Muslim Pilgrim Finds Jesus in Mecca
By Charles Gardner, Special to ASSIST News Service
MANCHESTER, UK (ANS – June 27, 2015) -- A Muslim man from Turkey went on a pilgrimage to Mecca in a desperate bid to get his life straightened out – and met Jesus!
wife-beater
who was addicted to alcohol, Ali Pektash was on a visit to the famous
shrine when he fell asleep under the burning sun. Jesus twice appeared
to him in a dream, telling him to leave the area and spread the gospel,
and left a permanent mark where he touched him on the chest.
Ali told his astonishing story to delegates of a conference in
Manchester designed to encourage believers in Christ from all over the
Middle East, many of whom risk their lives by practicing their faith.
One of ten children in a family of Kurds, he was rejected by his
mother, which opened a deep wound in his life. He was taken in by his
uncle, but he too chased him out. At 14 he ran away to work in the
construction industry before returning home four years later at the
invitation of his father.
The communists were gaining influence in his region, but when he
started work as a shepherd he couldn’t understand how people could curse
God whose beautiful creation he witnessed in the fields every day.
He met and married Zehra (who accompanied him to the conference), but
said he was a weak-willed man who succumbed to heavy drinking which
began to destroy his life. He would start to shake if he didn’t have a
drink and things got so bad that he was beating his wife several times a
day and struggling to breathe after just a few steps.
Friends persuaded him to find work in Saudi Arabia, where he could
get free of alcohol because it was forbidden. But in fact he discovered
there was plenty of it available there.
Perhaps Mecca held the key to success, they suggested, so he agreed
to join a group on hajj (pilgrimage) during his time in Arabia.
Speaking through an interpreter, he said: “I knew I belonged to God
somehow – he was my friend – but I did not belong to a religion I could
find. I circled the Ka’ba (the cube-like building at the center of the
Great Mosque) seven times (one of the specified rites involved in the
pilgrimage), and watched everybody kissing this black stone. But I
walked the other way. I believed in a living God, not in a rock.”
When they retreated to their tents for the night, he chose to sleep under the stars because it was so hot.
“Jesus came to me in a dream, put his finger on my forehead and his
hand on my heart. He was smiling at me and said: ‘Get up and leave this
place’.
“I
didn’t really understand, but I knew I was saved. There was a vibration
in my kidney area where it felt like someone was speaking to me, and he
kept saying the same thing. I became very afraid, and remembered
reading how too much alcohol could affect your brain. I thought maybe I
was going crazy; that my end had come. I told my friends what had
happened, but they laughed it off, saying I had eaten too much. And they
asked: ‘What does Jesus have to do with Mohammed?’
“But the voice would not leave me alone. I told my friends I couldn’t
finish the hajj, but they got upset and angry. I found a bathroom where
I took a shower before I left and saw in a mirror that the black hair
on my chest had the white imprint of a hand on one side. I tried to rub
it off, thinking it might be dust, and heard the voice say, ‘You’re
going to see a lot more things than this.’
“So I got down on my knees and said, ‘Lord, whatever you want from me I will do.’
“He told me that I should go directly back home, so I immediately left the construction company for whom I had been working.”
He rang his wife to say he was coming home with Jesus, which
naturally puzzled her as she was looking around to see where his
companion was when he landed. “He’s inside me,” he explained.
In accordance with tradition for those who return from hajj,
neighbors all turned out for a welcome home party. “I obeyed the Lord’s
instruction by standing up and telling everyone present that I had
become a Christian. Some got upset and left the room. And that night I
told Zehra that I couldn’t live with her anymore because I was a
Christian and she was a Muslim.”
But she responded: “Whatever you want to be, I’ll become.”
And although he knew he was now a Christian and passionately shared
his testimony with others, it was six long years before he was able to
obtain a Bible in his own language – through a Christian radio station
in Russia. “It was the most precious gift I received in my entire life. I
read it all before I ate or slept again,” he said. “I memorized whole
portions and this book changed my life. I kept reading it over and over,
understanding more as I did so.”
God’s word also brought healing to his life, curing his addiction to
drink and cigarettes along with his wife-beating antics. And it was
another year before he met his first Christian compatriot (apart from
his wife) – a pastor in Istanbul.
He studied there and became a pastor himself in Ankara, the capital.
Now his goal is to see a believer in every Turkish home. His hope is
that they will then help fulfil the vision foretold by the prophet
Isaiah (chapter 19) when he spoke of a highway of reconciliation from
Egypt to Assyria (representing much of the modern-day Arab world) via
Israel.
Hosted by the Church’s Ministry among Jewish people (CMJ), the
Manchester conference itself was held to encourage followers of Jesus
from throughout the Middle East to work together towards such an
outcome.
Photo captions: 1) Treasure Chest: Ali Pektash bares his chest for
the cameras as his wife Zehra looks on. (Picture: Charles Gardner) 2)
Pilgrims in Mecca (Photo: sacredsites.com) 3) Charles Gardner with his wife, Linda.
About
the writer: Charles Gardner is a veteran Cape Town-born British
journalist working on plans to launch a new UK national newspaper
reporting and interpreting the news from a biblical perspective. With
his South African forebears having had close links with the legendary
devotional writer Andrew Murray, Charles is similarly determined to make
an impact for Christ with his pen and has worked in the newspaper
industry for more than 41 years. Part-Jewish, he is married to Linda,
who takes the Christian message around many schools in the Yorkshire
town of Doncaster. Charles has four children and eight grandchildren.
Charles can be reached by phone on +44 (0) 1302 832987, or by e-mail at chazgardner@btinternet.com
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
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