http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/nov/03/lauren-booth-conversion-to-islam


Lauren Booth: I'm now a Muslim. Why all the shock and horror?

*News that Lauren Booth has converted to Islam provoked a storm of negative
comments. Here she explains how it came about – and why it's time to stop
patronising Muslim women*

   -  [image: lauren] <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/lauren-booth>   Lauren
   Booth <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/lauren-booth>



[image: Lauren Booth] * **Lauren Booth . . .*

*How hard and callous non-Muslim friends and colleagues began to seem'.
Photograph: Sarah Lee for the Guardian *

*It is five years since my first visit to Palestine. And when I arrived in
the region, to work alongside charities in Gaza and the West Bank, I took
with me the swagger of condescension that all white middle-class women
(secretly or outwardly) hold towards poor Muslim women, women I presumed
would be little more than black-robed blobs, silent in my peripheral vision.
As a western woman with all my freedoms, I expected to deal professionally
with men alone. After all, that's what the Muslim world is all about, right?
*

*This week's screams of faux horror from fellow columnists on hearing of my
conversion to Islam <http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/islam> prove that this
remains the stereotypical view regarding half a billion women currently
practising Islam.*

*On my first trip to Ramallah, and many subsequent visits to Palestine,
Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon, I did indeed deal with men in power. And, dear
reader, one or two of them even had those scary beards we see on news
bulletins from far-flung places we've bombed to smithereens. Surprisingly
(for me) I also began to deal with a lot of women of all ages, in all manner
of head coverings, who also held positions of power. Believe it or not,
Muslim women can be educated, work the same deadly hours we do, and even
boss their husbands about in front of his friends until he leaves the room
in a huff to go and finish making the dinner.*

*Is this patronising enough for you? I do hope so, because my conversion to
Islam has been an excuse for sarcastic commentators to heap such patronising
points of view on to Muslim women everywhere. So much so, that on my way to
a meeting on the subject of Islamophobia in the media this week, I seriously
considered buying myself a hook and posing as Abu Hamza. After all, judging
by the reaction of many women columnists, I am now to women's rights what
the hooked one is to knife and fork sales.*

*So let's all just take a deep breath and I'll give you a glimpse into the
other world of Islam in the 21st century. Of course, we cannot discount the
appalling way women are mistreated by men in many cities and cultures, both
with and without an Islamic population. Women who are being abused by male
relatives are being abused by men, not God. Much of the practices and laws
in "Islamic" countries have deviated from (or are totally unrelated) to the
origins of Islam. Instead practices are based on cultural or traditional
(and yes, male-orientated) customs that have been injected into these
societies. For example, in Saudi Arabia, women are not allowed to drive by
law. This rule is an invention of the Saudi monarchy, our government's close
ally in the arms and oil trade. The fight for women's rights must sadly
adjust to our own government's needs.*

*My own path to Islam began with an awakening to the gap between what had
been drip-fed to me about all Muslim life – and the reality.*

*I began to wonder about the calmness exuded by so many of the "sisters" and
"brothers". Not all; these are human beings we're talking about. But many.
And on my visit to Iran this September, the washing, kneeling, chanting
recitations of the prayers at the mosques I visited reminded me of the
west's view of an entirely different
religion<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/religion>;
one that is known for eschewing violence and embracing peace and love
through quiet meditation. A religion trendy with movie stars such as Richard
Gere, and one that would have been much easier to admit to following in
public – Buddhism. Indeed, the bending, kneeling and submission of Muslim
prayers resound with words of peace and contentment. Each one begins,
"Bismillahir rahmaneer Raheem" – "In the name of God, the Merciful, the
Compassionate" – and ends with the phrase "Assalamu Alaykhum wa rahmatullahi
wa barakatuh" – Peace be upon you all and God's mercy and blessing.*

*Almost unnoticed to me, when praying for the last year or so, I had been
saying "Dear Allah" instead of "Dear God". They both mean the same thing, of
course, but for the convert to Islam the very alien nature of the language
of the holy prayers and the holy book can be a stumbling block. I had
skipped that hurdle without noticing. Then came the pull: a sort of
emotional ebb and flow that responds to the company of other Muslims with a
heightened feeling of openness and warmth. Well, that's how it was for me,
anyway.*

*How hard and callous non-Muslim friends and colleagues began to seem. Why
can't we cry in public, hug one another more, say "I love you" to a new
friend, without facing suspicion or ridicule? I would watch emotions being
shared in households along with trays of honeyed sweets and wondered, if
Allah's law is simply based on fear why did the friends I loved and
respected not turn their backs on their practices and start to drink, to
have real "fun" as we in the west do? And we do, don't we? Don't we?*

*Finally, I felt what Muslims feel when they are in true prayer: a bolt of
sweet harmony, a shudder of joy in which I was grateful for everything I
have (my children) and secure in the certainty that I need nothing more
(along with prayer) to be utterly content. I prayed in the Mesumeh shrine in
Iran after ritually cleansing my forearms, face, head and feet with water.
And nothing could be the same again. It was as simple as that.*

*The sheikh who finally converted me at a mosque in London a few weeks ago
told me: "Don't hurry, Lauren. Just take it easy. Allah is waiting for you.
Ignore those who tell you: you must do this, wear that, have your hair like
this. Follow your instincts, follow the Holy Qur'an- and let Allah guide
you."*

*And so I now live in a reality that is not unlike that of Jim Carey's
character in the Truman Show. I have glimpsed the great lie that is the
facade of our modern lives; that materialism, consumerism, sex and drugs
will give us lasting happiness. But I have also peeked behind the screens
and seen an enchanting, enriched existence of love, peace and hope. In the
meantime, I carry on with daily life, cooking dinners, making TV programmes
about Palestine and yes, praying for around half an hour a day.*

*Now, my morning starts with dawn prayers at around 6am, I pray again at
1.30pm, then finally at 10.30pm. My steady progress with the Qur'an has been
mocked in some quarters (for the record, I'm now around 200 pages in). I've
been seeking advice from Ayatollahs, imams and sheikhs, and every one has
said that each individual's journey to Islam is their own. Some do commit
the entire text to memory before conversion; for me reading the holy book
will be done slowly and at my own pace.*

*In the past my attempts to give up alcohol have come to nothing; since my
conversion I can't even imagine drinking again. I have no doubt that this is
for life: there is so much in Islam to learn and enjoy and admire; I'm
overcome with the wonder of it. In the last few days I've heard from other
women converts, and they have told me that this is just the start, that they
are still loving it 10 or 20 years on.*

*On a final note I'd like to offer a quick translation between Muslim
culture and media culture that may help take the sting of shock out of my
change of life for some of you.*

*When Muslims on the BBC News are shown shouting "Allahu Akhbar!" at some
clear, Middle Eastern sky, we westerners have been trained to hear: "We hate
you all in your British sitting rooms, and are on our way to blow ourselves
up in Lidl when you are buying your weekly groceries."*

*In fact, what we Muslims are saying is "God is Great!", and we're taking
comfort in our grief after non-Muslim nations have attacked our villages.
Normally, this phrase proclaims our wish to live in peace with our
neighbours, our God, our fellow humans, both Muslim and non-Muslim. Or,
failing that, in the current climate, just to be left to live in peace would
be nice.*

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