From Quran to Bible: Why I Risked Everything for Jesus” My Testimony
What you’re about to hear is the remarkable testimony of Zara Khalifa, a young Egyptian medical student whose life was forever changed by a dying patients faith.
Her journey from Islam to Christianity cost her everything. Her family, her country, and nearly her life.
This is her story. In her own words. Before we continue, please subscribe and hit the notification bell to hear more incredible stories of faith and transformation.
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My name is Zara Khalifa and this is my story of how I found Jesus Christ in the most unexpected place, a hospital room in Cairo, Egypt.
I was born into a respected Muslim family in Egypt. My father was a religious man who made sure our household followed Islamic teachings to the letter.
My mother was gentle and kind, but she always stayed quiet under my father’s authority.
She would cook for us, take care of the house, and make sure I was doing well in school, but she rarely spoke unless my father asked her something directly.
I was their only daughter, and they had high hopes for me. My father especially was proud that I was intelligent and worked hard in my studies.
I was pursuing medicine at Cairo University with dreams of becoming a doctor and helping people.
Growing up, our house was always filled with Islamic teachings. My father would wake up before dawn for morning prayers and I could hear him reciting verses from the Quran.
He taught me to read Arabic when I was young so I could understand the holy book properly.
We had Islamic calligraphy hanging on our walls and my father had a large collection of religious books that filled our living room shelves.
I prayed five times a day just like my father taught me. I fasted during Ramadan, even when it was difficult during my medical studies.
I wore hijab when I went out and I followed all the rules my father taught me about being a good Muslim woman.
My friends at university thought I was very religious and some even came to me for advice about Islamic matters.
During my hospital internship in Cairo, everything changed. I was in my final year of medical school and I had been assigned to work in the cancer ward at one of Cairo’s major hospitals.
The work was difficult because I saw so much suffering every day. Patients would come in with hope and sometimes we could help them, but other times we could only try to make them comfortable.
That’s where I met her, an elderly Christian woman who was battling advanced cancer. Her name was Mary and she was about 70 years old.
She had been a teacher before she got sick. And even though she was Egyptian like me, she was part of the small Christian minority in our country.
She was so weak when she arrived and the cancer had spread throughout her body.
The doctors told her family that there wasn’t much more they could do except manage her pain.
But there was something different about her that I couldn’t understand. Even when she was in terrible pain, even when the chemotherapy made her sick, even when she couldn’t eat or sleep properly, she would whisper, “Thank you, Jesus,” under her breath.
I would hear her say it when I was checking her medications. When I was helping her eat, when I was just walking by her room, at first, I thought maybe the pain medication was making her confused, but she was always alert and kind when she talked to me.
She would ask about my studies, encourage me in my work, and even tried to make me laugh when I was having a difficult day with other patients.
I was completely puzzled by her response to suffering. How could someone thank God when they were going through so much pain?
In Islam, we accept suffering as God’s will and we try to be patient with it, but we don’t usually thank Allah for it.
We ask him to remove it or to help us bear it. This woman’s response made no sense to me, but I couldn’t stop thinking about it.
I started paying more attention to her than my other patients. I would find excuses to spend extra time in her room, checking on things that didn’t really need checking.
I was curious about what made her so different from everyone else I had cared for.
During my night shifts, I found myself spending more time by her bedside. She was often awake because the pain made it hard for her to sleep and the night nurses didn’t have as much time to spend with individual patients.
We started talking and she began telling me stories about her life that I found fascinating.
She had been a missionary in the 1990s, traveling to remote areas of Sudan and other difficult places in Africa to share her Christian faith.
She told me about the hardships she faced. Living in mud huts, dealing with diseases, having very little food, and sometimes facing hostility from people who didn’t want to hear her message.
She told me about the sacrifices she made, leaving behind a comfortable life in Cairo to go to dangerous places where there was no electricity, no running water, and no proper medical care.
But what amazed me was that even when she talked about these difficult experiences, her face would light up with joy.
She would tell me about the people she met, the children she taught, the families she helped, and through all of it, she spoke with such deep love about this Jesus.
I remember asking her one night, “Why would someone give up everything for him? Why would you leave your comfortable life to go to such dangerous places?”
Her eyes lit up even more when I asked this question. She told me that Jesus wasn’t just a prophet to her the way we think of him in Islam.
She said he was her personal savior who had given his life for her sins and that knowing him personally made every sacrifice worth it.
She explained that when she was young she had felt empty inside just like I was feeling.
She had gone to church and followed all the rules but something was missing. Then one day she said she realized that Jesus wanted to have a personal relationship with her, not just be someone she worshiped from a distance.
She said that when she invited Jesus into her heart as her Lord and Savior, everything changed.
The emptiness was filled and she felt a love that she had never experienced before.
