Search
Search titles only
By:
Search titles only
By:
Log in
Register
Search
Search titles only
By:
Search titles only
By:
Menu
Install the app
Install
Forums
New posts
All threads
Latest threads
New posts
Trending threads
Trending
Search forums
What's new
New posts
New ads
New profile posts
Latest activity
Free Ads
Latest reviews
Search ads
Members
Current visitors
New profile posts
Search profile posts
Contact us
Latest ads
Ad icon
Video Content Creator
pramukag
Updated:
Sunday at 6:10 AM
Ad icon
QA Engineer Intern
pramukag
Updated:
Sunday at 6:07 AM
Ad icon
Sell your Land, House on idamata.lk for FREE
sajith.xp.pk
Updated:
Thursday at 9:03 AM
Handmade Character Soft Toys
anil1961
Updated:
Jun 23, 2026
Bodim.lk out now !
Manoj Suranga Bandara
Updated:
Jun 21, 2026
Electronics
Vehicles
Property
Search
Reply to thread
Forums
General
Religious
From Buddhism to ISLAM
Get the App
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Message
<blockquote data-quote="Sailani" data-source="post: 6723505" data-attributes="member: 228334"><p><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="font-size: 15px"><span style="color: navy">Choosing Islam: One Man's Tale</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 10px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">(Original Source:</span></span></span><a href="http://abuzuhri.blogspot.com/2006/09/one-mans-tale.html" target="_blank"><span style="font-size: 10px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">http://abuzuhri.blogspot.com/2006/09/one-mans-tale.html</span></span></span></a><span style="font-size: 10px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">)</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">One Man's Tale by Masako San </span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">CHOOSING ISLAM: ONE MAN'S TALE retold again by Masako San</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">I became a Muslim when it seemed I had already accepted Islam in my bones, as if beyond choice, and I only had to make a leap to embrace it formally. Outwardly I was content; inwardly I was coasting. My three-year-old theatre company was disbanded after a hilariously chaotic production for a Tim Leary Benefit at the Family Dog in San Francisco, circa '68 -- naturally the orange juice everyone had passed around was spiked, so that chorus members were doing the final scene in the first ten minutes -- and for six months I had been methodically typing out poetry manuscripts in my attic in Berkeley preparatory to a big publishing peak.</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">I considered myself a Zen Buddhist. But I was other things as well. My normal routine was to get up, sit zazen, smoke a joint, do half an hour of yoga, then read the "Mathnawi" of Rumi, the long mystical poem of that great Persian Sufi of the thirteenth century.</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">Then I met the man who was to be my guide to our teacher in Morocco, Shaykh Muhammad ibn al-Habib, may Allah be pleased with him. At first the meeting was simply remarkable, and my guide simply a remarkable man. But soon our encounter was to become extraordinary, leading to a revolution in my life from which I have never recovered and never hope to.</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">The man looked like an eccentric Englishman. He too had only recently come out of the English version of the Hippie Wave. He was older, refined in his manners, spectacularly witty and intellectual, but of that kind prevalent then who had hobnobbed with the Beatles and knew the Tantric Art collection of Brian Jones firsthand. He had been on all the classic drug quests -- peyote in the Yucatan, mescaline with Laura Huxley -- but with the kif quest in Morocco he had stumbled on Islam and then the Sufis, and the game was up. A profound change had taken place in his life that went far beyond the psychedelic experience.</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">For the three days following our meeting, two other Americans and I listened in awe as this magnificent storyteller unfolded the picture of Islam, of the perfection of the Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, of the Sufis of Morocco, and of the 100-year-old plus Shaykh, sitting under a great fig tree in a garden with his disciples singing praises of Allah. It was everything I'd always dreamed of. It was poetry come alive. It was the visionary experience made part of daily life, with the Prophet a perfectly balanced master of wisdom and simplicity, an historically accessible Buddha, with a mixture of the earthiness of Moses, the otherworldliness of Jesus, and a light all his own.</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">The prophetic knowledge our guide talked about was a kind of spiritual existentialism. It was a matter of how you enter a room, which foot you entered with, that you sipped water but gulped milk, that you said, "Bismillah" (In the Name of Allah) before eating or drinking, and "Al-hamdulillah" (Praise be to Allah) afterwards, and so on. But rather than seeing this as a burden of hundreds of "how-to's," it was more like what the LSD experience taught us, that there is a "right" way to do things that has, if you will, a cosmic resonance. It is a constant awareness of courtesy to the Creator and His creation that itself ensures and almost visionary intensity.