IIIM Magazine Online, Volume 4, Number 34, December 12- December 19, 2002 |
Can you tell us of your background in Islam?
I grew up as a Muslim boy. My
parents were Muslims, although they weren't devout. You'd call them nominal
because they followed all the customs that Islam requires. So right from my
childhood, as soon as I could read and write, I had to sit with a Muslim priest
(or mullah) so he could teach me how to read the Qur'an. He would come every
morning. I would sit with him for at least an hour each morning at our home,
with my brothers and sisters. My parents paid him. He taught us seven days a
week how to read the Qur'an. That was how I learnt Islam.
Does this happen to all Muslim children?
Yes, whether they are nominal or not, it is expected.
Some people may not be able to do it due to the lack of money, but nev-ertheless
it is a desire. Muslim societies also
have something called the madrassa. It's like a theological institution, but not
nearly as sophisticated as in the Western world. They are usually set up in
villages and in other places where the mullahs come at a specific time each day.
On average, 50 to 60 children might come for a couple of hours. The village
people find it a relatively easy and inexpensive way to instruct their children.
Wealthy Saudis and others pour millions of dollars every year into funding
madrassas, particularly in other countries like Pakistan, where they become the
breeding grounds of militant Islam.
What's it like to grow
up in an Islamic culture?
At the time I loved it. Islam gave me some very strong
ideals. As a Muslim boy I had deep aspirations: how can I best serve Islam? How
best can I serve my Muslim country? And I decided as a boy that I would be an
officer in the army. I wanted to fight for my country and
the cause of Islam. Even as a child I believed
that the greatest sacrifice
a man can make is to give his life for Allah and his country. I was also taught
as early as I can remember that Israel was our number one enemy and that the
Jewish people had to be annihilated. My life was lived in this atmosphere. And
so you've got specific calls as you are growing up. As you go through school,
college and university there is a thread that is tying your life together. For
someone like me,who wanted to give his life for Islam and his country, all these
things, when you put them together, brought me to the conclusion that I had to
join the army and
be a career officer and a loyal Muslim.
Why were you so concerned to
give your life for your country and for Islam?
You have to understand
what it's like to be a Muslim. You can never experience any true peace. You can
never be sure that your good deeds will outweigh the bad ones that you have done
in your life. The only way that you can be absolutely sure about going to heaven
is to die on the battlefield as a warrior for Allah. And so that was one of my
regular prayers as an officer, as a soldier, that Allah might grant me the mercy
to die on the battlefield for the cause of Islam. I used to pray this every day
because I believed that if I died as a martyr, in the cause of my religion, then
I would go straight to heaven. This was the way to escape judgment. In my case,
I knew that if my deeds were weighed on the balance I would most likely go to
hell. So to die in battle and avoid the judgment was a great relief.
Is this the main reason young
Muslim men are happy to die in the cause of Islam?
I believe it is. That
was what we were taught. It was explained to me that, according to the Qur'an,
there was only one sure way to go to heaven, and that was by suffering death in
jihad (holy war).
The Qur'an teaches that if a man dies fighting for
Allah he is guaranteed the forgiveness of all sins and is assured of a reserved
place in paradise (3: 157;
169). Further, he is promised a crown of glory and the sexual pleasures of
72 virgins. He is also absolved from the suffering of the grave and the horrors
of judgment. And then there's the added bonus
that if you die striving in the cause of
Allah, you can bring 70 of your relatives with
you into paradise. I believe this is why so many young Muslims, especially
Palestinians, are willing to die as martyrs in the war against Jews and other
infidels. You have everything to gain by dying on the battlefield. There's
really nothing to lose. It's hard for people in the West to understand this
because here we have a completely different outlook on life. But in a genuine
Muslim setting all of life is dominated by religion. There is no division
between sacred and secular. You
don't have a separation between church and state because the interests of Islam
and the national interest merge. It is the duty of an Islamic state to
further the interests of religion. So it is impossible for the individual to
escape from Islam.
