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Opinion

My search for common ground

September 17, 2015 12:40
17092015 GettyImages 152465898
4 min read

He thinks I'm going to hell, my friend and Quran teacher, Muhammad Akram Nadwi. Not because he thinks I'm a bad person. Not for my love of crimson lipstick and Prosecco. Nor for the sexual escapades of my youth-- though I've spared him having to hear about them. The reason he believes I'm hell-bound is because I have not accepted that Muhammad is God's final messenger, the last in a prophetic line sketched out in the Quran, which includes Abraham, Moses and Jesus.

The Sheikh - as I call him, in deference to his status as an Islamic scholar- - speaks frequently of hell. I've heard him parse Quranic verses speaking of its flames, of the chains and manacles worn by its inhabitants. But he is the kindest of men, and so when I called him to ask what the Afterlife would hold for me, he delivered his fire-and-brimstone message in the gentlest manner imaginable.

"When I stand on the Day of Judgment," he said, "and I am asked whether I had warned the people about the Fires of Hell, I want to be able to say that I had. Those who are my friends, like you, I should certainly try to save them." After all, would I not do the same for him, "if there was something in this country that would cause me pain, wouldn't you warn me?"

I'd known the Sheikh for nearly a quarter-of-a-century, ever since we were colleagues on a research project at the Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies. Back then, he was 27 years old, a village boy from India, brilliant enough to be the star of his madrassa and, in turn, to be sent to work with a think-tank in Oxford. If I was not quite the first American he'd ever met, I was probably the first self-proclaimed feminist, and certainly the first Jew.