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In the name of Allah, Most Merciful and Compassionate
Becoming Muslim by Nuh Ha Mim Keller http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/newmuslims/nuhhamimkeller.html
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[This article appeared on the newsgroup soc.religion.islam in April 1995. -ed.]
What follows is a personal account of a scholar I have been writing to for over a year
and had the blessing of meeting when I invited him to do a lecture tour around England. He is quite unique in that he seems
to be one of the few reverts/converts to have achieved Islamic scholarship in the fullest sense of the word in traditional and
orthodox Islam, having studied Shafi'i and Hanafi Jurisprudence (fiqh) and tenents of faith (`aqidah). I hope it will serve as an
inspiration to those who have moved closer to Islam but have not yet taken the Shahadah, and as a reassurance to those
that have taken the Shahadah but are trying to find their feet in the beautiful ocean of Islam, and also as a reminder and
confirmation to those of us who were blessed with being born into Muslim families, Amin.
Mas`ud Ahmed Khan
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Born in 1954 in the farm country of the northwestern United States, I was raised in a
religious family as a Roman Catholic. The Church provided a spiritual world that was unquestionable in my childhood, if
anything more real than the physical world around me, but as I grew older, and especially after I entered a Catholic
university and read more, my relation to the religion became increasingly called into question, in belief and practice.
One reason was the frequent changes in Catholic liturgy and ritual that occurred in the
wake of the Second Vatican Council of 1963, suggesting to laymen that the Church had no firm standards. To one another,
the clergy spoke about flexibility and liturgical relevance, but to ordinary Catholics they seemed to be groping in the dark.
God does not change, nor the needs of the human soul, and there was no new revelation from heaven. Yet we rang in the
changes, week after week, year after year; adding, subtracting, changing the language from Latin to English, finally bringing
in guitars and folk music. Priests explained and explained as laymen shook their heads. The search for relevance left
large numbers convinced that there had not been much in the first place.
A second reason was a number of doctrinal difficulties, such as the doctrine of the
Trinity, which no one in the history of the world, neither priest nor layman, had been able to explain in a convincing way,
and which resolved itself, to the common mind at least, in a sort of godhead-by-committee, shared between God the
Father, who ruled the world from heaven; His son Jesus Christ, who saved humanity on earth; and the Holy Ghost, who was
pictured as a white dove and appeared to have a considerably minor role. I remember wanting to make special friends with
just one of them so he could handle my business with the others, and to this end, would sometimes pray earnestly to this
one and sometimes to that; but the other two were always stubbornly there. I finally decided that God the Father must be in
charge of the other two, and this put the most formidable obstacle in the way of my Catholicism, the divinity of Christ.
Moreover, reflection made it plain that the nature of man contradicted the nature of God in every particular, the limitary and
finite on the one hand, the absolute and infinite on the other. That Jesus was God was something I cannot remember having
ever really believed, in childhood or later.\
Another point of incredulity was the trading of the Church in stocks and bonds in the
hereafter it called indulgences. Do such and such and so-and-so many years will be remitted from your sentence in
purgatory that had seemed so false to Martin Luther at the outset of the Reformation.
I also remember a desire for a sacred scripture, something on the order of a book that
could furnish guidance. A Bible was given to me one Christmas, a handsome edition, but on attemptingto read it, I found it
so rambling and devoid of a coherent thread that it was difficult to think of a way to base one's life upon it. Only later did I
learn how Christians solve the difficulty in practice, Protestants by creating sectarian theologies, each emphasizing the
texts of their sect and downplaying the rest; Catholics by downplaying it all, except the snippets mentioned in their liturgy.
Something seemed lacking in a sacred book that could not be read as an integral whole.