That’s why I could give up everything for him. She told me because he first gave up everything for me.
When you truly know how much Jesus loves you, you want to share that love with everyone.
Night after night, we talked. She never tried to convince me to leave Islam. She never criticized my faith or said anything negative about Muslims.
She just shared her stories and answered my questions with such patience and kindness. She treated me like I was her own granddaughter, and I found myself looking forward to our conversations.
Slowly a bond formed between us that I had never experienced before with anyone outside my family.
She would ask about my studies, my dreams, my family. She listened when I told her about the pressure I felt to succeed and make my father proud.
She encouraged me and told me that God had a special plan for my life, even though at the time I didn’t understand what she meant.
Then one morning in March, I came to work and found that Mary had passed away during the night.
The night shift nurse told me that she had died peacefully in her sleep and that her last words were, “Thank you, Jesus.”
The same words I had heard her say so many times. I felt a pain in my heart that I wasn’t expecting.
It was like I had lost a grandmother or a very close family member. I had cared for other patients who died.
And while it was always sad, I had never felt such a personal loss. I found myself crying in the hospital bathroom, which surprised me because I usually tried to stay professional about these things.
That night, when I was lying in my bed at home, I found myself whispering, “Thank you, Jesus.”
Without even thinking about it. The same words Mary always said just came out of my mouth naturally.
I stopped myself and wondered what I was doing. Why was I saying these words?
I was Muslim. I should be saying alhamdulillah if I wanted to thank God. But I tried to stop myself and push those words away.
But they kept rising up in my heart. Even when I tried to pray in Arabic the way I always did, the name of Jesus would come into my mind.
I didn’t understand what was happening to me. But something had definitely changed inside. It was like Mary had planted a seed in my heart that was beginning to grow.
I found myself thinking about our conversations all the time. I kept remembering the peace on her face even when she was in pain and the joy in her voice when she talked about Jesus.
I had never seen anyone face death with such confidence and hope. Most of the Muslim patients I had cared for were afraid when they were dying, worried about whether they had been good enough Muslims to get into paradise.
But Mary seemed completely certain that she was going to be with Jesus when she died.
Soon after Mary died, I began having dreams that I had never experienced before. In these dreams, a man dressed in brilliant white would appear to me.
I couldn’t see his face clearly, but I felt such incredible peace when he was near.
He never spoke harshly to me or condemned me for being Muslim. Instead, he would just stand there, and I felt this overwhelming sense of love and acceptance that I had never felt before in my life.
I would wake up from these dreams with my heart pounding, not from fear, but from the strange longing to understand who this person was.
Deep in my heart, I knew it was Jesus, even though I was afraid to admit it to myself.
The dream started happening two or three times a week. And each time I woke up, feeling more drawn to learn about this Jesus who had been so important to Mary.
I started reading about Christianity, trying to learn more about Jesus. I would use the computer at the hospital during my breaks to search for information about Christian beliefs.
I found websites that explained the gospel message and I started reading the Bible online when no one was around.
I had to be very careful because if anyone saw me, it could cause serious problems for me and my family.
The more I read, the more I understood what Mary had been talking about. I learned that Christians believe Jesus is not just a prophet but the son of God who came to earth to die for our sins.
I read about how Jesus loved people so much that he willingly went to the cross to pay the price for our wrongdoing so we could have a relationship with God.
This was completely different from what I had learned in Islam. In Islam, we believe that we must earn our way to paradise by doing good deeds and following all the rules.
But Christianity taught that salvation is a free gift that comes through faith in Jesus Christ, not through our own good works.
I started reading the New Testament, beginning with the Gospel of Matthew. The stories about Jesus amazed me.
I read about how he healed the sick, fed the hungry, and showed love to people that society rejected.
I read his teachings about love, forgiveness, and hope. But what touched me most was reading about his death on the cross and his resurrection from the dead.
For the first time in my life, I began to understand what it meant to have a personal relationship with God.
In Islam, Allah seemed distant and unknowable. But Jesus seemed close and personal, someone who understood human suffering because he had experienced it himself.
I found myself praying to Jesus during my shifts at the hospital. Especially when I was caring for patients who were suffering, I would ask him to comfort them and help me be a better nurse.
And I started noticing that I felt different when I prayed to Jesus compared to when I prayed in Arabic to Allah.
When I prayed to Jesus, I felt like someone was actually listening and caring about what I was saying.
But I was terrified of what this meant. I knew that if anyone in my family discovered what I was thinking and feeling, it would destroy them.
My father had worked so hard to raise me as a good Muslim daughter. He was so proud of my religious devotion and my academic achievements.
How could I tell him that I was questioning everything he had taught me? I spent months struggling with these thoughts and feelings.
Part of me wanted to ignore what I was experiencing and just continue living as a Muslim.
