Friday, 28 August 2015

Michael Wolfe Journalist

Michael's life


After twenty-five years as a writer in America, I wanted something to soften my cynicism.  I was searchingfor new terms by which to see.  The way one is raised establishes certainneeds in this dnepartment.  From a pluralist background, I naturally placed great stress on the matters ofracism and freedom.  Then, in my early twenties, I had gone to live in Africa for three years.  During this time, which was formative for me, I rubbed shoulders with blacks of many different tribes, with Arabs, Berbers, and even Europeans, who were Muslims.  By and large these people did not share the Western obsession with race as a social category.  In our encounters, being oddly colored, rarely mattered.  I waswelcomed first and judged on merit later.  By contrast, Europeans and Americans, including many who are free of racist notions, automatically class people racially.  Muslims classified people by their faith and their actions.  I found this transcendent and refreshing.  Malcolm X saw his nation’s salvationin it.  “America needs to understand Islam,” he wrote, “because this is theone religion that erases from its society the race problem.”I was looking for an escape route, too, from the isolating terms of a materialistic culture.  I wanted access to a spiritual dimension, but the conventional paths I had known as a boy were closed.  My father had been a Jew; my mother Christian.  Because of my mongrel background,I had a foot in two religious camps.  Both faiths were undoubtedly profound.  Yet the one that emphasizes a chosen people I foundinsupportable; while the other, basedin a mystery, repelled me.  A century before, my maternal great-great-grandmother’s name had been set instained glass at the high street Church of Christ in Hamilton, Ohio.  By the time I was twenty, this meant nothing to me.These were the terms my early lifeprovided.  The more I thought about it now, the more I returned to my experiences in Muslim Africa.  After two return trips to Morocco, in 1981 and 1985, I came to feel that Africa, the continent, had little to do with the balanced life I found there.  It was not, that is, a continent I was after, nor an institution, either.  I was looking for a framework I could live with, a vocabulary of spiritual concepts applicable to the life I was living now.  I did not want to “trade in” my culture.  I wanted access to new meanings.After a mid-Atlantic dinner I went to wash up in the bathroom.  During my absence a quorum of Hasidim lined up to pray outside the door.  Bythe time I had finished, they were tooimmersed to notice me.  Emerging from the bathroom, I could barely work the handle.  Stepping into the aisle was out of the question.I could only stand with my head thrust into the hallway, staring at thecongregation’s backs.  Holding palm-size prayer books, they cut an impressive figure, tapping the texts on their breastbones as they divined.Little by little the movements grew erratic, like a mild, bobbing form of rock and roll.  I watched from the bathroom door until they were finished, then slipped back down theaisle to my seat.We landed together later that night in Brussels.  Reboarding, I found a discarded Yiddish newspaper on a food tray.  When theplane took off for Morocco, they were gone.I do not mean to imply here that my life during this period conformed to any grand design.  In the beginning, around 1981, I was driven by curiosity and an appetite for travel.  My favorite place to go, when I had the money, was Morocco.  When I could not travel, there were books.  This fascination brought me into contact with a handful of writersdriven to the exotic, authors capable of sentences like this, by Freya Stark:“The perpetual charm of Arabia is that the traveler finds his level there simply as a human being; the people’s directness, deadly to the sentimental or the pedantic, like the less complicated virtues; and the pleasantness of being liked for oneself might, I think, be added to the five reasons for travel given me by Sayyid Abdulla, the watchmaker; “to leave one’s troubles behind one; to earn a living; to acquire learning; to practice good manners; and to meet honorable men”.I could not have drawn up a list of demands, but I had a fair idea of what I was after.  The religion I wanted should be to metaphysics asmetaphysics is to science.  It would not be confined by a narrow rationalism or traffic in mystery to please its priests.  There would be no priests, no separation between nature and things sacred.  