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Keeping the Spirit Alive
A thoughtful article by American convert and writer Yahiya Emerick on how some
Muslim parents inadvertently drive their children away from Islam and lose them
to western ways.
I just read a very interesting story. A teacher
gave her students the following assignment: Ask a parent what their dream life
was when they were a teenager, and then write an essay comparing it to your own
dreams for your future right now. Accordingly, a teenager asked her mom about
her aspirations when she was young, and the mother replied, (reflecting her
Sixties hippie roots,) "I wished for a simple life, living on a farm
commune, growing my own vegetables and being happy."
The daughter paused for a moment and stopped writing
down her mother’s words. "What’s wrong?" Her mother asked.
"It’s sort of embarrassing," the teenager
replied, "because all I want is to drive a Lexus and get a good job."
In the first place, this may seem to be a harmless
little story to elicit a chuckle. But it got me thinking. How many Muslim
"activists" have I met, who spent all their free time doing Dawah and
promoting Muslim causes, only to lose their own children and spouses to the kufr
lifestyle? It’s pretty amazing that that would ever be the case. But I’ve
seen it first hand and it isn’t pretty.
Of the activist who is never home, we have no doubt
about why he or she may lose their families. After all, THEY WERE NEVER
HOME. We all know at least one person like this. Is it because it’s
easier to be in the Masjid all day, surrounded by things that are easy to
control, at least easier than an unruly child? Or has the activist become so
filled with Islamic romaticism they live in a dreamland of khalifah, movements
and spiritual battles? Only Allah knows for sure.
But what about the other kind of activist? The one who
is so skilled and full of energy that they can tear through any Dawah task
outside the home and still have plenty of juice left over to "do Dawah"
in the home. I’ve met quite a few of this category also. I’ve even taught
the children of such "Super Da’ees" myself in the various Islamic
schools I found myself in. Here are some interesting observations, but first, an
introducing to the topic of giving Dawah in the home.
Your hear a lot from people, from conventions,
speeches, khutbas, etc…about the family being the number one priority for
Dawah. Few speakers, however, give any realistic ways of doing it. It seems to
me that the only method of "doing Dawah" that most people are familiar
with is the challenge them/give a lecture format. In this format, one person
assumes another is completely wrong. Then he or she proceeds to lecture them
endlessly to bring the other person into enlightenment. Almost every Muslim
activist I’ve ever met does this type of Dawah. Does it work? I’m usually
the only convert at most gatherings I attend (male, at least). You decide.
How does the super Da’ee relate Islam in his or her
home? I will describe for you examples I’ve seen with my own eyes. A father
and son come to my book table. The son is, by all standards, an Americanized
teen. The father is an immigrant, middle-aged, Masjid-going and reasonably
well-off financially. As the son is looking at the videos, the father endlessly
lectures the son about why he should pray. It looks like a well-rehearsed
script. The son’s face darkens in annoyance and he whispers, "You don’t
understand." But the father, who is too busy lecturing on the merits of the
prayer, didn’t hear him. I suspect he has probably never really heard his own
son- ever.
A mother with a loose, see-through head-scarf,
precariously, (and obviously temporarily) perched on her permed hair, wearing
the typical colorful get-up replete with nail polish and Gucci bag, is walking
near the entrance to a Masjid during social gathering. Her teenage daughter is
standing near her, wearing nail polish, make-up, tight, tight jeans, a short
sleeve shirt and no head-covering at all. (Talk about dressed to attract!)
A group of teenage "Muslim" boys walk by shouting and talking about
sports and girls. This girl flirts with them and is about to follow them when
the mother calls her daughter back and gives her a long lecture about why
"Muslim girls shouldn’t hang out with boys alone.
Here’s a favorite of mine: I know of a father who
literally terrorizes his family with endless talk of Islam. To the point where
pouring a cup of water in the home is to invite a lecture on the merits of water
in Islam. Obviously, his children can’t stand Islam because they equate it
with their father’s droning, boring and endlessly running voice.
Each of the three examples has one common denominator:
a parent who is forceful about giving some Islamic teaching, but who then goes
about it the wrong way. The first parent never listened to his son, and instead,
was totally unaware that his son was complete won over by modern, popular teen
culture. If he would have developed a good relationship wit his son, and been a
consistent role-model for him form his earliest memories, his son would have
been praying all along. Lecturing a fifteen year old about prayer isn’t likely
to make him want to start.