People in the West find this
difficult to grasp because we experience such tremendous freedoms here. And it
is this freedom that so many Muslims resent, particularly here in Australia. I
will never forget a meeting where I was speaking in Australia. A young Muslim
man about 18 years old came up to me at the end of my talk. He was very
passionate. We had an exchange and he finished by saying: "You know the biggest
enemy in this country is freedom." This is the normal way to think in an Islamic
society. Muslims believe that we are meant to be guided, moulded, shaped by our
religious teachers. There is no personal freedom. They believe that the soul is
seasoned and grows as it submits unquestioningly to the teaching of the
Qur'an.
So did you progress into
the army?
Yes, I joined the army. It took me five years to prepare for
all the interviews because the tests and competition for a commission were very
tough: 20,000 people applied and only 19 were accepted. But the prospects for
career advancement were exceptional and so I was glad to get in. My great
ambition was to be a general by my mid-40s. So I put everything, every effort,
every energy, every thought, everything toward that goal.
And what happened then?
Well, my career came to a
grinding halt because of a civil war. And my life became even more complicated
because I became a Christian. All these changes took place during a number of
years, and I need to explain what happened in my life so that you can see how
the Lord amazingly brought me to himself.
Tell us.
While I was planning to join the army,
I realised that I would have to learn English because all the interviews were
conducted in it. But I had a problem: no one could teach me to speak it. But one
day I heard some people singing in English in a church, so I knocked on the door and
went inside. It was a Gospel Hall run by the Australian
Baptist Missionary Society and the preacher was speaking in
English. So I figured out that it was a good place to come every Sunday to hear
English. And I told my parents about it. They were very happy that I'd found a
place like that because they wanted me to join the army. And so my parents made
sure that no one prevented me from going to church. It's funny that later my
father disowned me because I became a Christian. Yet, even he, in the early
days, made sure that I was free to go there. So when I went there and I began to
meet the missionaries. And I discovered that they were really fine people. And
that started me asking questions: Why are these people so different to the
impression that I have been given of people from the West?
So what ultimately led you to
Christ?
The preaching of Jesus Christ. Though outwardly I was learning
English, inwardly my spirit was learning about Christ. So there was a testimony
born in my own spirit, if I can put it this way. And then we had a preacher come
from Egypt, his name was Mr Girghis, and I was invited to come and listen to him
one evening. And his subject was: "How big are you in the sight of God?" And
that challenged me because I was trying to join the army to be a commissioned
officer, and in those days in my country if you were an army officer you were
like a little king; everything was given to you, you were the elite of society.
People gave you gifts and did whatever they could to please you. Free tickets,
free meals, reserved seats all that sort of thing. But Mr Girghis challenged me
about whether it was right to be so proud and exercise such power and authority.
And on that night I had a dream. And in that dream I found that I was in the
army and I was authorised to go and bring in someone dead or alive. And so I
went to this person's place and I said to him: "Come with me or I'll take your
body with me." And he refused to come. This is my dream! And I was about to kill
him. Then the window in that room opened up and a burst of light came through
that window. I fell to the floor (this was in my dream) and I was almost
blinded. And then I heard a voice say: "Stand up." And I stood up. And the voice
said: "Open your eyes." And I opened my eyes and I could see through the window
something like a star (but it was more than a star). I can't describe it, but it
was a light. And then the same voice said: "Who are you to destroy my creation?"
At that point I woke up. And I began to think about how true it was. You know,
if you haven't made something then you have no right to destroy it. And that
stirred me up quite a lot. Then we had our civil war. So I had to take a side in
that, and I joined the rebels. It's a very long story. As I look back, I can see
how God saved my life on many occasions through the help of Christian people and
by the Lord directing my circumstances. It was ultimately through all these
things that I met my wife too.
To convert to Christianity in Islamic culture is a profound
religious act with life-and-death consequences. Why did you feel you could no
longer continue as a Muslim and you had to be a follower of Jesus?
There
are a number of things. As a Muslim you are told from your childhood that you
cannot question the unquestionable. And the Qur'an is unquestionable. And my
problem was that I was question-ing a number of things. For instance, I had
questions about the status of women. I could not accept their status or the way
they were treated in Islam. In my country they were looked at as though they
were less than human. I found that very difficult to accept. But I was not able
to question this teaching because if I asked the mullah, he would say: "Ssh.