There would be no war with the flesh, if I could help it.  Sex would be natural, not the seat of a curse upon the species.  Finally, I did want a ritual component, daily routine to sharpen the senses and discipline my mind.  Above all, I wanted clarity and freedom.  I did not want to trade away reason simply to be saddled with a dogma.The more I learned about Islam, the more it appeared to conform to what I was after.Most of the educated Westerners Iknew around this time regarded any strong religious climate with suspicion.  They classified religion as political manipulation, or they dismissed it as a medieval concept, projecting upon it notions from their European past.It was not hard to find a source fortheir opinions.  A thousand years of Western history had left us plenty of fine reasons to regret a path that led through so much ignorance and slaughter.  From the Children’s Crusade and the Inquisition to the transmogrified faiths of nazism and communism during our century, whole countries have been exhausted by belief.  Nietzsche’s fear, that the modern nation-state would become a substitute religion, has proved tragically accurate.  Our century, it seemed to me, was ending in an age beyond belief, which believers inhabited as much as agnostics.Regardless of church affiliation, secular humanism is the air westerners breathe, the lens we gaze through.  Like any world view, this outlook is pervasive and transparent.  It forms the basis of our broad identification with democracy and with the pursuit of freedom in all its countless and beguiling forms.  Immersed in our shared preoccupations, one may easily forget that other ways of life exist on the same planet.At the time of my trip, for instance,650 million Muslims with a majority representation in forty-four countriesadhered to the formal teachings of Islam.  In addition, about 400 million more were living as minorities in Europe, Asia and the Americas.  Assisted by postcolonial economics,Islam has become in a matter of thirty years a major faith in Western Europe.  Of the world’s great religions, Islam alone was adding to its fold.My politicized friends were dismayed by my new interest.  They all but universally confused Islam with the machinations of half a dozen middle eastern tyrants.  The books they read, the new broadcaststhey viewed depicted the faith as a set of political functions.  Almost nothing was said of its spiritual practice.  I liked to quote Mae West to them: “Anytime you take religion for a joke, the laugh’s on you.”Historically, a Muslim sees Islam as the final, matured expression of an original religion reaching back to Adam.  It is as resolutely monotheistic as Judaism, whose major Prophets Islam reveres as links in a progressive chain, culminating in Jesus and Muhammad, peace be upon them.  Essentially a message of renewal, Islam has done its part on the world stage to return the forgotten taste oflife’s lost sweetness to millions of people.  Its book, the Quran, caused Goethe to remark, “You see, this teaching never fails; with all our systems, we cannot go, and generally speaking no man can go, further.Traditional Islam is expressed through the practice of five pillars.  Declaring one’s faith, prayer, charity, and fasting are activities pursued repeatedly throughout one’s life.  Conditions permitting, each Muslim is additionally charged with undertaking a pilgrimage to Mecca once in a lifetime.  The Arabic term for this fifth rite is Hajj.  Scholars relate the word to the concept of ‘qasd’, “aspiration,” and to the notionof men and women as travelers on earth.  In Western religions, pilgrimage is a vestigial tradition, a quaint, folkloric concept commonly reduced to metaphor.  Among Muslims, on the other hand, the Hajj embodies a vital experience for millions of new pilgrims every year.  In spite of the modern content of their lives, it remains an act of obedience, a profession of belief, and the visible expression of a spiritual community.  For a majority of Muslims the Hajj is an ultimate goal, the trip of a lifetime.As a convert, I felt obliged to go toMakkah.  As an addict to travel I could not imagine a more compelling goal.The annual, month-long fast of Ramadan precedes the Hajj by aboutone hundred days.  These two rites form a period of intensified awareness in Muslim society.  I wanted to put this period to use.  I had read about Islam; I [attended] a Mosque near my home in California; I had started a practice.  Now I hoped to deepen what I was learningby submerging myself in a religion where Islam infuses every aspect of existence.

