Liyana is an
extraordinary woman on Notre Dame’s campus, and I am blessed to consider her a
dear friend. She is a Muslim woman graduating from the University of Notre Dame
with more knowledge about the Catholic faith than most Catholics here (and
around the world, for that matter). How? After four years at ND, Liyana will
soon graduate with a degree in Theology.
I had the
opportunity to sit down this week to chat with Liyana about life and faith and
what it has been like to find a home at Notre Dame as a Muslim student from
Malaysia.
Liyana grew up
in Malaysia, where 60% of people identify themselves as Muslim. The culture as
a whole is a conservative one, in which children grow up learning the
intricacies of Islam. Liyana began wearing the hijab, the veil worn by many
Muslim women, when she was seven years old. Wearing this modest head covering
is as normal to her as putting on any other clothing for the day; it simply is
what she does. She was taught to pray five times a day from very early on, and
Islam has always been an integral part of her identity and way of life.
A college
scholarship program essentially decided that Liyana would attend Notre Dame.
She distinctly remembers realizing the school was Catholic in her freshman
seminar course, where she noticed a crucifix mounted on the wall. She saw the
same cross in her next class and in her next one, and by the end of the day she
realized there was something distinctly different about this school. Islam does
not have any symbols or images, so at Islamic schools in Malaysia where some of
Liyana’s friends attend university, the Muslim identity is present because it
is lived in and spoken about rather than represented in images such as the
crucifix present in every classroom on Notre Dame’s campus. The longer
Liyana has lived here, the more she has seen that Christianity can be the same
way: talked about and lived in.
Liyana entered
her education at Notre Dame as an engineering major. After some important
conversations with her Foundations of Theology teacher, she realized theology
was something worth pursuing during her time here and beyond because it
addresses important issues that engage her deep investment in her Islamic faith
and asks the “important questions.”
She realized how
much she didn’t know about Christianity and developed a thirst to learn more.
Liyana joined a group of Theology graduate students who study the Qur’an, which
she remained in for one semester. She gradually progressed from declaring a
Theology minor to a supplemental major to a full-blown second major in
Theology.
I was extremely
interested to find out how studying Catholic Theology at Notre Dame has
informed Liyana’s understanding of her own religion, which Christian beliefs she
has adopted into her own understanding of God and life and the world, and which
ones she takes issues with. In Islam, Liyana explained, there is a
“bookkeeping” idea of sinfulness: one is not born a “sinner,” as in the
Christian tradition, but rather can become sinful. There is a sort of record
kept, and sins can be cancelled out with good deeds. Liyana finds that the
Christian idea of being born sinful is hard to accept, but she likes the idea
that sins are forgiven in Christ. She also thinks Muslims could benefit from an
authority, Pope-like figure to unify the “colorful” distribution of Islam, and
admires that Catholics have such a figure to look to for spiritual direction.
The elements of
her Islamic faith that have really anchored her to the religion she grew up
with, even despite engaging so deeply in another religion during her time here,
are the Qur’an and personal prayer.
In attempting to
put myself in Liyana’s shoes – which I really cannot, because they’re such
beautifully unique shoes – I was curious as to whether she feels that she has
found a home here at such a Catholic school as a Muslim student. Her answer? A
resounding yes. She was skeptical
upon arrival about whether her faith could grow in a place that was so
different from where she grew up, but she has found that every year has met her
with pleasant surprises. She has found a home in the Muslim Student Association on campus, which she is the president of this year. She is especially
thankful for the opportunity to engage in personal and communal prayer in the
Meditation Room in the Campus Ministry office in CoMo.
One of the most encouraging comments Liyana made during our conversation was that Notre Dame has really started to listen to what students of other religions have to say, which has been a huge transition since she arrived as a freshman. She feels that she can speak about faith candidly and freely here, which in itself already makes ND feel like home to her. After she graduates, Liyana hopes to work in inter-faith dialogue, particularly in Malaysia, where she feels this ministry is particularly needed. She says she will dearly miss CoMo, the Campus Ministry office, and going to Mass after graduation. “I love it here,” she smiled.
One of the most encouraging comments Liyana made during our conversation was that Notre Dame has really started to listen to what students of other religions have to say, which has been a huge transition since she arrived as a freshman. She feels that she can speak about faith candidly and freely here, which in itself already makes ND feel like home to her. After she graduates, Liyana hopes to work in inter-faith dialogue, particularly in Malaysia, where she feels this ministry is particularly needed. She says she will dearly miss CoMo, the Campus Ministry office, and going to Mass after graduation. “I love it here,” she smiled.
No comments:
Post a Comment