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Islam is
wonderful, but I can't stand the Muslims
"Why should I try to convert my
non-Muslim friends when I often prefer them to the Muslims that I know? How will
being Muslim change their lives for the better if they already display more of
the Islamic virtues than most of the Muslims they are likely to meet?"
By British convert to Islam, Michael A. Malik.
There was a white face in the
mosque. You don't see very many, so I went over and asked if he was a Muslim,
“I used to be, but not any more.” he said, “I thought Islam
was wonderful, but I couldn't stand the Muslims”. What could I say except
“I know how you feel”;. Most converts do.
Of course one meets some special
individuals in encounters with the ummah, but how is it possible that in the
Muslim world they seem so few and far between? Does my being a cultural alien
mean that I am inherently less capable of understanding Islam, or is it just
that I don't understand my fellow Muslims? Why is it that a trip to the mosque
so often leaves me closer to despair than hope? Why do I so rarely feel
enlightened and uplifted after conversation with my fellow Muslims, yet so often
offended by their behaviour, frustrated by their mindless approach to truth, and
enraged by the inadequacy of the Islam they expect me to accept? How often I
have felt like giving it all up.
Fortunately I was a Muslim for
four years before going to the Muslim world and meeting those who feel that
Islam belongs to them by birthright, so I early on formed a relationship with
God which served to armour me against the ummah. The first time I went into a
mosque in a Muslim country, the first thing to happen was that someone tried to
throw me out. Now they weren’t to know that I was a Muslim but they didn't
even ask. When I told them, in fact, the first thing they did ask was “Sunni
or Shi’a?”, so if I'd picked the wrong one they would probably have
thrown me out anyway. I thoroughly confused them when I said I didn't care,
however, and eventually they let me stop and pray.
First impressions last a long
time, they say, but many years after having learned by experience the best way
to get in, pray, and get out without harassment, it still seems that in a
strange mosque a strange face is more likely to be greeted with hostility than
welcome.
The man in the editor's office was
obviously a Muslim, so the brusque arrogance of his manner should not have come
as a surprise. It did little, however, to incline me towards composing a careful
answer, too much effort was required to remain courteous, and it seemed more
like a challenge than a question. “And how many of your people have you
converted?” he said, but I suspect the answer was more complex than he
really wanted to hear.
“Converted to what?”
is the first response. Islam presumably, yet here we have a huge assumption that
we both agree on what that is. Why should I try to convert my non-Muslim friends
when I often prefer them to the Muslims that I know? How will being Muslim
change their lives for the better if they already display more of the Islamic
virtues than most of the Muslims they are likely to meet? I share what I have
found when they show Interest, but like me they often look at the Muslim world
and wonder what we have in common. They find it hard to see living examples of
the principles of which I speak.
I came to Islam through a search
for Truth, but I found that in practice most Muslims give the truth a very low
priority, and I can still be shocked by their facility for saying whatever they
think suits the conversation best. Along with truth goes trustworthiness, surely
an Islamic virtue, yet travelling through the Muslim world I met Muslims eager
to sit down and discuss breaking an agreement not two minutes after sealing it
with a pious recitation of Al Fatiha [first chapter of the Quran]. And closer to home how distasteful it is to belong
to a community so notorious with regard to paying bills.
How about Mercy and Compassion -
those words now repeatedly on my Muslim lips. In three years of travelling
through the Muslim world, hardly a day passed without some stranger feeling he
ought to instruct me in the principles of Islam. In all that time, in all these
casual encounters, not only was mercy never given pride of place, but I actually
don't recall it ever having been given a place at all. It is not necessary for
my friends to look to the Muslim heartlands, when at home the Muslim example can
be confused with “My Beautiful Launderette”.
But they see the Muslim heartlands
every evening an TV, with their dictators and demagogues thick on the ground,
oppressive and unjust societies, poverty and ignorance. There is no point in
telling friends that Islam is a complete way of life. That it is a way to
achieve joy and fulfillment in this life, hope and trust when approaching the
next, and the perfect basis for a tolerant and peaceful society for all
humanity. What can I answer when someone says “Show me!” - “Point
to a Muslim country you can use as an example.”
My Islam sees in the prophet
endless examples of forgiveness and tolerance, yet my friends see the mindless
enforcement of rigid laws and eccentric punishments. I sometimes explain, but
could just as well tell tales of Shari'a court corruption and injustice. My
Islam insists on individual freedom, there is no compulsion, no priests are
needed, and except for piety all men are equal. I kneel before no man, though I
will kneel in prayer beside any, and my wealth and privilege is permitted,
though charity is to be preferred, and the prophet chose to die a pauper.
My friends can understand and be
drawn to such principles, but unless they can see this utopia in a more tangible
form than my theories they are surely destined to remain cynical about their
possible fulfillment. As long as I can't show them examples of Muslims living in
a way they consider preferable to their own, I won't worry too much about their
conversion. They see my Islam as a pipe dream, and who knows, perhaps they are
right. The task is of course even harder when the friends concerned are women,
as the clichéd platitudes of Islamic freedom and equality mean nothing when
such highly visible inequities and oppression are impossible to hide.
Since I came back to this country
there has been much talk in the Muslim community about an “identity crisis”.
But the business successes of their family networks show that Muslims have no
problem in identifying themselves with other Muslims, they just have trouble in
identifying themselves with anything recognisable as Islam. In fact it seems
that most Muslims would rather have as little to do with Islam as possible from
the moment they are old enough to avoid it.
