Read Once Were Radicals Online
Authors: Irfan Yusuf
My rebuttal worked well, especially since the speakers on the negative team were all from the Christian Fellowship. One of them came up to me afterwards and planted a further seed of doubt about my ancestral faith: âIrfan, your argument about Jesus was very interesting. You should explore that argument further. I think you might find that the Holy Spirit moved you to speak this truth.'
The Holy Spirit was the spirit that had descended upon Jesus like a dove almost immediately after he was baptised by John the Baptist. It also caused some of Christ's disciples
to speak in all kinds of strange languages. But where did the Holy Spirit fit into the grand scheme of things?
I asked this question in a Divinity class. Rev Alex was explaining to us the doctrine of the Trinity: the Holy Spirit was part of God. This made me wonderâwere there three different Gods? Or was God divided into three parts? Rev Alex insisted that there was only one God, and that God was three persons in one God. He gave various examples, including that of a triangleâthree sides, three angles but one triangle. But this didn't make much sense. Yes, there were three sides and three angles. There were also two dimensions and 180 degrees.
We changed Divinity teachers halfway through Year 9. We had a gentleman named Mr Martin, who was a huge fan of Bob Dylan and Joe Cocker. He also had a convert's zeal, having become âborn again' some years back. Mr Martin had an eye for potential converts and regarded me as someone having Christian potential.
To his credit, Mr Martin was an honest man who wanted to answer all my questions about doctrine. He tried his best to clarify the idea of a Trinitarian God, and I was almost convinced. However, there was another issue I couldn't quite fathom: if Jesus was God, how come he was able to eat and drink and be killed in such a humiliating fashion?
This doubt was triggered by a verse in the Koran that spoke about Jesus and his mother eating food. It was probably the most powerful yet simple argument against the divinity of Christ. How could he be God when he was so human? How could he be divine when he was killed? Who could have the power to kill God?
Mr Martin's answer was quite straightforward. Jesus was part of God who chose to become man and then chose to die as a man. Throughout this time, he was still God but he was also human. He then was able to resurrect the human part of him, and eventually (according to some versions of the Bible) able to resurrect. So when the Gospels talk about Jesus eating and drinking and being born and dying, this was all about Jesus being a man.
But if Jesus was a man, does that mean he also inherited the original sin that we have inherited? Mr Martin patiently explained.
âThat is why Jesus was born to a virgin. He had no father. Joseph was Jesus's stepfather. Jesus's real father was God.'
âSo God was Jesus's dad in the same manner as my dad is my dad?'
âYes, that's right.'
âSo Mary had sex with God?'
âNo, not in that sense.'
âSo is Jesus equal to God?'
âYes, He is. If you deny that, you become like Jehovah's Witnesses.'
âBut when Jesus became a man, didn't he compromise his divinity?'
âOur human logic leads us to believe this. But we cannot comprehend these things. Just face facts, Yusuf. We don't know everything about God.'
It was a compelling argument. But where was its scriptural proof? And if there were arguments in support of this in the Old Testament, did Jews also believe this stuff?
âYusuf, you will find the proof everywhere in the Bible. Look in the Old Testament, in the Book of Genesis. God talks about Himself in plural, as “We”. What does that show you? Was God talking about one person?'
âBut Mr Martin, God calls Himself “We” in the Koran also.'
âYusuf, the Koran isn't the book of God. It talks about Allah, not God. The Christian God is a Trinitarian God.'
âDo Jews believe in a Trinity?'
âNo.'
âSo do Jews believe in the same God as Christians?'
âJews believe in the Old Testament God.'
âDid God change when the New Testament was written?'
Mr Martin's arguments were patiently presented. However, to my mind, they began to sound ridiculous. It seemed strange that I had to wait until Year 9 to learn such fundamental doctrines, and that I had to stretch my brain cells to understand them. But Islamic beliefs about God were so simple, and were among the first things I was taught as a young child. It was easy to explain the Islamic concept of God (
la ilaha illallah
ââThere is no god except God') to a four-year-old. But try explaining the intricacies of the Trinity and other doctrines to a four-year-old.
Perhaps I didn't try hard enough to understand the beliefs of my school. Later, I saw a book that proved enormously influential. It was called
Jesus: The Evidence
by Ian Wilson and was based on a BBC TV documentary. The book undermined any faith I might have had in the veracity of the New Testament. I learned that there were numerous different gospels floating around in the years
after Jesus. I also learned about the confused state of Judaism during the Roman occupation of Palestine.
The death knell to my Christianity was the discovery of a South African Muslim missionary named Ahmed Deedat, an aggressive debater whose public spats with various prominent Christian missionaries were not just entertaining but also enlightening. Ahmed Deedat had no university training, yet seemed to have almost memorised the Bible (or at least the key verses that proved his points) and had also read and memorised key verses in both Hebrew (the original language of the Old Testament) and ancient Greek (the original language of the New Testament).
At this point of the book, some Christian readers might feel somewhat slighted. The previous and following paragraphs aren't designed to malign or belittle Christianity or the faith of Christians. I recognise that for many Christians, these ideas of Jesus's divinity, the resurrection and so on are a source of enormous solace and strength. I myself am a beneficiary of the fruits of Christianity. St Andrews was a school that took its Christianity seriously, and it is a credit to Christians everywhere that such fine schools exist where young non-Christian men like myself could explore these issues without being beaten with a stick. Although Christian teachings seemed far more civilised to me, this in itself did not make the fundamental teachings of Christianity true. I imagined the truth lay in some combination of Islamic doctrine and Christian civilisation.
