Susan
married Abdul Qadar, a Burmese Muslim residing in Maryland.
He was a manager of a shoe company and frequently
attended Friday services in the Laurel Mosque. One day he expressed
his difficulties to me.
He said, “I am married to a Christian lady. We are blessed with
twin daughters and I am worried about the future of
my children. I
tried my best to bring my wife to this mosque but she
totally refused.
What should I do?”
I advised him to bring her to our house for dinner. She will meet my wife
and would feel more comfortable. This approach worked.
Susan started coming to the mosque and also started
attending sessions of tafseer(interpretations/explanations)
of the Quran.
A few weeks passed very well.
One Friday I was conducting the tafseer session. I gave an explanation
of a few verses of the Quran and then I invited questions
from the participants. Susan asked a question. Another gentleman responded,
even before I could say anything. To my surprise Susan
started crying bitterly while sitting in the session.
Everybody was confused.
Abdul Qadar led her out of the mosque
and drove her home.
Later
on I asked Abdul Qadar the reason for her crying. He
said, “Susan refused to go to the mosque again. She felt that her question
had annoyed the person who answered it since he had
a very serious face.
She does not like to annoy anybody.”
To
the best of our knowledge and judgement the respondent
was not annoyed.
He only had a serious look. I said to Abdul Qadar,
“Please explain to her calmly and cool-mindedly that
many
people
from India and
Pakistan
have serious faces. You can see this at any airport
or bus station or shopping center. This is our cultural
drawback.”
Susan
gradually digested this idea and after a few months
returned to the mosque.
She learned more and more about Islam every week. She found the question-and-
answer session very beneficial in understanding Islamic
values and faith. She developed
many friendly relationships with other ladies in the
mosque and received lots of encouragement and respect.
She
liked this new way of life and wished to embrace Islam. I had the honor to invite
her to recite the Shahada, the Islamic pledge,
which is Ashhadu
an La ilaha illa Allah wa ashhadu anna Muhammadan Rasoolu
llah. (I bear witness that there is no deity but God
and Muhammad is His Messenger). After that she was a
Muslim and our sister in Islam. I also performed the
Islamic marriage between her and her husband in the
mosque the same day.
Susan was enjoying a new life under
the blessings of the Islamic faith.
During
the Islamic marriage I explained to them that it was
mandatory for the husband to give a mahr(dowry) to his
wife. I also reminded them
that the mahr is the personal property of the wife and
she can use it in the way she chooses. The husband has no say
in the matter throughout his life. Abdul Qadar eagerly
agreed to pay the mahr.
Susan was amazed to see the respect accorded
to women in Islam and the way her rights are preserved. It definitely strengthened
her Islamic faith. This situation
took place in the State of Maryland.
It
would like to mention a similar situation that took
place in the state of Michigan a few years later. As the Imam of the Tawheed
Mosque, it was one of my duties to perform marriages
in this State.
A young Muslim asked me to conduct his marriage
ceremony. I explained to them
the rights of men and women in Islam and about the mahr. Both of them filled
out the prescribed forms for marriage and the form for
payment of the mahr.
Then, I asked them if they had any questions
before entering into a marriage bond. The lady said, “I have
no questions.”
The young man said, “I have an important question
to ask you.” He said, “I understand that I am supposed
to give her the mahr and that will be exclusively her
personal property.
Is she not similarly supposed to give me a mahr?” I told him that in Islam
the mahr is for the wife only. Like Susan,
this lady was amazed to see such dignity and honor given
to women in Islam.
She
chose to be called Saeeda since she was very gentle
and nice to everybody.
She embraced Islam with clear knowledge, utmost
sincerity and full commitment. She immediately started
observing the full Islamic dress irrespective of fear
from neighbors and the general public. Her daughters
were going to elementary school at that time.
She asked each of them to wear a headscarf in
school despite of the fact that the children tried to
make fun of them. I told her that it was
not necessary for her young girls to face this difficult
situation at school.
However, she emphasized that they should learn
and observe the Islamic way of life from their young
age. So, Saeeda and her two
young daughters wore the Islamic dress and looked very
distinguished and graceful wherever they went.
This
was her level of faith and commitment. Her husband used to
laugh at himself.
He felt that we born Muslims take Islam very lightly
and hence our commitment is shaky. Abdul Qadar and Saeeda
have a very peaceful and enviable family life.