Moreover, when I went to the university, I found that the authenticity of the book,
especially the New Testament, had come into considerable doubt as a result of modern hermeneutical studies by Christians
themselves. In a course on contemporary theology, I read the Norman Perrin translation of The Problem of the Historical
Jesus by Joachim Jeremias, one of the principal New Testament scholars of this century. A textual critic who was a master
of the original languages and had spent long years with the texts, he had finally agreed with the German theologian Rudolph
Bultmann that without a doubt it is true to say that the dream of ever writing a biography of Jesus is over, meaning that
the life of Christ as he actually lived it could not be reconstructed from the New Testament with any degree of confidence. If
this were accepted from a friend of Christianity and one of its foremost textual experts, I reasoned, what was left for its
enemies to say? And what then remained of the Bible except to acknowledge that it was a record of truths mixed with
fictions, conjectures projected onto Christ by later followers, themselves at odds with each other as to who the master had
been and what he had taught. And if theologians like Jeremias could reassure themselves that somewhere under the layers
of later accretions to the New Testament there was something called the historical Jesus and his message, how could the
ordinary person hope to find it, or know it, should it be found?
I studied philosophy at the university and it taught me to ask two things of whoever
claimed to have the truth: What do you mean, and how do you know? When I asked these questions of my own religious
tradition, I found no answers, and realized that Christianity had slipped from my hands. I then embarked on a search that is
perhaps not unfamiliar to many young people in the West, a quest for meaning in a meaningless world.
I began where I had lost my previous belief, with the philosophers, yet wanting to
believe, seeking not philosophy, but rather a philosophy.
I read the essays of the great pessimist Arthur Schopenhauer, which taught about the
phenomenon of the ages of life, and that money, fame, physical strength, and intelligence all passed from one with the
passage of years, but only moral excellence remained. I took this lesson to heart and remembered it in after years. His
essays also drew attention to the fact that a person was wont to repudiate in later years what he fervently espouses in the
heat of youth. With a prescient wish to find the Divine, I decided to imbue myself with the most cogent arguments of atheism
that I could find, that perhaps I might find a way out of them later. So I read the Walter Kaufmann translations of the works
of the immoralist Friedrich Nietzsche. The many-faceted genius dissected the moral judgments and beliefs of mankind with
brilliant philological and psychological arguments that ended in accusing human language itself, and the language of
nineteenth-century science in particular, of being so inherently determined and mediated by concepts inherited from the
language of morality that in their present form they could never hope to uncover reality. Aside from their immunological
value against total skepticism, Nietzsches works explained why the West was post-Christian, and accurately predicted the
unprecedented savagery of the twentieth century, debunking the myth that science could function as a moral replacement
for the now dead religion.
At a personal level, his tirades against Christianity, particularly in The Genealogy of
Morals, gave me the benefit of distilling the beliefs of the monotheistic tradition into a small number of analyzable forms. He
separated unessential concepts (such as the bizarre spectacle of an omnipotent deitys suicide on the cross) from essential
ones, which I now, though without believing in them, apprehended to be but three alone: that God existed; that He created
man in the world and defined the conduct expected of him in it; and that He would judge man accordingly in the hereafter
and send him to eternal reward or punishment.
It was during this time that I read an early translation of the Koran which I grudgingly
admired, between agnostic reservations, for the purity with which it presented these fundamental concepts. Even if false, I
thought, there could not be a more essential expression of religion. As a literary work, the translation, perhaps it was Sales,
was uninspired and openly hostile to its subject matter, whereas I knew the Arabic original was widely acknowledged for its
beauty and eloquence among the religious books of mankind. I felt a desire to learn Arabic to read the
original.
On a vacation home from school, I was walking upon a dirt road between some fields
of wheat, and it happened that the sun went down. By some inspiration, I realized that it was a time of worship, a time to
bow and pray to the one God. But it was not something one could rely on oneself to provide the details of, but rather a
passing fancy, or perhaps the beginning of an awareness that atheism was an inauthentic way of being.
I carried something of this disquiet with me when I transferred to the University of
Chicago, where I studied the epistemology of ethical theory how moral judgments were reached reading and searching
among the books of the philosophers for something to shed light on the question of meaninglessness, which was both a
personal concern and one of the central philosophical problems of our age.
According to some, scientific observation could only yield description statements of the
form X is Y, for example, The object is red, Its weight is two kilos, Its height is ten centimeters, and so on, in each of which
the functional was a scientifically verifiable is, whereas in moral judgments the functional element was an ought, a description
statement which no amount of scientific observation could measure or verify. It appeared that ought was logically
meaningless, and with it all morality whatsoever, a position that reminded me of those described by Lucian in his advice that
whoever sees a moral philosopher coming down the road should flee from him as from a mad dog. For such a person,
expediency ruled, and nothing checked his behavior but convention.
