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From darkness into light (Read 16818 times)
abu_rashid
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #30 - Dec 6th, 2010 at 6:54pm
 
Finally my fears of never being able to find a wife were false. Al-Hamduliah, Allah has given me what every persons desires in life - a wonderful wife (who was also a convert like myself) and four lovely children.

For all those on their search for the truth, Muslim and non-Muslim I would like to end with a perfect Prayer,

O Allah, Help me see the Truth as TRUTH and give me the strength to follow it
And O Allah, Help me to see Falsehood as FALSE and give me the strength to Abstain from it.
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abu_rashid
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #31 - Feb 20th, 2011 at 9:58pm
 
Catholic Priest embraces Islam!



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Gummit
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #32 - Jun 23rd, 2011 at 2:52pm
 
abu_rashid wrote on Oct 19th, 2008 at 11:57am:
This thread is going to be a place to list inspirational stories of those who've made the great journey of embracing Islam. There's been quite a few threads so far claiming that millions of Muslims are leaving Islam for Christianity, personally I think it's a load of rubbish. There's very few sincere sounding stories, and most of them just seem to be extremely secular/poor people who've become Christians for some worldly gain, or because they don't really want religion in their life, so becoming a Christian is an easy way to do that. Whilst on the contrary many Christians who become Muslims tend to be quite knowledge and active members of Christian churches. As I myself was 100% secular prior to becoming a Muslim, my story is not really relevant, so I won't bore anyone with it.

Anyway if any Christians have stories from Muslims who've embraced Islam, feel free to start another thread, but don't put them in this thread. I'd personally be interested to any stories of Muslims who actually practised or knew anything about Islam, rather than just people who were already agnostic/secular anyway, if they actually exist.


You'd do well not to quite unsubstantiated numbers regarding the deaths in Iraq.

Better yet you'd do well to actually out forward a nuanced position on the matter.
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it_is_the_light
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #33 - Jun 25th, 2011 at 2:23am
 
i am not religious..

namaste

-:)
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ॐ May Much LOVE and CHRISTS LIGHT be upon and within us all.... namasté ▲ - : )  ╰დ╮ॐ╭დ╯
it_is_the_light it_is_the_light Christ+Light Christ+Light  
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Bobby.
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #34 - Jun 25th, 2011 at 9:50am
 
[quote author=it_is_the_light link=1224381470/30#33 date=1308932639]i am not religious..

namaste

-:)[/quote]

Rubbish - you turn the conversation into [b]Christ's love [/b]on every thread.
You are forgiven - go & sin no more.
Namaste.
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abu_rashid
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #35 - Aug 22nd, 2011 at 11:38pm
 
Islam takes root in land of mini-bikinis and Carnival

By Claire de Oliveira (AFP) – 1 day ago 


RIO DE JANEIRO — "As-salam aleikum!" Omar greeted worshippers as he entered Mesquita da Luz, Rio's first mosque where he had just broken his Ramadan fast at dusk.

Those are some of the only words Omar knows in Arabic, and he quickly continued his conversation in Portuguese with fellow Muslims who mostly, like him, converted recently to Islam in the world's biggest Catholic country.

In a land known more for its mini-bikinis and extravagant Carnival featuring scantily clad women, a small but growing number of Brazilians of various backgrounds call themselves Muslim.

For decades, it was primarily families of Libyan, Palestinian and Syrian descent who practiced Islam in Brazil.

Omar, who until just four years ago officiated as Catholic priest at a local church, explained why he embraced Islam.

"I found in Islam everything I had always looked for. I met God as he is, with no adaptation," the 34-year-old graphic designer told AFP.

Wearing a traditional long djellaba robe, he refused to give his official name, instead only revealing his Muslim one: Omar Israfil Dawud bin Ibrahim.

"At the seminary, you learn that Islam is one of the monotheistic religions. There is no prejudice against this religion," said Omar as he stood by his wife Alessandra Faria, who goes by the name "Fatima" after converting and deciding to wear the veil.

