Becoming Muslim 
                
                Sir Abdullah 
                Archibald Hamilton (England) 
                Statesman and Baronet  
                 
                
                 
                Since arriving at an age of discretion, the beauty and the 
                simple purity of Islam have always appealed to me. I could 
                never, though born and brought up as a Christian, believe in the 
                dogmatic aspect of the Church, and have always placed reason and 
                commonsense above blind faith.  
                As the time progressed, I wished to be at peace with my 
                Creator, and I found that both the Church of Rome and the Church 
                of England were of no real use to me.  
                In becoming a Muslim I have merely obeyed the dictates of my 
                conscience, and have since felt a better and a truer man.  
                There is no religion that is so maligned by the ignorant and 
                the biased as is Islam; yet if people only knew, it is the 
                religion of strong for the weak, the rich for the poor. Humanity 
                is divided into three classes. First, those on whom God has, out 
                of His bounty, bestowed possessions and wealth; secondly, those 
                who have to work to earn their living; and lastly, the great 
                army of the unemployed, or those who have fallen by the wayside 
                through no fault of their own.  
                Again Islam recognizes genius and individuality. It is 
                constructive and not destructive. For example, if a landowner 
                who is rich and is not in need of cultivating his land refrains 
                from doing so for some time, his property ipso facto 
                becomes public property, and according to Islam Law, passes into 
                the hands of the first person who cultivates it.  
                Islam strictly forbids its adherents to gamble or to indulge 
                in any games of chance. It prohibits all alcoholic drinks and 
                interdicts usury, which alone has caused enough sorrow and 
                suffering to mankind. Thus, in Islam, none can take a mean 
                advantage of another who is less fortunate.  
                We neither believe in fatalism nor in predestination, but 
                only in pre-measurement; that is to say the fixity of the laws 
                and the intelligence to follow them.  
                To us, Faith without Action is a dead-letter; for in itself 
                it is insufficient unless we live up to it. We believe in our 
                own personal accountability for our actions in this life and the 
                Hereafter. We must carry our own cross and none can atone for 
                another's sin.  
                Islam teaches the inherent sinlessness of man. It teaches 
                that man and woman come from the same essence, possess the same 
                soul, and have been equipped with equal capabilities for 
                intellectual, spiritual and moral attainment.  
                I do not think I need say much about the Universal 
                Brotherhood of man in Islam. It is a recognized fact. Lord and 
                vassal, rich and poor, are all like. I have always found that my 
                brother Muslims have been the soul of honour and that I could 
                believe their word. They have always treated me justly, as a man 
                and a brother, and have extended to me the greatest hospitality, 
                and I have always felt at home with them.  
                In conclusion, I would like to say that whereas Islam guides 
                humanity in the daily workaday life, the present-day so-called 
                Christianity, indirectly in theory and invariably in practice, 
                teaches its followers, it would seem, to pray to God on Sundays 
                and to prey on His creatures for the rest of the week.  
                 
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