journey of sara bokkar for peace of mind

Journey of Sara bokkar for peace of mind


I am an American woman who was born in the midst of America’s “Heartland”.  I grew up, just like any other girl, being fixated with the glamour of life in “the big city”.  Eventually, I moved to Florida and onto South Beach of Miami, a hotspot for those seeking the “glamorous life”.  Naturally, I did what most average Western girls do.  I focused on my appearance and appeal, basing my self-worth on how much attention I got from others.  I worked out rigorously and became a personal trainer, acquired an upscalewaterfront residence, became a regular “exhibiting” beach-goer and was able to attain a “living-in-style” kind of life.Years went by, only to realize that my scale of self-fulfillment and happiness slid down the more I progressed in my “feminine appeal”. I was a slave to fashion.  I was a hostage to my looks.As the gap continued to progressively widen between my self-fulfillment and lifestyle, I sought refuge in escapes from alcohol and parties to meditation, activism, and alternative religions, only to have thelittle gap widen to what seemed like a valley.  I eventually realized it all was merely a pain killer rather than an effective remedy.As a feminist libertarian, and an activist who was pursuing a better world for all, my path crossed with that of another activist who was already at the lead of indiscriminately furthering causes ofreform and justice for all.  I joined in the ongoing campaigns of my new mentor which included, at the time, election reform and civil rights, among others.  Now my new activism was fundamentally different.  Instead of “selectively” advocating justice only to some, I learned that ideals such as justice, freedom, and respect are meant to be and are essentially universal, and that own good and common good are not in conflict.  For the first time, I knew what “all people are created equal” really meant.  But most importantly, I learned that it only takes faith to see the world as one and to see the unity in creation.One day I came across a book thatis negatively stereotyped in the West--The Holy Quran.  Up until that point, all I had associated with Islam was women covered in “tents”, wife beaters, harems, and a world of terrorism.  I was first attracted by thestyle and approach of the Quran, andthen intrigued by its outlook on existence, life, creation, and the relationship between Creator and creation.  I found the Quran to be a very insightful address to heart and soul without the need for an interpreter or pastor.Eventually I hit a moment of truth: my new-found self-fulfilling activism was nothing more than merely embracing a faith called Islam whereI could live in peace as a “functional”Muslim.I bought a beautiful long gown and head cover resembling the Muslim woman’s dress code and I walked down the same streets and neighborhoods where only days earlier I had walked in my shorts, bikini, or “elegant” western business attire.  Although the people, the faces, and the shops were all the same, one thing was remarkably distinct: the peace at being a womanI experienced for the very first time.  Ifelt as if the chains had been broken and I was finally free.  I was delighted with the new looks of wonder on people’s faces in place ofthe looks of a hunter watching his prey I had once sought.  Suddenly a weight had been lifted off my shoulders.  I no longer spent all my time consumed with shopping, makeup, getting my hair done, and working out.  Finally, I was free.Of all places, I found my Islam at the heart of what some call “the most scandalous place on earth”, which makes it all the more dear andspecial.Soon enough, news started breaking about politicians, Vatican clergymen, libertarians, and so-called human rights and freedom activists condemning the Hijab (headscarf) as being oppressive to women, an obstacle to social integration, and more recently, as an Egyptian official called it -“a sign of backwardness.”I find it to be a blatant hypocrisy when some people and so-called human rights groups rush to defend women’s rights when some governments impose a certain dresscode on women, yet such “freedom fighters” look the other way when women are being deprived of their rights, work, and education just because they choose to exercise their right to wear the Hijab.Today I am still a feminist, but a Muslim feminist, who calls on Muslim women to assume their responsibilities in providing all the support they can for their husbands to be good Muslims.  To raise their children as upright Muslims so they may be beacons of light for all humanity once again.  To enjoin good -any good - and to forbid evil -any evil.  To speak righteousness and to speak up against all ills.  To fight for our right to wear Hijab and to please our Creator whichever way we chose.  But just as importantly to carry our experience with Hijab to fellow women who may never have had the chance to understand what wearing Hijab means to us and why do we, so dearly, embrace it.Willingly or unwillingly, women arebombarded with styles of “dressing-in-little-to-nothing” virtually in every means of communication everywhere in the world.  As an ex Non-Muslim, I insist on women’s right to equally know about Hijab, its virtues, and the peace and happiness it brings to a woman’s lifeas it did to mine.  Yesterday, the bikini was the symbol of my liberty, when in actuality it only liberated mefrom my spirituality and true value asa respectable human being.I couldn’t be happier to shed my bikini in South Beach and the “glamorous” Western lifestyle to live in peace with my Creator and enjoy living among fellow humans as a worthy person.Today, Hijab is the new symbol of woman’s liberation to find who she is, what her purpose is, and the type of relation she chooses to have with her Creator.

the journey of Jermaine Jackson




When and How did you start your journey towards Islam?
It was way back in 1989 when I, along with my sister, conducted a tour to some of the countries of the Middle East.  During our stay in Bahrain, we were accorded a warm welcome.  There I happened to meet some children and had a light chitchat with them.  I put certain questions to them and they flung at me their innocent queries.  During the course of this interaction, they inquired about my religion.  I told them, "I am a Christian."  I asked them, as to what was their religion. Awave of serenity took over them.  They replied in one voice : Islam.  Their enthusiastic answer really shook me from within.  Then they started telling me about Islam.  They were giving me information, much in piece with their age.  The pitch of their voice would reveal that they were highly proud of Islam.  This is how I paced towards Islam.A very short interaction with a group of children ultimately led me to have long discourses about Islam with Muslim scholars.  A great ripple had taken place in my thought.  I made failing attempt to console myself that nothing had happened but I could not conceal this fact any longer from myself that at heart I had converted to Islam.  This I disclosed first to my family friend, Qunber Ali.  The same Qunber Ali managed to take me to Riyadh, capital of Saudi Arabia.  Till that time, I did not know much about Islam.  From there, in the company of a Saudi family, I proceeded for Mecca for the performance of"Umrah" [A lesser type of pilgrimage performed to Mecca].  There I made public for the first time that I had become Muslim.What were your feelings after you proclaimed that you were a Muslim?Having embraced Islam, I felt as if I were born again.  I found in Islam the answers to those queries which Ihad failed to find in Christianity.  Particularly, it was only Islam that provided satisfactory answer to the question relating to the birth of Christ.  For the first time I was convinced about the religion itself.  I pray my family members might appreciate these facts.  My family is the follower of that cult of Christianity, which is known as AVENDANCE of JEHOVA (Jehovah’s Witness).  According to its creeds, only 144,000 men would finally qualify to enter into paradise.  How come?  It remained always a perplexing creed for me.  I was surprised to know that the Bible was compiled by so many men, particularly about a volume scripted by King James.  I wondered if a man compiles a directory and then ascribes it to God, but he does not fully comply with these directions.  During my stay in Saudi Arabia, I have had the opportunity to buy a cassette released by the erstwhile British pop-singer and the present Muslim preacher, Yusuf Islam (formerly Cat Stevens).  I learnt a lot from this as well.

