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Conversion Stories New Muslims

A British Takes Shahadah Live on Huda TV

Jamie Ward called in “Gardens of the Pious” program on Huda TV and was guided by Dr. Muhammad Salah.

Watch brother Jamie, now a British new Muslim, taking the Shahadah live on Wednesday, 06 February 2013.

Jamie has been guided to the truth. May Allah help him on his journey to Islam.

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Source: Huda TV.

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Categories
New Muslims Society

Islam & Legal Rights of Women

Are women degraded in Islam? Do women have rights in Islam? What legal rights do women have on the ground, and where does Islam stand from rights of women?

Are women degraded in Islam? In what way does Islam talk about the rights of women? Do women have rights in Islam? Do women have a right to participate in public life? Do women have a right to inherit?

What legal rights do women have on the ground, and where does Islam stand from this?

Do you know that during his lifetime, Prophet Muhammad took counsel with and encouraged over 600 female scholars, warriors, nurses, businesswomen, teachers and students?

Rights of Women in Islam

From her main areas of experiences and practices in criminal defense, international law and legal issues, Sultana Tafadar, who is a barrister, talks about rights and status of women on the ground and How Islam helps her do her job…

To know the answer to these questions, watch this show of Inspired by Muhammad campaign in which Sultana Tafadar focuses on women’s rights.

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Categories
Conversion Stories New Muslims

If This Is Islam, I Want to Be Muslim- This Is How I Found Islam

How did Lauren Booth, a British journalist and broadcaster, find her way to Islam? When was the beginning?

What happened with her when she visited a Palestinian family? What was her first impression about Muslims? What lessons did this viit teach her about Islam?

Watch sister Lauren Booth  talks with Sheikh Fahd Alkandari about her journey to Islam and how she found Iher way to the religion …

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Source: Fahad Alkandari Youtube Channel

 

 

 

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Categories
New Muslims Worldview

Women Before and After Islam

Did you know not that in the Christian France in 586 AD a conference was held to discuss whether women are humans with a soul or not? And if she has a soul, is it of a human or of an animal nature? And is her soul equal to that of a man or not?

Do you know what did they agree on then?

How did the Romans and Arabs before Islam treat woman? How was woman looked upon and considered before the advent of Islam?

Did you know not know that in such eras women was often treated worse than animals?

So, what did Islam come to give her? Besides, what about the widely held belief that Islam suffocates women’s rights, treating them as property?

The documentary here provides a factual record of the issue:

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Categories
Conversion Stories New Muslims

Islam: The True Emancipator of Women Converts

True Freedom

Contrary to the sneering stereotypes of some sections of the press, British women converting to Islam do not enter the realm of the socially immobile and culturally policed.

Many may think that, being a new female Muslim is so riddled with fault lines, but it’s not really. My recent interviews with Muslim converts offered a rare glimpse into the lives of three women who would flatly reject such comparisons. And they’re all buzzing with spiritual ecstasy, retelling what caused them to Islamize their wardrobes and dress codes.

“Being Muslim keeps me from wanting to impress others and gives me more personal confidence,” says Chantelle, a 19-year-old Muslim convert from Hackney.

Today, she goes by the name Khadija, as a sign of respect for Prophet Muhammad’s (peace be upon him) first wife and insists there’s more to British women trading bare midriffs for `abayas (Islamic outer garment) than what meets the eye.

“I wear the hijab because I want to. Because it is between me and Allah. It’s not a fashion statement. Yes, I do not go to clubs and do not sleep around. It gives me a comfort which I know so many of my friends would love to have.”

One of those friends is Monique, who recalls how Chantelle’s embracing Islam inspired a raw honesty and emotion in her, helping her sense power and security in a head-to-toe cover-up:

“I can’t really say for certain that I became Muslim because I read the Qur’an. But in a weird way, I felt Chantelle had more freedom than I did by covering herself, instead of letting it all out like me. I thought to myself ‘this was worth trying’. I can’t say I do not miss our clubs and parties, but I’d rather live like this. We still do what other girls do but it’s more toned down if you catch my drift. I haven’t looked back since.”

Aspirations & Challenges

Both girls were gearing up for a lifetime of prostration, meditation and single-sex socializing and offered gleaning insights into how their lives had taken a better turn from the moment they embraced Islam. As we entered deep into our discussions, they also took a moment to discuss the challenges which lay in their wake.

We talked about everything from relationships, sex and family, and it was clear the prospect of love and marriage lingered heavily over their heads. Chantelle spoke candidly about some common anxieties with converts: “It’s not just what friends and family are going to say. ‘Oh my God, why are you dressing like that, etc.’ I do not care about being unpopular. But I do wonder what my chances of marrying a native Muslim will be. I guess I’ll have to stick to another convert”.

