear outline of its form or
energy. It gathered a bouquet of the yellow flowers
for me. The flowers sparkled. Then the angel picked
me up and carried me to a special place. Because I
could not see the angel, I saw everything around me as
if I were flying.
I entered a
place where the sun shone, filtered through a light
mist. At first I saw tall grass swaying and trees
with large maroon leaves. As we proceeded, the grass
became shorter, and there were trees with very bright
red, pink, and white flowers with small black
centers. The flowers were profuse; they covered the
branches and the trunks, even the ground at their
bases. The next trees were some kind of evergreen
trees.
As I turned and
looked around, I saw a rectangular patch of cultivated
land in the distance to my right. It seemed that some
very tall herbs were growing there. I saw another,
smaller rectangle of purple irises. Beside them was a
wooden house. The angel carried me around the house
once, so that I could see that it was in the shape of
a perfect square. The angel put me down, and we
entered.
Inside were many
adults and children, all of them quite happy. They
left as we entered to give us privacy. We entered a
small reception area where there were two couches and
a small Japanese style table between them. There
appeared an old woman with white hair tied up in a bun
and a long black dress with a white lacy collar. She
gestured that I should make myself comfortable and
asked if I would like a drink. After I had settled,
she began to speak to me, telling me things about my
future (none of which I remember). She concluded by
saying, "You have to make some changes in your life
first." I felt very afraid of these words, for I
wasn't sure whether I was strong enough. I turned to
the angel and said, "I don't know if I can do it."
Then it lifted me up and threw me in the air, where
the dream ended.
Near the end of
the school year, I was at a good-bye party for one of
my foreign exchange friends. One girl's mother came
to me. I knew the girl as a friend, but I had never
seen the mother before. She told me, "When my
daughter speaks about you, I get such a feeling of joy
and happiness in my heart, and I feel a strong need to
tell you that God has a plan for you."
Some time
passed, and I was almost ready to graduate from high
school. That was when I met some Muslims and had real
in-depth contact with them. They did not practice
their religion, but there was something I liked about
their interactions with each other. There seemed to
be a mutual feeling between them that was stronger
than any I had seen between any people before. They
also spoke Arabic with each other a lot of the time,
and I wished to understand what they were saying. So
I determined to find an Arabic class and surprise
them.
The only classes
I found that suited my schedule were given at a local
mosque, so I went there. I never learned much Arabic,
but the sisters in the mosque taught me about Islam.
For every big, deep question I had, they provided me
with very simple, logical, and profound answers. I
felt within myself that Islam was a religion I could
accept. So on my 19th birthday, I officially declared
my Shahadah. After saying it, I leapt up with joy, my
arms in the air. "Yes!" I am a Muslim now, praise
God.
After becoming
Muslim, I felt much more at peace with my spiritual
foundation. My family was quite upset at first, but
they never stopped speaking with me or reaching out to
me with love. Some of them have come to understand a
little more about Islam and have become more
comfortable and accepting of my decision. All praise
be to Allah.
Through its
life-permeating system, Islam has affected the
decisions I make in life. Islam is not just a
"Sunday-feel-good affair." I don't doubt that some
sincere Christians make the effort to practice their
religion in their daily lives, but Islam has a much
more comprehensive set of guidelines to follow.
Everything I do comes with an awareness that I will be
held accountable for my actions and that I need to
constantly ask for Allah's forgiveness. Islam has
given me the purpose in life that I had been seeking.
It is one of the few things I am passionate about.
Before Islam, I had no idea what I wanted to do with
my life. One of my great wishes is that I can help
another person become Muslim. That still has yet to
happen.