|
|
|
|
|
|
Margaret Marcus, Ex-Jew, USA (part 2 of 5)
|
Description: Margaret discusses how a fellow Jewish classmate accepts Islam, and later accepts Islam herself.
By Margaret Marcus
Published on 16 Jan 2006 - Last modified on 15 May 2007
Viewed: 7529 (daily average: 5) - Rating: none yet - Rated by: 0 Printed: 485 - Emailed: 2 - Commented on: 1
Category: Articles
> Stories of New Muslims
> Women
|
|
It was in Professor Katsh’s class that I met
Zenita, the most unusual and fascinating girl I have ever met. The first time
I entered Professor Katsh’s class, as I looked around the room for an empty
desk in which to sit, I spied two empty seats, on the arm of one, three big
beautifully bound volumes of Yusuf Ali’s English translation and commentary of
the Holy Quran. I sat down right there, burning with curiosity to find out to
whom these volumes belonged. Just before Rabbi Katsh’s lecture was to begin, a
tall, very slim girl with pale complexion framed by thick auburn hair sat next
to me. Her appearance was so distinctive, I thought she must be a foreign
student from Turkey, Syria or some other Near Eastern country. Most of the
other students were young men wearing the black cap of Orthodox Jewry, who
wanted to become rabbis. We two were the only girls in the class. As we were
leaving the library late that afternoon, she introduced herself to me. Born
into an Orthodox Jewish family, her parents had migrated to America from Russia only a few years prior to the October Revolution in 1917 to escape persecution.
I noted that my new friend spoke English with the precise care of a foreigner.
She confirmed these speculations, telling me that since her family and their
friends speak only Yiddish among themselves, she did not learn any English
until after attending public school. She told me that her name was Zenita
Liebermann, but recently, in an attempt to Americanize themselves, her parents
had changed their name from “Liebermann” to “Lane.” Besides being thoroughly
instructed in Hebrew by her father while growing up and also in school, she
said she was now spending all her spare time studying Arabic. However, with no
previous warning, Zenita dropped out of class, and although I continued to
attend all of his lectures to the conclusion of the course, Zenita never
returned. Months passed and I had almost forgotten about Zenita, when suddenly
she called and begged me to meet her at the Metropolitan Museum and go with her
to look at the special exhibition of exquisite Arabic calligraphy and ancient
illuminated manuscripts of the Quran. During our tour of the museum, Zenita
told me how she had embraced Islam with two of her Palestinian friends as
witnesses.
I inquired, “Why did you decide to become a
Muslim?” She then told me that she had left Professor Katsh’s class when she
fell ill with a severe kidney infection. Her condition was so critical, she
told me, her mother and father had not expected her to survive. “One afternoon
while burning with fever, I reached for my Holy Quran on the table beside by
bed and began to read and while I recited the verses, it touched me so deeply
that I began to weep and then I knew I would recover. As soon as I was strong
enough to leave my bed, I summoned two of my Muslim friends and took the oath
of the “Shahadah” or Confession of Faith.”
Zenita and I would eat our meals in Syrian
restaurants where I acquired a keen taste for this tasty cooking. When we had
money to spend, we would order Couscous, roast lamb with rice or a whole soup
plate of delicious little meatballs swimming in gravy scooped up with loaves of
unleavened Arabic bread. And when we had little to spend, we would eat lentils
and rice, Arabic style, or the Egyptian national dish of black broad beans with
plenty of garlic and onions called “Ful”.
While Professor Katsh was lecturing thus, I was
comparing in my mind what I had read in the Old Testament and the Talmud with
what was taught in the Quran and Hadith and finding Judaism so defective, I was
converted to Islam.
Q: Were you scared that you might not be accepted by
the Muslims?
A: My increasing sympathy for Islam and Islamic
ideals enraged the other Jews I knew, who regarded me as having betrayed them
in the worst possible way. They used to tell me that such a reputation could
only result from shame of my ancestral heritage and an intense hatred for my
people. They warned me that even if I tried to become a Muslim, I would never
be accepted. These fears proved totally unfounded as I have never been
stigmatized by any Muslim because of my Jewish origin. As soon as I became a
Muslim myself, I was welcomed most enthusiastically by all the Muslims as one
of them.
