Broken yet Faithful. From the Journal of Umm Zakiyyah

Broken yet Faithful. From the Journal of Umm Zakiyyah

Broken yet Faithful. From the Journal of Umm Zakiyyah

Broken yet Faithful. From the Journal of Umm Zakiyyah


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Overview

I lived so much of my life as a problem solver. When I was younger, math had been my favorite subject in school, and I'd always looked forward to the challenging problems it presented. Behind all the alphabetic variables, cryptic charts, scrambled values, and geometric shapes was always a single numerical solution.
If you got the wrong answer, it was because you missed something, because you looked away when you should have been paying attention, or because you gave up on yourself when you became too consumed in helplessness to lift your head and see that the answer was literally right in front of you, even if not in the form you found easiest to understand.
And to me, math was the language of life. That is, until I began to live life beyond the confines of a school building and the clarity of a numerical grading system.
Shortly after graduating from college, I found myself at odds with those I loved most because I was pursuing what I valued most--my faith in God. When they expressed anger and disapproval with the evidence of my spiritual growth, I frantically searched my mind for a solution that would give us all what we wanted. And I failed.
It took years of trying and disappointing, hoping and suffering, and giving up even my peace of mind before I realized that they wanted from me something that I could not give. Because my soul did not belong to me. It belonged to God.
But my heart was connected to them, and I valued their happiness more than I valued my own. So began the painful battle between my heart and soul, hence the beginning of my emotional breaking. But by God's mercy, I retained my faith, hence the title Broken yet Faithful.
Here I share some of my journal reflections from that difficult time along with abstract art pieces by Cynthia Lyles, which were inspired by my words

Product Details

BN ID: 2940156979523
Publisher: Al-Walaa Publications
Publication date: 08/23/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Daughter of American converts to Islam, Umm Zakiyyah, also known by her birth name Ruby Moore, is the award-winning author of the If I Should Speak trilogy and "Pain. From the Journal of Umm Zakiyyah" and the novels "Muslim Girl" and "His Other Wife."

Dr. Robert D. Crane, advisor to former U.S. President Nixon, said of Umm Zakiyyah’s If I Should Speak: “I could not put it down…I was fascinated not only by the plot of the novel, but especially by the brilliance of the writing itself. As a life-long, professional writer and editor, I can say that I have never encountered Umm Zakiyyah’s equal in portraying the nuances of encounters between persons at all levels from the most superficial to the most profound. She is a clear example of a person who has natural talent. A person can be trained to write well, but no amount of training can bring a person without superb, natural talent to captivate the reader as she does and exert a permanent intellectual and emotional impact.”

Umm Zakiyyah’s books have been used in schools and universities in America and abroad for multicultural and religious studies. She writes about the interfaith struggles of Muslims and Christians, and the intercultural, spiritual, and moral struggles of Muslims in America.

She currently resides in Washington, D.C.
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