List of converts to Catholicism from Islam
The following is an incomplete list of notable individuals who converted to Catholicism from Islam.
Converts
A
- Jean Mohamed Ben Abdeljlil – Moroccan Roman Catholic priest and a Catholic convert from Islam.
- Basuki Abdullah, Indonesian painter
- Leo Africanus, Berber Andalusi Moorish diplomat and author who was converted to Christianity following his capture
- Bernard of Alzira, Andalusian prince and diplomat
- Juan Andrés – Spanish Islamic scholar who converted to Catholicism and wrote a well known polemical work against Islam, the Confusión o confutación de la secta mahomética y del Alcorán
- Juliana Awada, Lebanese-Argentine businesswoman and First Lady of Argentina
B
- Josephine Bakhita, Sudanese-Italian Canossian religious sister and Roman Catholic saint from Darfur, Sudan. She was forcibly converted to Islam. On 9 January 1890 Bakhita was baptised with the names of Josephine Margaret and Fortunata.
- Bayano – also known as Ballano or Vaino, was an African enslaved by Spaniards who led the biggest slave revolts of 16th century in Panama
- Mohammed Christophe Bilek – Algerian former Muslim who lives in France since 1961; baptized Roman Catholic in 1970; in the 1990s, he founded Our Lady of Kabyle, a French website devoted to evangelisation among Muslims
- Francis Bok – Sudanese-American activist, convert to Islam from Christianity; but later returned to his Christian faith
- Jean-Bédel Bokassa, dictator of the Central African Republic and its successor state, the Central African Empire in what he became and declared Emperor.
C
- Moussa Dadis Camara – ex-officer of the Guinean army who served as the President of the Republic of Guinea; Roman Catholic Christian convert from Islam
- Rianti Cartwright – Indonesian actress, model, presenter and VJ; two weeks before departure to the United States to get married, she left the Muslim faith to become a baptized Catholic with the name Sophia Rianti Rhiannon Cartwright
- Chehab family – prominent Lebanese noble family; having converted from Sunni Islam, the religion of his predecessors, was the first Maronite ruler of the Emirate of Mount Lebanon
- Djibril Cissé – French international footballer
- Hansen Clarke – U.S. Representative for Michigan's 13th congressional district
- Constantine the African – Baghdad-educated Muslim who died in 1087 as a Christian monk at Monte Cassino
D
- Justinus Darmojuwono, first Indonesian Cardinal of the Catholic Church; converted to Catholicism in 1932, served as Archbishop of Semarang from 1963 to 1981, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1967
- Bob Denard – French soldier and mercenary. Born a Roman Catholic, Denard converted first to Judaism, then to Islam, and finally back to Catholicism again
E
- Estevanico Berber originally from Morocco and one of the early explorers of the Southwestern United States
F
- Joseph Fadelle – Roman Catholic convert from Islam and writer born in 1964 in Iraq to a Shiite family
- Rima Fakih, Lebanese-American model, actress, professional wrestler and beauty pageant titleholder, Miss USA 2010, converted to the Maronite Church from Shia Islam upon marriage to her Maronite husband
G
- George XI of Kartli – Georgian monarch who ruled Eastern Georgia from 1676 to 1688 and again from 1703 to 1709; an Eastern Orthodox Christian, he converted to Islam prior to his appointment as governor of Qandahar; later converted to Roman Catholicism
- San Geronimo – a young Arab who had embraced Catholic Christianity, and had been baptized with the name of Geronimo
- Fathia Ghali,, Princess of Egypt and youngest daughter of Fuad I of Egypt and Nazli Sabri
H
- Maria Hertogh – Dutch woman child who had been raised by Muslims more later returned to her Catholic biological parents
- Rajah Humabon, Rajah of Cebu, Philippines and first Filipino Sultan convert to Roman Catholicism and was baptized with the name Carlos
I
- Antuan Ilgit, Turkish-Italian Jesuit
J
- Sabatina James, born in Dhedar, Pakistani-Austrian book author; started a new life in Vienna, changing her name and converting to Catholicism; baptized in 2006
- Lina Joy – Malay convert from Islam to Christianity; born Azlina Jailani in 1964 in Malaysia to Muslim parents of Javanese descent; converted at age 26; in 1998, she was baptized, and applied to have her conversion legally recognized by the Malaysian courts
- Don Juan of Persia – late 16th- and early 17th-century figure in Iran and Spain; also known as Faisal Nazary; was a native of Iran, who later moved westward; settled in Spain where he became a Roman Catholic
K
- George XI of Kartli, King of Kartli
- Ilyas Khan – British philanthropist and businessman. Notable British Roman Catholic convert from Islam
- Ivan Krušala – writer, diplomat, explorer and a Catholic convert from Islam.
