List of converts to Islam from Christianity
A
- Aminah Assilmi – former Southern Baptist preacher.[1]
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – retired basketball player & the NBA's all-time leading scorer[2]
- Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf – American former professional basketball player[3]
- Tariq Abdul-Wahad – French basketball coach and former player[4]
- Eric Abidal – French former professional footballer; played mainly for Lyon and Barcelona[5]
- Ivan Aguéli – Swedish Sufi, painter and writer
- Abdul-Karim al-Jabbar – former NFL player[6]
- Oscar[7]
- The Nation of Islam to Sunni Islam;[10]American professional boxer (three-time world heavyweight champion), philanthropist and social activist
- Rowland Allanson-Winn, 5th Baron Headley – British soldier and peer[11][12]
- Adunni Ade – Nigerian actress who converted to Christianity and afterwards reverted back to Islam.
B
- Kristiane Backer – German television presenter, television journalist and author residing in London[13]
- Maurice Bucaille – French family physician of King Faisal.[14]
- – Alexandre de Bonnevalas "Humbaracı Ahmet Paşa"
- Abdullah Beg of Kartli – Georgian convert to Islam; served as a viceroy of Kartli for the Iranian Shah, Nadir in 1737;[16] claimant to the kingship of Kartli
- Mohammed Knut Bernstrom – Swedish ambassador to Venezuela (1963-1969), Spain (1973-1976) and Morocco (1976-1983)[17]
- Danny Blum – German footballer[18]
- Józef Bem – Polish and Hungarian general; historically defined as a national hero within Poland and Hungary; escaped to the Ottoman Empire where he converted to Islam and took up the name Murad Pasha[20]
- Omar Bongo – Gabonese, Ex-President of Gabon[21]
- Ottoman Turkish[22]
- R. V. C. Bodley – British Army officer, writer and journalist
- Dolores "LaLa" Brooks – American musician[24]
C
- Torquato Cardilli – Italian ambassador[25]
- André Carson – American politician serving as the U.S. representative for Indiana's 7th congressional district since 2008[26]
- Muwallad rulers[27]
- Dave Chappelle – American comedian and television star[28]
- Chrisye – Chinese Indonesian singer; changed his name to Chrismansyah Rahadi from Christian Rahadi[29]
- Emilia Contessa – Indonesian actress, singer and politician (from Islam to Christianity back to Islam; known as Nur Indah Cintra Sukma Munsyi)[30]
- Zainab Cobbold – first Muslim woman born in Britain to perform the Hajj pilgrimage[31]
- Robert D. Crane – former adviser to President Richard Nixon, and is former Deputy Director (for Planning) of the U.S. National Security Council[32]
D
- Mujahid Dokubo-Asari – founder and leader of the Niger Delta People's Volunteer Force[33]
E
- Abdullah el-Faisal – Muslim cleric who preached in the United Kingdom until he was convicted of stirring up racial hatred and urging his followers to murder Jews, Hindus, Christians, and Americans[34][35]
- Wadih el-Hage – former Al-Qaeda member who was convicted for his part in the 1998 United States embassy bombings[36]
- Muslim to be elected to the United States Congress, converted from Catholicism[37]
- Yusuf Estes – former American preacher and federal prison chaplain, converted from Protestantism[40]
- Byzantine convert to Islam[41]
F
- Jaime Fletcher – American film maker and founder of IslamInSpanish.[42]
- Shah Shahidullah Faridi – writer of English descent born to a Christian family[43]
- Firouz – Armenian Christian convert to Islam[44] who served as a spy for Bohemund during the Siege of Antioch[45]
- Myriam François, previously François-Cerrah – English journalist who converted from Roman Catholicism in 2003[46]
- Franck Ribéry – French footballer who converted to Islam after learning about it from his Algerian friend who he later married. In respect to his conversion Bayern Munich gave him a small place to worship during his football career.[47]
G
- Roger Garaudy – French philosopher and writer[48]
- Jennifer Grout – American singer of Arabic music.[49]
- Ghazan – seventh ruler of the Ilkhanate division of the Mongol Empire[50]
- Khalid Gonçalves – Portuguese American actor and musician (born Paul Pires Gonçalves), converted from Catholicism[51]
- Cristian Gonzáles – Uruguayan-born Indonesian footballer[52]
- Abdur Raheem Green – presenter on Peace TV and the chairman of iERA, the Islamic Education & Research Academy.