It would have been so much easier. But the dreams continued and my hunger to know more about Jesus continued to grow.
I felt like I was being drawn to him by a force that I couldn’t resist.
Finally, one evening in October, about 7 months after Mary had died, I was alone in my room reading the Bible on my phone, when I came to John 3:16.
For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only son that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.
As I read those words, something happened in my heart. I suddenly understood that God loved me personally.
That Jesus had died specifically for me and that I could have eternal life not by being a perfect Muslim but simply by believing in Jesus Christ as my Lord and Savior.
I fell to my knees beside my bed and prayed, “Jesus, I don’t understand everything, but I believe you are the Son of God.
I believe you died for my sins and rose from the dead. Please forgive me and come into my heart.
I want to follow you. The moment I said those words, I felt a peace and joy fill my heart like nothing I had ever experienced.
The emptiness that had been inside me for so many years was suddenly gone, replaced by a sense of God’s love and presence.
I knew that my life had just changed forever. But my father discovered what I was doing about 2 weeks later.
I thought I had been careful, but he found some Christian materials I had printed out and hidden in my room, along with some notes I had written about what I was learning.
I had also been caught visiting a Christian website on the family computer. His anger was terrible and frightening.
My father had never been a violent man, but when he realized I was interested in Christianity, he felt like I had betrayed everything our family stood for.
He beat me with his belt and screamed at me, calling me ungrateful and saying I was bringing shame on our family name.
Then he locked me in my room for 5 days without food or water, hoping that hunger and isolation would make me give up this foolishness and return to Islam.
He kept coming to my door and shouting at me to renounce Jesus and ask Allah for forgiveness.
He told me that if I didn’t change my mind, he would have no choice but to turn me over to the religious authorities.
But even in that dark room, Jesus visited me in my dreams. He would encourage me and tell me, “I am with you.
Do not be afraid. I will never leave you or forsake you.” Instead of breaking me down, those days of isolation only made my faith stronger.
I knew that Jesus was real and that he was with me even in this terrible situation.
My mother would sneak me small amounts of water when my father wasn’t watching. And I could see the pain in her eyes.
She didn’t understand what was happening, but she was afraid for me. She kept begging me to just tell my father what he wanted to hear so that this could all end.
When my father finally let me out, I was weak and dehydrated, but my faith was stronger than ever.
However, word had already started to spread in our neighborhood about my interest in Christianity.
Some of our neighbors had heard my father shouting, and rumors were beginning to circulate.
People in our community were pressuring my father to hand me over for Sharia judgment.
In Egypt, converting from Islam to Christianity is not officially illegal, but in practice, it can be very dangerous, especially in more conservative areas like where we lived.
Some of the men from our mosque were telling my father that he needed to take me to the religious authorities so they could deal with me properly.
I could see the struggle in my father’s eyes during those terrible days. He was torn between his religious duty, as he understood it, and his love for his only daughter.
He had raised me, been proud of my achievements, and despite his anger, I knew he didn’t want to see me harmed.
But he also felt that his honor and reputation in the community were at stake.
The pressure on him was enormous. Every day, more people were talking about what was happening in our family.
Some were saying that if he didn’t do something about me, it would prove that he wasn’t a true Muslim.
Others were suggesting that maybe I had been influenced by evil spirits and needed special prayers to drive them out.
I remember one evening when he came to talk to me in my room. He sat on the edge of my bed and looked so tired and sad.
Zara, he said, why are you doing this to our family? Why are you throwing away everything I taught you?
Don’t you love your mother and me? I told him that I did love them and that this wasn’t about rejecting them or our family.
I tried to explain that I had found the truth about God and that I couldn’t turn away from it.
But he couldn’t understand how I could believe that Jesus was anything more than a prophet.
If you continue on this path, he warned me, I won’t be able to protect you much longer.
People are demanding that I hand you over. Some are even saying that they will take matters into their own hands if I don’t act.
That night, I prayed harder than I had ever prayed in my life. I asked Jesus to protect me and to show me what I should do.
I was only 23 years old, and I was terrified of what might happen to me.
But I also knew that I couldn’t deny what I had experienced. Jesus had changed my life, and I couldn’t pretend otherwise, even to save myself.
3 days later, my father made his decision. He came to my room late at night with tears streaming down his face.
“You have brought pain and shame on me and on our family,” he said. “But I cannot let them harm you.
You are my daughter, and despite what you have done, I love you. But you must go and you can never return.”
He had packed a small bag with some of my clothes and a little money he had saved.
I am going to lead you out of here tonight, he told me. I will tell people that I sent you away to live with relatives who will try to bring you back to Islam, but you must run and you must never come back to Egypt.
If you return, I won’t be able to save you again.” My heart was breaking as we walked quietly through the dark streets of Cairo.