I did not embrace Islam out of hatred for my
ancestral heritage or my people. It was not a desire so much to reject as to
fulfill. To me, it meant a transition from parochial to a dynamic and
revolutionary faith.
Q: Did your family object to your studying Islam?
A: Although I wanted to become a Muslim as far
back as 1954, my family managed to argue me out of it. I was warned that Islam
would complicate my life because it is not, like Judaism and Christianity, part
of the American scene. I was told that Islam would alienate me from my family
and isolate me from the community. At that time my faith was not sufficiently
strong to withstand these pressures. Partly as the result of this inner
turmoil, I became so ill that I had to discontinue college long before it was
time for me to graduate. For the next two years I remained at home under
private medical care, steadily growing worse. In desperation from 1957 - 1959
my parents confined me both to private and public hospitals where I vowed that
if ever I recovered sufficiently to be discharged, I would embrace Islam.
After I was allowed to return home, I
investigated all the opportunities for meeting Muslims in New York City. It
was my good fortune to meet some of the finest men and women anyone could ever
hope to meet. I also began to write articles for Muslim magazines.
Q: What was the attitude of your parents and friends
after you became Muslim?
A: When I embraced Islam, my parents, relatives
and their friends regarded me almost as a fanatic, because I could think and
talk of nothing else. To them, religion is a purely private concern which at
the most perhaps could be cultivated like an amateur hobby among other hobbies.
But as soon as I read the Holy Quran, I knew that Islam was no hobby but life
itself!
|
| Parts of This Article |
|
Margaret Marcus, Ex-Jew, USA (part 1 of 5)
|
|
Margaret Marcus, Ex-Jew, USA (part 2 of 5) |
|
Margaret Marcus, Ex-Jew, USA (part 3 of 5)
|
|
Margaret Marcus, Ex-Jew, USA (part 4 of 5)
|
|
Margaret Marcus, Ex-Jew, USA (part 5 of 5)
|
|
View all parts together
|
| Other Articles in the Same Category |
|
Category:
Articles
>
Stories of New Muslims
>
Women
|
|
Diane Charles Breslin, Ex-Catholic, USA (part 1 of 3)
|
|
Diane Charles Breslin, Ex-Catholic, USA (part 2 of 3)
|
|
Diane Charles Breslin, Ex-Catholic, USA (part 3 of 3)
|
|
Natassia M. Kelly, Ex-Christian, USA (part 1 of 2)
|
|
Natassia M. Kelly, Ex-Christian, USA (part 2 of 2)
|
|
Angel, Ex-Christian, USA
|
|
Penomee (Dr. Kari Ann Owen), Ex-Jew, USA
|
|
Aminah Assilmi, Ex-Christian, USA (part 1 of 4)
|
|
Aminah Assilmi, Ex-Christian, USA (part 2 of 4)
|
|
Aminah Assilmi, Ex-Christian, USA (part 3 of 4)
|
|
Aminah Assilmi, Ex-Christian, USA (part 4 of 4)
|
|
Steinmann, Ex-Secularist, UK
|
|
Akifah Baxter, Ex-Christian, USA
|
|
Kristin, Ex-Catholic, USA (part 1 of 2)
|
|
Kristin, Ex-Catholic, USA (part 2 of 2)
|
|
Noor, Ex-Hindu, UK (part 1 of 2)
|
|
Noor, Ex-Hindu, UK (part 2 of 2)
|
|
Lynda Fitzgerald, Ex-Catholic, Ireland (part 1 of 4)
|
|
Lynda Fitzgerald, Ex-Catholic, Ireland (part 2 of 4)
|
|
Lynda Fitzgerald, Ex-Catholic, Ireland (part 3 of 4)
|
|