The real story of ice cube

                       The Story Of Ice cube               


Real Name
O'Shea Jackson 
AlbumsN.W.A.N.W.A. and the Posse (1987)Straight Outta Compton (1988)100 Miles and Runnin' (1990)Niggaz4life (1991)Westside ConnectionBow Down (1996)Terrorist Threats (2003)SoloAmerikka’s Most Wanted (1990)Kill At Will EP (1990)Death Certificate (1991)The Predator (1992)Lethal Injection (1993)War & Peace Vol. 1: The War Disc (1998)War & Peace Vol. 2: The Peace Disc (2000)Laugh Now, Cry Later (2006)Raw Footage (2008)Total Albums Sold13 million+Notes
You might know Ice Cube from his days asone of the main members of N.W.A., the group that sprung gangster rap on the masses with their street, yet politically charged lyrics. Ice Cube continued the tone of the gangster rapper with a social conscience throughout his career, and haseven had that persona transpire into a successful movie career.In an interview that touched on the confusion of whether he was an Orthodox Muslim or an involved member of the Nation of Islam, as he first projected on his1992 album, The Predator, he responded with the following, "Ah, when you say involved with the Nation, it's tricky. I never was in the Nation of Islam... I mean, what I call myself is a natural Muslim, 'cause it's just me and God. You know, going to the mosque, the ritual and the tradition, it's just not in me to do. So I don't do it."On how religion impacts his moral outlook and conscience, however, he said, “It’s all helped to shape me; half of my life Christian and the other half of my life Muslim. I realized in looking at both of them that ultimately when you know right from wrong you don’t need either of them to know how to live right. A lot of people really need a lot of religion in their life. I’m not knocking them for that at all because you gotta do what’s right for you. I’m not a person who needs a lot of that to stay on the right path, know how to respect people, and respect, believe and fear in God. So I don’t put a lot into religion
Upcoming Albums(none)

che smith chnaged His life

                       
Real Name Che Smith
Albums Blue Collar (2006)Total Albums Sold~ 0.02 million
NotesRhymefest, probably best known for his ghostwriting for Kanye West, including the hit single, Jesus Walks, was first introduced to Islam through member of the Vice Lords gang. The gangmember took him to the mosque where he was toldto listen to the Imam speak, "I heard the imam speak, and it made me cry," the rapper says. "He was speaking of community and brotherhood and love, and I saw men all around me who had their boys with them. I saw these men in this holy place, with their shoes off, prostrated before God. I said, 'That's the kind of fatherI want to be.'"Now he shares a house in Indianapolis with his mother, who has been clean (fromcrack-cocaine) for years; a teenage sister; and his young son from a brief marriage, Solomon. Rhymefest worked countless jobs to support them, eventually becominga teacher and youth counselor. He could have easily written an entire album about his close proximity to the gang life where he grew up."Discovering God was my way out," he says. "You know why some rappers glorify drug dealing? They don't tell the whole story. They don't talk about the lives destroyed by it. The children left at home who eat paint chips off the wall, that go to school hungry. They aren't telling the whole story, and I hate that."Rhymefest has also spoken out about rappers who hide behind God to help themsell records. On his blog on SOHH.com, hesays, “Even rappers are jumping in on the"use God as a shield" act. Or is it really an act? It doesn't seem as though rappers areconcerned with appealing to that religious audience yet one of DMX's last singles was "Lord Give Me A Sign." Yes, this thing reaches further than any specific denomination, when even Lupe Fiasco proudly proclaims his Muslim faith as part of the reason for his unique outlook on music and culture. Don't get it twisted, in no way am I dissing any artist who announces their faith in their music and lifestyle. For even I use my co-authoring of"Jesus Walks" as part of the advertisementfor Rhymefest as an artist. And like Lupe, I have publicly embraced my Islamic faith. Although, I personally have a difficult time calling myself a Muslim (one who submits his will to God) because I'm still striving to totally submit myself to God. So let's makethis clear, sum it up and ask the questions”“(I’m) not talking about partial submission to God or using God's name as a marketingtool. (I’m) talking about totally submitting our lives to the idea of a power greater than record sales, saving face in lieu of criticism or even our own physical lives.”

The alica's story

                               

Sister Alicia:Alicia Brown.

