Hadayatullah Hübsch

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Hadayatullah Hübsch
Hübsch in 2009
Hübsch in 2009
BornPaul-Gerhard Hübsch
(1946-01-08)8 January 1946
Chemnitz
Died4 January 2011(2011-01-04) (aged 64)
Frankfurt
OccupationWriter, journalist, poet, activist, Imam, translator, artist
NationalityGerman
GenreBeat literature, poetry, non-fiction, essay, journalism, memoir, Islamic literature
ChildrenKhola Maryam Hübsch, 7 others
Website
hadayatullah.de

Hadayatullah Hübsch (January 8, 1946 in

Ahmadiyya Islam, long-time spokesman of the Ahmadi Community in Germany. He also served as an Imam of the Noor Mosque in Frankfurt. From 1991 to 1998 he was chairman of the Association of German Writers (VdS) in Hesse and in his last years he worked as a writer in Frankfurt.[2]

Life and work

Early life and activism

Born into a middle-class Christian family, Paul-Gerhard Hübsch attended the Paul-Gerhardt-school in

LSD. He was also the co-founder of the leftist organisation Club Voltaire in Frankfurt [4] and opened the first alternative bookstore in Germany, the "Heidi Loves You" shop in Frankfurt-Bockenheim.[5]

Conversion to Islam

Hübsch inclined towards Islam during a trip to

In the early 1970s, several volumes of his poetry were published, still under the name of Paul-Gerhard Hübsch by various publishers.[7] His work featured regularly for eight years in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung which also published his poems until 1979, although after he embraced Islam, he had received a notice of termination which stated that Hübsch was "an extraordinary phenomenon that bustled every bourgeois frame of the West".[6][8][9]

Literary activity and Journalism

Hübsch continued to publish in various national dailies such as Die Welt; taz; and the Süddeutsche Zeitung as well as various alternative literary magazines such as Ulcus Molle Info; Der Metzger; and Die Brücke – Forum für antirassistische Politik und Kultur. From 1991 to 1998, he was the chairman of the Association of German Writers in Hessen and worked for the Ethics Council of the country.[10] He also devoted himself to the visual arts, specifically collage as a leisure time activity which he exhibited.[11] Besides poetry, Hübsch also wrote prose work such as essays novels, several plays and satires, as well as non-fiction works related to topics ranging from rock music to Islam and the Ahmadiyya movement.[11][12] His works on Islam, included Der Weg Mohammeds (The Way of Muhammad); Prophezeiungen des Islam (Prophecies of Islam); and Fanatische Krieger im Namen Allahs (Fanatical Warriors in the Name of Allah). He also translated several books from English into German, including Jesus in India and the classical Islamic work Tazkirat al-Awliya by Attar of Nishapur.[13] As a journalist, he wrote reviews and made contributions on radio and in literary magazines. In the late 1970s and early 1980s he worked as a reporter and feature writer for the youth radio Hessischer Rundfunk (hr). Since 1990, Hübsch was the director of the Ahmadi Muslim publishing house Der Islam and as a spokesman for the Ahmadi community in Germany, had committed himself to interreligious dialogue, delivering lectures on Ahmadiyya teachings, throughout Germany.

Hübsch also worked as a guest author and interview partner for the newspapers

N24
, as well as other televised debates.

He published his memoirs in 1991 under the title Keine Zeit für Trips (No Time for Trips) and a summary of his life was published in 1998 under the title Alles war Geheimnis (Everything was Secret) in Claus Wolfschlag’s anthology Bye-bye '68. Towards the end of his life he was working on his book Der muslimische Witz (The Muslim Joke).[15]

Hübsch married twice and was the father of eight children. The journalist and writer Khola Maryam Hübsch is his daughter. He died on the morning of January 4, 2011.[16] The Hessian Minister for Justice and Integration, Jörg-Uwe Hahn acknowledged Hübsch’s literary work and his contribution to integration, describing him as “one of the most prominent German converts” a supporter of “liberal Islam” and “like hardly any other, a bridge between the worlds”.[17] On the first anniversary of his death, the first Poetry Memorial was held for Hadayatullah Hübsch, organized by the Association of German Writers of Hesse.

Publications

References

  1. ^ "Dossier: 1968 - A Critical Turning-Point". 1968–2008 worldwide. Goethe Institut. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  2. ^ "16.03.01 / Gotteslästerung". www.jf-archiv.de.
  3. ^ Dichter und Prediger: Der Schriftsteller Hadayatullah Hübsch ist in Frankfurt gestorben. In: FAZ, 5. Januar 2011.
  4. ^ Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 5. Januar 2011.
  5. ^ HR-Dokumentation (nicht mehr aufrufbar).
  6. ^
    taz
    , 7. Januar 2011.
  7. ^ Hadayatullah Hübsch: Die ersten Hundert. Ariel Verlag, 2002.
  8. ^ Hadayatullah Hübsch, Hessischer Rundfunk am 4. Januar 2012 (nicht mehr aufrufbar).
  9. ^ Hadayatullah Hübsch, Kulturportal Hessen (Portrait der Woche Nr. 150).
  10. ^ Pressemitteilung der VS vom 5. Januar 2011 Archived 2015-02-20 at the Wayback Machine (PDF; 98 kB)
  11. ^ a b Offizielle Liste aller Publikationen.
  12. ^ Verzeichnet in der DNG (https://portal.dnb.de/opac.htm?query=9783930148240&method=simpleSearch).
  13. ^ Muslimische Heilige und Mystiker; Farīd al-Dīn ʻAṭṭār; Hadayatullah Hübsch; Kreuzlingen : Heinrich Hugendubel, 2002. Diederichs Gelbe Reihe, 173
  14. ^ „Von der Liebe zur Wahrheit“, hadayatullah.de.
  15. ^ Der muslimische Witz wurde vom Patmos Verlag für Herbst 2013 angekündigt.
  16. ^ "kulturnetz-frankfurt.de". Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2017-01-22.
  17. ^ Anlässlich des Todes von Hadayatullah Hübsch bekundete Integrationsminister Jörg-Uwe Hahn der Familie und der Ahmadiyya Gemeinde sein Beileid Archived 2016-08-16 at the Wayback Machine.

External links