Yusha Evans
My intention was to become a minister or a missionary

Residence: Minneapolis, MN
Family : Married with 3 children
In his own words:
In what
faith were you raised?
I was raised in Greenville, S.C. with a very strict Methodist upbringing.
How
involved were you in Christianity?
I was actually going to a small Bible college in Greenville through our church
and actually had an intention to enroll in Bob Jones University.
My intention was to become a minister or a missionary.
I also had interest in becoming a Bible scholar, and I was learning to read the
Bible in Hebrew and Greek.
When did
you convert to Islam, and why?
It was in December of 1998. After reading the Bible maybe six or seven times,
cover to cover, analytically, I began to realize there were a lot of
inconsistencies, contradictions. This confusion led me to leave Christianity
altogether and I started searching other religions, Buddhism, Taoism – every
kind of “ism” that’s out there – and none of them seemed to have a clear truth.
One day I ran into a Muslim. He invited me to a Friday worship service and when
I saw Muslims praying it was almost like a light went off in my head. I asked
for a copy of the Quran. I read it cover to cover in one week, and that was
enough.
How
difficult was the decision to become a Muslim?
The decision was not very difficult. The difficulty came after the decision.
Did your
family have difficulty accepting your conversion?
My old-fashioned grandmother – I was raised by my grandmother – it was hard for
her to digest. And my mother, who is a Baptist, and my father, he’s a Christian
and a freemason, it was not easy for him. But it was harder for my extended
family, many of whom are involved in politics in South Carolina. It was people
trying to talk me out of it and not so much an open condemnation, but you could
feel the cold shoulder of the family.
How exactly
does one convert to Islam?
If you believe in your heart that there is no God but Allah, and Muhammad is the
messenger of Allah, then you must make something called shahada – open
testimony, an open declaration. You do that before anybody who can be witness to
this. I did it at a Muslim brother’s home late in the night. There’s nothing
like a ritual that you have to go through.
How much
has Islam changed your life?
After I left Christianity I started heading down the wrong road, being 17
years old and being confused by the world. Islam put me back on a right
perspective and even my family sees it has made me a much better and a much
better-rounded person than I ever could have been.
Has your
conversion changed your understanding of yourself?
I don’t feel it’s changed my understanding of myself. But I finally feel
I have made a real connection with something greater than myself. I feel with
Islam that a connection has finally been made with the creator, and when you
feel a connection like that, there’s no way it cannot change you.
Do you see your adopted faith as
the one true religion, and would you recommend it to anyone else?
I absolutely would recommend it – not as the one true religion separate from
everything else, but as the only true religion the creator has ever given to
humanity almost every religion has claimed some form of truth in it. But Islam
is the only religion that has contained its originality and its truthfulness
over its 1,400-year span. We believe it’s the same religion preached since
Abraham, since Adam, because God is not someone who changes his way of life for
humanity.
|
[ Converts to Islam ] [ Home ] [ Site Map ] |