“Brother, let me tell you
the most important thing in Islam”, said the stranger who had cornered me
in a Lahore coffee bar. Far from agog, I waited to hear what it might be, though
experience had taught me that it was unlikely to include any of the five
pillars, truth or tolerance, or the like. “The most important thing in
Islam” he said “is that your wife covers her head”, a view of
Islam which I had heard often from many Muslim men. In other words the most
important thing in the practice of Islam is to get your wife to do it, or your
children, or your grandfather, or anybody but yourself!
Back in Britain I listened to the
Muslim wails. “We are losing our children! By the time they leave school
they are strangers, lost to us and to Islam! What can we do?” My usual
response was often faced with dismay – “I can say what I think you
should do, but it's unlikely that you will do it, because it involves changing
yourselves. It involves changing the way you understand your Islam”. This
is not suggesting wholesale innovation, as it might seem to imply, but quite the
reverse. “It is necessary to revive that Muslim community which is buried
under the debris of the manmade traditions of several generations, and which is
crushed under the weight of those false laws and customs which are not remotely
related to Islamic teachings, and which, in spite of all this, calls itself the
‘world of Islam’” (Qutb - Milestones). It's time to get back
to the real thing - and I don't mean coca cola.
As I waited to begin my talk to
the gathering of young Muslims I engaged in conversation with the group. A nice,
quiet, attentive, well-mannered lot I thought. Then time to begin, but the mike
wasn't working, and they waited “Testing! Testing! 123...” for
while. Rather than just read numbers, it seemed more appropriate to read some
Qur’an - after all, I was going to be talking about prayer. To my
amazement, the first words of Fatihah seemed to fall in the room like a
grenade, turning the group into a rabble. Punches flew, people rolled on the
floor, conversations were attempted back and forth across the room, and Fatihah
was generally taken as Time Out. If these were the ones at a Muslim conference,
what on earth would the Muslim youth who weren't there have been like?
Now it's not that I'm a one for
excessive displays of reverence, I see my religion more in a practical kind of
way, but this was , which the Prophet called the best of the chapters of the
Qur'an, and which Al-Ghazali called the key to Paradise. These words are not
recited in every rakat of prayer without good reason. The outward
displays of reverence, such as venerating a Qur'an, placing it high up and
wrapped away, cannot do justice to the awe and wonder this surah
deserves. But if a Muslim does not have a reason for this reverence which
satisfies his understanding, the outward displays become hollow and easy to
discard.
At the exhibition, the school kids
of all ages were milling around looking at the World of Islam. As they tried to
find the answers for their question sheets it was clear that Muslim kids knew
little more than all the rest. No wonder our young people are losing their
Islam. They have received so little to start off with. From out of the crowd
around the Qur'an, one boy said to the teacher “I can read that!”,
and proceeded to do so - more fluently than I could have done myself. The
teacher was obviously highly impressed, but then asked the obvious question,
“What does it mean?”, and the boys satisfaction turned to wry
embarrassment. “I don't know”, he shrugged, and that was the end of
that.
Now our young people are not
stupid. Muslims have a better academic record than most groupings, as a glance
at the honours board of your local school will show. The teacher's response was
a common sense question, one that anyone might have expected in the situation.
The embarrassment came from the common sense questions that remained unspoken,
“Then why did you learn it?”, “What use is it to you?”,
“Is this a skill without a purpose?” The teacher implicitly
understood that these are questions you do not ask, and neither it seems do
Muslims. It is as though Muslims are afraid that Islam can't stand up to common
sense questions, yet Fatihah alone can satisfy whatever intellectual
demands are put upon it and still remain inexhaustible. Are we passing on the
key to the door of paradise, and forgetting to explain how you use it to open
the lock.
If young Muslims are not shown the
full richness of Islamic knowledge, we must not be surprised if they show more
interest in fields where there seems further to explore. It will take some time
before mosques are again centres of learning in all its aspects, places of
research, experimentation and debate concerning our understanding of God and
Creation. But when western educated young Muslim adults begin to search for
their spiritual roots, God willing, they will uncover the means of
reinvigorating the ummah, and leading them in the example of the Companions. If
our Islam is not like theirs, filled with a sense of awe, wonder and excitement,
can we really be doing justice to the service of Allah.
In such a situation, we will find
new Muslims drawn towards the mosque. At the moment, amidst the ummah they are
more likely to find Islam expressed as a cultural adjunct, where even the five
pillars are avoided. But if the pillars are treated as unnecessary then what is
needed to be Muslim, and if they are necessary how many Muslims are there in the
ummah?
This goes to the heart of the
conversation question, as we need to know what is essential for a person to be
considered Muslim. Do Muslims in fact expect more from a convert than they do
from those born in their cultures? How little does a westerner have to do before
Muslims accept him as Muslim, and how far can he stray from their cultural norm
before they consider him a disturbing intrusion and would rather that he stayed
away? Is the reason there are not more converts because they would disturb the
status quo?
But our effect on our surrounding
society is a mirror to our behaviour and how well we represent Islam. We must
live in a way that seems preferable and then at least partially satisfy the
expectations of the inquisitive. Once upon a time, Islam spread like wildfire.
In a few short years the Message spread to Morocco and to China. Millions
welcomed the good news, and quickly shaped their lives around it.
Now Islam may be fast growing in
the third world regions, but here in the West Muslims face a peculiar reaction
to their invitations to join them in their faith, as almost nobody wants
anything to do with it. If the message we are passing on no longer seems to have
the same effect, is it not time to consider if we just have a communications
problem, or whether we ourselves are abusing the message? Fortunately we still
have the original - all we have to do is understand it!
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