|
All I have to say is
all what you know already, to confirm what you already know,
the message of the Prophet, may Allāh send prayers and
blessings on him, as given by God - the Religion of Truth.
As human beings we are given a consciousness and a duty that
has placed us at the top of creation. Man is created to be
God's deputy on earth, and it is important to realize the
obligation to rid ourselves of all illusions and to make our
lives a preparation for the next life. Anybody who misses
this chance is not likely to be given another, to be brought
back again and again, because it says in Qur'ān Majīd
that when man is brought to account, he will say,
"O Lord, send us back and give us
another chance." The Lord will say,
"If I send you back you will do the
same."
MY EARLY
RELIGIOUS UPBRINGING
I was brought up in the
modern world of all the luxury and the high life of show
business. I was born in a Christian home, but we know that
every child is born in his original nature - it is only his
parents that turn him to this or that religion. I was given
this religion (Christianity) and thought this way. I was
taught that God exists, but there was no direct contact with
God, so we had to make contact with Him through Jesus - he
was in fact the door to God. This was more or less accepted
by me, but I did not swallow it all.
I looked at some of the
statues of Jesus; they were just stones with no life. And
when they said that God is three, I was puzzled even more
but could not argue. I more or less believed it, because I
had to have respect for the faith of my parents.
POP STAR
Gradually I became
alienated from this religious upbringing. I started making
music. I wanted to be a big star. All those things I saw in
the films and on the media took hold of me, and perhaps I
thought this was my God, the goal of making money. I had an
uncle who had a beautiful car. "Well," I said, "he has it
made. He has a lot of money." The people around me
influenced me to think that this was it; this world was
their God.
I decided then that
this was the life for me; to make a lot of money, have a
'great life.' Now my examples were the pop stars. I started
making songs, but deep down I had a feeling for humanity, a
feeling that if I became rich I would help the needy. (It
says in the Qur'ān, we make a promise, but when we make
something, we want to hold onto it and become greedy.)
So what happened was
that I became very famous. I was still a teenager, my name
and photo were splashed in all the media. They made me
larger than life, so I wanted to live larger than life and
the only way to do that was to be intoxicated (with liquor
and drugs).
IN HOSPITALAfter
a year of financial success and 'high' living, I became very
ill, contracted TB and had to be hospitalized. It was then
that I started to think: What was to happen to me? Was I
just a body, and my goal in life was merely to satisfy this
body? I realized now that this calamity was a blessing given
to me by Allāh, a chance to open my eyes - "Why am I here?
Why am I in bed?" - and I started looking for some of the
answers. At that time there was great interest in the
Eastern mysticism. I began reading, and the first thing I
began to become aware of was death, and that the soul moves
on; it does not stop. I felt I was taking the road to bliss
and high accomplishment. I started meditating and even
became a vegetarian. I now believed in 'peace and flower
power,' and this was the general trend. But what I did
believe in particular was that I was not just a body. This
awareness came to me at the hospital.
One day when I was
walking and I was caught in the rain, I began running to the
shelter and then I realized, 'Wait a minute, my body is
getting wet, my body is telling me I am getting wet.' This
made me think of a saying that the body is like a donkey,
and it has to be trained where it has to go. Otherwise, the
donkey will lead you where it wants to go.
Then I realized I had a
will, a God-given gift: follow the will of God. I was
fascinated by the new terminology I was learning in the
Eastern religion. By now I was fed up with Christianity. I
started making music again and this time I started
reflecting my own thoughts. I remember the lyric of one of
my songs. It goes like this: "I wish I knew, I wish I knew
what makes the Heaven, what makes the Hell. Do I get to know
You in my bed or some dusty cell while others reach the big
hotel?" and I knew I was on the Path.
I also wrote another
song, "The Way to Find God Out." I became even more famous
in the world of music. I really had a difficult time because
I was getting rich and famous, and at the same time, I was
sincerely searching for the Truth. Then I came to a stage
where I decided that Buddhism is all right and noble, but I
was not ready to leave the world. I was too attached to the
world and was not prepared to become a monk and to isolate
myself from society.
I tried Zen and Ching,
numerology, tarot cards and astrology. I tried to look back
into the Bible and could not find anything. At this time I
did not know anything about Islām, and then, what I regarded
as a miracle occurred. My brother had visited the mosque in
Jerusalem and was greatly impressed that while on the one
hand it throbbed with life (unlike the churches and
synagogues which were empty), on the other hand, an
atmosphere of peace and tranquillity prevailed.
