Renaldo’s journey to Islam began not with theology or debate, but with a childhood encounter with death that shook him to his core. After wandering into a funeral home as a young boy and seeing a man in a coffin, the reality of death consumed his every thought for years — food lost its taste, sleep became impossible, and nothing in the world could offer him escape. His search for answers would eventually lead him from Christianity to Islam, where he finally found peace.
A Young Boy’s Search for Answers
Growing up Christian, Renaldo read the Bible intensely looking for a way to escape death, clinging to passages about the return of Jesus. His mother took him to fortune tellers and therapists, but nothing could calm his anxiety. Then he encountered the Nation of Islam movement, which initially impressed him — until two Jewish lawyers doing pro bono work for his mother challenged his thinking. A friend then directed him to orthodox Islam, and everything changed.
“I saw a man in the coffin and the reality of death hit me. Sugar Frosted Flakes weren’t even sweet anymore because death was scaring the life out of me. Nothing could make me escape it — until I found Islam.”
What Islam Offered That Nothing Else Could
- A clear understanding of death: Islam teaches that death is not the end but a transition to the Hereafter, where believers are rewarded for their good deeds
- Direct relationship with the Creator: No intermediaries, no confusion about who God is — just pure worship of Allah alone
- Purpose in life: Islam gave Renaldo a reason to live — to please Allah through sacrifice, kindness, and service to humanity
- The complete blueprint: The Quran provides guidance for every aspect of life, offering clarity where other sources left confusion
A Message to Those With Misconceptions
“The media always wants to control the narrative. Islam is not the religion of the state, so they will never tell you the truth about it. The real pristine purity of Islam is peace — any lifestyle that advocates destruction and confusion is not the religion of God.”
Renaldo — who changed his name to Shakur, meaning “one who is thankful and grateful” — now lives a life centered on pleasing his Creator. His advice is simple: look at the message of the Quran honestly and ask yourself whether it promotes harmony for humanity. If it does, then you have found the right way and it is the message of God. If you are held back by media distortions or cultural misconceptions, look past the noise and come to the source — because God can never be a liar, and His message in the Quran speaks for itself.