Interviewer:Where are you from?
Sister Alicia:I‘m from Texas.
Interviewer:Masha’Alah, so you are a Texan!
Sister Alicia:Yes, a deep east Texan!
Interviewer:How long have you been a Muslim?
Sister Alicia:I embraced Islam just yesterday.
Interviewer:Oh wow, that’s great.And would you tell me how was your life before Islam?Sister Alicia:I hated myself and everything around me. It was just like I wanted to do anything I could do to hurt myself.I didn’t come from a very religious family. Imean they say they are religious but they are not really what you would call a religious family. They are Christian Baptists, but we were the type of family that don’t go to church regularly.My parents were divorced when I was 10. So we lived with my dad after that until I was 17. My father was very very abusive to me and my younger brother. He wasn’t so much abusive to my little sister, but he was really abusive to me so much I think because I reminded him a lot of my mother.When I was 16 actually I moved in with mygrandparents. I led a pretty self-destructive lifestyle. I hated myself and everything around me. It was just like I wanted to do anything I could do to hurt myself. I just did this like it was fun, and as something I wanted to do. I’ve tried drugs, alcohol and sex and nothing ever really fulfilled me emotionally.I went back to live with my mother when I was 17, and I thought maybe it was like a different thing; a new beginning. But still I led the same pattern, and maybe it even got worse.I met my daughter’s father when I was in my senior high school. He was really funny and sweat, so I thought that was a good path for me. And we dated for a couple of years, and I ended up getting pregnant. At first, it wasn’t as bad. I wasn’tfulfilled and we didn’t have the best of things but it wasn’t bad. We had somebody for each other at least, and I was just satisfied with what I had. I didn’t ask for too much. I didn’t expect too much, as I was certainly better than what Ihad before.After my daughter was born, that’s when my friend, her father, got really heavy into drugs. It was not just drugs like Marijuana but I’m talking about hard stuff like Cocaine. I can’t say I didn’t do it, I thought it’s OK, I’ll do it too. After like three months, we came to the point where we lost everything. So I quit that and thought he had to quit too but he didn’t.Interviewer:So you broke up with him?Sister Alicia:I left him a few times trying to give him a chance after a chance because I loved him and I cared for him, and when you love and care for someone you forgive him, and a lot of people make mistakes and they are forgiven. I thought maybe he could change. Maybe I could change. I dideverything.
Interviewer:I’m sorry to hear that. Now how did you start to learn about Islam?
Sister Alicia:My daughter was actually diagnosed with Guillain-Barré Syndrome. It’s a syndrome that starts at your feet, and moves up yourbody and makes sure muscles are really weak, where your immune system attacks your central nervous system, and it causes your muscles to get really weak and moves up to different parts of your body. It happens to kids or adults. It can happen to anybody. My daughter can move her arms, but some kids get damaged layers, but thank God she didn’t get that bad. She is getting better. I met Hayat and some Muslims at the hospital, and started to ask them a lot of questions about religion and things like that.I think a lot of people are misinformed about Islam. I think a lot of people think that it’s like the Hindu religion because this is what I thought.Interviewer:What really made you get attracted to Islam? I mean you knew about Islam, but what really attracted you to Islam to decide that it will be your religion?Sister Alicia:First, I think a lot of people are misinformed about Islam. I think a lot of people think that it’s like the Hindu religion because this is what I thought. I thought it’s just something predominantlylike the Middle East type of things. I didn’t really know about Islam. When they started to tell me that a lot of Islam had to deal with the same background, because I’ve always known that there’s one God I’ve never questioned that, but I was brought up as Jesus died on a cross and that he was the son of God.But it was then like the question was why did Jesus have to die on a cross for our sins, why can't God could forgive us anyway? I mean why does that have to happen? Because God is all powerful and He could do anything, why did He have to get somebody die on a cross for our sins. Then there was the fact that the bible has been translated so many times and there were so many different versions of the bible. I can’t even count how many different churches I’ve been to. They were basically Christian churches but they all have something different and everybody can give you a different answer. I mean you can ask anybody, and they can say my bible says this or this but if it’s a different bible, so which one is the right kind and that was always confusing for me.But then when I looked at Islam, I found that there’s one Quran. Everybody knows what it says. It’s translated in the English but you can read the Arabic. It’s not something that you can’t learn or you can’t read yourself. It’s not very difficult tounderstand. It’s fairly easy to understand. It’s not like five different things that can come out of it. It’s pretty self-explained and that’s what attracted me.Interviewer:I want to know what really hit you and made you say “This is the right time to take Islam as my religion”. How did that happen with you?Sister Alicia:First, I knew in what direction I was heading, but I was really scared because when you grow up your whole life being told that it’s blasphemous to say that Jesus is not the son of God; that’s blasphemy. And in the religion I grew up in, that’s the unforgivable sin. And if you commit that unforgivable sin then you willgo to Hell.What made me get over that fear and passthat to where I could allow myself to embrace Islam, was when I was talking to Hana, Hayat’s mother, and she showed me a lot of passages and I had prayed every night before I go to bed: “Oh God please give me a sign, some kind of a clear sign to know that’s the way I’m supposed to go.” And she read a passage of Quran to me and I can’t read Arabic, so I read the English part and the last words, I don’t remember which chapter it was, but it was about Jesus saying I’m not Godand never said I was, and then in the last sentence it said “To all who are looking fora sign, this is a sign within itself”. This is asign for you. If this is what you are lookingfor, this is your sign.I actually embraced this because this is something special, because you don’t get a sign from God everyday.To me that was like an overwhelming feeling came over me and I just started to cry because I just felt like this is my sign. This is exactly what I was looking for, and God gave this to me. And I actually embraced this because this is something special, because you don’t get a sign fromGod everyday. That made me really happy and then felt love and support because nobody before was so happy for me, and I never had that before
Interviewer:How do you feel right now after you embraced Islam?
Sister Alicia:I feel really good. I feel like a big weight has been lifted off of me. I feel like I can breathe easier than ever before. I don’t have to worry about anything anymore. I’m re-born and I’m free of everything. All the sins that I have committed and all the things that happened in my life don’t matter any more.Interviewer:Alhamdulellah, now exactly all the sins you have done before are not only forgiven but actually they are swapped and they are all like mountains of good deeds right now and good blessings in-sha’Allah.

