Becoming Muslim
Lord Headley Al-Farooq
(England)
Peer, Statesman, and Author
About the Author:
Lord Headley al-Farooq (Rt. Hon. Sir Rowland George
Allanson) was born in 1855 A.D. and was a leading British
peer, statesman and author. Educated in Cambridge, he became a
peer in 1877, served in the army as a captain and later on as
Lieut. Colonel in 4th Battalion of North Minister Fusiliers.
Although an engineer by profession he had wide literary
tastes. One time he was the editor of the "Salisbury Journal".
He was also the author of several books, most well known
amongst them being: A Western Awakening to Islam. Lord Headley
embraced Islam on 16th November 1913(8) and adopted the Muslim
name of Shaikh Rahmatullah al-Farooq. The Lord was a widely
travelled man and he visited India in 1928.
It is possible some of my friends may imagine that I have
been influenced by Muslims; but this is not the cause, for my
present convictions are solely the outcome of many years of
thought. My actual conversations with educated Muslims on the
subject of religion only commenced a few weeks ago, and need I
say that I am overjoyed to find that all my theories and
conclusions are entirely in accord with Islam.
Conversion, according to the Koran, should come out of free
choice and spontaneous judgement, and never be attained by means
of compulsion. Jesus meant the same thing when he said to his
disciples: "And whosoever shall not receive you nor hear you,
when ye depart there ... (St. Mark, vi, 2).
I have known very many instances of zealous Protestants who
have thought it their duty to visit Roman Catholic homes in
order to make 'converts' of the inmates. Such irritating and
unneighbourly conduct is, of course, very obnoxious, and has
invariably led to much ill-feeling -- stirring up strife and
tending to bring religion into contempt. I am sorry to think
that Christian missionaries have also tried these methods with
their Muslim brethren; though, I am at a loss to conceive, why
should they try to convert those who are already better
Christians than they are themselves? I say 'better Christians'
advisedly, because charity, tolerance and broad-mindedness in
the Muslim faith come nearer to what Christ himself taught than
do the somewhat narrow tenets of the various Christian Churches.
To take one example: the Athnasian Creed, which treats the
Trinity in a very confusing manner. In this Creed, which is very
important and deals conclusively with one of the fundamental
tenets of the 'Churches', it is laid down most clearly that it
represents the Catholic faith, and that if we do not believe it
we shall perish everlastingly. Then we are told that we must
think of the Trinity if we want to be saved - in other words
that the idea is of a God whom we in one breath hail as merciful
and almighty and in the very next breath whom we accuse of
injustice and cruelty, qualities which we would attribute to the
most blood-thirsty human tyrant. As if God, Who is before all
and above all, would be in any way influenced by what a poor
mortal 'thinks of the Trinity'.
Here is another instance of want of charity. I received a
letter -- it was of my leaning towards Islam -- in which the
writer told me that if I did not believe in the Divinity of
Christ I could not be saved. The question of the Divinity of
Christ never seemed to me nearly so important as that other
question: 'Did he give God's message to mankind?' Now if I had
any doubt this latter point it would worry me a great deal, but
thank God, I have no doubts, and I hope that my faith in Christ
and his inspired teachings is as firm as that of any other
Muslim or Christian. As I have often said before, Islam and
Christianity, as taught by Christ himself, are sister religions,
only held apart by dogmas and technicalities which might very
well be dispensed with.
In the present day men are prone to become atheists
when asked to subscribe to dogmatic and intolerant beliefs, and
there is doubtless a craving for a religion appealing to the
intelligence as well as to the sentiments of men.
Whoever heard of a Muslim turning atheist? There may have been
some cases, but I very much doubt it.
There are thousands of men -- and women, too, I believe --
who are at heart Muslims, but convention, fear of adverse
comments, and desire to avoid any worry or change, conspire to
keep them from openly admitting the fact. I have taken the step,
though I am quite aware that many friends and relatives now look
upon me as a lost soul and past praying for. And yet I am just
the same in my beliefs as I was twenty years ago; it is the
outspoken utterance which has lost me their good opinion.
Having briefly given some of the reasons for adopting the
teachings of Islam, and having explained that I consider myself
by that very act a far better Christian than I was before, I can
only hope that others will follow the example -- which I
honestly believe is a good one -- which will bring happiness to
any one looking upon the step as one in advance rather than one
in any way hostile to true Christianity.
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