L
- Lakandula – Filipino ruler before Spanish conquest of Philippines
- Balthazar of Loyola – Moroccan prince
- Fernão Lopes , 16th-century Portuguese soldier in India who converted to Roman Catholicism
M
- Enrique de Malaca – Malay slave of Ferdinand Magellan, converted to Roman Catholicism after being purchased in 1511
- Hubert Maga – former president of President of Dahomey
- Fadhma Aït Mansour – mother of French writers Jean Amrouche and Taos Amrouche
- Carlos Menem, former Syrian-Argentinian President of Argentina; raised a Nusayri but converted to Roman Catholicism, a constitutional requirement for accessing the presidency until 1994
- Mizse – last Palatine of King Ladislaus IV of Hungary in 1290; born into a Muslim family in Tolna County in the Kingdom of Hungary; converted to Roman Catholicism
- Rajah Matanda – ruler of Maynila, a pre-Hispanic Tagalog polity along the Pasig River in what is now Manila, Philippines
- Archbishop Thomas Luke Msusa – born into a Muslim family; converted to Christianity as a child and later became an archbishop in his home country of Malawi, as well as converting and baptizing his father, a former imam
- Paul Mulla – Turkish scholar and professor of Islamic Studies at the Pontifical Oriental Institute
N
- Anthony Neyrot – Italian Dominican priest, apostate, reconvert, and martyr.
O
- Fata Omanović – Bosniak historical figure from Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Karim Ouchikh – French lawyer and politician of Algerian origin
- Malika Oufkir, Berber-Marrocan writer and daughter of General Mohamed Oufkir; she and her siblings are converts from Islam to Catholicism; and she writes in her book, Stolen Lives, "we had rejected Islam, which had brought us nothing good, and opted for Catholicism instead"
P
- Shams Pahlavi, Princess of Iran and the elder sister of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Shah of Iran
- Agni Pratistha, Indonesian actress, model and former beauty queen, converted to Catholicism after marriage, although initially denied rumors of conversion
R
- Abdul Rahman – Afghan convert to Catholic Christianity who escaped the death penalty because of foreign pressure
- Dewi Rezer – Indonesian model of French descent
S
- Nazli Sabri, Queen of Egypt, converted to the Catholic Church in 1950 and took the name "Mary Elizabeth"
- Begum Samru – Kashmir ruler of Sardhana, a small principality near Meerut.
- Lamin Sanneh – Scholar of missions and religious studies
- Bashir Shihab II, Lebanese Emir of Mount Lebanon who ruled Lebanon in the first half of the 19th century; his family was Sunni Muslim; he and some members of his family converted to the Maronite Catholic Church at the end of the 18th century
- The Shihab family –prominent Lebanese noble family who originally belonged to Sunni Islam, and converted to Christianity at the end of the 18th century
- Skanderbeg, Albanian nobleman and military commander, was forcibly converted to Islam from Christianity, but reverted to Christianity later in life
- Rudolf Carl von Slatin – Anglo-Austrian soldier and administrator in the Sudan
- Albertus Soegijapranata – born in Surakarta, Dutch East Indies, to a Muslim courtier and his wife who later converted to Catholicism; the first native Indonesian bishop; known for his pro-nationalistic stance, often expressed as "100% Catholic, 100% Indonesian"
- Isabel de Solís – slave concubine and later the consort of Abu l-Hasan Ali, Sultan of Granada. After sultan's death, she converted to Roman Catholicism
- Maria Aurora von Spiegel – Turkish mistress of Augustus II and the wife of a Polish noble
T
- Tabaraji of Ternate – Indonesian sultan; converted to Roman Catholicism after 1534 and baptised with the name Dom Manuel
U
- Ismael Urbain – French journalist and interpreter.
V
- Francis Verney – English adventurer, soldier of fortune, and pirate. Converted to Catholicism shortly before his death
X
- Muley Xeque, Moroccan prince, born in Marrakech in 1566; exiled in Spain, he converted to Roman Catholicism in Madrid and was known as Philip of Africa or Philip of Austria
Z
- Zaida of Seville – born an Iberian Muslim; when Seville fell to the Almoravids, she fled to the protection of Alfonso VI of Castile, becoming his mistress, converting to Christianity and taking the baptismal name of Isabel
- Zayd Abu Zayd the last Almohad governor of Valencia, Spain; remained a loyal ally of James I of Aragon; in 1236 he converted to Roman Catholicism, adopting the name of Vicente Bellvis, a fact which he kept secret until the fall of Valencia
- Saye Zerbo – President of the Republic of Upper Volta