At the end of Year 9, Mum decided to take me to Pakistan to visit my cousins and relatives. This was my third trip (we'd
had a brief trip when I had finished Year 7, but this was largely uneventful). By that time, I still had some interest in religion but had also become obsessed with rock'n'roll. I developed my own taste in music different to that of my elder sisters who were still swinging somewhere between tragic Bollywood songs and the Electric Light Orchestra. I became addicted to British and Irish rock music, especially U2 and Simple Minds. My record collection began to grow, and soon included Tim Finn and The Police.
On the way to Pakistan, we stopped off at Manilla airport. There I managed to pick up over thirty tapes of some of my favourite artists. It wasn't until I got back to Australia that I realised the tapes weren't exactly originals.
In Karachi, we stayed at the rather large home of Mum's aunt from the Jamaat-i-Islami, whom we called Naani Amma. Karachi was just as dirty and dusty as it was eight years before. However, for me it was a novelty to be holidaying in a different environment. I was also appreciative of the comments my relatives were making about me. One of my mum's cousins, Aunt Lubna, spoke fluent English. She observed once: âMy God, Irfan. I can't believe you are so well-behaved. And you have grown so tall and handsome.'
Her husband, Uncle Junaid, soon reminded me that everything is relative. âThat's right. You are so much better than you were the last time you were here. You were a complete rascal back then. We were scared of inviting you in case you broke another window!'
My Urdu had been substantially weakened, and I tried on this trip to speak Urdu as much as I could. I felt very much at home in Pakistan, where I didn't stand out from
the crowd (until I spoke Urdu of course!) and I couldn't help but notice all kinds of shops and businesses having my name. There was even a large Irfan Shopping Arcade in a busy street where another of my aunts had a homeopathic medical clinic.
Naani Amma was now my only maternal grandmother, as Mum's actual mum had passed away. Naani Amma noticed that I liked going to the mosque when the
azaan
was sounded. She could tell that I had some interest in the ceremonial aspects of my faith, and she wanted me to learn more. So she gave me access to her extensive library, which included many books in English.
Naani Amma had books on all different subjects. Most were by the same few authors, most prominent of whom was a man named Syed Abul Ala Maududi, the founder of the Jamaat-i-Islami. Mum had also studied some of Maududi's work, and she praised him for his superb Urdu prose. Even his most fervent opponents agreed that Maududi was a brilliant writer.
I found much of Maududi's work a little hard to understand at first. I forced myself to read some of his more esoteric works on legal philosophy, politics and ethics. However, Naani Amma noticed that I was soon getting bored. She told me to read more basic stuff, and pointed me in the direction of an American writer named Maryam Jameelah.
I read one book by Maryam Jameelah called
Islam vs Ahl-i-Kitab: Past & Present
, which compared Islam to Judaism and Christianity. I skipped the section on Judaism, as I always assumed Jews and Muslims had little to disagree about. Most of Jameelah's chapter was about how
European orthodox Jewish children studied in a traditional environment which was very similar to a
madrassa
. For Jameelah, the main differences between Jews and Muslims seemed to be political, and these would not interest me until some years later.
Jameelah's chapter on Christianity was unusual. What she described as Christianity was not what I had been exposed to at St Andrews. She seemed to confuse Christianity with Western society. Perhaps I wasn't reading her book closely enough, but I soon did away with it.
The book that really caught my attention was one called
The Myth of the Cross
. It was written by a Nigerian barrister named Alhaj A.D. Ajijola, who like me had attended a Christian school and was initially attracted to Christianity. He was from a nominally and culturally Muslim family, though his indigenous Nigerian upbringing was different to mine.
Ajijola set out quite clearly certain Christian doctrines and their basis from Christian scriptures. He tried to prove using the words of Jesus as reported in the New Testament that Christian doctrines such as the Trinity were largely invented by Paul of Tarsus, a Jew who was also a Roman citizen and who persecuted Jesus's followers until he saw a vision on the road to Damascus and became a Christian.
Ajijola's book proved decisive to me, though I did notice that he had certain errors in his biblical citation. The book convinced me that Christian doctrines were not true and that Islamic beliefs were true, but it failed to convince me that the rest of Islam was true.
Mum and Naani Amma arranged for a veritable library of books to be shipped from Pakistan. These books arrived around four months later when I was halfway through Year 10.
I started reading Maududi's books, and soon found I could understand much of what he was saying. I forced myself to read the first chapter of his book Risalat-i-Diniyat which had been translated into English as Toward Understanding Islam.
It was an immensely powerful chapter, and it taught me about the importance of understanding the proper meanings of various religious words I had become accustomed to. Maududi taught that the word âIslam' had two basic meanings: âsurrender to God' and âpeace'. These two meanings combined to form the basic message of our faithâthat the only way to achieve real and lasting peace,
both individually and socially, was through surrendering to the will of God. Human beings who surrendered and achieved peace willingly were given the title of âMuslim'.
Maududi explained that the entire universe surrendered to God and was thus Muslim. Words like physics, chemistry and astronomy were all just names that human beings invented to describe what was in fact the law of God. These laws were collectively known by the name
sharia
. Unlike other creatures, human beings had a free will. However, we still had a part of us that surrendered to God. That part was our biology, our metabolism. God controlled how blood flowed through our veins and arteries and capillaries. Part of us surrendered and was therefore, by definition, Muslim. What made us truly Muslim was when we surrendered our free will to God.
Maududi also taught the meaning of the words
kufr
and
kaafir
. Up until now, I thought the word
kaafir
referred to someone who worshipped idols. Maududi said that the word
kufr
(which was related to
kaafir
) referred to the act of covering up the truth. A
kaafir
didn't just willingly deny the truth but went further and covered up the truth so that others couldn't see it. A
kaafir
wasn't satisfied with his own ignorance, but wanted to make sure that others were ignorant. In this sense, a
kaafir
was the worst form of oppressor.