"In the beginning, my mother was mortified at the thought of going outside with me. I wear the veil to show I am Muslim and aware that I am part of a minority," she said.

Fatima's hijab may raise eyebrows in Rio, where it is more common to see women walking the streets in bikinis in seaside neighborhoods, but she says her beliefs can find a place here.

"Brazil is a mix, made up of several different cultures. This mix makes Brazilians very adaptable and tolerant."

Like most practicing Muslims here, Omar and Fatima are only recent converts to Islam. They plan to travel to Saudi Arabia next year on a Saudi government grant to learn Arabic.

Renovations on the mosque they attend in the suburb of Tijuca north of Rio got under way four years ago with donations from worshippers. It will soon hold up to 400 people during prayers, a major upgrade.

"The number of Muslims continues to grow, and most are Brazilians who are converting. We recruit members mostly online," said Sami Isbelle, a spokesman for the Beneficent Muslim Society (SBMRJ).

"In Rio, there are about 500 Muslim families, 85 percent of them Brazilian converts who have no Arab links," Isbelle said.

Things are different in Sao Paulo state and southern regions of Brazil, where most Muslims were born as such and are often of Arab descent.

Brazil's census does not count the number of Muslims, and only provides data on Catholics, evangelicals, Jews, spiritualists and followers of Afro-Brazilian religions.

"Muslims are listed in the 'other' category, along with Buddhists, for example, said Islam expert Paulo Pinto of Fuminense Federal University, who estimated Brazil is home to about a million Muslims.

The best indicator of the growth of Islam in the country is the rapid increase in the number of places of worship, according to Pinto. There are now 127 mosques, four times as many as there were back in 2000.

After the September 11 attacks in the United States, "there was a growth of interest in Islam, and many people decided to convert," Pinto added. "Islam was seen as a new form of resistance."

But it was a "telenovela" or soap opera launched just three weeks after the 2001 attacks, "The Clone," that sparked some Brazilians' infatuation with Islam.

Set in Morocco, the popular show showed a "positive imagine of that part of the world, with a benevolent Muslim hero," said Pinto.

"There is a tendency to think that Brazilian culture, as liberal and sensual as it is, is against the rules of Islam. But in fact, there are many conservative rules that are part of moral and sexual control. Look at how many evangelicals are successful in Brazil!"

Source: AFP
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Belgarion
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #36 - Aug 23rd, 2011 at 12:01am
 
It's understandable that Islam has taken root among the many fringe dwellers that Brasilian society has generated. Brasil is a great place for those who have money and for foreign tourists, but is not so great for the vast majority of its citizens.

When you have nothing and no hope of improvement then you will naturally be open to the seduction of a movement that promises all sorts of delights in the next life in return for total obedience in this one.

I include all organised religion in this, not just Islam.
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"I may not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."

Voltaire.....(possibly)
 
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abu_rashid
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #37 - Aug 25th, 2011 at 11:46pm
 
Well that might hold for some religions, but I think even a basic look at what kind of people are usually attracted to Islam will suggest otherwise.

Islam is not the refuge of lost souls that Christianity is for example, where we find the largest group of "born again" adopters of the religion are ex-drug addicts or recovering alcoholics etc. that need an anchor in their life to keep them on the straight and narrow.

We find that those who embrace Islam are usually astute, intelligent, and often more affluent people in societies, who realise there must be something more fulfilling to life. That's why we find not just average Christians coming to Islam, but missionaries, priests, even bishops who embrace Islam.

Since becoming a Muslim, I've come across the kinds of people I never would've crossed paths with previously, like Quantum physicists, doctors, lawyers, mayors etc. many of them converts to Islam like myself.

Like this recent example:



A TOP RAF pilot trainer has shocked military chiefs by converting to Islam and criticising Britain’s air strikes in Libya.

Dr Joel Hayward launched an attack on the military campaign in a Muslim magazine.

He has been dubbed “the Air Force Ayatollah” by fellow officers.