why i chose islam

                         

I was born Lew Alcindor. Now I’m Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.The transition from Lew to Kareem was not merely a change in celebrity brand name— like Sean Combs to Puff Daddy to Diddy to P. Diddy — but a transformation of heart, mind and soul. I used to be LewAlcindor, the pale reflection of what white America expected of me. Now I’m Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the manifestation of myAfrican history, culture and beliefs.For most people, converting from one religion to another is a private matter requiring intense scrutiny of one’s conscience. But when you’re famous, it becomes a public spectacle for one and all to debate. And when you convert to an unfamiliar or unpopular religion, it invites criticism of one’s intelligence, patriotism and sanity. I should know. Even though I became a Muslim more than 40 years ago, I’m still defending that choice.Unease with celebrityI was introduced to Islam while I was a freshman at UCLA. Although I had already achieved a certain degree of national fame as a basketball player, I tried hard to keep my personal life private. Celebrity made me nervous and uncomfortable. I was still young, so I couldn’t really articulate why I felt so shy of the spotlight. Over the next few years, I started to understand it better.Part of my restraint was the feeling that the person the public was celebrating wasn’t the real me. Not only did I have the usual teenage angst of becoming a man, but I was alsoplaying for one of the best college basketball teams in the country and trying to maintain my studies. Add to that the weight of being black in America in 1966 and ’67, when James Meredith was ambushed while marching through Mississippi, the Black Panther Party was founded, Thurgood Marshall was appointed as the first African-American Supreme Court Justice and a race riot in Detroitleft 43 dead, 1,189 injured and more than 2,000 buildings destroyed.I came to realize that the Lew Alcindor everyone was cheering wasn’t really the person they imagined. They wanted me to be the clean-cut example of racial equality. The poster boy for how anybody from any background — regardless of race, religion or economic standing — could achieve the American dream. To them, I was the living proof that racism was a myth.I knew better. Being 7-foot-2 and athletic got me there, not a level playing field of equal opportunity. But I was also fighting a strict upbringing of trying to please those in authority. My father was a cop with a set of rules, I attended a Catholic school with priests and nuns with more rules, and Iplayed basketball for coaches who had even more rules. Rebellion was not an option.Still, I was discontented. Growing up in the 1960s, I wasn’t exposed to many black role models. I admired Martin Luther King Jr. for his selfless courage and Shaft for kicking ass and getting the girl. Otherwise, the white public’s consensus seemed to be that blacks weren’t much good. They were either needy downtrodden folks who required white people’s help to get the rights they were due or radical troublemakers wanting to take away white homes and jobs and daughters. The “good ones” were happy entertainers, either in show business or sports, who were expected to show gratitude for their good fortune. I knew this reality was somehow wrong — that something had to change. I justdidn’t know what it meant for me.Some fans took my decision very personally, as if I had firebombed their church while tearing up an American flag.Much of my early awakening came from reading “The Autobiography of Malcolm X” as a freshman. I was riveted by Malcolm’s story of how he came to realize that he was the victim of institutional racism that had imprisoned him long before he landed in an actual prison. That’s exactly how I felt:imprisoned by an image of whoI was supposed to be. The first thing he did was push aside theBaptist religion that his parents had brought him up in and study Islam. To him, Christianity was a foundation ofthe white culture responsible for enslaving blacks and supporting the racism that permeated society. His family was attacked by the Christianity-spouting Ku Klux Klan, and his home was burned by the KKK splinter group the Black Legion.Malcolm X’s transformation from petty criminal to political leader inspired me to look moreclosely at my upbringing and forced me to think more deeply about my identity. Islam helped him find his true self and gave him the strength not only to face hostility from both blacks and whites but also to fight for social justice. I began to study the Quran.Conviction and defianceThis decision set me on an irreversible course to spiritual fulfillment. But it definitely wasn’t a smooth course. I made serious mistakes along the way. Then again, maybe thepath isn’t supposed to be smooth; maybe it’s supposed to be filled with obstacles and detours and false discoveries in order to challenge and hone one’s beliefs. As Malcolm X said, “I guess a man’s entitled to make a fool of himself if he’sready to pay the cost.”I paid the cost.As I said earlier, I was brought up to respect rules — and especially those who enforced the rules, such as teachers, preachers and coaches. I’d always been an exceptional student, so when I wanted to know more about Islam, I founda teacher in Hammas Abdul-Khaalis. During my years playing with the Milwaukee Bucks, Hammas’ version of Islam was a joyous revelation. Then in 1971, when I was 24, I converted to Islam and becameKareem Abdul-Jabbar (meaning“the noble one, servant of the Almighty”).The question I’m often asked iswhy I