Bismillahirrahmanirrahim
Becoming Muslim
Samir
My conversion to Islam has been intellectual and emotional.
My parents have both been educated at the university-level. My
mother is a Christian convert (she was atheist), and my father
has personal beliefs. My family is rather rich.
Ever since I was very young, I've been interested by
political questions. I enjoyed reading history books, although I
was confused a little bit between military history and politics.
I called myself a communist, but today I wouldn't say I knew
what it means. Over time, I learned real politics and sociology,
but when the communist bloc fell, I admitted my error and was no
longer a fan of the communist states. I became agnostic, and
thought that all human beings are condemned to egotism and to
ignorance of some questions, like the existence of God. I
learned philosophy. I wanted to avoid doing the same mistakes as
in the past, and so I refused all dogmas. At this time occured
the separation of my parents, and also other personal problems.
To forget all this, I spent a lot of time in laughing with
(fake) friends, drinking, and then smoking cigarettes, then
hash. I sometimes took hard drugs (heroin, LSD, and some other
poisons). Despite this, I passed my baccalaureat (this is an
exam that ends four years of college and gives the right to
continue graduate level study at the university). By chance, I
had to go at the army (we do not have the choice in the country
I live in). The strict rules I could not avoid there were a very
good thing for me; also, I was tired enough to enjoy simple
things as eating and sleeping. Alhamdulillah (praise be to God),
my mentality changed.
Back in civil society, I spent one more dark year: I always
had the temptation of my bad habits, and I felt that life was
very superficial after the big efforts and the friendship of the
army. I began feeling the necessity of something else in my
life. Then one of my sisters, back from a journey to Syria, gave
me a book. This book, written in my language, is a gift she
received there. Its author, who had titled it "The Bible, Quran
and Science", wanted to show that there are in the Quran some
things that were simply impossible for a human being to know at
the time the Quran was revealed. Conclusion: the authenticity of
the Quran is proved, scientifically proved. The first thing I
thought after having read the book was: "Oh! It would be super!"
-- I was ready for a change in my way of life.
I bought a translation of the Quran to compare. Before having
entirely read it, I had become a Muslim, alhamdulillah. As you
can see, a psychologist wouldn't have any problem to explain
what he would call my choice. For me, all things come from God
and He had written this for me, He had chosen these means to
make me accept Islam. Alhamdulillah! What no psychologist can
see is what happens in my heart when I read the Quran: faith has
little to do with what one feels in front of a scientific
demonstration!
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