Why Are Women Turning to Islam

   
  By an ex-Christian Lady
  
At a time when Islam is faced with hostile media coverage
particularly where the status of women in Islam is concerned, it may
be quite surprising to learn that Islam is the fastest growing
religion in the world, and even more ironic to discover that the
majority of converts to Islam are WOMEN .

The status of women in society is neither a new issue, nor is it a
fully settled one. And where Islam is mentioned, for many the
term 'Muslim Women' prompts images of exhausted mothers chained to
the stove, 'victims' suppressed in a life of indoctrination, frantic
to be westernized and so on. Others will go to great lengths to
explain how the hijaab is an obstacle, clouding the mind, and
comment that female converts are either brainwashed, stupid or
traitors to their sex. I reject such accusations and pose to them
the following question: why is it that so many women who have been
born and brought in the so called 'civilized' societies of Europe
and America are willing to reject their 'liberty' and 'independence'
to embrace a religion that supposedly oppresses them and is widely
assumed to be prejudicial to them?

As a Christian convert to Islam, I can only present my personal
experience and reasons for rejecting the 'freedom' that women claim
to have in this society in favour of the only Religion that truly
liberates women by giving us a status and position, which is
completely unique when compared with that of our non-Muslim
counterparts. Before coming to Islam, I had strong feminist
tendencies and recognized that where a woman was concerned, a lot of
shuffling around had been going on, yet without being able to pin
her on the social map. The problem was ongoing: new 'women's issues'
being raised without the previous ones being satisfactorily
resolved. Like the many women who shared my background, I would
accuse Islam of being a sexist religion, discriminating, oppressing
and giving men the greater privileges. All of this, coming from a
person who did not even know Islam, one who had been blinded due to
ignorance and had accepted this deliberately distorted definition of
Islam.

However, despite my criticisms of Islam, inwardly, I wasn't
satisfied with my own status as a woman in this society. It seemed
to me that society would define such terms as 'liberty'
and 'freedom' and then these definitions were accepted by women
without us even attempting to question or challenge them. There was
clearly a great contradiction between what women were told in theory
and what actually happened in practice. The more I pondered, the
greater emptiness I felt within. I was slowly beginning to reach a
stage where my dissatisfaction with my status as a women in this
society, was really a reflection of my greater dissatisfaction with
society itself. Everything seemed to be degenerating backwards,
despite the claims that the 1990's was going to be the decade of
success and prosperity. Something vital seemed to be missing from my
life and nothing would fill this vacuum.

Being a Christian did not do anything for me, and I began to
question the validity of only remembering God one day a week -
Sundays! As with many other Christians too, I had become
disillusioned with the hypocrisy of the Church and was becoming
increasingly unhappy with the concept of Trinity and the deification
of Jesus.

Eventually, I began to look into Islam. At first, I was only
interested in looking at those issues, which specifically dealt with
women. I was surprised. What I read and learned, taught me a lot
about myself as a woman, and also about where the real oppression of
a woman lies: in every other system and way of life outside of
Islam. Muslim women have been given their rights in every aspect of
the religion with clear definitions of their role in society - as
had men - with no injustice against either of them. As Allah
says: "Whoever does deeds of righteousness, be they male or female,
and have faith, they will enter paradise and not the least injustice
will be done to them." [Nisaa 4:124]

So having amended my misconceptions about the true status of women
in Islam, I was now looking further. I wanted to find that thing
which was going to fill the vacuum in my life. My attention was
drawn towards the beliefs and practices of Islam. It was only
through establishing the fundamentals that I would understand where
to turn and what to prioritize. These are often the areas, which
receive little attention or controversy in society, and when
studying the Islamic Creed, it becomes clear why this is the case:
such concise, faultless and wholly comprehensive details cannot be
found elsewhere.

http://www.beconvinced.com/en/article.php?articleid=0073&catid=09&subcatname=Conversion%20To%20Islam


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  "People who worry that nuclear weaponry will one day fall in the hands of the 
Arabs, fail to realize that the Islamic bomb has been dropped already, it fell 
the day Muhammad was born." (Dr. Joseph Adam Pearson)

       
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