Hush. You are not to ask that kind of question." The problem is that if the
Qur'an says: "The sun rises in the west", and you know for a fact that it
doesn't, you've still got to accept that the sun rises in the west. The other
problem was that there were all sorts of contradictions in the Qur'an. Some
things that Muhammad said at the beginning are contradicted later on. But my
problem was this: if the Qur'an is the word of God, then how can there be later
revelations that actually contradict the earlier ones? It should be the one,
consistent message all the way through. I was also troubled by the blatant
homosexuality of many of the priests.
Many of these men knew the
Qur'an back-to-front yet they lived hypocritical lives. So those things really
hit me hard and made me ask: "What is the alternative?"
Do many Muslims share your spiritual longings?
Yes, particularly Muslims who have had the opportunity
to get a good education and have been to university. They have all sorts of
questions and spiritual struggles. The problem is that very few Muslims have
read the Qur'an. They may have read
bits here and there, but mostly they have heard what the priests, the mullahs,
have said. About
80 percent of Muslims have not read the Qur'an right through with understanding.
Many mullahs have never read right through either.
Do you think that many Muslims share your views on Islam?
Educated Muslims undoubtedly share some of the
misgivings that I have had about Islam. The problem is that once they enter the
Muslim community they are not able to have a questioning attitude. One of the
problems is that when push comes to shove, moderates usually become fanatics.
You can see this tendency quite clearly in the response of many Muslims to the
gang rapes that were committed in Sydney over the past few years. While some
community leaders have condemned them, the overall effect has been to unite
Muslims. I would love to be a fly on the walls of some of their meetings to hear
exactly what they are discussing. But if their thinking is similar to the way
mine used to be when I was a Muslim, then I know one thing: they will never
really feel at home in Australia.
How do Muslims
cope with being so different to the rest of Australia?
I think they find
it very hard. They feel that they are strangers here. And their religion leads
them to them having a "them-us" mentality. I think that's one of the reasons why
many Muslims feel that they need to have a part of Australia where they can
exercise their faith with-out any interference from Western and non-Muslim
influences. I'm not a prophet, but I believe that there are a lot of Muslims in
Australia who are hoping that some day a part of Australia will be declared an
Islamic state, in say, 20, 30, or 50 years. And their numbers are increasing
dramatically. We are told that the Australian families are producing 1.7
children on average; however, Muslim families are having an average five or six
children.
Many Muslims are coming here as immigrants. When you look at
all these facts in a social perspective, I don't think it's unreasonable to
foresee a lot of instability several decades from now. It happened in Lebanon
when a majority Maronite population was overtaken by the fast-growing Muslim Druze community. The
government needs to be aware of this potential problem.
There seems to be a worldwide
resur-gence of Islam at the moment. What's driving it? Is it the wealth of the
Arab oil nations?
I don't think it's Arab wealth. It's more a matter of
the Islamic worldview. Islam is different to Christianity in that it expands by
military conquest. The church is meant to grow through evangelism and
conversion. But Islam has grown historically through armed conflict and
territorial gain. In Islam, territory is directly related to religion. Islam has
not spread by sending missionaries; it spreads through military conquest. Look
what's going on in Indonesia and West Papua at the moment. Christian communities
are being attacked and murdered by the Laskar Jihad. This is how Muslim
influence is growing there; through conquest and fear. As soon as lands are
captured, the locals are given an option: "become a Muslim or perish." There is
a saying: "It is better for you to die under the sword of the Muslim than to die
as an infidel." Muslims also give a choice to the Jews and Christians: "You
either become Muslims or you will be put in a class called 'Dhimmi', which means
a second-class citizen." In that case, you have to pay an extra tax for the
privileges of living in a Muslim country. Muslim scholars see jihad (holy war)
as a basic Muslim duty. They are required to wage war as a religious act against
all who attack Muslim territory as well as against infidels, apostates and
People of the Book (Jews and Christians). They divide the world between what they call the dar al-Islam (land of Islam) and the
dar al-harb(land of war). Muslims believe that they
must struggle to expand the dar al-Islam throughout the world so
that everyone will have the opportunity to live within a just Islamic political
and social order. In other words, they want to increase the political territory
under their control. People need to know this.
