|
Brief Introduction
to Dr. Abu Ameenah Philips
Written by Dr. Bilal Philips
Abu Ameenah Bilal Philips was
born in Jamaica, but grew up in Canada, where he accepted Islam
in 1972. He completed a diploma in Arabic and a B.A. from the
College of Islamic Disciplines (Usool ad-Deen) at the Islamic
University of Madeenah in 1979. At the University of Riyadh,
College of Education, he completed a M.A. in Islamic Theology in
1985, and in the department of Islamic Studies at the University
of Wales, he completed a Ph.D. in Islamic Theology in 1994.
Abu Ameenah taught Islamic
Education and Arabic in private schools in Riyadh for over ten
years and for three years he lectured M.Ed. students in the
Islamic Studies department of Shariff Kabunsuan Islamic
University in Cotobato City, Mindanao, Philippines. Since 1994
he has founded and directed the Islamic Information Center in
Dubai, United Arab Emirates (which is now known as Discover
Islam) and the Foreign Literature Department of Dar al Fatah
Islamic Press in Sharjah, UAE. Presently, he is a lecturer of
Arabic and Islamic Studies at the American University in Dubai
and Ajman University in Ajman, UAE.
Bilal Philips, once a Christian,
is now an Islamic scholar. He received his B.A. degree from the
Islamic University of Madina and his M.A. in Aqeedah (Islamic
Philosophy) from the King Saud University in Riyadh. His deep
study and understanding of Islam has won him the respect of
ordinary Muslims as well as many learned scholars of Islam.
“There is no time for holidays”,
says Bilal Philips, “when you realise how little time there is,
and how much work has to be done for Islam.”
Born in Jamaica in 1947, he comes
from a family of educationists. Both his parents are teachers,
and one of his grandfathers was a church minister and Bible
scholar.
Bilal came from a broad-minded
family, and though he went to church regularly every Sunday with
his mother, he was never forced to go. He says: “Going to church
was a social event, more than a religious one. What was being
taught went right over my head.”
When Bilal was eleven, his family
migrated to Canada and for the first time the sensitive boy
began to feel that all was not right with the world.
“Most of the Canadians at that
time were Euro-Canadians”, he says, “and the Europeans, of
course, had an idea of their own superiority. They had gone
around and smashed up everybody else's society, so they had to
justify the destruction of human civilisation by promoting their
own superiority over others. Those feelings are expressed in
much of their literature, in films, on television and so forth.”
Growing up in an environment
where one is different from everyone else and trying to
rationalise it was hard for a little boy. Little discrimination
hurt more as he became a teenager. “Later on”, he says, “my
parents told me about the struggle they had to go through; they
had to face much more in society than I had to as a child at
school.”
Bilal's first contact with a
Muslim society came when his parents moved to Malaysia in the
capacity of teachers and advisors to the ministry of education
under the Canadian Colombo Plan.
Though much happier there, Bilal
hardly noticed that he was in a Muslim country. The British had
been in Malaysia and had left their traces behind. His friends
were either Euro-Asians or anglicised Muslim Malaysians. Bilal
formed a rock group and began to play the guitar professionally.
He had a motorbike and was quite popular and consequently his
A-level studies suffered.
While in Malaysia Bilal's parents
adopted an Indonesian boy who happened to be a Muslim. Mrs.
Philips was quite aware of Islam and made it easy for him to
fast and pray. Bilal understood that this boy was different once
when opening the door to his new brother's room and he bumped
his brother on the head as he prostrated himself in prayer. Not
being interested in religion at that time, he did not pursue the
issue.
Bilal's parents felt there were
too many distractions in Malaysia for him, so they decided to
send him back to Canada to the Simon-Frazer University in
Vancouver.
Back in Canada, Bilal stepped
right into the volatile student movements of the late sixties
and early seventies. The drug culture and hippy movement was
being propagated by such prestigious persons as Allen Ginsberg
and Timothy Leary.
In certain classes the lecturers
would pass marijuana cigarettes to the students. They would
smoke together and then start the classes.
At this time Bilal's goal was to
become a medical artist and thus combine his love for science
and art. To this end, he had taken up biochemistry and had also
received a scholarship from an art university.
Before he could fully pursue his
goals, he found himself getting deeply entrenched in student
politics. The seed sown during his childhood, the idea that
something was amiss with Western society and things needed to be
changed, bore fruit now. He began to get involved with student
movements. There were sit-ins and strikes, sometimes there were
more violent protests and the police would be called in.
Professors were introducing
socialism into their classes. Impressed by this, Bilal began a
detailed study of the work of Marx, and soon considered himself
to be a Marxist-Leninist. “Socialism was presented as a
programme for change of society”, he says “rectifying injustices
and making sure there are equal rights for all. This change was
to be brought about by revolution.”
His search for a political
solution led him to California. Here he worked with black
activist movements like the Black Panthers. “These movements
were all black movements, the figures in the forefront were
mostly blacks. Since the blacks were the most oppressed group at
that time, naturally their voice was the loudest. However, they
were widely supported by white college kids. Eventually
everybody got on the bandwagon. There was a women's liberation
movement followed by the gay liberation when the homosexuals
started coming out of the closets.”
Soon disillusion set in. “Many of
these people were deep into drugs. They collected money for what
they called defence committees and used much of the money to pay
for their parties, their rents and their drugs. They were like
leeches living off the people's donations.”
During this period there also
existed a “black movement known as the Nation of Islam” or, more
popularly, the Black Muslims, founded by Elijah Muhammad, who
concocted a religion called Islam but which was totally
different from the real thing.
He taught that all black men were
gods and all white men were devils. There was one major god who
had come and taught Elijah, and Elijah was his prophet. At that
time the autobiography of a former follower of Elijah, Malcolm
X, was very popular. Malcolm X had left the Black Muslims after
being its leading spokesman and had found real Islam. He was
assassinated within six months of his conversion and had little
time to use his rhetorical skills to promote the real Islam.
Thus only a few who read his autobiography grasped the
significance of his journey.
Bilal, who had read Malcolm X's
autobiography, visited one of the temples of the Black Muslims.
Though impressed by their organization and the fact that their
women dressed modestly, he found their ideology useless.
|