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Why I
embraced Islam
by Maryum Jameelah (formerly Margaret
Marcus), an American Jew who convert to Islam in the late 1950's.
I trace the beginning of my interest in Islam when as a child of ten
, while attending a reformed Jewish "Sunday School" , I became
fascinated with the historical relationship between the Jews an the Arabs. From
my Jewish textbooks, I learned that Abraham was the father of the Arabs as well
as the Jews. I read how centuries later when in medieval Europe, Christian
persecution made their lives intolerable, the Jews were welcomed in Muslim Spain
and that it was the magnanimity if this same Arabic-Islamic civilization which
stimulated Hebrew culture to reach its highest peak of achievement. Totally
unaware of the true nature of Zionism, I naively thought that Jews were
returning to Palestine to strengthen their close ties of kinship in religion and
culture with their Semitic cousins. Together I believed that the Jews and Arabs
would cooperate to attain another Golden Age of culture in the Middle East.
Despite my fascination with the study of Jewish history, I was extremely
unhappy at the "Sunday School". At this time I identified strongly
with the Jewish people in Europe, then suffering a horrible fate under the Nazis
and I was shocked that none of my class-fellows nor their parents took their
religion seriously. During the services at the synagogue, the children used to
read comic strips hidden in their prayer books and laugh to scorn at the
rituals. The children were so noisy and disorderly that the teachers couldn't
discipline them and found it very difficult to conduct the classes. At home the
atmosphere for religious observance was scarcely more congenial. My elder sister
detested the "Sunday School" so much that my mother literally had to
drag her out of bed in the mornings and she never went without the struggle of
tears and hot words. Finally my parents were exhausted and let her quit. On the
Jewish holy days instead of attending Synagogues and fasting on Yum Kipper, my
sister and I were taken out of school to picnics and gay parties in fine
restaurants. When my sister and I were convinced our parents how miserable we
were both at the Sunday School they joined agnostic, humanist organization known
as the Ethical Cultural Movement.
The Ethical Culture Movement was founded late in the 19th century by Felix
Adler. While studying for the rabbinate, Felix Adler grew convinced that
devotion to ethical values as relative and man-made, regarding and
supernaturalism or theology as irrelevant, constituted the only religion fit for
the modern world. I attended the Ethical Culture "Sunday School" each
week from the age of eleven until I graduated at fifteen. Here I grew into
complete accord with the ideas of the movement ad regarded all traditional,
organized religions with scorn.
Throughout my adolescence I remained under the influence of humanistic
philosophy until, after I began to mature intellectually and atheism no longer
satisfied me, I began a renewed search for my identity. For a time I joined a
bahai group in New York called the "The caravan of East and West"
under the leadership of a Persian by the name of Mirza Ahmed Sohrab (D.1958) who
told me that he had been the secretary of Abdul Baha, one of the founders of the
Bahai. Initially I was attracted to the Bahai because of its Islamic origin and
its preaching about the oneness of the mankind, but when I discovered how
miserably they had failed to implement this ideal, I left them a year later
bitterly disillusioned. When I was eighteen years old, I became a member of the
local branch of the religious Zionist youth movement known as the Mizrachi
Hatzair, but when I found out what the real nature of Zionism was, which made
hostility between Jews and Arabs irreconcilable, I left several months later in
disgust. When I was twenty and a student in New York University , one of my
elective courses was "Judaism in Islam". My professor, Rabbi Abraham
Issac Katsh, the head of the Department of Hebrew Studies there, he spared no
efforts to convince his students -- all Jews many of whom aspired to become
Rabbis-- that Islam was derived from Judaism. Our textbook, written by him *
took each verse from the Quran , painstakingly tracing it to its alleged Jewish
source. Although his real aim was to prove to his students the superiority of
Judaism over Islam, he convinced me diametrically the opposite. I was repelled
by the sub-ordination of the Hereafter, so vividly ported in the Holy Quran, to
the alleged divine right of the Jews to Palestine. The Jewish God in the Old
Testament and in the Jewish prayer book appeared to me distorted and degraded
into some kind of real estate agent ! The fusion of Parochial nationalism with
religion, I thought had spiritually impoverished Judaism beyond redemption. The
rigid exclusiveness of Judaism I felt had a great deal of connection with the
persecutions the Jews have suffered throughout their history. I reflected that
perhaps these tragedies wouldn't have happened if the Jews had competed
vigorously with other faiths for converts. I soon discovered that Zionism was
merely a combination of the racist, tribalistic Judaism with modern secular
nationalism. Zionism was further discredited in my eyes when I learnt that few
if any of the leaders of the Zionism were observant Jews and that perhaps
nowhere is orthodox, traditional Judaism regarded with such intense contempt as
in Israel. When I found nearly all important Jewish leaders in America
uncritical supporters of Zionism who felt not the slightest twinge of conscience
because of the terrible injustice inflicted on the Palestinian Arabs, I could no
longer consider myself a Jew at heart.
One morning in November 1954, Professor Katsh during his lecture, argued with
irrefutable logic that the monotheism taught my Moses (PBUH) and the Divine laws
related to him at Sinai were indispensable as the basis for all higher ethical values. If
morals were purely man-made as the Ethical Culture and other agnostic and
atheistic philosophies taught then they could be changed at will according to
mere whim, convenience or circumstance. The result would be utter chaos leading
to individual and collective ruin. Belief in the Hereafter as the Rabbis in the
Talmud taught, argued Prof. Katsh. was not mere wishful thinking but a moral
necessity. Only those he said who firmly believed that each of us will be
summoned by God on judgment Day to render a complete account of our life and
rewarded or punished accordingly, will possess the self-discipline to sacrifice
transitory pleasures and endure hardships and sacrifice to attain lasting good.
