Susan
The reason why I looked into Islam was
the age-old reason of becoming involved with a Muslim man (very
westernized and liberal - a lovely person by the way, we're not together
anymore but still get on well). He never pushed me to take up his
religion, but remarked one day that if that if he ever married a
westerner, to be acceptable to his family she would have to 'convert',
although he himself wasn't bothered if it was in name only. This I
couldn't do - I didn't want to feel like a fraud, spiritual matters are
very close to my heart and I would have to either convert sincerely or
not at all. So I tried to look into the religion to see if there was
something there that I could accept. I've always felt in tune with
Buddhist ways of thinking, and I was shocked by the concept of hell and
punishment for the unbelievers in the Quran. On the plus side
though, I was assured that the Quran is less harsh and makes more sense
in Arabic. I was also impressed by some of the
"scientific" statements in the Quran - support for the big
bang and the expanding universe (although the bit about seven heavens
and the stars being in the lowest one confused me a bit). I persevered,
reading everything I could, I especially tried to find a translation of
the Quran that came close to the "beautiful and gentle" Arabic
original I'd been told about. I found the commentary of Abdullah
Yusuf Ali inspiring, I read about Sufism, the stories of converts
especially the book "Struggling to Surrender" by Jeffrey Lang.
I very much wanted to believe, I could see the "pure spiritual
state" that some people have as a result and and I wanted to be
part of that. But I still had questions that wouldn't go away. If
God is compassionate, why would he torture people in Hell for eternity
simply because they don't believe in Him? I never got a
satisfactory answer. The final straw came when I read: "Allah
forgiveth not that partners should be set up with Him; but He forgiveth
anything else, to whom He pleaseth; to set up partners with Allah is to
devise a sin Most heinous indeedl" (Q.4:
48). So being serial killer is a lesser sin and being
polytheist such as a Hindu is the worst evil of all? At this point I
thought enough is enough, I can't accept this. Once I had the
courage to admit this to myself, I felt a sense of relief. It has
however taken me several months disentangle myself from Islamic thinking
without feeling guilty about being a Western Colonialist Muslim-basher
and without being afraid for my soul.
Susan.
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