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If "Quaker" is meant to refer to The Religious Society of Friends, that is more of a religious group, than a religion. It apparently includes a number of faiths, and a fraction of these appear to not even be Christian. It's not only not explicitly clear to what faith she converted. It's also unclear (to me) from what faith she converted. The article doesn't state whether or not she was being raised as a Sunni Muslim. If she was being raised Muslim, it seems unlikely (although it's certainly possible) that Sister Betty would have enrolled her in a program, that's faith differed from the one in which she was raising her daughter. If she was not being raised Muslim, I don't know that it should be called a "conversion" if she did not come to this faith from a different one. Hopefully someone with knoweledge of the subject can clarify specifically what faith she joined at this camp, and also provide information about her religious upbringing prior to this experience. Finally, it would be helpful to clarify whether Ms. Shabazz has remained with this faith.Mk5384 (talk) 10:18, 8 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Shabazz was raised as a Sunni Muslim. According to Rickford, she "converted to the [Quaker] faith at age eleven" after attending Quaker-run summer camps.[1]This book explicitly says Shabazz "left Islam and became a Quaker" (page 137). — Malik ShabazzTalk/Stalk19:05, 8 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I believe a pronunciation guide would be useful in the lead. The English language doesn't have a word with a qu which is followed by a consonant, so there is nothing which the average English speaker can use as a template for this pronunciation. ~ JDCAce (talk) 05:57, 9 August 2021 (UTC)[reply]