Becoming Muslim
Dr. Hamid Marcus
(Germany)
Scientist, Author & Journalist
As a child I had felt an inner urge to learn all I could
about Islam, and I had carefully studied an old Qur'an
translation which I had found in the library of my home town and
which dated back to 1750. It was the edition from which Goethe
also drew his knowledge of Islam. At that time I had been deeply
struck by the absolutely rationalistic and at the same time
imposing composition of the Islamic teachings. I had also been
very much impressed by the gigantic spiritual revolution which
they evoked in the Islamic nations of that time. Later, in
Berlin, I had the opportunity of working together with Muslims
and listening to the enthusiastic and inspiring commentaries
which the founder of the first German Muslim Mission at Berlin
and builder of the Berlin Mosque, gave on the Holy Qur'an. After
years of active co-operation with this outstanding personality
and his spiritual exertions, I embraced Islam. Islam
supplemented my own ideas by some of the most ingenious
conceptions of mankind ever thought of. The belief in God is
something sacred to the religion of Islam. But it does not
proclaim dogmas which are incompatible with modern science.
Therefore there are no conflicts between belief on the one hand
and science on the other. This fact is naturally a unique and
enormous advantage for a man who participated to the best of his
ability in scientific research. The second advantage is that the
religion of Islam is not an idealistic teaching which runs along
blindly beside life as it is, but that it preaches a system
which actually influences the life of a human being .... the
laws of Islam are not compulsory regulations which restrict
personal freedom, but directions and guides which enable a
well-contrived freedom.
Throughout the years I have noticed time and again with
deepest satisfaction that Islam holds the golden mean between
individualism and socialism, between which it forms a connecting
link. As it is unbiased and tolerant, it always appreciates the
good, wherever it may happen to come across it.
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