Torquato Cardilli – Italian ambassador, converted from کاتھولک کلیسیا. Cardilli served as ambassador to Italy in Albania (1991), Tanzania (1993), Saudi Arabia (2000) and Angola (2005).[1]
یوسف اسلام, now known as یوسف اسلام (born Steven Demetre Georgiou; 21 July 1948), British singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, humanitarian, education philanthropist, and prominent convert to Islam.[5]
Zainab Cobbold – formerly known as Evelyn Cobbold, she changed her name to Zainab Cobbold. Zainab was a Scottish noblewoman who performed the حج in 1933.[11]
Abdullah el-Faisal – a 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.[25][26]
Silma Ihram – formerly a born again اصطباغی کلیسیا who is an Australian pioneer of Muslim education in the West, founder and former school Principal of the 'Noor Al Houda Islamic College', campaigner for racial tolerance, and Author.[64]
Nuh Ha Mim Keller – Islamic scholar who converted from Catholicism to agnosticism to Sunni Islam.[76]
Saida Miller Khalifa – an author and convert to Islam, Saida was previously known as Sonya Miller and is from Britain. She converted in 1959 and married an Egyptian professor named Yusry Khalifa whom she went to Hajj with.[77]
Jamilah Nasheed – an American politician from مسوری who currently represents the fifth district of the Missouri Senate. She visited a mosque in Grand Boulevard and eventually converted to Islam after studying.[119]
Murat Reis or Jan Janszoon – a Dutch Barbary corsair who was an admiral for the Republic of Salé. He converted to Islam from Christianity. Janszoon became a very active Muslim missionary who tried to convert his fellow Europeans who were Christian to Islam.[152]
فرانک ریبری – a French football player. His name after he converted to Islam is Bilal.[153]
یووون رڈلے – British journalist, from Anglicanism. She converted after being kidnapped and released by the Taliban.[154][155]
Sean Stone – Son of Oliver Stone and documentary producer.[176]
Daniel Streich – Swiss military instructor, community council member and a former member of Swiss People's Party who led the campaign for the national ban on the construction of new minarets.[177]
Abu Usamah – American-born Imam of Green Lane Masjid in Birmingham, UK.Accused of preaching messages of hate towards non-Muslims in a UK Television documentary.[195]
میلکم ایکس – American Muslim minister, public speaker, and human rights activist who converted from Christianity to نیشن آف اسلام and later to mainstream اہل سنت.[213]
Abel Xavier – former Portuguese professional footballer converted to Islam with his new name Faisal.[214]
^ ابپ"Al Qaeda exploits 'blue-eyed' Muslim converts"۔ Financialexpress.com۔ 15 October 2005۔ اخذ شدہ بتاریخ 07 اپریل 2010نقص حوالہ: نادرست <ref> ٹیگ؛ نام "autogenerated1" مختلف مواد کے ساتھ کئی بار استعمال ہوا ہے۔
↑Lewis, Dominic Bevan Wyndham (1931)۔ Charles of Europe۔ Coward-McCann۔ صفحہ: 174–175۔ OCLC485792029۔ A new star was now rising in the piratical firmament, Barbarossa's lieutenant Dragut-Reis, a Greek who had been taken prisoner by the corsairs in his youth and had turned Mahometan.
↑Youval Rotman, Jane Marie Todd، Byzantine Slavery and the Mediterranean World، President and Fellows of Harvard College، صفحہ: 41، Hence, for example, Theophanes tells how Elpidios, the strategos of Sicily, took refuge in Africa, without mentioning his conversion to Islam.
↑The Moslem World, Volume 58, pg.63, Samuel Marinus Zwemer, Christian Literature Society for India, Hartford Seminary Foundation, Published for the Nile Mission Press by the Christian Literature Society for India, 1911
↑The complete idiot's guide to the Crusades By Paul L. Williams, pg. 73
↑Biography of Cristian Gonzales، Then right on 9th October 2003 Christian Gonzales decided to convert to Islam on the basis of their own accord in the presence of the Great Mosque cleric Mustafa al Akbar Surabaya
↑Bill Bole، John Coltrane، His cousin Mary's first husband, Charles Greenlee, had been a devout disciple...
