At 47 years old, after a lifetime as a devout Catholic, this sister said her shahada on December 25th — with her Christmas tree still standing in the dining room. Her story is a remarkable testament to how the truth of Islam can resonate with a heart that has been seeking God all along, even within the framework of another faith.
A Catholic Who Always Talked to God
From the age of seven, she would take herself to church and simply talk to God — never to Jesus, which always felt wrong. At eight years old, she asked for her own Bible. Her entire life was built on the pursuit of truth and a direct relationship with the Creator. Then at age 47, she met Muslims for the first time and began reading the Quran.
“I kept saying: but this is what I’ve believed my whole life! Wait — what’s going on here? I thought I’m Catholic, but everything I’m reading in the Quran is the truth. Within three or four months, I knew there was no other choice.”
The Freedom of Islam
- No intermediaries: What drew her most powerfully was the direct relationship with God — no priests, no saints, no intercessors. “You just talk to God and lay everything to Him”
- True liberation: Despite what people assume about Muslim women, she has never felt more free. The hijab and modest dress that others question are, to her, the ultimate expression of freedom
- The love of Ramadan: She describes fasting as “amazing what you can do when you’re doing it for God.” When Ramadan ends, she wants to cry because she loves it so deeply
A Lifelong Muslim Who Did Not Know It
Looking back, she realizes she was always Muslim in her heart — her parents simply did not know it when they baptized her. The Quran did not teach her something new; it confirmed everything she had always believed. Her story powerfully illustrates the Islamic concept of fitrah — the natural disposition that every human being is born with, inclined toward the worship of one God alone. For anyone still searching, the truth may be closer than you think.
