Assalaam alaikum warahmatullah
wabarakatuhu,
Parents, teachers, students, administrators I welcome you on this happy occasion
and congratulate all those who have and will graduate today.
As a student of this mosque for almost my whole life and a teacher now for the
last 4 years it is so wonderful to see how much this community tries to do for
these students.
Today, I wanted to speak to everyone about the state of these students and our
young generation. This is especially addressed to parents.
The subject of my speech is about the need to bring up your child Islamically,
to prioritize this and do everything in your power as a parent and community
member to inculcate true Islamic understanding and faith in our young people. I
would like to give some examples of what is happenning today that highlights the
extreme immediacy of this need and how important it is for all of us to begin
making changes. Lastly, I would like to give some practical suggestions on how
to do this.
At one time I thought that every parent would have the goal of raising his or
her child Islamically, but now, through experience, I really have to wonder. I
don't think some parents WANT to raise their child Islamically. They believe
that if their child has basic knowledge and practice, that's enough. That Islam
should be in the background while other things, such as being a doctor, going to
an Ivy League school, enjoying the good life with a big house, car, good job is
more important for their child in the future. They kill themselves so that their
kids can have everything in this life.
There is something extremely wrong with this. I'll tell you why. How
narrow-minded is it if a parent prepares their child for this life and does
nothing for their child's Hereafter. If a parent really, really loves their
child and wants the best for them, their goal first and foremost will be to
raise the best Muslim they can. This is the best you can ever do for your child,
in this life AND in the Hereafter, which is eternal. If your child is a good
Muslim, they will want to do well in everything they do. They will want to
attain knowledge, security, help those around them and become good people. They
will avoid so many harms and difficulties in this society.
Islam will NEVER, NEVER hinder your child from anything good. It will only
enhance whatever they do.
Let me give some examples of what happens when Islam is NOT the first priority
in families. In college, where I attend graduate school right now, you find the
most amazing things. I have met Muslims raised their whole lives in Muslim
families who don't pray, who date, who attend MSA meetings but go out to parties
and clubs and drink, who take drugs.
I had a brother come to me and say how he thought he was homosexual. I visited a
sister just a few weeks ago, who had tried to commit suicide.
EVERY single thing you can think of that is the opposite, antithisis of Islam,
our young people are doing them. It is to the point where you can't tell the
difference between them and a non-Muslim.
Why is this happenning? These are not extreme cases. These are ordinary Muslims
who were raised without Islam as their priority. They were taught, consciously
or unconsciously, that Islam was cultural and secondary. They were taught Islam
blindly and do not understand it and are lost.
We should be concerned, if not alarmed. Do not shrug this off and say, "It won't
happen to me, It won't happen to my kids." Do not live in a fool's paradise and
say "Oh ma'shallah my son or daughter is an honors student, they would never do
anything bad." It can and it will and is happening now.
We are too late to save Muslim college students. I say this even being an MSA
worker for the last 5 years. I even would say it is too late for high school
students. How many of them will ever come back to Islam? Very few. It's too late
for them.
But it's not too late for your kids, the young generation we have today.
We need to raise them with Islam and with being good Muslims as the priority,
the #1 goal as a parent and community.
So, how can we do this? I would like to give just 10 simple, positive, proactive
things we should all be doing.
#1 Be consistent. Bring your child consistently to attend mosque activities.
That doesn't mean every so often, for jumah, or every Sunday. I mean EVERY
Friday, Sunday class. It is extremely frustrating for us as teachers to have
students who come only Fridays or students who only come Sundays, or maybe every
other week. It is unfair to the whole class and unfair to your child. It sends a
message to your child of how important you think Islam really is.
I really do see the difference (even between test scores) of students who come
eratically or just one day a week with students who come consistently. This also
cannot drop off when they are 12 or 15, it needs to continue.
