Bismillah Ar-Rahman Ar-Raheem
David Myatt: From Neo-Nazi to Muslim
"And remember Allah's blessing upon you when you were enemies, and He
brought your hearts together, so that by His blessing you became
brothers." Quran 3:103 Interpretation of Meaning
Islam - submission to the will of Allah. I converted to Islam because
there came a time when both my mind and my heart accepted that there
was no god but Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala and that Muhammad (salla
Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam) was His Messenger. All that I had believed
and upheld before this conversion is at worst wrong, and at best
irrelevant. My duty now, the purpose of my life, is to submit to the
will of Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala - to live, InshaAllah, as a Muslim in
the way that Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala has decreed, through His Prophet
and Messenger, Muhammad (salla Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam). One of the
many wonderful things which occurred on the day I converted was when
the Imaam of the Mosque explained that by accepting Islam I had begun a
new life - Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala had forgiven me my past, and it
was as if I started my life again with my Book of Life, the record of
my deeds, empty.
"It is not for the believer - man or woman - when Allah
and His
Messenger have decreed a matter, that they should have any option in
their decision. For whoever disobeys Allah and His Messenger has indeed
strayed into plain error." 33:36 Interpretation of Meaning
Thus did I acquire a new life, a new identity - for I am a Muslim, and
all Muslims are my brothers, wherever they happen to live, and whatever
race they are said to belong to. How was it that I, a Westerner with a
history of over twenty-five years of political involvement in extreme
"right-wing" organizations - a former leader of the political wing of
the neo-Nazi group Combat 18 - came to be standing one Sunday outside a
Mosque with a sincere desire to go inside and convert to Islam? The
simple answer is that it was the guidance of Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala
- He guided me there. As for my political past, it belongs to the past.
All I can and should do, as a Muslim, is to trust in Allah Subhanahu wa
Ta'ala, The Most Merciful, He Who Often Forgives.
In terms of the 'Western' explanation that most Westerners will seek in
order to try and understand my conversion, I suppose my journey toward
Islam began when I first went to Egypt - over ten years before my
reversion to Islam - and, as a tourist, visited a Mosque. The Adhan -
the call to prayer - had begun and I was struck by its beauty. It is
fair to say my heart responded to it in a way that, at the time, I did
not understand. Then, I knew little about Islam, and at that time I did
not investigate it further, returning to my life in England, and my
political activities. Yet something of that moment of beauty stayed
with me, in the months after my visit - as did the image of the Sun
rising in Cairo over the minaret, the dome, of a Mosque as I cycled
along the dusty road from the airport toward the city, heading for the
desert.
Less than a year later, I returned to Cairo with my wife. We spent two
weeks travelling, visiting the usual tourist sites - but it was
"Islamic" Cairo that we both enjoyed the most, and we spent several
days wandering around there, she suitably and modestly attired (in a
garment she had made herself) and I with my Tweed cap, long baggy
trousers and rather bushy red beard. Everywhere we were greeted with
friendliness, and I was in some ways sad to leave, although I did not
know then why I felt sad. I did not at that time make any connection
between the way I felt, and Islam, even though I once had spent an hour
or so outside a Mosque waiting to hear the Adhan again and even though,
while browsing in a bookshop in Cairo, I had bought a copy of an
English interpretation of the Quran. I just felt, vaguely, that I
wanted to know more about the people and what I considered was their
culture. My wife (who did not share my political views) and I even took
to eating, while there, with only our right hands so as not to give
offence, for, like her, I considered that manners were important, and -
unlike her - part of being English, as if the English had some kind of
monopoly on manners.
The next year, we returned to Egypt again, as we returned the year
after that, although two months after our last visit my wife fell ill,
to die six weeks later of cancer. Yet each time we returned to Egypt we
both learnt a little more about the people, and what I still regarded
as their culture, and each time, after our visits, we returned to our
English way of life: she to her rather quiet, unassuming, life and I to
my political activities and my pride in being English. In those days, I
believed that it was our nation, our national culture, which defined us
and which therefore was of supreme importance, and I felt I had a duty
to fight to preserve this culture, and the identity I assumed went with
it. Thus, I was staunchly - and in the previous decade, violently -
opposed to non-White immigration into Britain and had twice been jailed
for violence in pursuit of my political aims. In addition, I regarded
Western culture, and what I called Western civilization, as superior to
any other, and was very proud to be English. Had we not built the
greatest Empire, the most civilized Empire, the world had ever seen?