THE QUR'ÂN
When he came to London
he brought back a translation of the Qur'ān, which he gave
to me. He did not become a Muslim, but he felt something in
this religion, and thought I might find something in it
also.
And when I received the
book, a guidance that would explain everything to me - who I
was; what was the purpose of life; what was the reality and
what would be the reality; and where I came from - I
realized that this was the true religion; religion not in
the sense the West understands it, not the type for only
your old age. In the West, whoever wishes to embrace a
religion and make it his only way of life is deemed a
fanatic. I was not a fanatic, I was at first confused
between the body and the soul. Then I realized that the body
and soul are not apart and you don't have to go to the
mountain to be religious. We must follow the will of God.
Then we can rise higher than the angels. The first thing I
wanted to do now was to be a Muslim.
I realized that
everything belongs to God, that slumber does not overtake
Him. He created everything. At this point I began to lose
the pride in me, because hereto I had thought the reason I
was here was because of my own greatness. But I realized
that I did not create myself, and the whole purpose of my
being here was to submit to the teaching that has been
perfected by the religion we know as al-Islām. At this point
I started discovering my faith. I felt I was a Muslim. On
reading the Qur'ān, I now realized that all the Prophets
sent by God brought the same message. Why then were the Jews
and Christians different? I know now how the Jews did not
accept Jesus as the Messiah and that they had changed His
Word. Even the Christians misunderstand God's Word and
called Jesus the son of God. Everything made so much sense.
This is the beauty of the Qur'ān; it asks you to reflect and
reason, and not to worship the sun or moon but the One Who
has created everything. The Qur'ān asks man to reflect upon
the sun and moon and God's creation in general. Do you
realize how different the sun is from the moon? They are at
varying distances from the earth, yet appear the same size
to us; at times one seems to overlap the other.
Even when many of the
astronauts go to space, they see the insignificant size of
the earth and vastness of space. They become very religious,
because they have seen the Signs of Allāh. When I read the
Qur'ān further, it talked about prayer, kindness and
charity. I was not a Muslim yet, but I felt that the only
answer for me was the Qur'ān, and God had sent it to me, and
I kept it a secret. But the Qur'ān also speaks on different
levels. I began to understand it on another level, where the
Qur'ān says, "Those who believe do
not take disbelievers for friends and the believers are
brothers." Thus at this point I wished to meet my
Muslim brothers.
CONVERSION
Then I decided to
journey to Jerusalem (as my brother had done). At Jerusalem,
I went to the mosque and sat down. A man asked me what I
wanted. I told him I was a Muslim. He asked what was my
name. I told him, "Stevens." He was confused. I then joined
the prayer, though not so successfully. Back in London, I
met a sister called Nafisa. I told her I wanted to embrace
Islām and she directed me to the New Regent Mosque. This was
in 1977, about one and a half years after I received the
Qur'ān. Now I realized that I must get rid of my pride, get
rid of Iblīs, and face one direction. So on a Friday,
after Jumma' I went to the Imām and declared my faith
(the Kalimah) at this hands. You have before you
someone who had achieved fame and fortune. But guidance was
something that eluded me, no matter how hard I tried, until
I was shown the Qur'ān. Now I realize I can get in direct
contact with God, unlike Christianity or any other religion.
As one Hindu lady told me, "You don't understand the Hindus.
We believe in one God; we use these objects (idols) to
merely concentrate." What she was saying was that in order
to reach God, one has to create associates, that are idols
for the purpose. But Islām removes all these barriers. The
only thing that moves the believers from the disbelievers is
the salāt. This is the process of purification.
Finally I wish to say
that everything I do is for the pleasure of Allāh and pray
that you gain some inspirations from my experiences.
Furthermore, I would like to stress that I did not come into
contact with any Muslim before I embraced Islām. I read the
Qur'ān first and realized that no person is perfect. Islām
is perfect, and if we imitate the conduct of the Holy
Prophet may Allāh send prayers and blessings on him we will
be successful. May Allāh give us guidance to follow the path
of the ummah of Muhammad may Allāh send prayers and
blessings on him. Amīn!
-- Yusuf Islam
(formerly Cat Stevens) |