But if Muslims are religiously at odds with societies that
are non-Islamic, why do they go to live in them?
Sometimes they may not
have a choice. They may be forced into these countries by circumstances beyond
their control. But if they act consistently with their beliefs they will have to
struggle against the culture and religion of the society where they find
themselves. And this doesn't mean that they have to move away. Look what's
happening in Nigeria and Sudan. There, various parts of the country have been
declared Muslim and they come under the Shariah law as the Muslim proportion of
the population grows or gains political power. The Islamic worldview will
ultimately present Western nations with a huge political problem. Muslims don't
send missionaries like the Christian church. They just send floods of people.
And once their numbers grow, then they begin to exert political pressure. They
have already asked the British parliament several years ago for the right to set
up an Islamic parliament to govern
the affairs of the Muslim community there. They were
turned down. It's possible that a similar
request could be made in Australia in, say, 30 years time. I have a friend who
went along to a mosque in Sydney. The people in the mosque embraced and welcomed
him. They even offered him a Turkish girl that he could marry and who would take
care of him very well. They said to him, "Brother, you should join us. This land
is ours. And it will be ours." And he said, "Well, we're only a small group
now." And they said, "Oh, maybe today we are 300,000 but give us a few more
years and we'll be 3 million." That's the sort of aspirations that many of them
have. Unfortunately, many Australians with whom I speak are completely naïve in
understanding the religious and political ambitions of Islam. If they bothered
to look on Islamic web-sites they would see what I mean (www.islam.org.au
).
Why do Muslims have such a problem with Western culture?
Because they believe
that Western culture is completely corrupt. For instance this comment about
Australia came off an Islamic web-site: "It is therefore inevitable as long as
we live here, that we will, through a process of cultural osmosis, take on some of the characteristics of the kafirs
(unbelievers).
The comparison of Islam to the kafir is like that of fresh, clear spring water
and water brought up from the bottom of suburban sewer. If even a drop of the
filthy water enters the clearwater, the clarity diminishes. Likewise,
it only takes a drop of the filth of disbelief to contaminate Islam in the West.
If we have it within our means we should therefore consider moving to a Muslim
land whereby we can at least live amongst our brethren and within an Islamic
society free from the contamination of the unbelievers" (www.islam.org.au Preserving the Islamic
Identity in the West: Threats and Solutions).
I think this explains why
Muslims have such a difficult time accommodating themselves to western culture.
Their religion sets up a barrier.
Why is America
the object of so much Islamic hatred? The Americans helped Muslims in
Afghanistan and Bosnia, and give billions of dollars to Egypt.
The
problem with the Americans is tied up with the Muslim hatred for Israel. If
America did not back Israel it would be a totally different situation. However,
because America backs Israel, Muslims refer to it as the "greater Satan," and
Israel is known as the "little Satan". Of course, the tension between Israel and
Islam goes all the way back to the hostility that arose between Isaac and
Ishmael in the time of Abraham. And Israel's strength is America. America has
put its money, wealth, armour, technology into Israel. And Israel is a
reflection of the West in the middle of an autocratic, dictatorial, Islamic
world. And so in every way Israel is an offence. Israel's problem goes back into
Abraham's days because, again in tradition, it says that the Jews were Allah's
biggest enemy.
Why is Islam
more militant than other religions? Is there something in its theology?
Yes, there is. One of the central concepts of Islam is jihad. Jihad
literally means "to struggle". It is a Muslim's duty to struggle in
the path of God and in the example of the prophet Mohammed and
his
early companions. While jihad has been interpreted in a number of different
ways, in recent years growing numbers of Muslims have maintained that it's a
universal religious obligation for all true
Muslims to
join the jihad to promote a global Islamic revolution. Some of the more vocal
and radical groups combine militancy and messianic visions and call upon their
followers to take up armed struggle to subject the world to Allah. I was taught
as a small boy that I must engage in jihad against Israel. I learned from my
mullah and family to hate the Jewish people. I was told that the number one
enemy of Allah is the Jews and they are to be annihilated; the state of Israel
was to be destroyed. All
Muslims are taught this.