As Chicago was a more expensive school, and I had to raise tuition money, I found
summer work on the West Coast with a seining boat fishing in Alaska. The sea proved a school in its own right, one I was to
return to for a space of eight seasons, for the money. I met many people on boats, and saw something of the power and
greatness of the wind, water, storms, and rain; and the smallness of man. These things lay before us like an immense
book, but my fellow fishermen and I could only discern the letters of it that were within our context: to catch as many fish as
possible within the specified time to sell to the tenders. Few knew how to read the book as a whole. Sometimes, in a blow,
the waves rose like great hills, and the captain would hold the wheel with white knuckles, our bow one minute plunging
gigantically down into a valley of green water, the next moment reaching the bottom of the trough and soaring upwards
towards the sky before topping the next crest and starting down again.
Early in my career as a deck hand, I had read the Hazel Barnes translation of Jean
Paul Sartres "Being and Nothingness", in which he argued that phenomena only arose for consciousness in the existential
context of human projects, a theme that recalled Marxs 1844 manuscripts, where nature was produced by man, meaning,
for example, that when the mystic sees a stand of trees, his consciousness hypostatizes an entirely different phenomenal
object than a poet does, for example, or a capitalist. To the mystic, it is a manifestation; to the poet, a forest; to the
capitalist, lumber. According to such a perspective, a mountain only appears as tall in the context of the project of climbing
it, and so on, according to the instrumental relations involved in various human interests. But the great natural events of the
sea surrounding us seemed to defy, with their stubborn, irreducible facticity, our uncomprehending attempts to come to
terms with them. Suddenly, we were just there, shaken by the forces around us without making sense of them, wondering
if we would make it through. Some, it was true, would ask Gods help at such moments, but when we returned safely to
shore, we behaved like men who knew little of Him, as if those moments had been a lapse into insanity, embarrassing to
think of at happier times. It was one of the lessons of the sea that in fact, such events not only existed but perhaps even
preponderated in our life. Man was small and weak, the forces around him were large, and he did not control them.
Sometimes a boat would sink and men would die. I remember a fisherman from another
boat who was working near us one opening, doing the same job as I did, piling web. He smiled across the water as he pulled
the net from the hydraulic block overhead, stacking it neatly on the stern to ready it for the next set. Some weeks later, his
boat overturned while fishing in a storm, and he got caught in the web and drowned. I saw him only once again, in a dream,
beckoning to me from the stern of his boat.
The tremendousness of the scenes we lived in, the storms, the towering sheer cliffs
rising vertically out of the water for hundreds of feet, the cold and rain and fatigue, the occasional injuries and deaths of
workers these made little impression on most of us. Fishermen were, after all, supposed to be tough. On one boat, the
family that worked it was said to lose an occasional crew member while running at sea at the end of the season, invariably
the sole non-family member who worked with them, his loss saving them the wages they would have otherwise had to pay
him.
The captain of another was a twenty-seven-year-old who delivered millions of dollars
worth of crab each year in the Bering Sea. When I first heard of him, we were in Kodiak, his boat at the city dock they had
tied up to after a lengthy run some days before. The captain was presently indisposed in his bunk in the stateroom, where
he had been vomiting up blood from having eaten a glass uptown the previous night to prove how tough he was.
He was in somewhat better condition when I later saw him in the Bering Sea at the end
of a long winter king crab season. He worked in his wheelhouse up top, surrounded by radios that could pull in a signal from
just about anywhere, computers, Loran, sonar, depth-finders, radar. His panels of lights and switches were set below the
180-degree sweep of shatterproof windows that overlooked the sea and the men on deck below, to whom he communicated
by loudspeaker. They often worked round the clock, pulling their gear up from the icy water under watchful batteries of
enormous electric lights attached to the masts that turned the perpetual night of the winter months into day. The captain had
a reputation as a screamer, and had once locked his crew out on deck in the rain for eleven hours because one of them had
gone inside to have a cup of coffee without permission. Few crewmen lasted longer than a season with him, though they
made nearly twice the yearly income of, say, a lawyer or an advertising executive, and in only six months. Fortunes were
made in the Bering Sea in those years, before overfishing wiped out the crab.