For over two decades I had been active in various nationalist political
organizations, and various para-military groups, as I had written
several articles, and essays, about nationalism and National-Socialism.
Indeed, it is true to say that I was a National-Socialist - a nazi;
someone who admired Adolf Hitler and who sincerely believed that he had
created a good, and honourable, society for the German people, and that
a campaign of lies, disinformation and propaganda had been directed at
him, and at National-Socialist Germany. I really did regard him as a
good man, an honourable man, just as I strived, in my own way, to be
honourable - to do my duty to my people, my nation, believing that
sometimes hard choices, hard decisions, have to made and that violence
was justified, and indeed necessary, to achieve my political aims, for
how else could our nation, our race, be saved?
Not long after the death of my wife, I went back to Egypt - to wander
into the desert, and to find a kind of peace there. Back in Cairo, an
Egyptian I had met invited me into his home and I spent a very happy
evening there. We talked, briefly, about Islam, but I was too enwrapped
in my own life, my own personal concerns, to discus the matter further.
But the people, the sights, the sounds, the smells of Egypt - the sound
of the Adhan - lingered in my memory, month after month, following my
return to England.
It was around that time that the violent National-Socialist group
Combat 18 came to public attention, and I enthusiastically helped them
for over three years - often by writing racist articles; often by
giving speeches and attending various events. And yet I could never
quite forget the sound of the Adhan, the feeling of being alone in the
desert and what I can only describe as the wonder of Islam. It was as
if I had caught a glimpse of something strange, and beautiful: a
fleeting memory of another world; a memory of something sublime,
sacred, which made my own life, and especially my own political aims
and views, seem small, insignificant, and maybe even unethical.
Years ago I had experienced - or believed I had experienced - something
of the divine, the sacred. This was when - following my release from my
second term of imprisonment for violence - I went on a retreat in a
Nazarene monastery, following many months of thinking about politics,
religion, and life in general. I eventually stayed two years at the
monastery, becoming a monk - more drifting into it, than out of
conviction. Toward the end of my time as a monk I began to believe that
I was shirking what I still regarded as my duty to create a better
world, by means of politics. Thus I left, to travel and wander for a
while, before returning to nationalist politics, to my pride in being
English.
It was during my time with Combat 18 that I decided to return to Egypt.
It was an Egypt-Air flight, and I spent well over an hour listening to
the Quran, which I found was being broadcast on one of the channels of
the "in-flight" entertainment system. Immediately, in Cairo, I felt at
home, at ease, and I really did sense, then, that I belonged in such a
place with minarets and the Adhan around me. I have always loathed
cities and large towns - but Cairo was somehow different. I liked it
(and still do) - despite the overcrowding, the noise, the traffic, and
it was during this visit that I began to appreciate the difference
between Arab nationalism, and Islam, for I talked to several Egyptians,
and several Muslims, about their land, about Islam, about life in
general.
I returned to England to find bad-manners, arrogance, materialism,
decadence, and for the first time in my life I did not really feel
comfortable among my own people. But gradually, over the coming months,
the feeling faded, and I continued with my political work - believing I
could and should make a difference; that the answers of nationalism and
National-Socialism were right. For I was still in thrall to my own ego,
my own Western way of life.
Reversion to Islam:
My conversion/reversion really begin when I started a new job, working
long hours on a farm, often by myself. This followed my arrest by a
special Police team from Scotland Yard who were investigating me for
incitement to racial hatred, and conspiracy and incitement to murder.
Prior to my arrest, the founder and first leader of Combat 18, and one
of his close friends, had been arrested for murder, and both of them
would be convicted of murder and sentenced to many years in Prison.
I was released, while the Police tried to find sufficient evidence to
convict me in British Court of Law. In the end, they would spend over
three years trying to gather this evidence, and their investigation
involved the Police forces, and the intelligence services, of Canada,
France, and the United States. I was arrogantly determined to continue
my political work and that of Combat 18, but I was losing my enthusiasm
- not because of my arrest, or my pending trial, or anything similar,
but rather because I had glimpsed that other world again: the world of
the divine, of God. The world that I felt on hearing the Adhan; that I
felt on hearing the Quran on my flight to Egypt; the world I felt when
alone in the desert, knowing how close I was to death, how slender was
my own thread of life. It was as if in the desert, on hearing the
Adhan, on hearing the Quran, on talking with a well-mannered Muslim, I
felt the reality of God.
