{"article":{"id":2490,"title":"Michael Wolfe, Journalist, USA","slug":"michael-wolfe-journalist-usa","word":"\/uploads\/articles\/Michael Wolfe, Journalist, USA.docx","pdf":"\/uploads\/articles\/Michael Wolfe, Journalist, USA.pdf","mime_type":null,"type":"node","path":"\/nodes\/view\/type:article\/slug:michael-wolfe-journalist-usa","hint":"","body":"<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"font-size: xx-large;\"><strong><strong>Michael Wolfe, Journalist, USA<\/strong><\/strong><\/span><\/p>\r\n<p>&nbsp;<img style=\"display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;\" src=\"http:\/\/www.islamreligion.com\/articles\/images\/Michael_Wolfe__Journalist__USA_001.jpg\" alt=\"\" \/><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">After twenty-five years as a writer in America, I wanted something to soften my cynicism.&nbsp; I was searching for new terms by which to see.&nbsp; The way one is raised establishes certain needs in this department.&nbsp; From a pluralist background, I naturally placed great stress on the matters of racism and freedom.&nbsp; Then, in my early twenties, I had gone to live in Africa for three years.&nbsp; During this time, which was formative for me, I rubbed shoulders with blacks of many different tribes, with Arabs, Berbers, and even Europeans, who were Muslims.&nbsp; By and large these people did not share the Western obsession with race as a social category.&nbsp; In our encounters, being oddly colored, rarely mattered.&nbsp; I was welcomed first and judged on merit later.&nbsp; By contrast, Europeans and Americans, including many who are free of racist notions, automatically class people racially.&nbsp; Muslims classified people by their faith and their actions.&nbsp; I found this transcendent and refreshing.&nbsp; Malcolm X saw his nation&rsquo;s salvation in it.&nbsp; &ldquo;America needs to understand Islam,&rdquo; he wrote, &ldquo;because this is the one religion that erases from its society the race problem.&rdquo;<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">I was looking for an escape route, too, from the isolating terms of a materialistic culture.&nbsp; I wanted access to a spiritual dimension, but the conventional paths I had known as a boy were closed.&nbsp; My father had been a Jew; my mother Christian.&nbsp; Because of my mongrel background, I had a foot in two religious camps.&nbsp; Both faiths were undoubtedly profound.&nbsp; Yet the one that emphasizes a chosen people I found insupportable; while the other, based in a mystery, repelled me.&nbsp; A century before, my maternal great-great-grandmother&rsquo;s name had been set in stained glass at the high street Church of Christ in Hamilton, Ohio.&nbsp; By the time I was twenty, this meant nothing to me.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">These were the terms my early life provided.&nbsp; The more I thought about it now, the more I returned to my experiences in Muslim Africa.&nbsp; After two return trips to Morocco, in 1981 and 1985, I came to feel that Africa, the continent, had little to do with the balanced life I found there.&nbsp; It was not, that is, a continent I was after, nor an institution, either.&nbsp; I was looking for a framework I could live with, a vocabulary of spiritual concepts applicable to the life I was living now.&nbsp; I did not want to &ldquo;trade in&rdquo; my culture.&nbsp; I wanted access to new meanings.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">After a mid-Atlantic dinner I went to wash up in the bathroom. &nbsp;During my absence a quorum of Hasidim lined up to pray outside the door. &nbsp;By the time I had finished, they were too immersed to notice me. &nbsp;Emerging from the bathroom, I could barely work the handle. &nbsp;Stepping into the aisle was out of the question.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">I could only stand with my head thrust into the hallway, staring at the congregation&rsquo;s backs. &nbsp;Holding palm-size prayer books, they cut an impressive figure, tapping the texts on their breastbones as they divined. &nbsp;Little by little the movements grew erratic, like a mild, bobbing form of rock and roll. &nbsp;I watched from the bathroom door until they were finished, then slipped back down the aisle to my seat.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">We landed together later that night in Brussels. &nbsp;Reboarding, I found a discarded Yiddish newspaper on a food tray. &nbsp;When the plane took off for Morocco, they were gone.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">I do not mean to imply here that my life during this period conformed to any grand design. &nbsp;In the beginning, around 1981, I was driven by curiosity and an appetite for travel. &nbsp;My favorite place to go, when I had the money, was Morocco. &nbsp;When I could not travel, there were books. &nbsp;This fascination brought me into contact with a handful of writers driven to the exotic, authors capable of sentences like this, by Freya Stark:<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">&ldquo;The perpetual charm of Arabia is that the traveler finds his level there simply as a human being; the people&rsquo;s directness, deadly to the sentimental or the pedantic, like the less complicated virtues; and the pleasantness of being liked for oneself might, I think, be added to the five reasons for travel given me by Sayyid Abdulla, the watchmaker; &ldquo;to leave one&rsquo;s troubles behind one; to earn a living; to acquire learning; to practice good manners; and to meet honorable men&rdquo;.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">I could not have drawn up a list of demands, but I had a fair idea of what I was after. &nbsp;The religion I wanted should be to metaphysics as metaphysics is to science. &nbsp;It would not be confined by a narrow rationalism or traffic in mystery to please its priests. &nbsp;There would be no priests, no separation between nature and things sacred. &nbsp;There would be no war with the flesh, if I could help it. &nbsp;Sex would be natural, not the seat of a curse upon the species. &nbsp;Finally, I did want a ritual component, daily routine to sharpen the senses and discipline my mind. &nbsp;Above all, I wanted clarity and freedom. &nbsp;I did not want to trade away reason simply to be saddled with a dogma.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">The more I learned about Islam, the more it appeared to conform to what I was after.