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Rachel Noor, Convert Story

I reverted to Islam in August of 1999. My first year as a Muslim has been quite interesting.


When a person first "reverts" to Islam, you are on this emotional roller-coaster ride, where you have your days when you are so happy to be a Muslim, and your days where you think that life was so much easier as a non-Muslim, especially when you don't have a strong community backing you up.

Alhamdulillah, my up days have been more than my down days, and I am happy to report that I no longer have regrets, just memories, and the future is definitely looking brighter
than the past. With this said, here is my reversion story. Enjoy!!!!

In January of 1999, I can honestly say that my life was falling apart piece by piece. I was 23 years old, married, with a new daughter that was born in September, working a full time job in a Mexican restaurant while my husband basically lived in Virginia while he attended college and worked. My husband at the time was from India, and he had received his green card in January of 1999 and he had all of a sudden developed his own plans, none of which included me or the kids. (I also have a six-year-old daughter, who at the time was five) He was a Hindu, who originally came from New Delhi India. He decided to go there and visit right away, and of course his family had their own plans for him. I never really got the truth from his side, nor will I ever, but most people tell me that his parents knew that he was married in the States, and they didn't know about the kids or else they didn't care. They wanted their son married to a traditional Indian woman, and that is what was important. My friends where I worked knew of my situation, and had tried to warn me about him in their own ways, but I refused to believe what was happening to me could be true. That was until my life started falling apart.

The people that I worked with were mostly Indian and Pakistani, with an American or a Mexican thrown in here and there for a nice ethnic mix. Most of the people were Muslim, but not very religious in the sense that they had become Americanized, but not all of them. There was a Pakistani guy that worked in the kitchen. His name was Usman, and he was always very quiet. I had worked with his cousin, Asjid, for years and we had always gotten along. Usman was new to Casa Rico, and little was known about him except he was Asjid's cousin, and that he was Muslim. One day after my husband had gone to India, I basically had a breakdown mentally at my job. I knew people that knew about my situation surrounded me, but were bound by “custom” not to say anything to me. Usman had started talking to me about it little by little, asking me about things since we often had break around the same time. He promised that he would always be there to listen, and he promised not to judge me.

One day I poured my heart out to him and I think it was a week later that I had a mental breakdown at work. That day my thoughts were just pounding in my head. I felt like such a failure, and i wanted to die. That night I went home and i held some pills in my hand and decided that I wanted to end it all. I had nothing to live for. I had been betrayed by my husband and his family, the same people that I gave freedom to, I had two daughters that I could not provide for and whose father didn't care about, I hated my job, I couldn't go back to college because I couldn't afford it, the list just went on and on. Most of all, I felt God didn't care about me. I used to pray and pray that my situation would get better, but it only seemed to get worse. I used to open that bible almost every night and search for the answers to all my problems. Nothing related to my situation, my life did not relate to God' word or God's plan. Then I thought about my kids, left all alone with no one. How could I do it. I swallowed my pride, threw the pills, and called my mom to take me to the hospital. I was broken and I needed help.

That night I was admitted to the psychiatric ward for severe emotional stress. For two days I did nothing but cry and cry and cry. I did not sleep, I did not want to eat, I just wanted to die. By the second day the hospital staff got involved and they gave me medicine to sleep. I woke up 12 hours later with swollen eyes and a broken heart, but I did feel somewhat better. I was ready to listen. I opened the door and asked to speak to a counselor. The counselor and me talked for three hours. I told her my whole story. She told me that peace starts in the heart, and that struggle is a natural process. After she left I wrote down all the things in my life that I wanted to change. I laid all goals and choose to be a survivor, for my kids sake. Visitor time came, and the
nurse came to me and said that I had a visitor. I asked who it was and she said, Usman. Man I was so embarrassed. But I let him in. He walked in and I just started crying. He told me to be brave and talk if I wanted, but he had a few things to tell me. I was ready to listen. He said
one statement that I will never forget.

"My country is filled with poverty and problems, but no one ever gets depressed and tries to kill themself; do you know why?"

"No." I said. "Why?"

"Because the people in my country have Islam. They have the Qur’an, the final word from God. This Qur’an answers all of your questions and more. It will give you peace, if only you believe."

This was Usman's reply. I vowed to investigate Islam as soon as I could get out of the hospital. That night I lay in bed and I thought about how my life was destined to change, if only I could make it happen. If I only I knew where to look and find the answers. I thought about the Qur’an and how little I knew of Islam. I wondered about this mysterious book and why hadn't more people heard of this "miracle?" I fell asleep with a ton of questions swirling around my mind.

The next morning I met with my doctor. I couldn't believe it when I walked into her office and stared right into the face of a Pakistani Muslim doctor. I couldn't believe it. She talked to me about my depression and I answered her questions as best as I could without crying. I told her that my situation was just so embarrassing and unbearable. She recommended that I seek regular counseling and prescribed an anti-depressant.

