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Muslim World News Updates |
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18 March 2009 What do you give to your son on his
wedding night as a gift? A Mitsubishi Lancer, a Honda
Accord, or do you give him the ever useful toaster?
When Ibn Al-Qayyim’s son was getting married, he found
himself in this gift dilemma. He thought and thought
and decided upon a gift that would not only benefit
his son, but all the Muslims. He lit a candle, dipped
his pen in the ink, and began writing. The gift, you
ask? A book dedicated to his son and daughter-in-law
about marriage and the rights of children. He named
the book, Tuhfatul Wadood, bi Ahkaam al-Mowlood. The
value of the gift? Priceless.
Many times we hear about the respect due to parents –
because it is often the parents who are speaking. Yet,
how often do we hear about the rights of children?
Indeed, they have many rights that go farther back
than 9 months before their creation. For example, they
have the God given right that their future mother or
father choose a spouse that will teach them about
Allah and be an excellent example for them In his
book, in Chapter 25, Ibn Al-Qayyim discusses the
obligation of teaching the children, disciplining
them, and being just between them. Additionally, one
of the rights of children is the right to an Islamic
education.
Allah ta’aala commands us:
O you who believe, protect yourselves and your
families from a fire whose fuel is people and stones
…(At-Tahreem 66/6)
We are commanded by Allah ta’aala to save ourselves
from Hellfire. But it does not end there. The
commandment extends to our family; we must save them
also. Using all our resources we must save them from
Hellfire, and the biggest weapon we have to protect
them is knowledge of what Allah and His Messenger
require from them. For verily, a human is enemy to
that which he does not understand.
In another verse, we see the example of Luqman with
his son:
But if they endeavor to make you worship others with
Me – that of which you have no knowledge, then do not
obey, yet accompany them in (this) world with
appropriate kindness (Luqmaan 31/15).
Notice how Allah ta’aala mentions the shirk that the
child is being called to as something which he has no
knowledge of. Meaning, no knowledge of its divinity,
for there can be no knowledge about something which is
non-existent and untrue.
And yet in another situation, Allah ta’aala describes
the exchange between Nuh and his son:
…And Nuh called to his son who was apart (from them),
"O my son, come aboard with us and be not with the
disbelievers." / (But) He said, "I shall take refuge
on a mountain to protect me from the water." (Nuh)
said, "There is no protector today from the decree of
Allah except for whom He gives mercy." And the waves
came between them, and he was among the drowned (Hud
11/42-43).
It has been said that about 90% of everything a child
learns, he learns it within the first 5 years of his
or her life. If that is not enough cause for concern,
the children at that fragile age are ever so keen to
please the adults in their lives, especially the ones
they see day after day. Subhan Allah, it is a survival
skill that Allah ta’aala created in humans. For had
they not had this desire to please the 'teacher', they
most likely would not develop intellectually.
If you went to public school, imagine back to your
public school kindergarten class or grade 1 class and
how you used to act with the teacher. Did you try to
please him or her every chance you got? Would you do
things just to win her pleasure? I know for me, when
our school play for the Christmas Concert was coming
up, the teacher chose me to play one of the lead roles
because of how good an actor I was. Mind you, I
disliked the part and when a boy offered me a handful
of corn puffs to switch parts with me, I readily
accepted. I took him to Mrs. Mitchell and proudly
announced that Jason would be taking my part. She was
disappointed and said how much she wanted me to do the
part. I could not bear to see her disappointment, so I
continued with the part. At the time, I was in
kindergarten.
The horror story begins when the child is entrusted to
a non-Muslim – to someone who knows nothing about our
obligation to Allah and His Messenger sal Allaahu
alayhi wa sallam, someone who our Muslim children are
so eager to please.
There once was a little girl in a public school in a
Muslim country whose teacher was not practicing Islam.
The little girl, following the blessed example of her
mother, would go to school with her hijab on. The
hijab, however, was something displeasing to her
teacher, so she told the girl to take it off and not
dare come back to school with it on the next day or
she would suffer the consequences.
Home this girl went and told her mother of how the
teacher did not want her to wear hijab in school and
how she did not want to upset her teacher. Her mother
calmly said, "Who do you want to please then, your
teacher or Allah?" The little girl looked her mother
in the eye and said, "Allah!"
The next day, the little girl returned with her hijab
on, defiant. When the teacher saw her, she exploded in
chastisement, "How dare you disobey me?"
The painful words kept coming and coming until the
little girl lowered her head, sobbing. Then she
shouted back, "I don’t understand who I am supposed to
please – you or Him?" "Who’s Him?" asked the teacher.
"Allah!"
Her eyes widened and a chill ran through her. The
teacher stopped talking. From behind her tears, the
little girl said, "No, I shall please Allah and Allah
alone." That day the teacher sent a letter home to the
little girl’s mother with the words, "Today your child
taught me who I was and truly who is Allah. Thank you
for raising such a blessed daughter."
Television sets and public schools are spreading a
subtle devastating poison through the bloodstream of
our youth. Take a random class of Muslim high school
students from public school and reflect on their
habits and their knowledge of Islam. If a parent has
chosen public school for his son, in the final year
when he looks over the school yearbook and sees a
picture of his son standing hand in hand dancing with
a kafir woman, at that time it will be too late to
question his upbringing. Now is the time to question
it, now, before it’s too late.