"Allah (alone) has power over, and is the (sole) master of, all things.
The creations in Heaven and Earth, the very change of Night to Day, are
Signs for those gifted with intelligence, those who whether sitting,
standing or reclining on their sides, give praise to Allah and who
frequently recall these creations in Heaven and Earth, (saying): 'You
who are our Rabb - You created all these things for a purpose; the
achievement is Yours alone.' " 3:189-191 Interpretation of Meaning
"This present life is only like water which We send down from the
clouds so that the luxuriant herbage sustaining man and beast may grow;
until when the Earth puts on its lovely garment and becomes adorned,
and its people believe that they are its masters - down then comes Our
scourge upon it by night or in broad day, laying it waste as though it
had not blossomed yesterday. Thus We make plain our Signs to thoughtful
men." 10: 24-25 Interpretation of meaning
The close contact with Nature I encountered on the farm, the toil of
manual labour, really did restore my soul, my humanity, and I became
slowly aware, over a period of many months, of the Oneness of the
Cosmos and of how I was but part of this wonderful Order which I felt
God had created. In my heart and in my mind I was began to feel that
this Order had not arisen by chance - it was created, as I myself was
created for a purpose. I felt the truth of the one and only Creator in
my heart and in my mind. For the first time in my life, I felt truly
humble. Then, as if by chance (but I assume it was the guidance of
Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala) I took from my bookcase one of the copies of
the Quran I had bought after one of my visits to Egypt. I began to read
it properly - before, I had merely "dipped into it", reading a few
verses, here and there. What I found was logic, reason, truth,
revelation, justice, humanity and beauty. Then, with a desire to find
out more about Islam, I "surfed the Internet" for Islamic sites. I
found one with audio files of Adhan and Salat and Suras from the Quran.
Again, my heart responded. There was no need for words.
In the next few days I found more web-sites as I read all I could about
Islamic beliefs, travelling to Oxford, and London, to find books about
Islam. Stripped of my prejudices, my arrogance, my belief in Western
superiority, here was everything that I myself felt, and always had
felt in my heart to be true: dignity, honour, trust, justice,
community, truth, an awareness of God on a daily basis, the need to be
self-disciplined, the spiritual way before materialism, and the
recognition of how we, as individuals, are subservient to God. I
marvelled at the life of Muhammad (salla Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam) and
at the spread of Islam - at how those early Muslims, once "rough and
ready" nomads, had through only the words, deeds and revelations of the
Prophet, created perhaps the most civilized civilization there has ever
been. I became enthralled reading about the life of the Prophet
Muhammad (salla Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam), for there was something
remarkable here: he seemed to represent everything I felt in my heart
and my mind to be noble and civilized. In fact, he seemed to me to be
the perfect human being: the perfect example to follow.
The more I discovered about Islam, the more it answered all the doubts,
all the questions, of my past thirty years. It really did feel as if I
had "come home" - as if I had at last found myself, as if I could see
things clearly for perhaps the first time. Now, I would sit for hours
listening to recordings of the Adhan and the Quran in Arabic. Truly,
here - I felt - in Islam was the numinous, the sacred; the way for us
to become, to behave like, civilized human beings.
Thus, my own conversion became not a question, but a duty. For I had
found and accepted the truth that there was no god but Allah Subhanahu
wa Ta'ala and that Muhammad (salla Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam) was His
Messenger.
So it was that I came, on Sunday morning, to be standing outside a
Mosque with the sincere intention of converting to Islam. For nearly
half an hour I hesitated - for these were the people who, twenty five
or more years ago, I had been fighting, on the streets. These were the
people I had swore at and had used violence against - indeed, one of my
terms of imprisonment was a result of me leading a gang of skinheads in
a fight against "Pakis". These were the people I had spent thirty years
trying to get out of Britain. How would they react to the former leader
of the neo-nazi NSM walking into "their" Mosque?
At first when I, very nervously, entered there seemed to be no one
around. Out of respect, I removed my shoes and knocked on an inner
door. The Imaam opened it - but he could not speak English, and I tried
to say something in Arabic but the only thing that made sense was
Shahadah. Soon, someone was fetched, who translated, and the Imaam
embraced me. They were so pleased and so friendly - so brotherly - that
it brings tears to my eyes now as I remember it, and I thank Allah
Subhanahu wa Ta'ala that I found the true Way in the end.