At present, he was at anchor, and was amiable enough when we tied up to him and
he came aboard to sit and talk with our own captain. They spoke at length, at times gazing thoughtfully out at the sea
through the door or windows, at times looking at each other sharply when something animated them, as the topic of what
his competitors thought of him. "They wonder why I have a few bucks", he said. "Well I slept in my own home one night last
year."
He later had his crew throw off the lines and pick the anchor, his eyes flickering warily
over the water from the windows of the house as he pulled away with a blast of smoke from the stack. His watchfulness,
his walrus-like physique, his endless voyages after game and markets, reminded me of other predatory hunter-animals of
the sea. Such people, good at making money but heedless of any ultimate end or purpose, made an impression on me, and
I increasingly began to wonder if men didn't need principles to guide them and tell them why they were there. Without such
principles, nothing seemed to distinguish us above our prey except being more thorough, and technologically capable of
preying longer, on a vaster scale, and with greater devastation than the animals we hunted.
These considerations were in my mind the second year I studied at Chicago, where
I became aware through studies of philosophical moral systems that philosophy had not been successful in the past at
significantly influencing peoples morals and preventing injustice, and I came to realize that there was little hope for it to do
so in the future. I found that comparing human cultural systems and societies in their historical succession and multiplicity
had led many intellectuals to moral relativism, since no moral value could be discovered which on its own merits was
transculturally valid, a reflection leading to nihilism, the perspective that sees human civilizations as plants that grow out
of the earth, springing from their various seeds and soils, thriving for a time, and then dying
away.
Some heralded this as intellectual liberation, among them Emile Durkheim in his
"Elementary Forms of the Religious Life", or Sigmund Freud in his "Totem and Taboo", which discussed mankind as if
it were a patient and diagnosed its religious traditions as a form of a collective neurosis that we could now hope to
cure, by applying to them a thorough scientific atheism, a sort of salvation through pure science.
On this subject, I bought the Jeremy Shapiro translation of "Knowledge and Human
Interests" by Jurgen Habermas, who argued that there was no such thing as pure science that could be depended upon to
forge boldly ahead in a steady improvement of itself and the world. He called such a misunderstanding scientism, not
science. Science in the real world, he said, was not free of values, still less of interests. The kinds of research that
obtain funding, for example, were a function of what their society deemed meaningful, expedient, profitable, or important.
Habermas had been of a generation of German academics who, during the thirties and forties, knew what was happening in
their country, but insisted they were simply engaged in intellectual production, that they were living in the realm of
scholarship, and need not concern themselves with whatever the state might choose to do with their research. The horrible
question mark that was attached to German intellectuals when the Nazi atrocities became public after the war made
Habermas think deeply about the ideology of pure science. If anything was obvious, it was that the nineteenth-century
optimism of thinkers like Freud and Durkheim was no longer tenable.
I began to reassess the intellectual life around me. Like Schopenhauer, I felt that higher
education must produce higher human beings. But at the university, I found lab people talking to each other about forging
research data to secure funding for the coming year; luminaries who wouldn't permit tape recorders at their lectures for fear
that competitors in the same field would go one step further with their research and beat them to publication; professors
vying with each other in the length of their courses syllabuses. The moral qualities I was accustomed to associate with
ordinary, unregenerate humanity seemed as frequently met with in sophisticated academics as they had been in fishermen.
If one could laugh at fishermen who, after getting a boatload of fish in a big catch, would cruise back and forth in front of the
others to let them see how laden down in the water they were, ostensibly looking for more fish; what could one say about
the Ph.D.s who behaved the same way about their books and articles? I felt that their knowledge had not developed
their persons, that the secret of higher man did not lie in their sophistication.
