Top Hamas leader's son converts to Christianity
By Dan
Wooding
UNITED
STATES (ANS) -- The son of
a top Hamas leader has converted to Christianity and prays some day his
family will also accept Jesus Christ as their savior, according to an Israeli
newspaper.
Mosab Hassan Yousef, son
of West Bank Hamas leader Sheik Hassan Yousef, revealed for the first time in
an exclusive interview with Haaretz newspaper that he has left Islam and is
now a Christian. Prior to the interview's publication last Thursday, Yousef's
family did not know of his faith conversion even though he is in regular
contact with them.
This news was revealed
in a story written by Ethan Cole for the Christian Post (www.christianpost.com).
"[T]his interview will
open many people's eyes, it will shake Islam from the roots, and I'm not
exaggerating," said Yousef, who now resides in the United States. "What other
case do you know where a son of a Hamas leader, who was raised on the tenets
of extremist Islam, comes out against it?"
The Christian Post story
says that Yousef, who is now 30-years-old, was first exposed to Christianity
eight years ago while in Jerusalem, where out of curiosity he accepted an
invitation to hear about Christianity. Afterwards, he became "enthusiastic"
about what he heard and would secretly read the Bible every day.
"A verse like 'Love
thine enemy' had a great influence on me," Yousef recalled. "At this stage I
was still a Muslim and I thought that I would remain one. But every day I saw
the terrible things done in the name of religion by those who considered
themselves 'great believers'.
"I studied Islam more
thoroughly and found no answers there. I re-examined the Koran and the
principals of the faith and found how it is mistaken and misleading."
The story by Ethan Cole
went on to say that with Christianity, Yousef said he could understand God as
revealed through Jesus Christ. He said he could talk about God and Jesus for
days, but Muslims are not able to say anything about God.
"I consider Islam a big
lie," said Yousef. "The people who supposedly represent the religion admired
Mohammed more than God, killed innocent people in the name of Islam, beat
their wives and don't have any idea what God is.
"I have no doubt that
they'll go to hell. I have a message for them: There is only one way to
paradise - the way of Jesus who sacrificed himself on the cross for all of
us."
Four years ago, Yousef
decided to convert to Christianity but did not let his family know. He still
helped his father with his political activities, and his father only knew his
son had Christian friends.
"I felt responsible. It
was better for me to be there rather than a gang of fools who would poison
his mind," Yousef explained. "I tried to understand those people, their
thoughts, in order to change them from inside by means of a strong person
like my father, who admitted to me in the past that he does not support
suicide attacks."
Cole went on to say, "Yousef
described his father as a moderate Hamas leader. But even before his
encounter with Christianity, Yousef had already become disenchanted with
Hamas and Islam after being imprisoned at the age of 18 years old for heading
a youth Islamic movement at his high school."
Yousef the Hamas leaders
he met in prison as people with "no morals" and "no integrity", although they
hide their corruption better than Fatah party members.
"Nobody knows them and
how they operate as well as I do," Yousef said, recalling how the family of
Hamas members killed by Israel were forced to beg for financial assistance
while the leadership "abandoned" them and "wasted" tens of thousands of
dollars a month only on security for themselves.
"Then (in prison) I
understood that not everyone in Hamas is like my father. He's a nice,
friendly man. But I discovered how evil his colleagues are," Yousef said.
"After my release I lost the faith I had in those who ostensibly represented
Islam."
Cole went on to say that
Hamas is considered a terrorist group by the United States, Israel, and many
Western countries. The group has publicly vowed to destroy Israel.
He added, "Now Yousef,
the eldest son of Sheikh Yousef, says he 'admires' Israel."
"You Jews should be
aware: You will never, but never have peace with Hamas," Yousef stated.
"Islam, as the ideology that guides them, will not allow them to achieve a
peace agreement with the Jews. They believe that tradition says that the
Prophet Mohammed fought against the Jews and that therefore they must
continue to fight them to the death."
He denounced the
"entire" Palestinian society as one that "sanctifies death and the suicide
terrorist.
"In Palestinian culture
a suicide terrorist becomes a hero, a martyr. Sheiks tell their students
about the 'heroism of the shaheeds (martyr)'."
Yousef highlighted that Hamas was the first to use suicide bombers as weapons
against civilians.
"They (Hamas) are blind
and ignorant. It's true, there are good and bad people everywhere, but Hamas
supporters don't understand that they are led by a wicked and cruel group
that brainwashes the children and gets them to believe that if they carry out
a suicide attack they'll get to paradise," he said.
Cole went on to say,
"The Muslim-turned-Christian says he does not think Islam will survive for
more than 25 years because the truth about Islam will be exposed given the
mass communication available in the modern age."
For his part, Yousef
says he hopes to "open the eyes" of Muslims and "reveal the truth" to them
about Islam and Christianity with the goal to "take them out of the darkness
and the prison of Islam".
"In that way they'll
have an opportunity to correct their mistakes, to become better people and to
bring a chance for peace in the Middle East," he said.
Yousef, who has taken the biblical name of Joseph, said he dreams of one day
becoming a writer to tell his personal story and about the Middle East
conflicts.
"But at the moment, at
least, my ambitions are only to find work, a place to live," admits Yousef,
who left behind properties in Ramallah to find true freedom. "I have no
money, I have no apartment.
"I was about to become
one of those homeless people [in the United States]," he confessed, "but
people from the church are helping me. I'm dependent on them."
He also dreams that some day he can return to his homeland and his family
will accept Jesus Christ.
"I know that I'm
endangering my life and am even liable to lose my father, but I hope that
he'll understand this and that God will give him and my family patience and
willingness to open their eyes to Jesus and to Christianity," Yousef said.
"Maybe one day I'll be able to return to Palestine and to Ramallah with
Jesus, in the Kingdom of God."
CG
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