Dr Hayward, who taught Prince William, 29, at his Top Gun-style training school, stunned bosses by questioning the NATO strikes on tyrant Colonel Gaddafi after he ordered his army to attack civilians.

The 47-year-old dean of RAF training college Cranwell, in Lincolnshire, said: “Various leaders congratulated themselves for preventing an ‘atrocity’ or ‘slaughter’.

“Yet we do not know that Colonel Gaddafi’s army would have ‘slaughtered’ civilians.”

He also slated the UN resolution on Libya and claimed military action would lead to “distrust”.

His article has worried some defence chiefs, who fear he is giving too much time to Islamic activities.

One senior officer yesterday slammed Dr Hayward’s views as “nothing to do with the RAF”.

Concerns were also raised that air cadets were in fear of saying anything that Dr Hayward might consider “anti-Muslim”. It is not the first time Dr Hayward has courted controversy.

In 2000 he was accused of denying the Holocaust after he questioned the number of Jews killed by the Nazis.

An RAF spokesman maintained the doctor’s writings “did not impinge” on his classes at Cranwell.

Source: Daily Star
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Lisa Jones
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #38 - Aug 27th, 2011 at 4:32pm
 
abu_rashid wrote on Aug 25th, 2011 at 11:46pm:
A TOP RAF pilot trainer has shocked military chiefs by converting to Islam and criticising Britain’s air strikes in Libya.

Dr Joel Hayward launched an attack on the military campaign in a Muslim magazine.

He has been dubbed “the Air Force Ayatollah” by fellow officers.

Dr Hayward, who taught Prince William, 29, at his Top Gun-style training school, stunned bosses by questioning the NATO strikes on tyrant Colonel Gaddafi after he ordered his army to attack civilians.

The 47-year-old dean of RAF training college Cranwell, in Lincolnshire, said: “Various leaders congratulated themselves for preventing an ‘atrocity’ or ‘slaughter’.

“Yet we do not know that Colonel Gaddafi’s army would have ‘slaughtered’ civilians.”

He also slated the UN resolution on Libya and claimed military action would lead to “distrust”.

His article has worried some defence chiefs, who fear he is giving too much time to Islamic activities.

One senior officer yesterday slammed Dr Hayward’s views as “nothing to do with the RAF”.


Concerns were also raised that air cadets were in fear of saying anything that Dr Hayward MIGHT consider “anti-Muslim”.

It is not the first time Dr Hayward has courted controversy.


In 2000 he was accused of denying the Holocaust after he questioned the number of Jews killed by the Nazis.

An RAF spokesman maintained the doctor’s writings “did not impinge” on his classes at Cranwell.

Source: Daily Star


The guy's a total nutter .. yet you felt compelled to post this article for some reason Abu. Wonder why? Are you suggesting that you are like this guy also?
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« Last Edit: Aug 27th, 2011 at 4:38pm by Lisa Jones »  

If I let myself be bought then I am no longer free.

HYPATIA - Greek philosopher, mathematician and astronomer (370 - 415)
 
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abu_rashid
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #39 - Aug 27th, 2011 at 10:19pm
 
Quote:
The guy's a total nutter


As he doesn't blindly follow the standard narrative that we're spoon fed by our media? Yeh he must be a nutter...

Try thinking for yourself for once Lisa.
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #40 - Sep 18th, 2011 at 8:44pm
 
"They plot and plan, and Allah too plans; but the best of planners is Allah." (Qur'an 8:30)




Conversion To Islam One Result Of Post-9/11 Curiosity


First Posted: 8/24/11 05:42 PM ET Updated: 8/24/11 06:25 PM ET

BOSTON (RNS) Like a lot of other people in the haze and confusion of the 9/11 attacks, Johannah Segarich asked herself: "What kind of religion is this that could inspire people to do this?"

She had studied other religions, but never Islam. So she bought a copy of the Quran, wondering if her notions of Islam as a patriarchal and now seemingly violent religion, would be confirmed.