This was the man who had taught me to ride a bicycle, who had celebrated when I got accepted to medical school, who had been so proud of me my entire life.
Now he was helping me escape because of my faith in Jesus Christ. When we reached the edge of our neighborhood, he stopped and hugged me one last time.
“I don’t understand what has happened to you,” he whispered. “But you are still my daughter.
I pray that someday you will come back to Islam and we can be a family again.”
I wanted to tell him that I prayed someday he would understand and accept Jesus, too.
But I knew it would only hurt him more. Instead, I just said, “Thank you for saving my life, Papa.
I will always love you.” Then I was alone in a country where being a Christian convert could cost me my life.
For the next week, I hid during the day and traveled at night, staying in cheap hotels, and avoiding areas where I might be recognized.
I was scared, hungry, and didn’t know who I could trust. I had some money my father had given me, but I knew it wouldn’t last long.
I tried to contact some Christian organizations I had found online, but it was difficult because I had to be careful about using phones or internet cafes where people might overhear me or track me.
Egypt has a Christian minority, but they are often careful about helping Muslim converts because it can bring trouble on their communities, too.
Finally, after about 10 days of hiding and searching for help, God led me to a Christian family in a different part of Cairo.
I had been wandering through a market, trying to figure out where to go next when I overheard a woman speaking to her daughter about a church service.
I followed them at a distance and saw them enter a small Christian church. I waited outside for hours, praying for courage and wisdom.
When the service ended and people started leaving, I approached the woman I had followed.
I was so desperate and frightened that I just started crying and told her I was a Muslim who had converted to Christianity and needed help.
She looked around nervously, but then she took my hand and said, “Come with me.”
She and her family took me to their home and hid me in a small room above their garage.
They risked their own safety to help me and I will never forget their courage and kindness.
This family connected me with an underground network of Christians who help converts who are in danger.
I learned that there are many Egyptians who have converted to Christianity but have to live in secret because of the risks.
Some have been imprisoned, others have been killed by their own families, and many have had to flee the country.
Word soon spread through the community where I had lived that anyone who found me should capture me and bring me back dead or alive.
My father later told the authorities that he had sent me to relatives outside Cairo.
But people didn’t believe him. They searched for me for months. Through God’s providence and the help of these brave Christians, arrangements were made to get me safely out of Egypt.
It took several months to arrange all the paperwork and find a way to get me to safety.
During that time, I had to stay hidden, rarely going outside and always being careful about who might see me.
It has now been 5 years since I left my homeland. These have been the hardest, but also the most beautiful years of my life.
I have grown so much in my faith in Jesus Christ. I have built a new life here in America and serve actively in my church.
The emptiness I used to feel is completely gone. When I pray to Jesus, I know he hears me and loves me.
But I still miss my family terribly, especially my father. Despite everything that happened, I know he loved me.
The fact that he helped me escape instead of turning me over shows that love.
I think about him often and wonder how he is doing. Every day I pray that both my parents will come to know the light of Christ and the love that I have found.
I pray that one day we will be reunited not just as family but as brothers and sisters in Christ.
I dream of the day when my father will understand why I made this choice and will see that Jesus is not just another prophet but the son of God who died for our sins.
My story is one of pain, sacrifice and loss. I lost my family, my country, my old life, and everything familiar to me.
But it is also a story of freedom, peace, and eternal life. I have found something worth more than anything I gave up.
I want to boldly declare to anyone who will listen. I have found the true way to heaven.
Jesus is not just a prophet. He is my Lord and Savior. He is the way, the truth, and the life.
No one comes to the Father except through him. Despite all the persecution and suffering, I can say with complete confidence that God has been faithful in all he does.
If he could rescue me from my old life and bring me into his light, he can rescue anyone.
And no one is too lost. No situation is too hopeless. And no family or cultural background can stop God’s love from reaching someone.
To my Muslim friends who might hear this story, I want you to know that I don’t share this to hurt you or to attack Islam.
I share it because I have found the truth. And truth is meant to be shared.
Jesus loves you just as much as he loves me. He is calling you to come to him just as he called me.
And to my Christian friends, I want to encourage you to never give up praying for the lost.
You never know how God might use your witness, even in the smallest ways. That elderly woman in the hospital never preached to me or tried to force her faith on me.
She just lived her faith authentically even in suffering. Her witness changed my eternal destiny.
Today I live as a free woman in Christ. I may have lost my earthly family, but I have gained an eternal family.
I may have left my homeland, but I am now a citizen of heaven. The fear is gone.
The emptiness is filled. And I have peace that passes all understanding. This is my testimony and this is my prayer that many more will find the same Jesus who found me in that hospital room in Cairo.
He is still calling people today, still appearing in dreams, still using ordinary people to share his extraordinary love.
Jesus Christ is Lord and in him I have found everything I was searching for.