The Love I Found in Islam!
Fatima's Ultimate Journey
She
describes herself as a person who was at first preoccupied with her own
needs, and who has become one who is concerned about the needs of
others.
Fatima
Mali is a domestic worker from the squatter camp of Crossroads located
on the outskirts of Cape Town (South Africa), who embraced Islam in
2005.
Born in 1955 in the Transkei, she came to Cape Town in 1991 in search of work.
Sixteen
years later, Fatima is one of ten recipients of the Gifted Hajj
program, that presents at least ten deserving Muslims with the
opportunity of fulfilling the requirements of the fifth pillar of Islam,
the pilgrimage to the cities of Makkah and Madinah. Fatima departs for
Saudi Arabia on November 12.
This
is Fatima's ultimate journey. Not because it is the first time she will
set foot outside her country. Not because it is the first time she will
set foot on an aircraft. Not even because the hajj is the ultimate
journey for every Muslim.
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Fatima's
hajj is the ultimate journey because her journey begins before she
receives the good news of the Gifted Hajj. Her journey begins with the
first steps she takes towards consciously embracing the life of a
Muslim.
It
is an ordinary working day in 1995. Fatima, then known as Nozibele
Phylis Mali, is busy working for her employer, Mehrunisa Dawood, fondly
known as Mehrun Bhana, in Rylands Estate.
She
is busy sweeping a room from which she can clearly hear Mehrun Bhana's
son, Shafeeq, in the lounge, revising the Quranic chapters he has
memorized. Fatima is listening, spellbound. This is strange,
interesting, she thinks, although she does not understand a word.
"Why
is this child sitting like this?" Fatima's wonderment brings her work
almost to a standstill. As a diligent worker she does not want to appear
to be slowing down her work, so she watches secretly.
"I don't want him to see me because I must work," Fatima says.
But
she is so drawn to the recitation, the respectful way this child is
sitting with the book he holds. It is so beautiful and almost disturbing
at the same time, because it is so beautiful yet you cannot understand.
Fatima starts questioning why she is so attracted to this melodious
sound?
She
hears footsteps, and quickly resumes her work. But her mind and her
heart are fixed on this child reciting the book. She knows neither the
Quran, nor Islam. But, as she watches and listens, she ultimately
recognizes one powerful truth: "This thing comes in my heart."
Touching the Heart
There is a sisterhood that transcends the typical race, class and employer-employee barriers.
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And
so the one thing that comes into her heart is Shafeeq's recitation, his
posture, the whole atmosphere created by a sacred moment.
But there are other things too, she says, that come into her heart.
"This
lady, every morning when I'm coming here, she's got a smiling face."
Even when Fatima errs in her work, she has learned that there is no fear
of reprisal for the common mistake in domestic chores. Instead, there
is the culture of admonishment with kindness.
This
treatment is very different from that which Fatima experienced whilst
in the service of a previous Muslim employer. With Mehrun Bhana it is an
unusual relationship. There is a sisterhood that transcends the typical
race, class and employer-employee barriers.
Her
food is served on the same plates as the rest of the family and she
eats at the same table as Mehrun Bhana. When one touches another person
through these man-made barriers, then one reaches the heart of the
other. Fatima feels this touch and recognizes it as a feeling that makes
her "smile and cry at the same time."
Another
thing that comes into her heart is Mehrun Bhana's ritual ablution and
prayer. At 1pm Mehrun Bhana goes into the bathroom and comes out with a
beautiful long top and a scarf.
Her
questions multiply, urging like a wave. What is going on in this house?
Why am I so attracted to these people and their life? Mehrun Bhana
senses her curiosity. She knows Fatima is clearly searching for
spiritual guidance.
Fatima had been born into the Methodist Church and is the only surviving member of her family.
Mehrun
Bhana prompts a discussion with Fatima on religion, the church and her
faith. They speak of the things that dissatisfy Fatima in her faith over
breakfast. Mehrun Bhana advises her to pray.
"When
you leave my door, speak to God. Say 'O God, please help me. Show me
the truth.' Say that all the time as you walk until you get to your
home, and God will show you the path."
Several
months later Mehrun Bhana takes Fatima to the Islamic Da'wah Movement
(IDM) office where a Xhosa-speaking member of the organization explains
Islam to her in her native language. Right after that, Fatima decides to
embrace Islam.
