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Yusuf/Cat Stevens reveals the near-death experience that led him to convert to Islam

Singer converted to Islam officially in 1977

Annabel Nugent
Monday 28 September 2020 09:54 EDT
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Cat Stevens performance for an audience in Beirut
Cat Stevens performance for an audience in Beirut (Cat Stevens)

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Cat Stevens – now known as Yusuf/Cat Stevens – has opened up about his conversion to Muslim faith.

The singer spoke about his choice to convert when he appeared on the BBC Four radio program Desert Island Discs yesterday (28 September).

Stevens – real name Steven Demetre Georgiou – cited his 1976 near-death experience in Malibu as the event which ultimately led him to convert to Islam. 

He said: “I was an Englishman. I didn’t know it wasn’t wise to go out at that time of day and take a swim, so I did.

“I decided to turn back and head for shore and, of course, at that point I realised, ‘I’m fighting the Pacific.’ There was no way I was going to win. There was only one thing to do and that was to pray to the almighty to save me. And I did.”

The 72-year-old continued: “I called out to God and he saved me. A little wave came from behind. It wasn’t big. It was just simply pushing me forward.

“The tide somehow had changed and I was able to get back to land. So I was saved. I didn’t know what was going to happen next.”

Following the incident, the musician was given a Quran by his brother. Stevens said: “I would never have picked up a Quran. But it became the gateway. After a year I could not hold myself back. I had to bow down.”

The singer formally converted to Islam the following year in 1977, and adopted the name Yusuf Islam the year after that.

He told host Lauren Laverne that the news of his conversion was met with mixed opinions. Stevens said that in Turkey he was “raised on a pedestal” while “on the other side there were people who said, ‘He’s a bit of a traitor, isn’t he? He’s turned Turk.'”

The musician said: “That was very difficult because at one point I was an icon of the majority and now I am part of the minority who are looked down upon and certainly, to a large extent, misunderstood.”

Stevens also revealed that one of the most upsetting times in his life was the media’s portrayal of him as a supporter of the Iranian fatwa against the novelist Salman Rushdie in 1989.

The singer recalled: “I was certainly not prepared or equipped to deal with sharp-toothed journalists. I was cleverly framed by certain questions. I never supported the fatwa. I had to live through that.”

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