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Why Muslim Fathers Have to Man Up PDF Print E-mail
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Islam - Islam
Written by Yahya Whitmer   
Thursday, 26 January 2012 14:35

 

 

 

There is an old saying that goes “it takes a village to raise a child”. To me, that statement emphasizes the tremendous impact that a child’s environment and peers has on his or her development. In a hadith narrated by Imam Muslim, the Prophet (alayhis-salaam) mentioned that sheep shepherds are meek and humble, whereas the caretakers of camels are proud and arrogant, indicating that these human beings are influenced by the innate character of the animals that they take care of. In commenting on this hadeeth, the Ulama have long mentioned that if people are susceptible to being influenced by the character of animals, then how much more susceptible must they be to being influenced by other people and cultures? Now, please take time to think about this in relation to the situation with Muslim families today. Take a quick scan of mainstream culture; check out what is playing on TV or in the cinema, what are the popular stories on the internet, see what your average co-worker or potential classmate for your child is talking about. While there are positive nuggets to be found, the overwhelming majority of what is buzzing and rumbling in the cloud of mainstream culture is petty, selfish, and indulgent, and “Muslim” cultures are not exempt from this. This is our new, global village. Our children deserve better. And the only person that can provide them what they deserve is you, Allah willing.

“Each of you is a shepherd and each of you shall be asked about his flock”(Bukhari and Muslim) is what the Prophet (alayhis-salam) told us. Was there ever a time in history where this hadeeth has been more pertinent to a Muslim parent? Has there ever been a time where adultery, disrespect for parents, heedlessness of the Creator, rudeness, and intoxication, which are sins condemned by all the world’s major faiths, are not just accepted, but actually advertised to children? I dearly wish that I was exaggerating, that I was some turbaned version of Glenn Beck, but take one long, eye-searing look at the popular media that is targeted to youth, such as MTV and hip-hop, and you might get upset with me for understating the problem.  And as I often have to point out, the Muslim community is not mystically protected. Just because our children are named Aisha and Muhammad, or because someone’s great grandfather was a hafiz of the Quran, does not bestow a quasi-magical barrier of protection from society’s ills. Through research and personal accounts, I can guarantee you that our children fall prey to the same immorality that the children of all other communities suffer from. Permit me to lift the veil for just one moment: amongst Muslim youth, I know stories of zina, alcohol and drug use (including kids in Hifz school), apostasy, and even incest.  We are not immune! These children needed a protector. They needed a true Muslim Father.

Let me address the inevitable question: Why am I talking about Muslim Fathers and not Muslim Mothers? The simple answer is that the level of involvement of Muslim Mothers in the upbringing of our Ummah’s children is relatively high; look at Muslim parenting websites, masjid activities geared towards children, etc. and you will find that the majority of participants are mothers. Or even better, speak with the youth of your local community and ask them about their relationship with their parents. When it comes to their mothers, many may even complain that their mothers are too involved, “nosy”, or “smothering”. Ask them about their fathers and you will often get blank expressions, and vague, shy answers that they don’t spend much time together.

Our sisters were not meant to bear this tremendous responsibility alone. Children need the unique dynamics that a father and a mother bring to a family. Allah has created everything with an inherent nature and purpose, as indicated by the Prophet’s statement (alayhis-salam), “People are minerals like the minerals of gold and silver, the best of them before Islam are the best of them in Islam when they obtain knowledge and understanding.” (Bukhari and Muslim).  There is a specific role that men are supposed to play in the family, modern gender politics be damned. Failing to live up to that role is failure to be a man. Our Creator said, “men are the caretakers (Qawwamoon) of women” (An-Nisaa’, 34). I understand that this verse has often been used as a bludgeon to enforce female subservience to their husbands, but that is the result of a backwards and impotent culture, and has nothing to do with our Creator’s intent in revealing this verse. As always, our salvation comes from the Sunnah of the Messenger (alayhis-salam). In dealing with his wives and children, the Prophet (alayhis-salam) demonstrated kindness, consideration, compassion, and patience that would put any modern relationship guru to shame. And he sealed the issue by saying, “The best of you is the one who is best to his family, and I am the best amongst you to my family” (At-Tirmidhi, declared Saheeh by Al-Albaani) emphasizing that his implementation of Qawwamah is the only authentic one, and it is not open to a new American, Arab, Pakistani, or other interpretation. To reiterate: failure to be strong, kind, and caring to your family is failure to be a true man and Believer.