I wondered if I hadn't gone down the road of philosophy as far as one could go. While
it had debunked my Christianity and provided some genuine insights, it had not yet answered the big questions. Moreover,
I felt that this was somehow connected I didn't know whether as cause or effect to the fact that our intellectual tradition no
longer seemed to seriously comprehend itself. What were any of us, whether philosophers, fishermen, garbagemen, or kings,
except bit players in a drama we did not understand, diligently playing out our roles until our replacements were sent, and
we gave our last performance? But could one legitimately hope for more than this? I read "Kojves Introduction to the Reading
of Hegel", in which he explained that for Hegel, philosophy did not culminate in the system, but rather in the Wise Man,
someone able to answer any possible question on the ethical implications of human actions. This made me consider our
own plight in the twentieth century, which could no longer answer a single ethical question.
It was thus as if this centurys unparalleled mastery of concrete things had somehow
ended by making us things. I contrasted this with Hegels concept of the concrete in his "Phenomenology of Mind". An
example of the abstract, in his terms, was the limitary physical reality of the book now held in your hands, while the
concrete was its interconnection with the larger realities it presupposed, the modes of production that determined the kind
of ink and paper in it, the aesthetic standards that dictated its color and design, the systems of marketing and distribution
that had carried it to the reader, the historical circumstances that had brought about the readers literacy and taste; the
cultural events that had mediated its style and usage; in short, the bigger picture in which it was articulated and had its
being. For Hegel, the movement of philosophical investigation always led from the abstract to the concrete, to the more
real. He was therefore able to say that philosophy necessarily led to theology, whose object was the ultimately real, the
Deity. This seemed to me to point up an irreducible lack in our century. I began to wonder if, by materializing our culture and
our past, we had not somehow abstracted ourselves from our wider humanity, from our true nature in relation to a higher
reality.
At this juncture, I read a number of works on Islam, among them the books of Seyyed
Hossein Nasr, who believed that many of the problems of western man, especially those of the environment, were from his
having left the divine wisdom of revealed religion, which taught him his true place as a creature of God in the natural world
and to understand and respect it. Without it, he burned up and consumed nature with ever more effective technological
styles of commercial exploitation that ruined his world from without while leaving him increasingly empty within, because he
did not know why he existed or to what end he should act.
I reflected that this might be true as far as it went, but it begged the question as to the
truth of revealed religion. Everything on the face of the earth, all moral and religious systems, were on the same plane,
unless one could gain certainty that one of them was from a higher source, the sole guarantee of the objectivity,
the whole force, of moral law. Otherwise, one mans opinion was as good as anothers, and we remained in an
undifferentiated sea of conflicting individual interests, in which no valid objection could be raised to the strong eating the
weak.
I read other books on Islam, and came across some passages translated by W.
Montgomery Watt from "That Which Delivers from Error" by the theologian and mystic Ghazali, who, after a mid-life crises
of questioning and doubt, realized that beyond the light of prophetic revelation there is no other light on the face of the earth
from which illumination may be received, the very point to which my philosophical inquiries had led. Here was, in Hegels
terms, the Wise Man, in the person of a divinely inspired messenger who alone had the authority to answer questions of
good and evil.
I also read A.J. Arberrys translation "The Koran Interpreted", and I recalled my early
wish for a sacred book. Even in translation, the superiority of the Muslim scripture over the Bible was evident in every line,
as if the reality of divine revelation, dimly heard of all my life, had now been placed before my eyes. In its exalted style, its
power, its inexorable finality, its uncanny way of anticipating the arguments of the atheistic heart in advance and answering
them; it was a clear exposition of God as God and man as man, the revelation of the awe-inspiring Divine Unity being the
identical revelation of social and economic justice among men.
I began to learn Arabic at Chicago, and after studying the grammar for a year with a fair
degree of success, decided to take a leave of absence to try to advance in the language in a year of private study in Cairo.
Too, a desire for new horizons drew me, and after a third season of fishing, I went to the Middle East.
In Egypt, I found something I believe brings many to Islam, namely, the mark of pure
monotheism upon its followers, which struck me as more profound than anything I had previously encountered. I met many
Muslims in Egypt, good and bad, but all influenced by the teachings of their Book to a greater extent than I had ever seen
elsewhere. It has been some fifteen years since then, and I cannot remember them all, or even most of them, but perhaps
the ones I can recall will serve to illustrate the impressions made.
