Murtasin (Murtazin, Mortaza) was born in Turkestan region to a wealthy family.
However, the conservative groups thought that the teaching methods were too radical and the Russians had a fear that the qualitatively high level of education could increase the position of the Muslims too much.
Murtasin continued his studies at the Teachers College in Kazan and graduated in four years.
[2] Murtasin wrote under a pseudonym of Haberçı in the paper Yaña Milli Yul, edited by Ayaz Ishaki, on the cultural events of the Turkic people in Tampere.
[2] In 1938, Murtasin traveled to Warsaw, where Ayaz Ishaki had organized a 20-year memorial celebration for Idel-Ural.
A few other Turkic people from Finland traveled there with Murtasin, such as artist Aisa Hakimcan, and businessman Ymär Sali.
At the celebration, Murtasin read a few chapters of the Quran for the blessing of Mufti's Alimcan Barudi and Riazaeddin Bin Fahreddin.
His students sang songs, recited poems, and performed theatre plays at different kinds of parties.
Murtasin operated as the director of these plays and related activities, for example, the making of invitation cards and leaflets.
[3] In the 1930s, Murtasin worked as a teacher in a Turkic mother tongue school in Tampere.