- Charles Greenlee – American jazz trombonist[53]
- Traditionalist Schoolof metaphysics
H
- Sir Archibald Hamilton, 5th Baronet – distinguished British convert to Islam[54][55][56]
- al-Shabaab; known as Abu Mansoor Al-Amriki[57]
- Hatice Refia Hanım – mother of Tevfik Fikret[58]
- Joel Hayward – British scholar, author and poet[59]
- Muhammad Robert Heft – Canadian activist and writer[60]
- Knud Holmboe – Danish journalist and explorer who converted from Catholicism[62]
- professional boxer[63]
I
- Kyrie Irving – American Basketball player
- Silma Ihram – Australian pioneer of Muslim education in the West, founder and former school Principal of the 'Noor Al Houda Islamic College', campaigner for racial tolerance[64][65][66]
J
- Ibn Jazla – 11th-century physician and Christian convert who later wrote to refute doctrines of Christianity[69]
- emel magazine, converted from Catholicism[70]
K
- UFC.
- Abdul Kadir – former Guyanese politician, convicted of the 2007 John F. Kennedy International Airport attack plot[71]
- Catholic priest who converted to Islam and changed his name to Abd ul-Aḥad Dāwūd[72]
- Nuh Ha Mim Keller – Islamic scholar who converted from Catholicism to agnosticism to Sunni Islam[73]
- Rebeka Koha – Latvian weightlifter, two time junior world champion and two time European champion.[74]
- Georgian origin who was Christian[75]
- Iranian Constitutional Revolution[76]
L
- Colleen LaRose – identifies herself as "Jihad Jane";[79] American citizen charged with terrorism-related crimes[80]
- Thessalonica[81]
- Samantha Lewthwaite – also known as Sherafiyah Lewthwaite or the White Widow, one of the United Kingdom's most wanted terrorism suspects[82]
- Germaine Lindsay – one of the suicide terrorists in the 7 July 2005 London bombings[83][84] in which 52 people were murdered
- John Walker Lindh – American insurgent, known as the "American Taliban"; converted from Catholicism[85][86]
- Traditionalistand Writer; he is famous for having written the best biography of the Prophet Muhammad in the English language.
- Alexander Litvinenko – former FSB officer; converted to Islam on his deathbed[87][88]
- Fernão Lopes – 16th-century Portuguese soldier; tortured and disfigured by Christian Portugueses for siding with Muslim Indians[89]
- Vincenzo Luvineri – American rapper and the lyricist behind the Philadelphia underground hip-hop group Jedi Mind Tricks; converted from Catholicism[91]
M
- Daniel Maldonado – American Islamist convicted in the United States on charges of training with al-Qaida in East Africa; raised Catholic[92]
- Ingrid Mattson – Canadian scholar and current president of the Islamic Society of North America (2006); converted from Catholicism[93][94]
- Bruno Metsu – French footballer and football manager[95]
- lord of Armenian Cilicia
- Baptist Christianity;[99]
- Beltway sniper attacks with his partner, Lee Boyd Malvo, in which 17 people were murdered[100]
- Peter Murphy – English singer, songwriter, and musician[103]
- Ibrahim Muteferrika (original name not known) – from Unitarian Christianity, an early example of a Muslim publisher and printer[104]
- David Myatt – British Philosopher, Poet, Writer and a former Neo-Nazi; he later apostatised.
- Mercy Aigbe – a famous Nigerian actress who changed her faith from Christianity and changed her name to Hajia Meenah Mercy Adeoti.