While Prof. Katsh was lecturing thus, I was comparing in my mind what I had read
in the Old Testament and the Talmud with what was taught in the Quran and Hadith
and finding Judaism so defective, I was converted to Islam.
Although I wanted to become a Muslim as far back as in 1954, my family
managed to argue me out of it. I was warned that Islam would complicate my life
because it is not like Judaism and Christianity, part of the American scene. I
was told that Islam would alienate me from my family and isolate me from the
community. At that time my faith wasn't sufficiently strong to withstand these
pressures. Partly as the result of my inner turmoil, I became so ill that I had
to discontinue college long before it was any time for me to graduate so that I
never earned any diploma. For the next two years I remained at home under
private medical care, steadily growing worse. in desperation from 1957-1959, my
parents confined me both to private and public hospitals where I vowed that if I
ever recovered sufficiently to be discharged I would embrace Islam.
After I was allowed to return home, I investigated all the opportunities to
meet Muslims in New York City and it was my good fortune to make the
acquaintance of some of the finest men and women anyone could ever hope to meet.
I also began to write articles for Muslim magazines and carry on an extensive
correspondence with Muslim leaders all over the world. I corresponded with the
late Sheikh Abrahimi, the leader of the ulema in Algeria, Dr, Muhammad El-Bahay
of Al-Azhar, Dr. Mahmud F Hoballah , then the director of the Islamic center in
Washington D.C., Dr. Hameedullah of Paris, Dr. Said Ramadan, the director of the
Islamic center of Geneva, and Maulana Sayyid Abul Ala Maudoodi.
Even before I formally embraced Islam, I found the integrity of the faith in
the contemporary world greatly threatened by the so-called modernist movement
which aimed at adulterating its teachings with man-made philosophies and
reforms. I was convinced that had these modernizers had their way , nothing of
the original would be left ! As a child I had witnessed with my own eyes in my
own family how the liberals had mutilated what had once been a Divinely revealed
faith. Having been born a Jew and reared in a Jewish family ,I had seen how
futile was the attempt to reconcile religion with atheistic environment.
"Reformed Judaism" not only failed to check the cultural assimilation
of the Jews I knew but actively encouraged the process. As a result they had
become Jews by label only. None had any religion worthy of the name. Throughout
my childhood, the intellectual dishonesty, hypocrisy and superficiality of
"reformed" Judaism was a vivid experience. Even at that early age I
knew that such a watered down, half-hearted compromise could never hope to
retain the loyalty of its members, much less their children. How dismayed I was
when I found among the Muslims, the same threat! How shocked I was when I found
certain scholars and some political leaders within the Muslim community guilty
of the identical sins for which the God in our Holy Quran has vehemently
denounced the Jews! Convinced that God wouldn't spare us from calamity and doom
us to the same fate the Jews have suffered unless we sincerely repented and
changed our ways, I vowed that I would devote all my literary struggle to
combating this menace from within before it was too late.
Thus in his first letter to me of January 1961, Maulana Maudoodi wrote:
"While I was scanning your essays. I felt as if I were reading my very
own ideas. I hope your feeling will be the same when you have the opportunity to
learn Urdu and study my books. And that despite the fact there has been no
previous acquaintance between you and me, this mutual sympathy and unanimity in
thought has resulted directly from the fact that both of us have derived our
inspiration from one and the same source-- Islam "
MARYUM JAMEELAH's BOOKS:
1. ISLAM VERSUS THE WEST
2. ISLAM AND MODERNISM
3. ISLAM IN THEORY AND PRACTICE
4. ISLAM VERSUS AHL AL KITAB PAST AND PRESENT
5. AHMAD KHALIL
6. ISLAM AND ORIENTALISM
7. WESTERN CIVILIZATION CONDEMNED BY ITSELF
8. CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN MAULANA MAUDOODI AND MARYUM JAMEELAH
9. ISLAM AND WESTERN SOCIETY
10. A MANIFESTO OF THE ISLAMIC MOVEMENT
11. IS WESTERN CIVILIZATION UNIVERSAL
12 WHO IS MAUDOODI ?
13 WHY I EMBRACED ISLAM
14 ISLAM AND THE MUSLIM WOMAN TODAY
15 ISLAM AND SOCIAL HABITS
16 ISLAMIC CULTURE IN THEORY AND PRACTICE
17 THREE GREAT ISLAMIC MOVEMENTS IN THE ARAB WORLD OF THE RECENT PAST
18 SHAIKH HASAN AL BANNA AND IKHWAN AL MUSLIMUN
19 A GREAT ISLAMIC MOVEMENT IN TURKEY
20 TWO MUJAHIDIN OF THE RECENT PAST AND THEIR STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM AGAINST
FOREIGN RULE
21 THE GENERATION GAP ITS CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
22 WESTERNIZATION VERSUS MUSLIMS
23 WESTERNIZATION AND HUMAN WELFARE
24 MODERN TECHNOLOGY AND THE DEHUMANIZATION OF MAN
25 ISLAM AND MODERN MAN
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