Nationalism, Race and Islam:
Prior to my reversion to Islam, I had a great pride in what I regarded
as my own culture, my own people, my English ancestry, and my own
nation. Indeed, it is true to say that I regarded what I termed the
"Aryan" peoples of the world - and the civilizations I believed they
had created - as superior. Furthermore, I believed that "race" and
"nation" were important, and worth fighting for and - if necessary -
dying for. I also defined myself through such things - considering
myself an Englishman with a great heritage.
Now, I know I am a Muslim - that is, I look to Islam, to Allah
Subhanahu wa Ta'ala and His Prophet and Messenger, Muhammad (salla
Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam) to provide me with all the answers, the
identity, I need. I define myself in terms of submission, in terms of
obedience to Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala and His Prophet and Messenger,
Muhammad (salla Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam) - for my Shahadah was and is
a life-long oath of obedience and loyalty to Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala
and His Prophet and Messenger, Muhammad (salla Allahu 'alayhi wa
sallam). Thus, I am duty-bound, honour-bound, to obey them. I have no
choice - I do not want a choice, for as Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala says:
"It is not for the believer - man or woman - when Allah and His
Messenger have decreed a matter, that they should have any option in
their decision. For whoever disobeys Allah and His Messenger has indeed
strayed into plain error." 33:36 Interpretation of Meaning
Thus, I now know and understand that, for a Muslim, such things as
"race" and "nation" and one's ancestral culture, are not important.
Indeed, they are 'Asabiyyah. As I wrote in my essay Nationalism,
Race,
Culture and Islam:
"Asabiyyah is a loyalty to, or a feeling of kinship with and a
belonging to, some group, or grouping, distinguished as that grouping
is by some criteria established by some person, or idea, or non-Islamic
way. 'Asabiyyah is a dividing or division of people according to
limits, or boundaries, or standards which are not Islamic. Why are they
not Islamic? Because these limits, boundaries or standards do not
derive from Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala but instead belong to Jahilliyah,
the Ages of Ignorance. In addition, 'asabiyyah demands or implies two
things: first, obedience and loyalty to other than Allah Subhanahu wa
Ta'ala and such loyalty obedience is at best ignorance, and at worst a
setting up of some idea, or ideal, or way, or loyalty, or group to
compete with Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala; second, 'asabiyyah demands or
implies judging others and ourselves by other than what Allah Subhanahu
wa Ta'ala has revealed."
It is Islam which is my culture and which is sufficient for me; it is
Adhab Al-Islam which shows me how to behave, in private and in public -
not the traditions of my ancestors; not the so-called culture of the
West. Now, all Muslims are my brothers and sisters, regardless of the
colour of their skin, regardless of where they were born or who their
parents were. For me, this is one of the great beauties of Islam - a
source of our strength and our unity. As I wrote in another essay:
“Since
reverting to Deen Al-Islam, Alhamdulillah, I accept that all Muslims,
whatever "race" they may be deemed to be, are my brothers
and sisters and that the only distinction we Muslims should make is
between Muslims and the kuffar.
Our aim is to obey and submit
to only Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala - racial separation is a Taghut
which many of the kuffar, in their ignorance, see as a worthy cause,
a worthy goal, just as many of these kuffar judge people according to
their alleged or presumed "ethnic origin" and give their
loyalty and allegiance and obedience to a cause, or some
organization, or some person, who seeks to separate and judge people
according to their alleged or presumed "ethnic origin".
The
criteria we use to judge someone - the criteria we should use, for
example, to find a good wife or husband, the criteria for friendship
- is the criteria of Taqwa, of obedience to Allah Subhanahu wa
Ta'ala, of being Muslim. The assumed or presumed "ethnic origin"
of the person is irrelevant, as is the culture of their ancestors, as
is the place of their birth.
