Abubakr Ben Ishmael Salahuddin is an American religious writer.

He was formerly an Ahmadi and wrote many articles for the Ahmadi magazine Review of Religions, as well as two books promoting Ahmadi beliefs. The Afrocentric Myth or Islam, an appeal to Ahmadi beliefs from the perspective of a former "Black Cultural Nationalist" and Black Muslim,[1] and Saving the Savior around the Ahmadi conception of Jesus and related teachings on the Roza Bal tomb in Kashmir.[2] In 2003, he repudiated Islam and converted to the Baháʼí Faith.[3]

Publications

  • The Afrocentric Myth or Islam: The Liberator of the American People, 1995
  • Saving the Savior - Did Christ Survive the Crucifixion?, 2001

References

  1. "of "Saving the Savior" was by turns a Black Panther, a Black Muslim, an Ahmadi, and finally a Baháʼí."
  2. Steven Propp Josu: Prisoner at Shalem: The Story of a Religious Revolutionary 2005 "Abubakr Ben Ishmael Salahuddin wrote Saving the Savior: Did Christ Survive the Crucifixion? (2001), which expounds the same theme, that Jesus survived the crucifixion and moved to Kashmir, India, married and .."
  3. BahaiStudies Abu Bakr leaves the Jamaat
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