had to pick a religion so foreign to American culture anda name that was hard for people to pronounce. Some fans took it very personally, as if I had firebombed their churchwhile tearing up an American flag. Actually, I was rejecting the religion that was foreign to my American culture and embracing one that was part of my black African heritage. (An estimated 15 to 30 percent of slaves brought from Africa were Muslims.) Fans thought I joined the Nation of Islam, an American Islamic movement founded in Detroit in 1930. Although I was greatly influenced by Malcolm X, a leader in the Nation of Islam, I chose not to join because I wanted to focus more on the spiritual rather than political aspects. Eventually, Malcolm rejected the group right before three of its members assassinated him.My parents were not pleased bymy conversion. Though they weren’t strict Catholics, they had raised me to believe in Christianity as the gospel. But the more I studied history, the more disillusioned I became with the role of Christianity in subjugating my people. I knew, of course, that the Second Vatican Council in 1965 declared slavery an “infamy” that dishonored God and was a poison to society. But for me, it was too little, too late. The failure of the church to use its might and influence to stop slavery and instead to justify it as somehow connected to original sin made me angry. Papal bulls (e.g., “Dum Diversas” and “Romanus Pontifex”) condoned enslaving native people and stealing their lands. Conversion is a risky business because it can result in losing family, friends and community support.And while I realize that many Christians risked their lives andfamilies to fight slavery and that it would not have been ended without them, I found it hard to align myself with the cultural institutions that had turned a blind eye to such outrageous behavior in direct violation of their most sacred beliefs.The adoption of a new name was an extension of my rejection of all things in my life that related to the enslavement of my family and people. Alcindor was a French planter in the West Indies who owned my ancestors. My forebears were Yoruba people, from present day Nigeria. Keeping the name of my family’s slave master seemed somehow to dishonor them. His name felt like a branded scar of shame.My devotion to Islam was absolute. I even agreed to marry a woman whom Hammas suggested for me, despite my strong feelings for another woman. Ever the team player, I did as “Coach” Hammas recommended. I also followed his advice not to invitemy parents to the wedding — a mistake that took me more thana decade to rectify. Although I had my doubts about some of Hammas’ instruction, I rationalized them away because of the great spiritual fulfillment I was experiencing.But my independent spirit finally emerged. Not content to receive all my religious knowledge from one man, I pursued my own studies. I soon found that I disagreed with some of Hammas’ teachings about the Quran, and we parted ways. In 1973, I traveled to Libya and Saudi Arabia to learn enough Arabic to study the Quran on my own. Iemerged from this pilgrimage with my beliefs clarified and myfaith renewed.From that year to this, I have never wavered or regretted my decision to convert to Islam. When I look back, I wish I could have done it in a more private way, without all the publicity and fuss that followed. But at the time I was adding my voice to the civil rights movement by denouncing the legacy of slavery and the religious institutions that had supported it. That made it more political than I had intended and distracted from what was, for me, a much more personal journey.Many people are born into their religion. For them it is mostly a matter of legacy and convenience. Their belief is based on faith, not just in the teachings of the religion but also in the acceptance of that religion from their family and culture. For the person who converts, it is a matter of fierce conviction and defiance. Our belief is based on a combination of faith and logic because we need a powerful reason to abandon the traditions of our families and community to embrace beliefs foreign to both. Conversion is a risky business because it can result in losing family, friends and community support.Some fans still call me Lew, then seem annoyed when I ignore them. They don’t understand that their lack of respect for my spiritual choice is insulting. It’s as if they see me as a toy action figure, existing solely to decorate their world as they see fit, rather than as an individual with his own life.Kermit the Frog famously complained, “It’s not easy beinggreen.” Try being Muslim in America. According to a Pew Research Center poll on attitudes about major religious groups, the U.S. public has the least regard for Muslims — slightly less than it has for atheists — even though Islam isthe third-largest faith in America. The acts of aggression, terrorism and inhumanity committed by thoseclaiming to be Muslims have made the rest of the world afraid of us. Without really knowing the peaceful practices of most of the world’s 1.6 billion Muslims, they see only the worst examples. Part of my conversion to Islam is accepting the responsibility to teach others about my religion, not to convert them but to co-exist with them through mutual respect, support and peace. One world does not haveto mean one religion, just one belief in living in peace.Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is the NationalBasketball Association’s all-time leading scorer. During his 20 seasons in the league, he won six championships and was named its most valuable player six times.