To
make
things perfectly clear - I reject nationalism, racism, racial
separation and the ideas and concepts which underlie them and the
behaviour and attitudes which accompanies a belief in them, regarding
these things as incompatible with Deen Al-Islam.” (Questions
For Abdul-Aziz ibn Myatt)
Narrated By Abu Hurayrah: The Prophet (salla Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam)
said: "Allah, Tabarak wa'tala, has removed from you the pride of
Jahilliyah and its boasting about ancestors. A person can be either an
honourable believer or an ignoble sinner. You are sons of Adam, and
Adam came from dust. Let the people cease to boast about their kin and
kin-folk." Abu Dawud, Book 36, 5097
"Those who have experienced the beauty that is Al-Eeman
are those
who are content with Allah as their Rabb, with Al-Islam as their Way of
Life, and with Muhammad (salla Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam) as their
Messenger and Prophet." Narrated Al-'Abbaas bin 'Abd Al-Muttalib
(Shahih Muslim)
Abdul-Aziz ibn Myatt
(David Myatt)
5 Rabi Awal 1427
(Revised 2 Shaban 1428)
(This is a much revised and enlarged version of an article I wrote on
20 Jumad Awal 1419 entitled My Conversion to Islam)
Appendix:
The Kaffir Errors of Ideology and
Extremism
The Kaffir Errors of Ideology and Islamo-Fascism:
A recent myth, propagated by the kuffar is that Islam is some kind of
"ideology". This myth arose from the kaffir error of viewing the world,
and people, through various manufactured concepts, ideas, ideals and
abstractions. That is, these concepts, ideas and abstractions - all -isms and all -ologies - the kuffar and those
imitating them project onto the world and people, so categorising them.
They then believe they have "understood" the world, and people, whom
they so describe, and define, by such -isms, -ologies and abstractions.
This is a fundamental error, a manifestation of kufr, for by doing this
the kuffar, and those imitating them is speech, writing and thought,
are categorizing that-which cannot and should not be so categorized,
which is The Unity, the purity, the sacredness, of Tawheed. By this
division according to human manufactured and fallible and ever-changing
concepts, ideas, ideals and abstractions, the kuffar, and those
imitating them, have at best covered-up, and concealed, the numinous,
the sacred, indivisible essence of Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala, and our correct relationship with and
obligations to Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala, and at worst they have
set these concepts, ideas, ideals and abstractions up as idols, as
Tawagheet, which they adhere to, admire, respect, trust and often
worship: which they use as their source of judgement and understanding.
This is the profoundest Ignorance - a manifestation of Jahiliyyah -
because it profanely tries to separate us human beings from our source,
from Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala, ascribing to us the judgement which
rightly belong to Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala, alone. This error is
hubris: the arrogant insolence of usurping that which rightly belong to
God, to Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala, and the arrogant belief that there
is not, or we do not need, a Creator; that we are free agents and can
attain understanding (and thus "wisdom") by ourselves, using our
ingenuity and the concepts, ideas, ideals and abstractions which we
have manufactured or which we may manufacture in the future.
In contrast, for Muslims, everything is a creation of, or a Sign of,
Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala, just as our natural nature, our fitrah, as
human beings is to know and to submit to, to obey, only Allah Subhanahu
wa Ta'ala. Furthermore, Muslims accept that Aql - one thing which
distinguishes us, as human beings - is a gift from Allah Subhanahu wa
Ta'ala. {See Note 1]
According to the fundamental error of the kuffar - according to this
manifestation of their hubris - Islam is just a "religion" among many
religions, and those Muslims who do not accept or who do not adhere to
the "moderate"
so-called "Islamic religion" that the kuffar find acceptable (and which
they and those imitating them have
in large part manufactured and propagated) adhere instead to some kind
of "Islamist ideology". Furthermore, according to the kuffar, this
so-called "Islamist ideology" is
"totalitarian" in nature and has, according to them, similarities with
"fascism" and even "National Socialism" and some of the
kuffar have gone so far as to describe this "Islamist ideology" by the
term Islamo-fascism. Thus do the kuffar, and those imitating them,
believe they have "understood".
However, as I have written elsewhere:
"Correctly understood, Islam is a Deen - a complete and
perfect and numinous Way of Life. Nowhere in the Quran does the word
mazhab occur.
Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala calls Islam a Deen, and therefore to be
precise we should talk and write about Deen Al-Islam, and not about
"Islam" as if Islam was a "thing" - a manufactured human construct - to
be categorized according to the
manufactured terms, ideas and concepts of the kuffar. Thus, there is no
such
thing, in Deen Al-Islam, as a "religion" which is separate from
something called a "State" or separate from that which is "secular":
instead, there are only
duties and obligations to Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala and His Messenger
(salla Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam). There is only obedience to Allah
Subhanahu wa Ta'ala. A "religion" is a manifestation of kufr,
concealing as kufr does
The Unity of Tawheed which lies beyond the ignorant division to which
the kuffar have assigned and manufactured separate concepts such as
"the
State", "the nation", "the secular" and "religion". Furthermore, the
submission that
is Deen Al-Islam is a personal, individual, submission to
Allah Subhanahu wa
Ta'ala and His Messenger,
Muhammad (salla Allahu 'alayhi wa sallam) - that is, it is not to
"Islam" as if this "Islam" was some "thing", some abstract, impersonal,
human-manufactured and thus fallible construct to to be adhered to or
to be identified with."
