Rebecca
Hey I am so pleased
to hear something other than the endless incantations by Western
liberals that "Islam is peaceful/tolerant/scientific etc
etc". I am a female university student, 20 years old, and am
English. I am of western liberal agnostic background yet became
involved in Islam, my experiences in which I relate below. It is a
great comfort to me to know that there are people out there who feel
like I do. Contrary to the ridiculous cyclical arguments that people
who leave or reject Islam "do not understand it", we do, and
for that reason we are dangerous.
I am now so weary of the rebuttal of any reasoned critique of Islam,
even in the West, with the hysterical kneejerk reaction of
"racist!", "out of context!" or "because the
Quran says so!" as well as the ignorant complicity of western
liberals who confuse such "Islamophobia" with intolerance
and racism. Have most liberal PC apologetics, whether muslim or non-muslim,
ever READ the Quran and hadith, and if so, was it in a language they
understand? Did they honestly ask themselves the implications of what
it says??
From the age of 16 I was typically, for a teenage girl, disillusioned
with the world and had a great desire to find "truth" and if
God existed and what God wanted. I had a few muslim acquaintances and
a guy I knew was even a muslim scholar. I was much impressed with the
things he told me about Islam and scientific discovery, and he gave me
a Quran and several books on Islam. When he told me that Neil
Armstrong had heard the azaan on the moon and converted to Islam (this
is a hoax) I was close to being totally convinced. Perhaps I was
gullible, but no more so than millions of others.
For the next 3-4years I read much on Islam -I learnt far more about
Islamic practice, the Quran and Islamic history than most people I
know from a muslim background, including those who consider themselves
practicing. I also took the shahada in private. I feel now the reason
I kept this a secret was not only because I did not want to upset my
family, but also because I was aware of the consequences of apostacy
(in Islam, death). Needless to say I am not keen to tell people that
technically I am an apostate. Perhaps the most painful thing was that
the Quran told me that if I was a muslim, I could not love my parents
anymore. I felt my personality changed, I felt resentful and hardened
towards those who had mattered most.
By the time i got to university I had fallen for the modern rhetoric
that, actually, Islam really respected women and thought a muslim guy
would. However, in my experiences of the last couple of years this has
been far from the case. I have dated 2 religious muslim guys. They
both encouraged me in learning and practising Islam. I knew sex was
not allowed outside of marriage and nor did I want this kind of
relationship. I thought they would agree with this. However, in both
cases, once we were alone, both tried to force themselves on me. They,
and their male friends all seemed to have ridiculously dualistic
public/private views regarding sex and morality, and it is not hard to
see why when one reads the Quran. Islamic doctrine is obsessed with
sex and its social regulation, yet paradise for men is 72 panting
virgins (and a few little boys thrown in). Of course there are such
men in every religion, but in my own life at least, I have yet to meet
a religious muslim male that does not hold to some degree sexist,
homophobic, intolerant and Islamo-imperialist views and I now steer
clear.
Looking back, I wonder why I was so brainwashed, why I did not openly
question the fact that women blatantly receive less rights than men in
Islam, and all the other obvious facts in the Quran that indicate that
it was a man-made religion and a far-from-divine philosophy. I am
still asking myself that, though I feel fear, shame and DENIAL are
heavily involved in this. Eventually I opened my Quran and looked
inside and asked myself if I could honestly believe that I could
believe in the divinity of such hateful and violent words. I believe
in God, but more as a existing as level of divinity through love and
compassion of which all are capable of giving and worthy of receiving.
However, I do not feel I need to respect a person's beliefs in order
to respect the rights of that person to practice them (as long as this
does not infringe the rights of others) and to treat them with
compassion.
I will continue to look and contribute to this site now and offer a
hand of support to anyone who needs it.
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