Grace Seeker
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The bold part in the quote above makes me a bit confused, what kind of practices in a culture do you mean which could be associated with being a Muslim?
Oh, for instance I have friend who is a taxi driver in Tripoli, and he has told me horror stories of Saudi businessmen (for some reason all of his horror stories are about Saudi businessmen) who, when he picks them up at the airport, want him to find them young boys to spend several hours with in what can euphemistically be called untoward behavior. Now these men are all "Muslims", they are sure to celebrate Ramadan with their families, and will even make a show of buy a lamb for a poor family at the feast of the sacrifice, but they don't keep Islam. They drink, they don't attend to their prayers, they even engage in this illicit sexual encounters with boys they recruit to be prostitutes. Whether in their heart they really trust in Allah, I don't know. But their outward behavior does not express it.
I have another friend from Tehran with a completely different story. She lives what on the surface would be a considered by most to be truly moral life. And she practices all of the outward forms of Islam expected by her society, like dress, etc. And when she has to fill out forms she checks Islam as her religion. But she confesses to me, that she doesn't really believe any of it. She is in fact a secular humanists and nothing more. She doesn't know if there is a god (small "g"), doubts it, and doesn't care because as a scientist (she's a molecular biologist engaged in medical research) she just believes in what she can see and test for in her laboratory.
Now, I admit to judging the business, but my friend in Tehran, these are her own explanation of her religious beliefs to me. At first she said to me that she was Muslim, and then she said, not really because she doesn't really believe, it is just a part of her culture living where she does -- those are her words, not mine. And I suspect that both people would be adjugded as Muslims by the world at large, I don't think that given the information provided that we could say that either of them are truly followers of Islam. As you said, I think they have to considered more as non-believers, even if they do practice some vestiges of Muslim rituals in their lives; they don't do them as an act of faith, but more because they are expected aspects of the society in which they happen to live.
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