The second parent didn’t follow Islamic requirements
herself (and who knows what other Islamic deficiencies there were) and therefore
didn’t encourage any sense of an Islamic identity in her daughter, at least as
far as dress is concerned. Instead, she allowed her daughter to develop a
completely non-Muslim style of fashion that apes the modern
"liberated" woman who dresses only to be seen of men. Most probably
her daughter hangs out with boys in her public high school everyday as well. If
the mother allowed these un-Islamic habits to develop, then what good would all
the forceful lectures do? Her daughter imagines herself to be a scantily clad
beauty in a Madonna music video while her mother envisions her to be an Muslim
princess ready for her marriage after eight years of college.
And finally, one parent took Dawah to the extreme and
made his family tired of Islam by his constant nagging. This is against Islam
protocols of giving Dawah as even the prophet, himself, used to scold those who
made people tired of too much "religious talk." Check out this
topic and you’ll find many examples.
So what’s the best way to give Dawah to your family?
The wrong approaches, as highlighted before, include: not being open to your
family members as individual people with thoughts and feelings, being insincere
or a hypocrite and finally, going overboard.
The right way to do Dawah in you home is to start with
yourself first. You could literally spend your whole life working on your own
faith and actions without even talking to anyone else! You are the first
priority in Dawah. Are you sincere? Are you being true to yourself. Do you know
something is bad but then do it anyway?
What do you know about Islam? Is it possible that you may harbor feelings of
racism, hypocrisy or un-Islamic cultural traditions from your upbringing?
People know who is real. A popular American novel
entitled, ‘The Catcher in the Rye," has, as its main theme, a
disillusioned young boy in a world full of hypocrites. All he wants is to meet
someone who is "genuine" and not a "phony". Your own
children know if you’re real or not. And it’s sad to say, but it’s almost
always true: the manners and attitudes of the child are an uncamouflaged
reflection of what is in the deepest heart of the parents. Whatever is hidden in
the core of your heart will come out loud and clear in their demeanor and
attitudes. If your kids are not so good Islamically, be afraid of your own soul.
If you’re living as a true Muslim, not a perfect one,
but a trying one, then everyone sees it in your manners, speech and behavior.
You’re not yet saying a word to anyone, but you’re giving Dawah. The best
Dawah is not words- it’s actions, it’s attitude, it’s genuine. Knowledge
of Islam is not to be measured in how many du’as a person knows or surahs
memorized. Even parrots can be taught to say surahs but no one puts kufis or
hijabs on their feathered heads. Islamic knowledge is displayed in what no
spoken word can say. If you’re around a good-hearted person, you can feel it.
You want to be around that person more and to do what they do and to be like
them.
Have you ever wondered why everyone wanted to be so
close to the blessed Prophet? Iman, goodness and wisdom emanated from him. Think
of people in your life who had these qualities about them. One student told me
his grandfather was the sweetest Muslim ever. A girl told me her mother was her
Islamic role model. A bunch of kids in a class named the local Arabic expert as
their favorite teacher to be around. What were the qualities in all three of
these individuals? None f them ever lectured anybody. (I’ve met and known all
three.) One was a hafiz, one a homemaker/Islamic activist and the other a
scholar. But when you met them, they often said very little about Islam directly
and they certainly didn’t lecture or come off as arrogant.
What united all of them was that they were real sincere
believers. So it’s not how many "study-circles" you hold with your
family, it’s not how many surahs you make your children memorize. It’s not
even sending your children to a Sunday school or an Islamic school that is the
key. Rather, the key is you.
If you’re trying, sincere Musilm, you don’t talk
too much- about anything- and you perform good deeds as secretly as possible and
you try to be as peaceful and helpful to others as you can without asking
anything in return. (You also take your pleasure in simple things, not expensive
vacations and lavish living.) You prefer others over yourself and you don’t
display your wealth or worldly success by accumulating the finest cars, homes
and clothes. Anything else is folly and you’ll pay for it one day. A good
guidebook to Islamic humilty is called, "God-Oriented Life" by
Wahiduddin Khan. It contains the most beautiful hadith/Sahaba advice I’ve ever
seen.
Don’t be a Muslim "activist" if all your
activity is going to be outside the home. And don’t be an Islamic
"terror" to your family: coming in like a whirlwind, from
time-to-time, upsetting the normal schedule of everyone, even if you’re
enraged by what you see your family doing. Because if your family is doing
things that are not good Islamically, then where were you all those years when
those things were being built up in their minds and habits. A series of lectures
or thrashings on your part won’t change their attitudes.
Only when others see Islam make a meaningful change in your life will they be
willing to try the same. That is the real Dawah to the family, that is the only
message that they will listen to and the only way to make Islam survive in your
family tree. Think about it.
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