Unprecedented numbers of British people,
nearly all of them women, are converting to Islam
at a time of deep divisions within the Anglican and
Catholic churches.
The rate of conversions has prompted
predictions that Islam will rapidly become an important
religious force in this country. “Within the
next 20 years the number of British converts will
equal or overtake the immigrant Muslim community that
brought the faith here”, says Rose Kendrick,
a religious education teacher at a Hull comprehensive
and the author of a textbook guide to the Koran. She
says: “Islam is as much a world faith as is
Roman Catholicism. No one nationality claims it as
its own”. Islam is also spreading fast on the
continent and in America.
The surge in conversions to Islam
has taken place despite the negative image of the
faith in the Western press. Indeed, the pace of conversions
has accelerated since publicity over the Salman Rushdie
affair, the Gulf War and the plight of the Muslims
in Bosnia. It is even more ironic that most British
converts should be women, given the widespread view
in the west that Islam treats women poorly. In the
United States, women converts outnumber men by four
to one, and in Britain make up the bulk of the estimated
10, 000 to 20, 000 converts, forming part of a Muslim
community of 1 to 1.5 million. Many of Britains “New
Muslims” are from middle-class backgrounds.
They include Matthew Wilkinson, a former head boy
of Eton who went on to Cambridge, and a son and daughter
of Lord Justice Scott, the judge heading the arms-to-Iraq
enquiry.
A small scale survey by the Islamic
Foundation in Leicester suggests that most converts
are aged 30 to 50. Younger Muslims point to many conversions
among students and highlight the intellectual thrust
of Islam. “Muhammad” said, “The
light of Islam will rise in the West”[1] and
I think that is what is happening in our day”
says Aliya Haeri, an American-born psychologist who
converted 15 years ago. She is a consultant to the
Zahra Trust, a charity publishing spiritual literature
and is one of Britain’s prominent Islamic speakers.
She adds: “Western converts are coming to Islam
with fresh eyes, without all the habits of the East,
avoiding much of what is culturally wrong. The purest
tradition is finding itself strongest in the West.”
Some say the conversions are prompted
by the rise of comparative religious education. The
British media, offering what Muslims describe as a
relentless bad press on all things Islamic, is also
said to have helped. Westerners despairing of their
own society - rising in crime, family breakdown, drugs
and alcoholism - have come to admire the discipline
and security of Islam. Many converts are former Christians
disillusioned by the uncertainty of the church and
unhappy with the concept of the Trinity and deification
of Jesus.
Quest of the Convert - Why Change?
Other converts describe a search for a religious identity.
Many had previously been practising Christians but
found intellectual satisfaction in Islam. “I
was a theology student and it was the academic argument
that led to my conversion.” Rose Kendrick, a
religious education teacher and author, said she objected
to the concept of the original sin: “Under Islam,
the sins of the fathers aren’t visited on the
sons. The idea that God is not always forgiving is
blasphemous to Muslims.
Maimuna, 39, was raised as a High
Anglican and confirmed at 15 at the peak of her religious
devotion. “I was entranced by the ritual of
the High Church and thought about taking the veil.”
Her crisis came when a prayer was not answered. She
slammed the door on visiting vicars but travelled
to convents for discussions with nuns. “My belief
came back stronger, but not for the Church, the institution
or the dogma.” She researched every Christian
denomination, plus Judaism, Buddhism and Krishna Consciousness,
before turning to Islam.
Many converts from Christianity reject
the ecclesiastical heirarchy emphasising Muslims’
direct relationship with God. They sense a lack of
leadership in the Church of England and are suspicious
of its apparent flexibility. “Muslims don’t
keep shifting their goal-posts ,” says Huda
Khattab, 28, author of The Muslim Woman’s Handbook,
published this year by Ta-Ha. She converted ten years
ago while studying Arabic at university. “Christianity
changes, like the way some have said pre-marital sex
is okay if its with the person you’re going
to marry. It seems so wishy-washy. Islam was constant
about sex, about praying five times a day. The prayer
makes you conscious of God all the time. You’re
continually touching base.
The Times - Tuesday, 9th November
1993 - Home-news Page