The Kaffir Error of Moderate and Extremist Muslims:
This error arises from the kuffar judging Muslims according to whether
those Muslims accept or reject the West, and accept or reject the
values, concepts, abstractions, ideas, ideals and ways (the world-view)
of the West. Those who accept the West, with all that
this implies, the kuffar call "moderate Muslims". Those who do not
accept the West - who refuse to accept the kaffir mis-interpretation of
Islam and the hubris on which it is based - the kuffar call
"extremists", or "supporters of terrorism" or
"terrorists" or adherents of some so-called "Islamist ideology".
However, it is incorrect for Muslims to use the terms "extreme" and
"moderate" in
reference to Deen Al-Islam. Rather, we should use "obedience" and
"error". A Muslim falls into error when they reject the timeless
perfection of Deen Al-Islam, when they reject ruling by Shariah alone,
when they ally themselves with the kuffar, when they imitate the kuffar
by applying the terms, the concepts, the ideas, the Taghut, of the
kuffar to Deen Al-Islam. Thus, if we use the terminology of the kuffar
for the moment, then according to the correct definition just outlined,
what the kuffar call "moderate Muslims" are Muslims who are clearly in
error (if not apostates) while what the kuffar call "extremist Muslims"
or "fundamentalists" are those who are obedient to Allah Subhanahu wa
Ta'ala and who thus are true representatives of Deen Al-Islam.
A Personal Addendum:
Many of the kuffar - and some Muslims, imitating the kuffar for
whatever reason - have, on hearing about or learning about my reversion
to Islam, not only made many assumptions about me, but they have also,
almost without exception, described me according to their own
prejudiced (and Western) assumptions. Thus, according to them I have
simply "swapped one extremism for another", and have moved from one
totalitarian "ideology" to another - from National-Socialism to
"radical Islam". Thus do they reveal not only prejudice, but also
arrogance and ignorance. Prejudice, because there is a pre-judgement
based on existing assumptions and/or upon a failure to use Aql, a
failure to perceive - a failure to-be
- beyond one's hawah; Arrogance, because they assume or believe that
the Western, kaffir, world-view and values, are correct and universal;
Ignorance, because they are in ignorance not only of the true nature of
Deen Al-Islam but also of their own true nature, as fallible human
beings, who are but creations of Allah Subhanahu wa
Ta'ala and who but briefly live, in the dunya, in a vast Cosmos, but
who have an opportunity of eternal life in Jannah.
Those who understand correctly, those who use Aql, will understand my
reversion (Alhamdulillah) as a gift from Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala: a
dis-covery of Tawheed; a move toward a knowing of the numinous as the
numinous is. Thus, it is rejection of Tawagheet and a simple,
unaffected, reliance on, and remembrance of, only Allah Subhanahu wa
Ta'ala. Thus, all the terms that the kuffar (and those imitating them)
may use to describe this reversion, and me, are irrelevant.
"You only do we obey and to You only do
we turn for help." 1:5 Interpretation of Meaning
"The 'Ibaad of Ar-Rahman
[Allah] are those who walk on earth in
humility." 25:63 Interpretation of Meaning
Whatever good that may have been written is from Allah Subhanahu wa
Ta'ala, and whatever mistakes or errors have been made are from me.
Abdul-Aziz ibn Myatt
(David Myatt)
6 Rajab 1428
Notes:
(1) 'Aql is often best left untranslated - it is gift, to us, from
Allah Subhanahu wa
Ta'ala, the basis for our humanity, and it implies both reason and
intelligence, although not as these words are commonly understood in
the West, according to the materialistic philosophy of the West. One
possible interpretation of the meaning of al-'aql is "awareness of the
numinous" where by numinous is meant "the sacred", the divine. An
awareness of the numinous can dispose us toward what is good, and
distance us from what is bad. Thus, a Sign of Allah Subhanahu wa
Ta'ala is numinous - reminding us of Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'ala;
reminding us of the beauty, the purity, of Emaan; reminding us of the
truth of Islam itself.