My birth name is Bethany Parker, but I recently changed it to Anisah Amal to Anwar reflect a change in my identity. I am an English-born Caucasian woman and a former atheist and former feminist who converted to Islam. It shocked a lot of my friends and family members, especially since for many years I raged against the very idea of organized religion. Now I know the error of my ways. And I thank Allah for sending my husband Muhammad Anwar on my way. Presently, I'm washing the dishes in our house in the suburbs of Riyadh, in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. My husband is coming home soon, and I want him to come home to a nice clean house and a home cooked meal.
If somebody told me three years ago that I would walk away from the cause of feminism and atheism to embrace Islam, a religion which has always seemed gender-biased and oppressive to me, I would have laughed. I was born in the City of Berkshire, in England, and educated at Oxford University. My parents, Paul and Amelia Parker, were strict Anglicans and I embraced atheism early on because I didn't agree with the teachings of the Christian church. I didn't agree with the Teachings of Islam either. I felt that Islam oppressed women and as a feminist, I staunchly opposed it. I used to be one of those British folks you'd see on television, standing outside mosques with British flags and urging the Arabs and Somalis to go back to their Muslim countries. I've always felt that Great Britain's culture was endangered by the presence of so many Arabs and Somalis, the two largest groups among the Muslims. Islam teaches male domination and female submission. As a feminist, that really irked me.
I graduated from Oxford University, and began working at the World Bank. It's where I met Muhammad Anwar, a tall, dark and handsome man. The son of a Saudi sheikh and a Somali immigrant, Muhammad was born in the City of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and raised in North London in England. He was quite striking, too. Six feet two inches tall, with light brown skin, curly Black hair and hazel eyes. I didn't know there were Black people in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Muhammad told me a lot of things about his homeland. He told me about the many African migrant workers who settled there. Sometimes, Saudi men took Black female Muslims from African nations as their wives. A few times, African male Muslims living in Saudi Arabia took Saudi women as their wives. Muhammad was quite articulate and intelligent. I once thought all Muslim males were brutish and barbaric. This young man was handsome, educated and well-mannered. Also, he was very polite and friendly. Muhammad Anwar studied at Harvard University in the City of Boston, Massachusetts. He earned his bachelor's degree in business there and returned to my alma mater, Oxford University, for his Master's degree. This absolutely magnificent young man would change my mind about a lot of things.