Tuesday, December 24, 2013
America’s 1st Openly Gay Imam Daayiee Abdullah Was Born A Christian Tweet 44 1
Meet the first openly gay Imam in the
history of America, Daayiee Abdullah who was
born and raised in a Christian family in
Detroit, Michigan.
Daayiee Abdullah’s parents were Southern
Baptists. At age 15, he reportedly told his
parent he was gay. At age 33 while doing his
higher education in China, he converted to
Islam. He later travelled to Syria, Jordan and
Egypt to learn more about Islam.
But as a gay man in America, he saw that
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Muslims
had unmet spiritual needs, so he decided to
become an imam to attend to their needs.
He’s been condemned by other Muslim leaders,
and some local imams have even refused to
greet him.
According to Aljazeera, his first act as an
imam was performing funeral rites, Muslim
body cleaning ritual for a gay Muslim who died
of AIDS.
Pained Abdullah said:
“They had contacted a number of imams, and
no one would go and provide him his janazah
services. This pained me. I believe every
person, no matter if I disagree with you or
not, you have the right as a Muslim to have the
proper spiritual [rites] and rituals provided
for you. And whoever judges you, that will be
Allah’s decision, not me.
“The beautiful thing about God is that when
you change your attitude, and say, ‘God, I need
some help,’ and mean it sincerely, God is always
there for you,”
Abdullah serves as the imam and educational
director of the Light of Reform Mosque in
Washington, D.C. A mosque he helped form
more than two years ago, to be a safe space
for values and practices that other mosques
may eschew.
In his mosque, women and men kneel side-by-
side and women are allowed to lead prayers –
actions that have sparked controversy even
among American Muslims.
His mosque’s congregants are diverse and
represent a wide range of cultures, religious
upbringings and sexual orientations.
For its LGBT congregants, the Light of Reform
Mosque is a rare safe space. But not all of
them are gay. Many are just Muslims looking
for a mosque that accepts all kinds.
Not everyone is happy with the mosque though.
Some local imams have refused to greet
Abdullah, and many others across the country
argue his work performing same-sex marriage
is not legitimate, and that he should control
his “urges.”
But Abdullah is firm in his belief.
“Being an openly gay imam and having been
identified as such, I do get a lot of feedback
and also kickback, but that’s OK. “I think that
when people are unfamiliar with things, they
tend to have an emotional knee-jerk reaction
to it.
“It is our relationship with God and our
relationship with each other that really
establishes our faith.” Not whether you are
gay or straight. – Abdullah told Al Jazeera
network.
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