Mehrun Bhana reflects on the day Fatima goes to the IDM: "When I came back the Imam said: 'she immediately said the Shahadah and adopted the name Fatima.' It was a very emotional moment for me. I was actually speechless."
Hardships of a New Life
Christina's hostility compels Fatima to leave her brother's home and seek refuge
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The change in Fatima's life is visible.
She
describes herself as a person who was at first preoccupied with her own
needs, and who has become one who is genuinely concerned about the
needs of others. Previously she had no time for others. Now, she says,
she even makes time to smile.
But
the new life does not come to her without its hardship. Although her
brother Douglas is always very kind to her and shares his home with her,
his wife, Christina, is vehemently opposed to her sister-in-law's new
faith and she openly resents Fatima, deliberately making life difficult
for her.
However,
Fatima perseveres with patience and constancy. She is neither deterred
from practicing her faith, nor from refraining to respond in like manner
to Christina.
Christina's
hostility compels Fatima to leave her brother's home and seek refuge in
the nearby home of another sister in Islam, Nadia. Soon after she
embraced Islam, Fatima helps a neighbor and his two children who are
abandoned by their mother.
The
father is so overwhelmed by the benevolence of Fatima and Nadia that he
feels drawn to their faith and, with his children, embraces Islam
later.
The Angel of Death
Within
a few months an unexpected turn of events presents Fatima with another
challenge. In 1996, Christina's teenage son falls seriously ill and dies
of injuries sustained in an accident. Fatima responds with magnanimity
and comes to the aid of her sister-in-law. At a time when all
Christina's friends forsake her after the funeral, Fatima remains
faithfully at the side of the grieving mother and helps to heal her
broken spirit.
Is
it not in the nature of a grieving spirit to recognize compassion
foremost from one who had been rejected? Christina's heart melts with
Fatima's compassion. Her hostility dissipates and she is transformed
into a bosom friend.
She asks Fatima to let her come with her to Macassar to attend the weekly madrasa(school)
where they learn the basic teachings of Islam. After three visits to
the madrasa Christina's heart relents and she finally embraces Islam,
adopting the Muslim name Shanaaz. A bitter sister-in-law is transformed
into a beloved sister-in-faith.
And
so Fatima becomes familiar with the visits of the angel of death. This
messenger had already summoned the souls of many of her nearest kin; all
her siblings, her parents, her husband, and the last one was Douglas,
her beloved brother, who met his death in October 2006 as a victim of an
armed robbery. This incident occurs three days before he is due to
visit the offices of the IDM to embrace Islam.
Fatima grieves, but her comfort is that Douglas had made the niyyah (intention) to accept Islam, and that his reward is the realization of that niyyah.
The Ultimate Journey
Her four sons, aged 27, 18, 14 and 12, accept Islam immediately when they arrive in Cape Town
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Fatima does
not speak of her joy of undertaking the Hajj. Before the decision was
announced she simply "never put it in [her] heart" until the good news
reached her in April this year. It is a quiet joy, tempered by the
preparation and instruction under the tutelage of teacher Yasmina.
Mehrun
Bhana offers further guidance and takes care of the physical and
logistical matters. The Gifted Hajj Committee attends to the basic
costs. Fatima is excited, but she continues to fulfill her role as
helper and caregiver in her community wherever there is a need and where
it is possible to help.
Her
four sons, aged 27, 18, 14 and 12, accept Islam immediately when they
arrive in Cape Town from the Transkei at the end of 2006. Nozuko,
Fatima's first-born, is married and has not yet accepted Islam, but
undertakes the responsibility to look after her younger siblings in her
mother's absence.
In
her original journey, from a self-centered woman, to a compassionate
Muslim, Fatima touches the lives of many people. Of these, a total of
fifteen people commit themselves to the Islamic faith, including her
children and neighbors.
Of
the fifteen, Shanaaz remains the most important symbol of
reconciliation and steadfastness in Fatima's journey. In a deeply
profound way, Shanaaz represents a true measure of Fatima's devotion.
For the past four years Shanaaz has been living with cancer. Her
condition is deteriorating and Fatima continues to care for her sister
in Islam who was married to her brother. The bond of faith supersedes,
but also affirms, the bond of family.
Mehrun
Bhana affirms that propagation of Islam begins at home. Fatima
reflects, "Allah is love… so, I must try to love." Two women complete
the circle of giving and receiving.
But Fatima's journey is not yet full circle. When and how it will be, Allah knows best.
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