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Steven Barboza
This African American former
Catholic found spiritual peace and fulfillment in orthodox Islam having
investigated and rejected the racist ideology of the Nation of Islam.
My abandonment of Roman
Catholicism was spawned by a premature death, my mother’s at age 49, on
the day before my 22nd birthday. I prayed like crazy for God to spare her, and
when He did not, I established a new line of communication. I called God Allah
and prayed with my palms cupped (to catch blessings) and my eyes wide open (to
keep Allah’s creation in sight). Given the irony and absurdity of events
in racially torn Boston, where I lived, Islam was a godsend. A few months after
my mother’s death, whites assaulted a black man in front of Boston City
Hall, using as one weapon a flagpole with an American flag attached. With that
attack and my mother’s death, a lifetime of frustrations reached the
breaking point.
My odyssey 26 years ago was not
unlike that of hundreds of thousands of blacks in the United States. The journey
became my jihad--literally “struggle”--waged not for political power
or economic enfranchisement but for control over my own soul.
Christianity did not offer a
complete way of life the way Islam did. Attending mass once a week and calling
it religion failed to satisfy my spiritual needs. Islam offered a code of
conduct on how to run my daily life and how to communicate with God. Prostrating
in prayer five times a day as a Muslim offered me more solace than I had ever
found kneeling before a crucifix.
In 1974, as now, in the Roxburys
and Harlems across America, only liquor stores outnumbered churches in vying for
blacks’ attention, and in my opinion, both stupefied millions of black
Americans.
Islam, as I was familiar with it,
seemed the perfect way to fight back. As a religion, it offered clear-cut
guidelines for living; as a social movement, it stood for a pride born of
culture and discipline.
Before my mom died, I had dipped
into Malcolm X’s autobiography. After she passed, I plunged into it.
Malcolm had undergone a metamorphosis: from hoodlum to cleaned-up spokesman for
the Nation of Islam and finally a convert to orthodox Islam, and through
his own transformation he had shown that change, even from the most miserable
beginnings, was possible.
Of course, Malcolm’s life
and mine were very different. He had discovered Islam in prison. I discovered it
in college. He was the spokesman for a black theocratic visionary. I held down a
mid-level white-collar job in a Fortune 500 company. Still, I felt a kinship
with Malcolm and the Black Muslims. The color of our skin made us all cargo in a
sinking ship, and Islam beckoned like a life preserver.
Two and a half decades ago in
Boston and New York, however, there were few orthodox mosques. In black
neighborhoods, one institution, the Nation of Islam, dominated in the teaching
of Islam, or, rather, a homegrown version of it. Many blacks who converted took
to the Nation’s teachings--its admonitions to self-love and racial
solidarity, its belief in productivity and entrepreneurship. And with equal
ardor, they also took to the Nation’s other teachings--its racial
chauvinism and belief that white people were genetically inferior, intrinsically
evil “blue-eyed devils” who had been created to practice “tricknology”
against blacks.
Using the twin motivators of myth
and pride, Elijah Muhammad built the Nation into one of the largest black
economic and religious organizations American had seen. It claimed a heavyweight
boxing champion the whole world adored, Muhammad Ali. Its women looked like
angels in their veils, crisp white jackets, and ankle-length skirts; its men cut
no-nonsense yet gallant figures in their smart dark suits and trademark bow
ties. But sitting in the Nation’s Roxbury temple was like being on a jury
listening to a closing argument. The defendants (in absentia): white folks. The
prosecutor: a dapper minister who practically spat, saying whites were so
utterly devilish that their religion was grotesquely symbolized by a
“symbol of death and destruction”--the crucifix. The charge:
perpetrating dastardly deeds on blacks “in the name of
Christianity.” The verdict: guilty.
I barely lasted my one visit. To
me, demonizing the “enemy” as the Nation did hardly seemed the best
way to learn to “love thyself.” Anyway, I abhorred the idea of
colorizing God, or limiting godly attributes to one race. And though Elijah
deserved credit for redeeming legions of blacks from dope and crime when all
else, including Christianity, had failed them, I didn’t believe that
earned him the title of Allah’s “messenger.”
So I moved to New York and became
an orthodox Muslim in the manner all converts do: I declared before Muslim
witnesses my belief in Allah and my faith that the Prophet Muhammad of Arabia
was His very last messenger. I entered a Sunni mosque and prostrated myself on
rugs beside people of all ethnicities.
Here was what I deemed a truer
Islam--the orthodoxy to which Malcolm had switched, the one most of
Elijah’s followers opted for when the Nation of Islam waned after his
death, the Islam to which most of America’s 135,000 annual converts, 80%
to 90% of them black, belong.
On a plane to Senegal I sat next
to a black American wearing a traditional Arab robe. The man was headed to meet
an imam, his spiritual leader, a black African Muslim. I later met other black
Americans who had spent years in Africa studying Islam. Through research, I
found that up to 35 percent of enslaved blacks brought to the New World were
Muslim. In converting, many black Americans may have been simply returning to
the religion of their forefathers.
Over the years, I have come to
understand what should have been obvious long ago--that Jesus had not forsaken
my mother. She died because God had willed it, regardless of what form my
prayers took. I hadn’t rejected Christianity so much as embraced Islam.
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