↑Andrea Elliott (27 January 2010)۔ "The Jihadist Next Door"۔ New York Times Magazine۔ اخذ شدہ بتاریخ 28 جنوری 2010
↑Mehmet Kaplan, Tevfik Fikret: Devir- Şahsiyet- Eser, Dergâh Yayınları, 1987, p. 63., (ترکی میں) "Ana tarafına gelince: Fikret'in annesi Hatice Refia Hanım, annesi ve babası ihtida etmiş bir Sakızlı Rum ailesinden"
↑Logged in as click here to log out (19 March 2007)۔ "Comment is free Punk Muslims"۔ London: Commentisfree.guardian.co.uk۔ اخذ شدہ بتاریخ 07 اپریل 2010
↑Saeed Alizadeh، Alireza Pahlavani، Ali Sadrnia۔ Iran: A Chronological History۔ صفحہ: 137
↑H. J. Kissling, Bertold Spuler, N. Barbour, J. S. Trimingham, H. Braun, H. Hartel، The Last Great Muslim Empires، صفحہ: 118 صيانة CS1: أسماء متعددة: مصنفین کی فہرست (link)
↑Mladen Klemenčić (1993)۔ A Concise atlas of the Republic of Croatia & of the Republic of Bosnia and Hercegovina۔ Michigan: Miroslav Krleža Lexicographical Institute (original from University of Michigan Press)۔ صفحہ: 88
↑The decline and fall of the Ottoman Empire By Alan Palmer, pg. 52
↑Evg Radushev, Svetlana Ivanova, Rumen Kovachev – Narodna biblioteka "Sv. sv. Kiril i Metodiĭ. Orientalski otdel, International Centre for Minority Studies and Intercultural Relations, Research Centre for Islamic History, Art, and Culture (2003)۔ Inventory of Ottoman Turkish documents about Waqf preserved in the Oriental Department at the St. St. Cyril and Methodius National Library۔ Narodna biblioteka "Sv. sv. Kiril i Metodiĭ۔ صفحہ: 224۔ ISBN954-523-072-X۔ Hasan Pasa (Damad-i- Padisahi), Greek convert from Morea. صيانة CS1: أسماء متعددة: مصنفین کی فہرست (link)
↑Evg Radushev, Svetlana Ivanova, Rumen Kovachev – Narodna biblioteka "Sv. sv. Kiril i Metodiĭ. Orientalski otdel, International Centre for Minority Studies and Intercultural Relations, Research Centre for Islamic History, Art, and Culture (2003)۔ Inventory of Ottoman Turkish documents about Waqf preserved in the Oriental Department at the St. St. Cyril and Methodius National Library۔ Narodna biblioteka "Sv. sv. Kiril i Metodiĭ۔ صفحہ: 224۔ ISBN954523072X۔ Hasan Pasa (Damad-i- Padisahi), Greek convert from Morea. صيانة CS1: أسماء متعددة: مصنفین کی فہرست (link)
↑Davidson, Basil. Africa in History. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995.
↑Ethnicity, Cultural Discontinuity and Power Brokers in Northern Iraq: The Case of the Shabak .Amal Vinogradov. American Ethnologist, Vol. 1, No. 1 (Feb. 1974), pp. 207–218
↑Mohamed, Duse (1911)۔ In the land of the pharaohs: a short history of Egypt from the fall of Ismail to the assassination of Boutros Pasha۔ D. Appleton and company۔ صفحہ: xii۔ OCLC301095947۔ PRIME MINISTERS * Ragheb Pasha was Prime Minister from July 12, 1882
↑Schölch, Alexander (1981)۔ Egypt for the Egyptians!: the socio-political crisis in Egypt, 1878–1882۔ Ithaca Press۔ صفحہ: 326۔ ISBN0-903729-82-2۔ Isma'il Raghib was born in Greece in 1819; the sources differ over his homeland. After first being kidnapped to Anatolia, he was brought as a slave to Egypt in 1246 (1830/1), by Ibrahim Pasha, and there he was 'converted' from Christianity
↑Evan Darwin Winet (2007)۔ "Sarumpaet, Ratna (1949 – )"۔ $1 میں Gabrielle Cody۔ The Columbia Encyclopedia of Modern Drama۔ 2۔ New York: Columbia University Press۔ صفحہ: 1190–1191۔ ISBN978-0-231-14424-7
↑[3] Ahmed Ramzi witness the conversion of Omar Sharif
↑The holy cities, the pilgrimage and the world of Islām: a history from the earliest traditions until 1925 (1344H), pg. 310, by Ghālib ibn ʻAwaḍ Quʻayṭī (al-Sulṭān.), Sultan Ghalib al-Qu'aiti
↑Hogan, Christine (2006)۔ The Veiled Lands: A Woman's Journey Into the Heart of the Islamic World۔ Macmillan Publishers Aus۔ صفحہ: 74۔ ISBN9781405037013۔ Kosem was born on the Macedonian island of Tinos, where she was born as Anastasia, the daughter of a Macedonian Orthodox priest. Captured by slavers, she was sent to Istanbul by Bosna beylerbeyi
↑Freely, John (1996)۔ Istanbul: the imperial city۔ Viking۔ صفحہ: 215۔ ISBN0-14-024461-1۔ Then around 1608 Ahmet found a new favourite, a Macedonian girl named Anastasia, who had been captured on the island of Tinos and sent as a slave to the Harem, where she took the name of Kosem
↑Ibn Ab̄i Tahir Ṭāyfūr and Arabic writerly culture a ninth-century bookman in Baghdad RoutledgeCurzon Studies in Arabic and Middle-Eastern Literatures: A Ninth-century Bookman in Baghdad, By Shawkat M. Toorawa, pg. 94
↑A history of the crusades, By Steven Runciman, pg. 397