A moment of silence followed as she wrote out my release form. I took that opportunity to ask her about Islam.

She took a moment, breathed in, and closed her book. She asked how I knew of Islam and I told her I had friends. She smiled and said she would be happy to give me any information that I would need to investigate this further. We sat in her office for an additional hour talking about how Islam was a way of life. She told me about Mohammed (peace be upon him) and how he is the final messenger of God. She told me about how Islam was very similar to Christianity and Judaism, except Muslims believe that your relationship is directly with God, and that no one
should need to intercept this relationship. She told me how we are all accountable for our own sins and that the people that do bad in this world and do not believe in God will be punished by the creator of all things. And she told me that Allah is the answer to all my problems, and that the Qur’an is the best prescription for happiness. She told me to fill the prescription for the anti-depressant, to investigate Islam, and to come and see her or her staff if I had any other problems. She told me I would be all right, and to keep in touch. She told me that with Islam,
I probably wouldn't need the medicine.

I left the hospital that day. I filed for divorce the next day. Most importantly, I started my investigation of Islam wholeheartedly. I enrolled Usman and my other Muslim friends in this quest for knowledge. Usman bought me a ton of books to read, and I scourged through them like nobody's business!!! One day, Usman took me and my children to a Pakistani store to buy Islamic books. The storeowner was so excited to find that I was interested in Islam. He gifted me my first Qur’an That night when I got home I was so happy. I opened the Quran and started reading. I read until four am. I just couldn't put it down. Surah-al Baqarah was intense. The Quran made me feel like ....It was like God was talking to me!!! This indeed was the answer. The Quran spoke of things that I had wondered all my life. What happens when you die? Was Jesus God? Why did Jesus have to die for all of our sins, when it was God who created us? Why would God die for us? The Quran spoke of proofs...it talked of the rivers and oceans.. how they connect and how they remain salt water and not salt water in certain areas. It talked about the cycle of life inside the womb of the woman. How was Mohammed (peace be upon him, to know of this? A unlettered man, a man that could not read or write? How could he know things that were not known to man until recent centuries? The Quran spoke of ships floating in the water, ships made of steel... Mohammed lived in a desert. The Quran spoke of mountains being like pegs, deeper on the bottom than it was high. These are proofs from God. And we should believe.

I wanted to be Muslim. This was what my life was for. To be Muslim. To be God's slave. This is the truth.

I took my Shahadah in August of 1999.

This was the happiest day of my life.

My divorce from my husband became final in March of 2000. I had not seen him for more than one year. I broke off all communication from him and have not seen or heard from him since I became Muslim. He doesn't want anything to do with the kids. I don't care. My kids have Allah, and they have me.

In April of 2000, Usman asked if I wanted to get married again. I told him yes. We got married April 13, 2000. Things have been wonderful, Alhamdulillah. My kids are doing great. I am in college full time. I will graduate this May with my nursing degree. My husband is the one who helped me convert to Islam. Allah is the best of planners. I guess I was in God's plan after all.

---

from Dr. Amir Ali
From: Saladin Sharif
Sent: Monday, July 25, 2005 10:19 PM
Subject: Subject: My Husband Helped Me Convert to Islam
Sent: Sunday, July 24, 2005 11:14 PM
From: Syeda Muneeba Masood
Rachel Noor - The Reversion Story
Stories of the New Muslims
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I am imagination. I can see what the eyes cannot see. I can hear what the ears cannot hear. I can feel what the heart cannot feel.
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Four days later I woke up and realized my knee didn't hurt. I thanked God for some relief but expected it at any moment to return. This is a month later and the pain is still gone. It has been such a beautiful gift to walk the dogs without pain, to turn in bed without pain, and just be able to move pain free. My partner who was supposed to have knee replacement surgery has had almost 70% relief. My youngest daughter who was recently diagnosed with Lupus has had considerable relief from pain in joints and her whole body. I have been amazed at what it has done in our family.
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Zenster: Yeesh! It&#39;s hard to keep track. To me, atheist and agnostic achieve the same result which is to DENY God in the here and now - just when God needs human warriors to proclaim God&#39;s name and perform good actions in God&#39;s name.At any rate, weren&#39;t you trying to persuade everyone that man is naturally good and moral without God? Sounds more atheist than agnostic to me. I believe that I referred you to seek out atheists to see if they could help you make your argument - which is hamstrung by the actual outright murderous performance of atheistic forms of government in modern history.You claim that &quot;no one has ever beaten the Nazis,&quot; but I have read that the amount of people murdered by Communism is outrageously large and kept under wraps because of the current power and presence of Communist regimes like China and Russia. In other words, the media fails to elaborate about Communist murders because the Communists are still around to murder the media - much like the situation with Islam.

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