#2 Get involved as a parent or community member. Take an interest in what goes
on at mosque, in their class, help with homework, help them memorize, discuss
Islamic issues with them, ask questions, answer their questions. Do not expect
us, the teachers to do everything. YOU, as parents, have the responsibility to
give your child an Islamic education. How much can we teach 2 hours a week? We
can only help. How many parents have volunteered at the Islamic school? Have
said, "How can I help my child's Islamic education at the mosque?" How many
single people have volunteered to teach or help out at the mosque? Help build
the so badly needed school building, the playground?
#3 Create Islamic alternatives. Your kids should never think Islam is boring or
dogmatic. It is a complete way of life, which is good and fun. Parents should
help organize camps, festivals, sleepovers, fun days, sports, and Islamic movie
days for them.
#4 Buy Islamic books. How many of us have Islamic kid's books, tapes, games or
videos at home? If you don't, buy some. IQRA, Soundvision, Astrolabe all produce
excellent quality fun educational materials for Muslim kids. Why buy your kids
Home Alone when you can buy Salam's Journey or Adam's World? Why buy a Barbie
coloring book when you can buy an Islamic coloring book. We should take
advantage of this to create more of an Islamic culture for our kids.
#5 Send your kids to Islamic camps, conferences and conventions. How many of you
take vacations to Disney World or somewhere? How many of you send your kids to
those 4-H or basketball camps? Why not go to ISNA together as a family or send
your kids to MYNA where they can meet other Muslim kids from all over? Have a
problem sending them somewhere alone? Go with them. I guarantee anything in
public schools is 1000% worse.
Which brings me to #6 Be aware. I don't know if some parents are deliberately
oblivious or just don't care. What is your child's public school environment
like? Do you know? Do you know what they watch on TV, sitcoms, MTV, that just
about everything there is 90% sexual and inappropriate in content? Do you know
who their friends are?
This is not to say go overboard. The best type of parent is flexible and not
rigid over things that are not worth fighting over. Give alternatives. You can't
forbid them from having any friends but must facilitate them having Muslim
friends. Establish limits. Start with limiting TV to 3 hours a day maximum and
watch WITH them.
#7 Eliminate the cultural baggage. Cultural baggage are all those things that
parents have been raised with which are not part of Islam but are part of their
culture. Separate what is your culture from what is Islam. Cultural aspects only
seem confusing, hypocritical and unreasonable to young people. Get rid of them
now or else your children will equate them with Islam.
#8 Use the resources of this community. There are many experienced parents,
teachers, and Imams in this community that can help you if you are having
problems with your child. They can help you if you are not sure how to
incorporate Islamic education for your kids or don't understand its importance.
You know how your child says "But everyone else's parents are letting them do
it". Now you can ask other parents if they are. :) Work with them to help solve
any problems now. Do not wait untill it gets out of control, when the child is
15 and refuses to listen to anyone.
#9 Teach understanding, not blind ritual. We can't keep teaching our children
things without explaining why they should do them or what they mean. How many of
your kids say Surah Fatiha in prayer and have no idea what it means. Has no idea
what they are saying in prayer at all? This is so wrong. Saying you have to pray
and here is how to is not enough. Islam turns into blind ritual for them and
they won't be able to transfer Islamic principles or practice to their daily
lives.
Lastly and maybe most importantly, #10 be a good Muslim. You must be a good,
practicing, active Muslim for your child to be one. If you have little knowledge
about Islam your child will have less. If Islam isn't a priority for you, it
will not be for your child. If you are not continuously learning about Islam,
your child will not be either.
Inshallah I pray I have conveyed the present need for making Islam a priority
for young Muslims. I hope parents heed the true-life examples of the prevalent
situation, which can only get worse.
Inshallah, let's make the intention now to try to do some of these simple things
to help our kids understand and practice Islam. Let's not leave this need
unfulfilled for another generation.
Ashadu anna la ilaaha antastaghfiruka wa itubu ilaik. Please forgive me for any
mistakes I have made. Anything good I have said is from Allah, the mistakes are
mine.
Jazakamullahu khairan, walaikum salaam wrt
|