N
- the doctrine of the Trinity and was consequently imprisoned[105]
- Tech N9ne – American rapper born to a Christian mother who converted to Islam during adulthood[106]
O
- Sir David Ochterlony, 1st Baronet – British American East India Company officer and Mughal courtier
- Öljaitü – ruler of the Ilkhanate dynasty[107]
- Occhiali – Italian convert[108]
- Sinéad O'Connor (Shuhada' Davitt) – Irish singer-songwriter; a former excommunicated Roman Catholic before becoming a Nondenominational Trinitarian Christian for several years and later [Sunni] Islam due to theological reasons[109][110]
P
- José Padilla – also known as Abdullah al-Muhajir or Muhajir Abdullah; US citizen from Brooklyn, New York; convicted in federal court of aiding terrorists; also known as "the dirty bomber"[111]
- Wayne Parnell – South African cricketer[112]
- Abdul Wahid Pedersen – Danish Imam.[113]
- Hersekzade Ahmed Pasha – born to a Christian Croatian[114]
- devşirme[115]
- Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha – Ottoman Grand Vizier[116]
- Devşirme Christian child tax system.[118]
- Grand Vizier[119]
- Judar Pasha – conqueror of the Songhai Empire[120]
- Omar Pasha (1806–1871) – Ottoman general, born Orthodox[121]
- Raghib Pasha – Greek Ottoman politician who served as Prime Minister of Egypt;[122] converted to Islam from Christianity[123]
- Marmaduke Pickthall – English Islamic scholar and translator of the Quran[125]
Q
- Abdullah Quilliam – English convert from Christianity to Islam, noted for founding England's first mosque and Islamic centre.[128]
R
- Ilie II Rareş – prince of Moldavia[129]
- Murat Reis or Jan Janszoon – Dutch Barbary pirate who was an admiral for the Republic of Salé; converted from Christianity; became a very active Muslim missionary who tried to convert Christian slaves[130]
- Yvonne Ridley – British journalist, from Anglicanism; converted after being kidnapped and released by the Taliban[131][132]
- Khadijah Rivera – Puerto Rican Muslim convert from Roman Catholicism, founder of PIEDAD[133]
- Robert of St. Albans – English templar knight who converted to Islam from Christianity in 1185 and led an army for Saladin against the Crusaders in Jerusalem[134]
S
- Stephen Jackson – American Professional Basketball player who played for the NBA
- Salman the Persian – convert from Christianity;[135] previously Zoroastrian
- Ratna Sarumpaet – Indonesian stagewright, director, and actress[139]
- Traditionalist
- Betty Shabazz – wife of Malcolm X; former Methodist[citation needed]
- Zaid Shakir – American Muslim scholar and co-founder of Zaytuna College in Berkeley, California[140][141]
- Italian ambassador to Saudi Arabia from 1994 to 1996[142]
- Dolly Shahine (born 2 July 1980) – Lebanese former singer, actress, and fashion designer.[143]
- Mimar Sinan – Ottoman architect; converted to Islam and trained as an officer of the Janissary corps[145]
- Anthony Small – retired British professional boxer and Islamic political activist[146]
- Henry Stanley, 3rd Baron Stanley of Alderley and 2nd Baron Eddisbury – British historian and translator
- Robert Stanley – British grocer, tea trader and mayor of Stalybridge
- Daniel Streich – Swiss military instructor, community council member and a former member of Swiss People's Party [147][148]
- Kösem Sultan – born Anastasia, the daughter of an Orthodox priest, and later enslaved by Ottomans and sent to Istanbul, where she became one of the most powerful and influential women in the Ottoman Empire[149][150]
- Handan Sultan – mother of Ottoman sultan Ahmed I[151]
- Shaun King – American writer and Black Lives Matter activist
T
- Abu Tammam – 9th-century Arab poet born to Christian parents[152]
- Andrew Tate – retired American-British kickboxer, converted to Islam in October 2022.
- Nestorian Christian[153]
- Joe Tex – American singer and musician[154]
- Walachia; converted from Eastern Orthodox Christianity[157]
- Anselm Turmeda, later known as Abd Allah at-Tarjuman – 14th century priest and writer in Catalan language from Mallorca who converted to Islam and settled in Tunis. He is one of the earliest writers to have written in both Arabic and a Latin language (Catalan).
U
- interpreter[160]
V
- Bryant Neal Vinas – participated in and supported al-Qaeda plots in Afghanistan and the US, and helped al-Qaeda plan a bomb attack on the LIRR[161]
- Rudolf Carl von Slatin – Anglo-Austrian soldier and administrator in the Sudan; later reverted to Catholicism[162]
W
- Suhaib Webb – American Islamic activist and speaker[168]
- Dawud Wharnsby-Ali – Canadian singer/poet[169]
- Danny Williams – British boxer[170]
- Timothy Winter – British Islamic scholar, lecturer in Islamic studies in the Faculty of Divinity at the University of Cambridge[173]
X
- Abel Xavier – Portuguese former professional footballer and manager[176]
Y
- Mohammad Yousuf – former Pakistan cricketer
- Shaykh currently residing in Australia[177]
- Felixia Yeap – former model and Catholic of Chinese Malaysian heritage; converted to Islam in 2013[178]
- Hamza Yusuf – American convert from Greek Orthodox to Sunni Islam; co-founder of the Zaytuna College[181][182]
Z
See also
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Hasan Pasa (Damad-i- Padisahi), Greek convert from Morea.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link - ISBN 954523072X.)
Hasan Pasa (Damad-i- Padisahi), Greek convert from Morea.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link - ^ Davidson, Basil. Africa in History. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995.
- ISBN 978-0-275-98601-8. Archivedfrom the original on 20 December 2019. Retrieved 15 October 2016.
- OCLC 301095947.
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