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Last week, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who escaped fervent Islam for atheism, announced that she has become a Christian. She wrote a fascinating essay describing the Judeo-Christian underpinnings of the best of Western civilization, along with her need for assurance that life has meaning. By contrast, those women who are taking to TikTok to announce their conversion to Islam are attracted by only two things: its hatred for the West and its being a “strong horse.”

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Ali’s essay, entitled “Why I am now a Christian: Atheism can’t equip us for civilisational war,” explains that she was raised as a ritualistic Muslim but found purpose in what the Muslim Brotherhood had to say: Through Islam, she would have a straight path to paradise. What the secular world offered, by contrast, ensured eternal damnation. Most especially, the Muslim Brotherhood taught to hate Jews and to work for their destruction.

Eventually realizing Islam’s toxicity, Ali writes, “You can see why…atheism seemed so appealing.” As far as she was concerned, Bertrand Russell was correct when he said, in 1927, “that religion is based primarily on fear.” For Ali, raised in a hellfire faith, “As an atheist, I thought I would lose that fear.”

But Ali didn’t lose fear because the world is a dangerous place. Instead, she realized that faith, rather than being based on fear, is the antidote to fear. Looking at the degradation of the West and the rising forces of tyranny, she writes,