Do all Muslims believe it?
As far as I am
aware. It's an essential belief of Islam because I've quoted to you from the
Qur'an just now: "The stone will say: 'There is a Jew hiding behind me. 'A tree
will say: 'There is a Jew hiding behind me. Kill him!'" Here the stone and the
tree are talking to Muslims! And this is just one quotation. There are many
other quotations in the Qur'an (see www.islam.org.au, The Termination of Israel:
A Qur'anic Fact). So when, and I will be honest with you, you read the Qur'an
from the beginning to the end, it is not a book that propagates peace. It is a
book that propagates war. Having been a devout Muslim myself, I cannot
understand the ignorance of people in the West who say that Islam is a religion
of peace. How can they say that when it is used by the people to drive planes
into towers and to kill people throughout the centuries? All I can say is that they have not studied the Qur'an and that they are ignorant
of history.
Could attacking Iraq unite the
Islamic world against the West and renew persecution against the Church?
Most certainly. The church is already persecuted,
and it will be even more so. In Pakistan, as you know, numbers of Christians
have been deliberately murdered in cold-blood in recent months. In other places
around the world many Christians are being martyred every day in places like Ambon and the Sudan. In
Islamic countries you cannot practice Christianity openly. While the West gives
Muslims the right to freely practise their faith, Muslim countries do not extend the same
privileges to Christians or other religious
minorities. For instance, in Saudi Arabia it is impossible
to meet publicly for Christian worship. If you did so, you could risk the death penalty. Christians are forced to meet
underground.
Do you think that bin Laden is trying to trigger a
massive confrontation with civilisations that ends in war?
That's right.
I think he is trying to issue a world-wide call to Muslims to rise in jihad. The
World Trade Centre attack was meant to be a trumpet call to Muslims to unite and
to conquer the West. He wants to give Islam new strength and focus. Bin Laden's
activity will probably be the catalyst for a new wave of militancy. His aim is
to eradicate Jews and Christians. It's an historical fact that wherever Muslims
conquered, gradually Christianity disappeared. For instance, in the Byzantine
Empire the church played a major role; well, that came to an end with the Muslim
invasions. Now that part of the world is completely dominated by the mosque.
That's the story wherever Islam went. And now in the West I hear old church
buildings are being purchased by Muslims who are turning them into mosques. And
this is happening rapidly here as well as in other Western countries. I heard
just the other day that when the mosque at Regents Park opened in London, one of
the speakers said: "If we can win London, we can win the whole Western world." I
attach great significance to that statement. It shows an aspiration and a desire
to control and dominate the West. They believe that since everyone will become a
Muslim at the end of history, why not become Muslims now?
We are commanded to love all people and to share the Gospel
with them. How do Christians go about witnessing and sharing the love of God
with Muslims? Is it possible?
It's possible, but you have to remember
that it can only be done in the power of God. You will come to nothing unless
there is a supernatural breakthrough. Every conversion story that I've heard of
Muslims has been different. And I've come to realise that every one of them has
a supernatural intervention. You can read books like
I
Dared To Call Him Fatherand The
Torn Veil and a number of
other testimonies. Every one of them is different.
Christians must rely upon the power of
God in reaching Muslims. Muslim out-reach is 75 percent praying and 25 percent
witnessing. The spiritual veil that covers their eyes can only be removed by God
himself in his sovereign will and purpose, and that's where the problem lies. We
must love and respect them but that will be ineffective unless we pray for them.
We must ask God to give them open minds because one of the problems is this that
the moment you talk about Christ as the Son of God, you commit the unforgivable
sin. And so we've got to love them, we've got to know as much as possible to
start with, but never to enter into an argument because if you enter into an
argument you will only create wars. If I sense there's an argument developing, I
deliberately stop. I say: "Please, no more. I don't want to argue with you.
Leave it for another day." Once you argue with anyone, that's it, nobody is
going anywhere.