Becoming Muslim
by Muhammad John Webster (England)
President, The English Muslim Mission
http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/newmuslims/webster.html
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Born in London I was brought up Christian of the Protestant persuasion. In 1930, in my
teens, I was confronted with the problems normal to a reasonably intelligent young man, these problems being basically
relating to the reconciling of everyday affairs with the claims of religion and here I came across the first weakness of
Christianity. Christianity is a dualism which regards the world as sinful and seeks to turn its back on the realities of life,
projecting its hopes into a future world. As a result of this there is created a Sunday attitude towards religion which has no
place in the rest of the secular week. At this time in England there was a great deal of poverty and social discontent which
Christianity made no attempt to resolve. More emotional than knowledgeable, with the enthusiasm of youth I rejected the
Church and became a Communist.
Communism has a certain satisfaction at an emotional adolescent level but again it did
not take long to realise the hateful nature of Communism based upon class warfare, in itself immortal. Having rejected the
materialism of Communism I turned to the study of philosophy and religion. The unity which I observed all around me led me
to identify myself with what is known as Pantheism, a natural law religion.
We in the West find it difficult to acquaint ourself with Islam for since the days of the
Christian Crusades there has been either a conspiracy of silence or a deliberate perversion of Islamic matters. Anyway
at the time living in Australia I asked for a copy of the Holy Qur'an at the Sydney Public Library, when I was given the Book
and was reading the preface by the translator, the bigotry against Islam was so obvious that I closed it up. There was no
Qur'an translated by a Muslim available. Some weeks later in Perth, Western Australia, I again asked at the library for a
copy of the Qur'an stipulating that the translator must be a Muslim. It is difficult to put into words my immediate response to
the first surah, the Seven Opening Verses: Then I read something of the life of the Prophet (peace be on him). I spent hours
in the library that day, I had found what I wanted, by the mercy of Allah. I was a Muslim. I had not at this time met any
Muslim. I came out of the library exhausted by the tremendous intellectual and emotional experience I had received. The
next experience, I still ask myself: was it true or was it something I had dreamed up, for in cold print it seems impossible to
have happened. I came out of the library intending to get myself a cup of coffee. I walked down the street and raising my
eyes to a building beyond a high brick wall I saw the words `Muslim Mosque' I straightway said to myself `You know the
truth, now accept it'.
`La illaha illalah Muhammad ur Rasul Allah' and so by the mercy of Allah I became a
Muslim.
From "Islam, Our Choice"
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