</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">It is hard to put forward any kind of explanation of Islam, to try to suggest the beauty of its totality, through the medium of words. The light of Islam, since it is transformational and alchemical in nature, almost always comes via a human messenger who is a transmitter of the picture by his very being.</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">Face to face with our guide, what struck us most was his impeccable, noble behavior. He seemed to be living what he was saying. Finally the moment came, as a surprise, when he confronted me with my life. "Well," he said one morning after three full days of rapturous agreement that what he was bringing to us was the best thing we'd ever heard, "What do you think? Do you want to become a Muslim?"</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">I hedged. "It's the most beautiful thing I've heard about so far. After all my Zen Buddhism, all my yoga, Tibetan Buddhism and Hindu gurus, this is certainly it! But I think I would like to travel a little, see the world, go to Afghanistan (then unoccupied), maybe meet my Shaykh in a mountain village far off somewhere."</span></span></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">"That's not good enough. You have to decide now. Yes or no. If it's yes, then we start on a great adventure. If it's no, then no blame, I've done my duty. I'll just say goodbye and go on my way. But you have to decide now. I'll go downstairs and read a magazine and wait. Take your time."</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">When he had left the room I saw there was no choice. My whole being had already acquiesced. All my years up to that moment simply rolled away. I was face-to-face with worship of Allah, wholly and purely, with the Path before me well-trodden, heavily signposted, with a guide to a Master plunk in front of me. Or I could reject all of this for a totally self-invented and uncertain future.</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">It was the day of my birthday, just to make it that much more dramatic. I chose Islam.</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p> </p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="color: navy">Mr. Abd al-Hayy Moore has two books of poetry published by City Lights under the name Daniel Moore. He's traveled extensively, living in England, Morocco, Algeria, Nigeria and Spain. Mr. Moore is a talented writer and poet, and has turned his talents in writing for Islam. He is a contributor to "The Minaret" and other publications. His more recent publications are "The Chronicles of Akhira," "Halley's Comet" and Holograms.</span></span></span></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-family: 'Century Gothic'"><span style="font-size: 18px"><span style="color: navy">to be contineued ....</span></span></span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sailani, post: 6723505, member: 228334"] [FONT=Century Gothic][SIZE=4][COLOR=navy]Choosing Islam: One Man's Tale[/COLOR][/SIZE][/FONT] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=2][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy](Original Source:[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE][URL="http://abuzuhri.blogspot.com/2006/09/one-mans-tale.html"][SIZE=2][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]http://abuzuhri.blogspot.com/2006/09/one-mans-tale.html[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE][/URL][SIZE=2][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy])[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]One Man's Tale by Masako San [/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]CHOOSING ISLAM: ONE MAN'S TALE retold again by Masako San[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]I became a Muslim when it seemed I had already accepted Islam in my bones, as if beyond choice, and I only had to make a leap to embrace it formally. Outwardly I was content; inwardly I was coasting. My three-year-old theatre company was disbanded after a hilariously chaotic production for a Tim Leary Benefit at the Family Dog in San Francisco, circa '68 -- naturally the orange juice everyone had passed around was spiked, so that chorus members were doing the final scene in the first ten minutes -- and for six months I had been methodically typing out poetry manuscripts in my attic in Berkeley preparatory to a big publishing peak.[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]I considered myself a Zen Buddhist. But I was other things as well. My normal routine was to get up, sit zazen, smoke a joint, do half an hour of yoga, then read the "Mathnawi" of Rumi, the long mystical poem of that great Persian Sufi of the thirteenth century.[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]Then I met the man who was to be my guide to our teacher in Morocco, Shaykh Muhammad ibn al-Habib, may Allah be pleased with him. At first the meeting was simply remarkable, and my guide simply a remarkable man. But soon our encounter was to become extraordinary, leading to a revolution in my life from which I have never recovered and never hope to.