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Most of the educated Westerners I knew around this time regarded any strong religious climate with suspicion. &nbsp;They classified religion as political manipulation, or they dismissed it as a medieval concept, projecting upon it notions from their European past.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">It was not hard to find a source for their opinions. &nbsp;A thousand years of Western history had left us plenty of fine reasons to regret a path that led through so much ignorance and slaughter. &nbsp;From the Children&rsquo;s Crusade and the Inquisition to the transmogrified faiths of nazism and communism during our century, whole countries have been exhausted by belief. &nbsp;Nietzsche&rsquo;s fear, that the modern nation-state would become a substitute religion, has proved tragically accurate. &nbsp;Our century, it seemed to me, was ending in an age beyond belief, which believers inhabited as much as agnostics.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Regardless of church affiliation, secular humanism is the air westerners breathe, the lens we gaze through. &nbsp;Like any world view, this outlook is pervasive and transparent. &nbsp;It forms the basis of our broad identification with democracy and with the pursuit of freedom in all its countless and beguiling forms. &nbsp;Immersed in our shared preoccupations, one may easily forget that other ways of life exist on the same planet.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">At the time of my trip, for instance, 650 million Muslims with a majority representation in forty-four countries adhered to the formal teachings of Islam. &nbsp;In addition, about 400 million more were living as minorities in Europe, Asia and the Americas. &nbsp;Assisted by postcolonial economics, Islam has become in a matter of thirty years a major faith in Western Europe. &nbsp;Of the world&rsquo;s great religions, Islam alone was adding to its fold.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">My politicized friends were dismayed by my new interest. &nbsp;They all but universally confused Islam with the machinations of half a dozen middle eastern tyrants. &nbsp;The books they read, the new broadcasts they viewed depicted the faith as a set of political functions. &nbsp;Almost nothing was said of its spiritual practice. &nbsp;I liked to quote Mae West to them: &ldquo;Anytime you take religion for a joke, the laugh&rsquo;s on you.&rdquo;<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Historically, a Muslim sees Islam as the final, matured expression of an original religion reaching back to Adam. &nbsp;It is as resolutely monotheistic as Judaism, whose major Prophets Islam reveres as links in a progressive chain, culminating in Jesus and Muhammad, peace be upon them. &nbsp;Essentially a message of renewal, Islam has done its part on the world stage to return the forgotten taste of life&rsquo;s lost sweetness to millions of people. &nbsp;Its book, the Quran, caused Goethe to remark, &ldquo;You see, this teaching never fails; with all our systems, we cannot go, and generally speaking no man can go, further.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Traditional Islam is expressed through the practice of five pillars. &nbsp;Declaring one&rsquo;s faith, prayer, charity, and fasting are activities pursued repeatedly throughout one&rsquo;s life. &nbsp;Conditions permitting, each Muslim is additionally charged with undertaking a pilgrimage to Mecca once in a lifetime. &nbsp;The Arabic term for this fifth rite is Hajj. &nbsp;Scholars relate the word to the concept of &lsquo;qasd&rsquo;, &ldquo;aspiration,&rdquo; and to the notion of men and women as travelers on earth. &nbsp;In Western religions, pilgrimage is a vestigial tradition, a quaint, folkloric concept commonly reduced to metaphor. &nbsp;Among Muslims, on the other hand, the Hajj embodies a vital experience for millions of new pilgrims every year. &nbsp;In spite of the modern content of their lives, it remains an act of obedience, a profession of belief, and the visible expression of a spiritual community. &nbsp;For a majority of Muslims the Hajj is an ultimate goal, the trip of a lifetime.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">As a convert, I felt obliged to go to Makkah. &nbsp;As an addict to travel I could not imagine a more compelling goal.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">The annual, month-long fast of Ramadan precedes the Hajj by about one hundred days. &nbsp;These two rites form a period of intensified awareness in Muslim society. &nbsp;I wanted to put this period to use. &nbsp;I had read about Islam; I [attended] a Mosque near my home in California; I had started a practice. &nbsp;Now I hoped to deepen what I was learning by submerging myself in a religion where Islam infuses every aspect of existence.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"w-body-text-1\" style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">I planned to begin in Morocco, because I knew that country well and because it followed traditional Islam and was fairly stable. &nbsp;The last place I wanted to start was in a backwater full of uproarious sectarians. &nbsp;I wanted to paddle the mainstream, the broad, calm water.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">&nbsp;<\/p>\r\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">&nbsp;<\/p>","excerpt":"","terms":null,"visibility_roles":"","comment_status":1,"comment_count":0,"read_counter":20154,"lft":4763,"rght":4774,"promote":1,"sticky":0,"status":1,"publish_start":null,"publish_end":null,"created_at":"2014-10-16T17:21:00.000000Z","updated_at":"2026-05-07T03:02:04.000000Z","language_id":1,"user_id":7,"author_id":3157,"publisher_id":0,"category_id":10,"parent_id":null,"books":[],"fatawas":[],"videos":[],"audios":[],"author_name":"Michael Wolfe","category_name":"Why I became a Muslim!","category_slug":"Why-I-became-a-Muslim!","get_date":"2014-10-16","pdf_asset":"http:\/\/www.islamland.com\/uploads\/articles\/Michael Wolfe, Journalist, USA.pdf","word_asset":"http:\/\/www.islamland.com\/uploads\/articles\/Michael Wolfe, Journalist, USA.docx"},"translations":[],"article_books":[],"article_fatawas":[],"article_videos":[],"article_audios":[],"url":"http:\/\/www.islamland.com\/eng\/api\/articles\/michael-wolfe-journalist-usa"}