One was a man on the side of the Nile near the Miqyas Gardens, where I used to walk.
I came upon him praying on a piece of cardboard, facing across the water. I started to pass in front of him, but suddenly
checked myself and walked around behind, not wanting to disturb him. As I watched a moment before going my way, I
beheld a man absorbed in his relation to God, oblivious to my presence, much less my opinions about him or his religion.
To my mind, there was something magnificently detached about this, altogether strange for someone coming from the
West, where praying in public was virtually the only thing that remained obscene.
Another was a young boy from secondary school who greeted me near Khan al-Khalili,
and because I spoke some Arabic and he spoke some English and wanted to tell me about Islam, he walked with me
several miles across town to Giza, explaining as much as he could. When we parted, I think he said a prayer that I might
become Muslim.
Another was a Yemeni friend living in Cairo who brought me a copy of the Koran at my
request to help me learn Arabic. I did not have a table beside the chair where I used to sit and read in my hotel room, and it
was my custom to stack the books on the floor. When I set the Koran by the others there, he silently stooped and picked
it up, out of respect for it. This impressed me because I knew he was not religious, but here was the effect of Islam
upon him.
Another was a woman I met while walking beside a bicycle on an unpaved road on the
opposite side of the Nile from Luxor. I was dusty, and somewhat shabbily clothed, and she was an old woman dressed in
black from head to toe who walked up, and without a word or glance at me, pressed a coin into my hand so suddenly that
in my surprise I dropped it. By the time I picked it up, she had hurried away. Because she thought I was poor, even if
obviously non-Muslim, she gave me some money without any expectation for it except what was between her and her
God. This act made me think a lot about Islam, because nothing seemed to have motivated her but
that.
Many other things passed through my mind during the months I stayed in Egypt to
learn Arabic. I found myself thinking that a man must have some sort of religion, and I was more impressed by the effect of
Islam on the lives of Muslims, a certain nobility of purpose and largesse of soul, than I had ever been by any other religions
or even atheisms effect on its followers. The Muslims seemed to have more than we did.
Christianity had its good points to be sure, but they seemed mixed with confusions,
and I found myself more and more inclined to look to Islam for their fullest and most perfect expression. The first question
we had memorized from our early catechism had been Why were you created? to which the correct answer was To know,
love, and serve God. When I reflected on those around me, I realized that Islam seemed to furnish the most comprehensive
and understandable way to practice this on a daily basis.
As for the inglorious political fortunes of the Muslims today, I did not feel these to be
a reproach against Islam, or to relegate it to an inferior position in a natural order of world ideologies, but rather saw them
as a low phase in a larger cycle of history. Foreign hegemony over Muslim lands had been witnessed before in the thorough
going destruction of Islamic civilization in the thirteenth century by the Mongol horde, who razed cities and built pyramids
of human heads from the steppes of Central Asia to the Muslim heartlands, after which the fullness of destiny brought forth
the Ottoman Empire to raise the Word of Allah and make it a vibrant political reality that endured for centuries. It was now,
I reflected, merely the turn of contemporary Muslims to strive for a new historic crystallization of Islam, something one might
well aspire to share in.
When a friend in Cairo one day asked me, Why dont you become a Muslim, I found that
Allah had created within me a desire to belong to this religion, which so enriches its followers, from the simplest hearts to
the most magisterial intellects. It is not through an act of the mind or will that anyone becomes a Muslim, but rather through
the mercy of Allah, and this, in the final analysis, was what brought me to Islam in Cairo in 1977.
"Is it not time that the hearts of those who believe should be humbled to the
Remembrance of God and the Truth which He has sent down, and that they should not be as those to whom the Book was
given aforetime, and the term seemed over long to them, so that their hearts have become hard, and many of them are
ungodly? Know that God revives the earth after it was dead. We have indeed made clear for you the signs, that haply you
will understand." [Qur'an 57:16-17]
Nuh Ha Mim Keller is the translator of "The Reliance of the Traveller" [`Umdat
as-Salik] by Ahmed Ibn Naqib al-Misri
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