Lynda Fitzgerald, Ex-Catholic, Ireland (part 4 of 4)
|
|
Zainab, Ex-Christian, USA (part 1 of 2)
|
|
Zainab, Ex-Christian, USA (part 2 of 2)
|
|
Sophie Jenkins, Ex-Catholic-Protestant, UK
|
|
Indrani and Chandara, Ex-Hindu, Singapore (part 1 of 3)
|
|
Indrani and Chandara, Ex-Hindu, Singapore (part 2 of 3)
|
|
Indrani and Chandara, Ex-Hindu, Singapore (part 3 of 3)
|
|
Amber Acosta, Ex-Catholic, USA
|
|
Oum Abdulaziz, Ex-Christian, USA (part 1 of 4): Islam and Christianity
|
|
Oum Abdulaziz, Ex-Christian, USA (part 2 of 4): Jesus in Christianity
|
|
Oum Abdulaziz, Ex-Christian, USA (part 3 of 4): The Christian Bible
|
|
Oum Abdulaziz, Ex-Christian, USA (part 4 of 4): Conversion from Christianity to Islam
|
|
S. E. Levine, Ex-Jew, USA (part 1 of 2)
|
|
S. E. Levine, Ex-Jew, USA (part 2 of 2)
|
|
Noora Alsamman, Ex-Catholic, USA
|
|
Shariffa Carlo, Ex-Christian, USA
|
|
Diana, Ex-Mormon, USA
|
|
Amina, Ex-Christian, USA
|
|
Anne Collins, Ex-Christian, USA
|
|
Maria, Ex-Catholic, USA (part 1 of 2): Early Life Setup
|
|
Maria, Ex-Catholic, USA (part 2 of 2): Islamic Experience
|
|
Sana, Ex-Christian, Egypt (part 1 of 2): Questions of Childhood
|
|
Sana, Ex-Christian, Egypt (part 2 of 2): The Power of the Quran
|
|
Kätlin Hommik-Mrabte, Ex-Christian, Estonia
|
|
La Bianca, Ex-Christian, Australia
|
|
Sara Hermansson, Ex-Christian, Sweden
|
|
Gerda, Ex-Christian, Lithuania
|
|
Ologunde Sa, Ex-Atheist, India (part 1 of 4)
|
|
Ologunde Sa, Ex-Atheist, India (part 2 of 4)
|
|
Ologunde Sa, Ex-Atheist, India (part 3 of 4)
|
|
Nichole Arel, Ex-Christian, USA
|
|
Ologunde Sa, Ex-Atheist, India (part 4 of 4)
|
|
Haneefah bint Stefan, Ex-Christian, Sweden
|
|
Why Are Women Turning to Islam
|
|
My Muslim Husband
|
|
Linda Delgado, Ex-Christian, USA (part 1 of 2)
|
|
Linda Delgado, Ex-Christian, USA (part 2 of 2)
|
|
Aisha Canlas, Ex-Catholic, Philippines
|
|
Katherine Bullock, Ex-Christian, Canada (part 1 of 2)
|
|
Katherine Bullock, Ex-Christian, Canada (part 2 of 2)
|
|
Sally, Ex-Catholic, Philippines
|
|
Halimah David, Ex-Christian, USA
|
|
Iman Yusuf, Ex-Catholic, USA (part 1 of 4)
|
|
Iman Yusuf, Ex-Catholic, USA (part 2 of 4)
|
|
Iman Yusuf, Ex-Catholic, USA (part 3 of 4)
|
|
Iman Yusuf, Ex-Catholic, USA (part 4 of 4)
|
|
Kathryn Bouchard, Ex-Christian, Canadian
|
|
Melissa Riter, Ex-Christian, USA
|
|
Sariya Islam, Ex-Catholic, India
|
|
Jina Talang, Ex-Catholic, Philippines
|
|
Valerie Wright, Ex-Christian, USA (part 1 of 2)
|
|
Valerie Wright, Ex-Christian, USA (part 2 of 2)
|
|
Lana, Ex- Christian, Romania
|
|
Hagar, Ex-Christian, Brazil
|
|
Emily, Ex-Christian, New Zealand
|
|
Molly Carlson, Ex-Christian, USA (part 1 of 2)
|
|
Molly Carlson, Ex-Christian, USA (part 2 of 2)
|
|
Latasha, Ex-Christian, USA
|
|
Tina Styliandou, Ex-Christian, Greek
|
|
Aaminah Hernandez, Ex-Christian, USA (part 1 of 2)
|
|
Aaminah Hernandez, Ex-Christian, USA (part 2 of 2)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Online daily:
From to
(according to your computer time)
|
| |
Your Favorites |
 |
|
Your favorites list is empty. You may add articles to this list using the article tools. |
| |
Your History |
 |
|
|