Native Believer is
the story of M., a second-generation Muslim American who knows almost nothing
about the faith. M., who was raised in
the South, is married to Marie-Ann, a white Southerner, and the two have made a
rather comfortable life for themselves.
It is only when M. throws a party for his co-workers and invites their
new boss that things start to go bad for him – in a hurry.
The rather odd Germanic man seems to be enjoying M.’s
company but when he spots a tiny Koran on the top bookshelf in M.’s apartment,
the new boss makes an offhand comment about finding the Koran placed “above”
all the other books on the shelves, especially those of some of the world’s
most respected philosophers. The very
next day, M. is called into the man’s office and fired.
M. wants nothing more from life than to be an American, a
man with roots and children he intends to raise as modern Americans, not as
Muslims. But after the murders of 9-11,
it is not that simple. M. carries a
Muslim name, and in today’s America, he is ethnically challenged enough to be
seen as a suspicious person almost everywhere he goes. Now his life is falling apart.
His wife resents that he cannot find work, and the tension
between the two aggravates the medical condition that causes her to gain huge
amounts of weight in a matter of weeks.
Their marriage is beginning to fall apart, and there is little that
either of them seems to care to do about it.
M. is at a crossroads.
As he wanders Philadelphia’s streets on foot, he runs into a group of
devout Muslims who mistrust his lack of piety and want to convert him; he
befriends a Muslim pornographer who says he is trying to get Americans to see
Muslim men as anything other than terrorists; and Marie-Ann’s job brings him
into contact with other Muslims who want him to help spread the good word about
life in America to suspicious Muslims all around the world. In the meantime, M. feels like his world is
being ripped apart.
Native Believer makes
for a bit tedious reading at times, but it is filled with characters I wanted
to know more about. M.’s struggle for a
self-identity seems very real in today’s world, and I very much wanted to see
how Eteraz would resolve his main character’s dilemma. Let’s just say that the book’s final two
pages are nothing like I expected it would all end – so do not, under any
circumstance, read the end of Native
Believer first. Please.
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