Then she got to the first chapter, with its seven-line message about seeking guidance from a merciful creator. She finished the Quran a few weeks later, then started reading it again. About half way through, barely 10 weeks after 9/11, "I came to the realization," she said, "that I had a decision to make."

Segarich began studying Islam more intensely, and within a few months, the Utah-born music instructor made her Islamic declaration of faith, or shehadah, at the Islamic Society of Boston in Cambridge.

"It seemed kind of crazy to do. I was a middle-aged professional woman, very independent, very contemporary, and here I was turning to this religion, which at that point was so reviled," Segarich recalled.

Indeed, it seems counterintuitive that Americans would consider joining a religion that many associate with terrorism and violence -- especially after 9/11. But there are more than a few people like Segarich who, compelled by curiosity, became converts.

The majority of post-9/11 converts are women, according to experts. Hispanics and African-Americans, who were already converting well before 9/11, are the most common ethnic groups to convert.

Though exact numbers are difficult to tally, observers estimate that as many as 20,000 Americans convert to Islam annually.

Some conversions make headlines, such as Yvonne Ridley, a British journalist who converted in 2003 after being held captive by Taliban; Lauren Booth, the sister-in-law of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair; or the rapper known as Loon, who converted last year.

Angela Collins Telles grew up in southern California but had a travel bug that took her to Egypt and Syria, where she made friends and found most people generous and compassionate. When anti-Muslim rhetoric flared after 9/11, Collins Telles felt a need to push back.

"I saw my country demonizing these people as terrorists and oppressors of women, and I couldn't think of anything further from the truth," she said, "and I felt a need to stand-up and defend them. But then I realized that I couldn't argue without knowledge."

Like other converts, Collins Telles said some Christian beliefs, such as the Trinity and priests as intermediaries to God -- had never quite seemed right her.

"The concept of God was the most beautiful thing, and that concept fit with what I believe," said Collins Telles, who converted a few months after 9/11.

Chicagoan Kelly Kaufmann had a similar experience. When relatives chastised her for volunteering for President Obama's presidential campaign because they believed, erroneously, he is Muslim, she felt a need to study religion. When she came to Islam, her beliefs finally seemed in sync.

"Once I realized that's where my beliefs aligned, I had that big uh-oh moment that a lot of people have when they realize, 'Uh-oh, the (religion) I align with is the big fat scary one, as treated by the media, and understood as such by the public," she said.

But after nearly a year of study, Kaufmann could find nothing wrong with Islam. She decided to convert after confronting a man at a public lecture who said Muslims hated peace.

"That's when I realized, if I'm taking this personally, I think I must be ready," she said.

Because of a slow but steady number of converts, many mosques have launched programs to help them with learning the essentials: prayer, basic beliefs, and proper behavior.

Vaqar Sharief, who was tapped to create a program for converts at the Islamic Center of Wilmington, Del., estimates his mosque gets four or five converts every month.

Despite their enthusiasm, some converts worry about how friends and colleagues will react, or whether they are exposing themselves to harassment or attack.

"I guess it will always be a concern until the rhetoric changes a little bit," said Kaufmann, whose family has been supportive -- except for an uncle who now forbids his daughter from seeing Kaufmann. "What are they afraid of, conversion by proximity?"

Trisha Squires hasn't been a Muslim for even a month, following her July 31 declaration of faith, and has told only a few people, with mixed results.

Among the disappointing reactions was a close friend who said, "The godmother of my children is going to be a Muslim?" Squires hesitates to wear a headscarf to work, unsure what her employer might think.

Others, however, don't worry at all.

"I never cared about being accepted," said Collins Telles, who now lives in Brazil with her husband, who also converted after meeting her. "I knew that I had found God, and that's all I ever wanted."

Source: Huffington Post
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abu_rashid
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Re: From darkness into light
Reply #41 - Feb 6th, 2012 at 9:41pm
 
Coptic Bishop speaks about massive number of Copts embracing Islam each year and dispels the myths peddled in the West that they are "kidnapped".

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