[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]The man looked like an eccentric Englishman. He too had only recently come out of the English version of the Hippie Wave. He was older, refined in his manners, spectacularly witty and intellectual, but of that kind prevalent then who had hobnobbed with the Beatles and knew the Tantric Art collection of Brian Jones firsthand. He had been on all the classic drug quests -- peyote in the Yucatan, mescaline with Laura Huxley -- but with the kif quest in Morocco he had stumbled on Islam and then the Sufis, and the game was up. A profound change had taken place in his life that went far beyond the psychedelic experience.[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]For the three days following our meeting, two other Americans and I listened in awe as this magnificent storyteller unfolded the picture of Islam, of the perfection of the Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, of the Sufis of Morocco, and of the 100-year-old plus Shaykh, sitting under a great fig tree in a garden with his disciples singing praises of Allah. It was everything I'd always dreamed of. It was poetry come alive. It was the visionary experience made part of daily life, with the Prophet a perfectly balanced master of wisdom and simplicity, an historically accessible Buddha, with a mixture of the earthiness of Moses, the otherworldliness of Jesus, and a light all his own.[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]The prophetic knowledge our guide talked about was a kind of spiritual existentialism. It was a matter of how you enter a room, which foot you entered with, that you sipped water but gulped milk, that you said, "Bismillah" (In the Name of Allah) before eating or drinking, and "Al-hamdulillah" (Praise be to Allah) afterwards, and so on. But rather than seeing this as a burden of hundreds of "how-to's," it was more like what the LSD experience taught us, that there is a "right" way to do things that has, if you will, a cosmic resonance. It is a constant awareness of courtesy to the Creator and His creation that itself ensures and almost visionary intensity.[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]It is hard to put forward any kind of explanation of Islam, to try to suggest the beauty of its totality, through the medium of words. The light of Islam, since it is transformational and alchemical in nature, almost always comes via a human messenger who is a transmitter of the picture by his very being.[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]Face to face with our guide, what struck us most was his impeccable, noble behavior. He seemed to be living what he was saying. Finally the moment came, as a surprise, when he confronted me with my life. "Well," he said one morning after three full days of rapturous agreement that what he was bringing to us was the best thing we'd ever heard, "What do you think? Do you want to become a Muslim?"[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]I hedged. "It's the most beautiful thing I've heard about so far. After all my Zen Buddhism, all my yoga, Tibetan Buddhism and Hindu gurus, this is certainly it! But I think I would like to travel a little, see the world, go to Afghanistan (then unoccupied), maybe meet my Shaykh in a mountain village far off somewhere."[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]"That's not good enough. You have to decide now. Yes or no. If it's yes, then we start on a great adventure. If it's no, then no blame, I've done my duty. I'll just say goodbye and go on my way. But you have to decide now. I'll go downstairs and read a magazine and wait. Take your time."[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]When he had left the room I saw there was no choice. My whole being had already acquiesced. All my years up to that moment simply rolled away. I was face-to-face with worship of Allah, wholly and purely, with the Path before me well-trodden, heavily signposted, with a guide to a Master plunk in front of me. Or I could reject all of this for a totally self-invented and uncertain future.[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]It was the day of my birthday, just to make it that much more dramatic. I chose Islam.[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/FONT] [SIZE=3][FONT=Century Gothic][COLOR=navy]Mr. Abd al-Hayy Moore has two books of poetry published by City Lights under the name Daniel Moore. He's traveled extensively, living in England, Morocco, Algeria, Nigeria and Spain. Mr. Moore is a talented writer and poet, and has turned his talents in writing for Islam. He is a contributor to "The Minaret" and other publications. His more recent publications are "The Chronicles of Akhira," "Halley's Comet" and Holograms.[/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE] [FONT=Century Gothic][SIZE=5][COLOR=navy] [/COLOR][/SIZE][/FONT] [FONT=Century Gothic][SIZE=5][COLOR=navy]to be contineued ....[/COLOR][/SIZE][/FONT] [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Asuwa dahayen wadi kalama keeyada?
Post reply
Top
Bottom