Myriam
Francois-Cerrah, a Franco-British writer and journalist and a former actress
says she was enchanted by Prophet (peace be upon him's) life.
She says,
“There were several things that were pivotal in leading to this change in me.
One was looking into the Prophet Mohammad (peace be upon him). I think he is
one of the great misunderstood figures of history.”
“My
intellectual curiosity was sparked as a result of the backlash against my
Muslims friends after 9/11 when I, like most people, was convinced that Islam
was responsible for this atrocity. I wanted to understand why my friends would
remain part of such a faith.”
“When I began
looking into the faith, I realised how antithetical those terrorist actions are
to the core message of Islam which enjoins peace, moderation and fairness. I then
began to realise what was actually behind 9/11 was the distorted ideology of
some political extremists, using Islam as a veneer to justify their
actions."
Myriam
Francois-Cerrah Embraces Islam
I embraced
Islam after graduating from Cambridge. Prior to that I was a skeptical
Catholic; a believer in God but with a mistrust of organized religion.
The Qur’an was
pivotal for me. I first tried to approach it in anger, as part of an attempt to
prove my Muslim friend wrong. Later I began reading it with a more open mind.
The opening of
Al Fatiha, with its address to the whole of mankind, psychologically stopped me
in my tracks. It spoke of previous scriptures in a way which I both recognized,
but also differed. It clarified many of the doubts I had about Christianity. It
made me an adult as I suddenly realized that my destiny and my actions had
consequences for which I alone would now be held responsible.
In a world
governed by relativism, it outlined objective moral truths and the foundation
of morality. As someone who’d always had a keen interest in philosophy, the
Qur’an felt like the culmination of all of this philosophical cogitation. It
combined Kant, Hume, Sartre and Aristotle. It somehow managed to address and
answer the deep philosophical questions posed over centuries of human existence
and answer its most fundamental one, ‘why are we here?’
In the Prophet
Mohammad, I recognized a man who was tasked with a momentous mission, like his
predecessors, Moses, Jesus and Abraham. I had to pick apart much of the
Orientalist libel surrounding him in order to obtain accurate information,
since the historical relativism which people apply to some degree when studying
other historical figures, is often completely absent, in what is a clear
attempt to disparage his person.
I think many
of my close friends thought I was going through another phase and would emerge
from the other side unscathed, not realizing that the change was much more
profound. Some of my closest friends did their best to support me and understand
my decisions. I have remained very close to some of my childhood friends and
through them I recognize the universality of the Divine message, as God’s
values shine through in the good deeds any human does, Muslim or not.
I have never
seen my conversion as a ‘reaction’ against, or an opposition to my culture. In
contrast, it was a validation of what I’ve always thought was praiseworthy,
whilst being a guidance for areas in need of improvement. I also found many
masjids not particularly welcoming and found the rules and protocol confusing
and stressful. I did not immediately identify with the Muslim community. I
found many things odd and many attitudes perplexing. The attention given to the
outward over the inward continues to trouble me deeply.
Prophet Mohammad
(peace be upon him) said: 'Forgive him who wrongs you. Join him who cuts you
off. Do good to him who does evil to you and speak the truth even if it be
against yourself.'
There is a
need for a confident, articulate British Muslim identity which can contribute
to the discussions of our time. Islam is not meant to be an alien religion, we
shouldn’t feel like we’ve lost all trace of ourselves. Islam is a validation of
the good in us and a means to rectify the bad.
Islam is about
always having balance and I think the Prophet's (peace be upon him) message was
fundamentally about having balance and equilibrium in all that we do.
The Prophet's
message was always that you repel bad with good that you always respond to evil
with good and always remember that God loves justice so even when people are
committing serious injustices against you, you have a moral responsibility and
a moral obligation in front of God to always uphold justice and never yourself
transgress those limits.
Islam's beauty
really becomes to its own when it becomes manifest and it becomes manifest when
you make it into a tool for the betterment of society, human kind and the
world.
The ideal from
an Islamic perspective is for ethics to become lived ethics, to become an
applied body of values and not remain unfortunately as it often is cloistered
in the mosque of somewhere which is some more divorced from reality.
Myriam
Francois-Cerrah became popular when she was a child for acting in the 90's hit
film 'Sense and Sensibility.' Now she is gaining more popularity for being one
of a growing number of educated middle class female converts to Islam in
Britain.
She has
recently contributed to a series of videos on Islam produced in the UK titled
(Inspired by Muhammad).
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