Similar emotions skittered across Monique’s face when I asked her the same question. Despite being saddled with the weight of conversion, theirs was a genuine humility and grace with which both accepted their “good fortunes” of becoming Muslim and as Chantelle put it, “Women who can at last be themselves and please themselves and not men”. Neither of them was borne of any resignation, and were at pains to convince others that their new identities hadn’t sapped their career ambitions or aspirations in the slightest.

Contrary to the sneering stereotypes of some sections of the press, British women converting to Islam do not enter the realm of the socially immobile and culturally policed. Like those I interviewed, they’ve found a new lease of life as teetotalling Brits, dragging women from under the voyeuristic yoke. If Chantelle and Monique are anything to go by, then sex doesn’t have to sell for women to compete on the same terms.

Then there was 32-year-old mother of two, Jessica. Defiant, unrelenting and unapologetic, she sat before me, niqab-clad.  “I’m just so thankful to Allah that I’ve left everything behind; the hangovers, the guilt, the promiscuous sex. Basically, I feel completely transformed and hate to be reminded of my past because that was me then, and this is me now”.

She claimed becoming Muslim was a “welcome distraction” from her previous, unspiritual lifestyle and was relieved to be confronted by a siege of female converts after she took her Shahadah (Testimony of Faith). There was a lot of frenzy surrounding her conversion, not least from her family: “My mum dismissed it as a case of teenage rebellion,” says Jessica, who spends much of her spare time buying and selling the intricate embroideries and jewel works of hijabs and jilbabs (wide long dresses).

True Freedom

As I probed a little deeper, I realized the reason why she, like some other converts I’ve met in the past, came across as a lapsed Briton, cut off from their indigenous culture: “No one from our politicians to our newspapers are doing anything to fight the prejudice against women. Our culture has become so sex obsessed, its making parenting tougher than I thought”.

We spoke in length about the misogynistic gaffes served up by the media, and the recent description by The Daily Mail of an eight-year-old as a ‘leggy beauty’ unwittingly added fuel to her fire. “You see that’s exactly my point. My decision to become Muslim was a safety net from all this filth. My children are not going to grow up without realizing that although we’ve got a lot of things right in Britain we’ve also messed a lot of things up, especially when it comes to respecting our girls”.

For Jessica, accepting Islam was a way of her silently reproaching the cultural failure to improve the lot of women: “Why do you think so many women are becoming Muslim in this country? Because the ‘wonderful’ freedoms in the West have only enslaved us.”

As interesting as it was hearing these converts share memories from the past and express delight at their leap of faith, I was looking more forward to interviewing native Muslims who had grown up in British Muslim families, to find out what they thought about their convert sisters in faith.

Spiritual Bonus, Spiritual Guidance

Like me and Shanna Bukhari, the documentary’s presenter, Fatima felt converts to Islam claimed an ambiguous spiritual advantage: “Seeing them offer voluntary prayers and study the Qur’an led me to a lot of soul searching and reflection. They’re much better at being Muslim than I could ever have imagined”, she says.

For practicing Muslim Lutfa, the no-nonsense hardline exteriors of some converts bring a certain noise and colour to the religion which she feels can only be good for the faith.

“If you look at Islam from a historical point of view, then you will see that we really owe a lot of our genius to the energy of converts”.

I couldn’t agree any more. Among my Muslim friends, we’re often left feeling that converts have seized the initiative and run with it and to keep apace, we’ve got to step our God-game up so to speak. Lutfa also agrees that women converts offer Muslims a refreshing change of pace: “convert sisters are definitely setting a standard for others to follow”.

Whatever we may think of these converts, their decision to become Muslim may be a powerful indictment of some women’s lives in the west. That’s the impression they all left me, especially Jessica who would repeatedly ask whether feminism had delivered on its promise.

So amidst all the everyday sexism and cultural creepiness hounding British women, is Islam somehow squaring their circle?  Are burqas, niqabs (face-veils) and hijabs breathing soul in the lives of girls which desperately lack a higher calling, helping them reclaiming the watchwords of feminism? Does the conversion to Islam among British women bode healthily for Britain’s future?

For Chantelle, Monique and Jessica, the answer to these questions is a resolute yes.

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Source: independent.co.uk.

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FEATURED New Muslims

Prophet Muhammad: The Emancipator of Women’s Rights

In the seventh century Arabia women didn’t have a ranked status or any rights. After Islam, and because the Prophet’s intervention they were treated as equals, given rights.

He (peace be upon him) is a raw model for all Muslims around the world, including women.

The Inspired by Muhammad campaign was designed to improve the public understanding of Islam and Muslims. It showcased Britons demonstrating how Muhammad inspired them to contribute to society, with a focus on women’s rights, social justice and the environment.

In this video, Shaista Aziz, a writer and journalist, talks about how the Prophet’s significant contribution to women’s rights inspired her…

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