Thursday, 27 August 2015

The story of dr Maurice when and why he become Muslim

MAURICEBucaille was born to a French parent and, like his family, he grew up a Christian. After his secondary education, he joined Faculty of Medicine, France University. Later, he became the most renowned and cleverest surgeon ever in modern France, but a story happened to change his life completely.France is known for its unique interest in archeology and heritage. When French Socialist President François Mitterrand assumed power in 1981, France asked Egypt, late in the 80’s, for the mummy of Egypt’s pharaoh so that it would conduct astring of monumental and processing experiments. Actually the body of Egypt’s most notorious tyrant was transferred to France, and, strangely, the French president and his ministers as well as senior officials in the country lined up nearthe plane carrying the pharaoh’s body and bowed down to him as if he were still alive!After the ceremonies of the royal-like reception to Egypt’s pharaoh were over, the tyrant’s mummy was carried nearly in the same red carpet reception way he received. Then the mummy was transferred to a special wing at the French Monuments Center, and renowned archeologists, surgeons and anatomists started to conduct a study on this mummyin an attempt to delve into its mysteries. The senior surgeon and the scientist in charge of the study on this mummy of the Pharaoh was Professor Maurice Bucaille. While the processors were busy making restoration to the mummy, their head (Maurice Bucaille) was thinking otherwise. He was trying to discover how this Pharaoh died when, late at night, he concluded his final analyses. The remains of the salt stuck in his body was a shining evidence that he had drowned and that hisbody was retrieved from the sea swiftly after he drowned; it was also obvious that they rushed to mummify his body so that his body would remain intact!! But MauriceBucaille puzzled over a question: How did this body — to the exclusion of other mummified bodies of other ancient Egyptians — remain that intact although it was recovered from the sea?” Maurice wasbusy conducting a final report while thinking as to whether the pharaoh’s body was recovered from the sea and mummified immediately after he drowned. But one of his company whispered in his ear, saying “There is no need to rush aboutthis issue, since the Muslims say that this Pharaoh did drown.” At first, he vehemently rejected this and did not believe it, citing that such a discovery would be reached only through sophisticated, modern and accurate computers. Another one accompanying him surprised him more when he told him that the Muslims’ Qur’an in which they believe narrates the story that says he drowned and that his body remained intacteven after he drowned. He got more surprised and kept on asking” Where did the Muslims’ Qur’an quote these data fromwhile the mummy was not discovered until1898, i.e. about 200 years only, given that the Qur’an has been recited by Muslims forover 1400 years, and given also that until a few decades ago the entire mankind including Muslims did not know that the ancient Egyptians had mummified their pharaohs?Maurice Bucaille stayed up all this night gazing at Pharaoh’s body, thinking deeply of what his fellow researcher told him about the Muslims’ Qur’an explicitly establishing that this body was recovered after drowning, while the Christians’ Gospel (Matthew and Luca) narrated only the story of Pharaoh when he was chasingProphet Musa (peace be upon him) without mentioning the fate of his body at all.“Is it believable that Muhammad (peace beupon him) knew about this over 1,000 years ago while I have only just known it?” he thought.Maurice spent a sleepless night, and asked for a version of the Torah. But it onlyfurthered Bucaille’s astonishment; since even Torah did not narrate that the body was recovered and remained intact due to the processing and restoration, which it did undergo.France sent back the mummy to Egypt in asplendid glass coffin. But, since he knew about the story circulated by Muslims on the intactness of this body, he decided to pack his baggage and travel to Saudi Arabia where a medical conference happened to be held with a galaxy of Muslim anatomists attending.There, told them about his discovery, i.e. that Pharaoh’s body was kept intact even after he drowned. One of the conferees opened the Qur’an and read out the Ayah in which Allah Almighty said, “So today Wewill (safely) deliver you with your body thatyou may be a sign to the ones succeeding you; and surely many among mankind are indeed heedless of Our signs.” (Yunus: 92)In his excitement, he stood before the attendants and loudly said, “I have converted to Islam and believed in this Qur’an.”Back to France, Maurice Bucaille spent 10 years conducting a study as to how far therecently scientific facts match that mentioned in the Holy Qur’an, trying to reassure himself that the Qur’an has never contradicted with any single scientific fact,so that he eventually came up with the conclusion that Allah Almighty said of the Qur’an, “Untruth does not come up to it before (Literally: between its two hands) it nor from behind it; a successive sending down from (One) Ever-Wise, Ever-Praiseworthy.”He came up with a earth shaking book on the Holy Qur’an which jolted the entire Western states, with the title of the book reading, “The Bible, The Qur’an and Science, The Holy Scriptures Examined In The Light Of Modern Knowledge.”The book sold out and even hundreds of thousands of it were translated from French to Arabic, English, Indonesian, Persian, Turkish and German, extending to include nearly all East and West bookstores; one has come to see it with any Egyptian, Moroccan or Gulf person in the US.In the preface of his book, Maurice Bucaille said, “These scientific areas whichQur’an established to the exclusion of other Scriptures filled me with deep surprise early on, since it never struck my mind to see such a large amount of scientific issues in such a variable and accurate way that they are a mirror image of what has recently been discovered in a book which has existed for more than 13 centuries.!!The Bible, The Qur’an and Science, The Holy Scriptures Examined In The Light Of Modern Knowledge was such a marvelous piece of writing that, in the year 1988, the French Academy awarded him its prize in history.