Al-Hasan ibn Ali radi Allahu anhu used to say,
"Educate yourselves today, for today you are the youth
of the community but tomorrow you shall be the
seniors." Alhamdulillah, there are many exceptionally
smart adults out there. When you are in their company,
you cannot help marvelling at their intellect.
However, a question comes to mind: "What could this
person have done for Islam and the Muslim community if
his parents had educated him about the deen?"
There is a child, in grade 3, who has memorized almost
7 juz of the Qur’an . He is 8 years old. This child,
more than likely, knows more Qur’an than most adults.
There are other children just as smart as him thrown
to public school, their intelligence squandered on the
Incas and the pyramids, while they cannot recite the
very letters of their mother tongue.
Yahya ibn Humayd said, "We went to Imam Hammad ibn
Salamah once and found him sitting with children
narrating hadith to them. When he completed and the
children left, we approached him and said, 'O Abu
Salamah, we are the seniors of your tribe. We have
come to you to learn. Why do you leave us and turn
instead to these children?'" "He replied, 'I once saw
in a dream that I was sitting on the banks of a river,
bending over with a bucket to get water to drink.
After drinking, I turned around and saw these children
standing there, and so I gave them the bucket of water
after me'" (Ibn Abee Ad-Dunya, Kitaab al-Ayaal).
A poet once said:
Young trees, if you raise them firm, they will grow
straight,
They will not slouch if kept firm with a stick.
Perhaps discipline for young ones brings benefit
But that same discipline will no longer bring results
in a senior.
PART II
Sa’eed ibn Rahmah Al-Asbahee used to tell his
students:
"I used to camp out in the masjid in the hopes of
getting the best seat in the halaqah of Abdullaah ibn
Al-Mubaarak. I had friends my age, but none of them
would do as I did. When the time for the halaqah would
arrive, Ibn Al-Mubaarak would come and with him would
be the seniors. They would complain to him, 'These
children have overcome us at the halaqah, there is no
place near you for us.'
"Ibn al-Mubaarak would reply, 'These children are
dearer to me than you. You – how long shall you live?
These children, however, perhaps Allah shall carry
them far.'"
Sa’eed would then say to his students, "Today there is
no one alive from that halaqah of Ibn al-Mubaarak
except me."
When children work on a science experiment, an
instrument that they might use is a thermometer. This
is a device that reflects the heat coming from an
object or area. At home we all have this thing called
a thermostat. When we are too hot, it cools us down.
And if we get cold it warms us up. Not only does it
reflect the heat, it does something about it. When we
look at the Muslim ummah, we will see that many of our
communities are nothing more than thermometers. When
there is heat coming from Bosnia, it registers a
reaction in our salah, our du’aas, and our checkbooks.
And when there is heat in Chechnya, it registers a
reaction in our salah, our du’aas, and our checkbooks.
This is the action of a thermometer. What we must
become is thermostats; cooling things down when they
get too hot and warming things up when they get too
cool.
Today everyone is looking to our brothers and sisters
in Palestine and pulling their hair because they
cannot seemingly do anything. We must not let the
things we cannot do stop us from doing what we can do.
By Allah, the long-term goal is the children. If we do
not stand up to the challenge of educating them in
Islam and raising them as best we can, we – with our
own hands – are paralyzing the future of Islam in this
country.
All of you are shepherds and all of you shall be
questioned regarding your flock.
Never think that the work you do for the betterment of
our children’s Islamic education goes in vain. There
is an English word called sacrifice. Some Muslims when
translating the idea of sadaqah may incorrectly use
this concept of sacrifice. A more correct word is 'to
deposit'. We are not spending these dimes hoping for
nothing in return. Nay, we are investing it for an
enormous return; we are depositing it in the
Hereafter.
"What’s in it for me?" we always ask. Of the many
blessings…
Firstly: Allah ta’aala will protect your children
because of your piety.
The example given to us in the Qur’an is that of Khidr.
When he built the wall without any compensation, he
told Musa why:
And as for the wall, it belonged to two orphan boys in
the city, and there was beneath it a treasure for
them, and their father had been righteous. So your
Lord intended that they reach maturity and extract
their treasure, as a mercy from your Lord… (Al-Kahf
18/82)
Secondly: By educating and protecting the Muslim
children, you would be fulfilling the amaanah (trust)
that Allah has placed upon you. And in the fulfillment
of ones trust lies success and a 401k plan in
Paradise.
Allah ta’aala says:
Certainly successful are the believers …they who to
their trusts and their promises are attentive / And
they who carefully maintain their payers – those are
the inheritors / Who will inherit al-Firdaus wherein
they will abide eternally.
In conclusion, I would like to pose the question, who
is responsible for these Islamic schools? We are all
responsible – every one of us. This school and
everything in it is our ra'eyyah and we shall be
questioned for it.
As I was speaking to a good brother recently, he asked
me about the situation of our Islamic school. We spoke
about the upcoming fundraiser, and then he said to me,
"A’aanak Allah (May Allah help you)."
I said, "No. You said it wrong. It’s a'aanan Allah
(may Allah help us), because brother, you’re just as
responsible for these Islamic schools as I am." --
Muhammad Alshareef |