RAMAI Muslims senang mengirimkan article mengenai orang Kristian yang masuk Islam. Menuruti aku ini ialah bukti bahawa ramai orang Islam tak percaya ke diri sendiri dan musti mendapatkan dukungan dari orang2 kafir yang kemudian menjadi mualaf. BTW di USA ada statistic yang mengatakan bahawa yang terbanyak menjadi mualaf ialah orang2 Afro-American yang ada di jel (penjara). Sebahagian besar daripada mereka ini ialah losers yang tertipu oleh imam2 Islam yang antara lain mengatakan bahawa Muhammad ialah orang kulit hitam! (Muhammad dan ramai orang Arab sampai hari ini memanggil orang berkulit hitam sebagai 'ABD' yang maknanya budak.
Muslim seperti jenis ini tidak bolih mengakui bahawa di banyak negeri termasuk Malaysia, Sudan, Nigeria, dan juga Indonesia jumlah orang Islam yang meninggalkan Islam, ertinya murtad itu jauh lebih banyak daripada orang non-Muslim yang menjadi mualaf. Di beberapa negeri di Malaysia beratus ribu Muslim yang merayu Kot di negeri itu guna catitan ugama di Kad Pengenal dirubah dari Islam menjadi ugama lain. Tetapi kot ugama di Malaysia tak mengabulkan rayuan itu, kerana menuruti kot ugama satu kali seorang menjadi Islam dia tak bolih murtad kecuali dia mati. [Saye jadi teringat akan ayat Qur'an yang cakap bahawa 'Tidak ada paksaan dalam Islam!'] Umat berugama Hindu. Buddha, Kristian tak peduli sama ada seseorang masuk atau keluar dari ugama mereka kerana ugama ialah urusan pribadi dan Tuhan! Gabriela Rantau ________________________________ From: Roslan Salleh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: yufei99999 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, 4 December, 2008 9:22:39 PM Subject: Balasan: [MURTADINKAFIRUN] Re: Revert to the God - God of all Prophets A Canadian Sister’s Guidance by: Admin Bismillahi Ar-Rahman Ar-Raheem In the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful I testify that there is no god but Allah and Muhammad is his Messenger. As a women born and raised in a very multi-cultural Canadian city I was always a very open-minded and excepting individual. I always believed that we were made equal and that people should have equal opportunity to practice whatever religion they wanted, whether Catholic, Muslim, atheist…etc. My parents raised me as a Roman Catholic, my father, taking my younger brother and I to church. My parents enrolled us into Sunday school for several years; however, we both went to public school during the week. As the years passed I fulfilled all my obligations as a Roman Catholic, from baptism to first communion, confession and confirmation. By the time I was 10 we stopped going to Church all together. Still, I always felt a close bond with God, saying my prayers at night before sleeping and always asking for guidance. All in all though my family wasn’t that religious, we never read religious texts together and we only spoke of God on rare occasions. Throughout high school, like most kids in America, I frequented the bars and dated. It is clear to me now that I went this path because of lack of guidance in our predominantly secularly led society. My family wasn’t talking to me about God, nor my friends, nor my teachers, I only felt his presence in my heart. Also like most American kids my parents could not find it in them to stay together, they got a divorce when I was 13. This was a very difficult time for my family, however, it was during this difficult time that I became even closer to God, (this is in contrast to my younger brother who began to lose his faith, may Allah guide him to the truth.) I can remember during that time in my life constantly asking God for guidance, for help, at many times I felt lost and would cry. I was looking for answers but didn’t really know how. I would read parts in my little bible that were supposed to help in times of despair, sadness..etc. I didn’t know it then but it would be 7 years before the answers would be revealed to me, with many trials and tribulations between. My father eventually remarried and his new wife had a son and a daughter who are like family to my younger brother and I. I always had a very good relationship with my parents, however I could not seem to set aside my differences with my mothers boyfriend and at 18 I moved out to go live with my stepbrother, not far from work or school. By the age of 19 I was enrolled to go to University majoring in Human Rights and Political Science. Eight months after moving in with my brother I decided to move in with three girlfriends of mine, again, not far from my school. I began going to a Roman Catholic Church by myself every Sunday and I also began to read the Bible. Soon after I moved in I met a very wonderful man who was just a few years older than me. We became friends, talking on the phone or going out to play pool together with a group. He was an Italian/Lebanese Muslim who had moved to Canada 7 years prior to us meeting. At first we never really spoke about religion. He asked me if I believed in God, I said yes, that was that for a while. Then I became curious and would ask him questions about Islam, at the time I knew nothing of Islam, our conversations would usually end when I would disagree with him about certain things. (Mainly I would disagree that Jesus wasn’t God’s son, may Allah forgive me for being blind.) Nonetheless time passed and our relationship grew, he asked if I would be his girlfriend and I said yes. During the first year of our relationship I began reading the translation of the Holy Qu’ran on the Internet at my work. Over a number of months I read it over several times and I couldn’t help but believe the words that I was reading, there were no confusing or conflicting words or teachings like in the Bible, only truth. At first I thought, could this be? Could all that I learnt previously in the Catholic religion be wrong? It didn’t take long for that question to be answered. I would cry when I read the Holy Qu’ran because I knew that God was answering all my prayers, he had shone his light on little old me, Al Humduli’Lah. As I continued to read the Holy Qu’ran I felt also like Allah was opening my eyes for the first time. One day I decided in my heart that I wanted to become a Muslim, I told my boyfriend to his surprise and happiness, at first he was a little skeptical, he wanted to be sure that I was not becoming Muslim for him. By that time Al Humduli’Lah I understood what I was doing and that I was doing it solely for Allah and my own soul, that I was returning to the truth in which I was born (fitrah). I am eternally grateful for Allah’s guidance and ask him to guide me back to him everyday, without it I am surely lost. My decision to start wearing the hijab came only about 6 months after I became Muslim did I start wearing the hijab. I feel very good every time I step outside wearing it. I can remember only a few years ago thinking that the women who wore hijabs were oppressed but now I see it as the opposite, I see it as liberating, a sort of right to be dignified if you will, and just another way to please Allah. My eyes have never been more open to who we are as human beings, where we came from, where we’re going and the importance of worship and what that word really means. Even now as I read other convert stories I get chills and my eyes well with tears. It’s just so powerful! I have a whole new perspective on life, I see us as but one of Allah’s many creations who he wants to obey him; like a flower that grows as he wishes, blows in the wind the way he wills so does every human physically obey him (their heart beats until he causes it to stop, their lungs breath…), but the thing that sets us apart from all of his other creations is that he gave us a will, a will to believe or not, a will to pray or not and he gave us guidance through all the Prophets, the last of who is the Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him. I anxiously await the time when my husband (we’ve since been married!) and I will be ready and able Insha’Allah to raise our children as Muslims, the first in a long line of my descendents to know the truth! I always knew the importance of education in order to gain a good job to support my children; now that I have found Islam I can support them in the material sense as well as the psychological sense! With regards to my family. There have been different reactions. Mainly they don’t like to talk about it, I can tell in their hearts that they wish that I hadn’t become Muslim but that is only because they do not understand. I will pray to Allah everyday to guide them so that we can be together in the next life Insha’Allah.