I do realise that people of other faiths may also claim to have found the true God, but I can quote the personal testimonies of several Muslims who have had the courage and conviction to convert to Christianity.
And, equally, I'd suggest that there are a number of converts from Christianity to other faiths, who are equally devout, and equally convinced that they now have the right idea.
It is very difficult for a Muslim to convert because of the fear of being rejected by their own family and community.
It's very difficult for anyone from a strict religious community, and they exist in any number of different denominations.
One person in particular was a very devout Muslim who out of curiosity started reading the New Testament. He was not pressurised by any evangelical preacher - he simply discovered God's love by prayerful reading of the Christian Bible which depicted a loving God which is not there in the Koran.
OK. How many anecdotes will turn this into a fact? How many of these individual subjective accounts will mean that they stop being subjective? How many conversions each way are required for it to be suddenly objectively true?
Why is it that you think the idea of conversions to Christianity validate the idea of Christianity and not that the idea of conversions validates belief being independent of the trappings of names?
O.