There has never been a time when families have been more in need of this strong, caring figure. We live in an age where we can take nothing for granted. Can you wholly entrust your child’s education to the public school system, especially in such an evolving and dynamic world? Thousands of  educators and experts have written about the inherent flaws of our school system and those flaws are present in any school that models itself after that system (i.e. Islamic schools). Is the food in our supermarkets safe? Again, the testimony of countless experts highlights significant dangers in the way our food is produced. What about your child’s physical development? Hours and hours of play every day were once typical for a child, but current cultural trends are more likely to steer your child towards hours in front of the TV or computer. And what about their spiritual life? Is it enough to send them to Quran class on Saturday and Sunday? Would memorizing and reciting lines from Grey’s Anatomy be enough to make them competent physicians? What about the immorality promoted by modern media channels that I discussed earlier? The list goes on and on, the challenges are relentless, and Muslim families will be overwhelmed, unless they can come together, cooperate, and help each other in the path to their Creator. This endeavor, like all great endeavors, needs a leader. That leader is supposed to be the Muslim Father. And Allah knows best.

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Source: muslimdads.blogspot.com

Comments (16)
  • Umm Ahmed  - Alhamdullilah!
    Assalaamu alaikum wa rahmatullahi wa barakaatuhu! Whomever wrote this I say to you that may Allah reward you aimeen. I am glad that someone feels compelled enough to speak out against this "trend" that has become apart of our communities.
  • Anonymous
    Jazakallahu khairan
  • RS  - Will the men listen?
    What you say in this article is true. Sometimes I wonder if men are so busy with their work, that they fail to notice that they have barely spent anytime even beginning to understand that children are under in terms of peer pressure, marketing pressure, school demands etc and them still trying to make time to just be able to play a bit. Do our men even know our children's friends or what the kids do in their free time? Quite a few lose track of how old their own kids are! This article is quite apt, especially for our Ummah as many in our Ummah stick to their cultural mindset that kids are the women's responsibility and not the Islamic concept that a man has a moral responsibility to be good (involved, caring) to his family. But how will you make the men listen? Possibly if the article is armed with additional facts from organizations that have correlated lack of parenting (where men equally participate) in upbringing with how children have resorted to crime or drugs or have been 'lost in life' (and I believe facts are out there), it might help men accept this message of the article. Someone should talk about this at Jummah prayers as well
  • yahya  - From the author
    Assalam alaikum, I thank everybody for their comments and support, especially the MuslimLink staff. In regards to one request about providing statistical data about the impact of fatherly involvement, I've already done so in an article entitled "Fathers, Who Needs 'Em?" on muslimfathers****. (I can't post urls because of the spam filter, but it should be easy to find via google). The article makes reference to a long term study done by UK and Swedish researchers and is very compelling. I would love to get more support for this movement/effort, but the response has been relatively minimal. Everybody says its a great idea and appreciates what little I have done, but real support has been weak. Let me know if you have any ideas and check out our facebook page. Thank you all! Wa jazakum Allahu khairan.
  • sondre tragethon  - Salam
    I agree!
  • Anonymous
    maasha allah.........such a beautiful piece of information . really inspiring hop all the fathers wud go thru this
  • Anonymous  - jazakallh
    I agree completely.
  • Justin  - Wonderful and pertinent article
    Assalaamu alaykum wa rahmatullahi wa barakatuh, Jazakum Allahu khayran. This is a most pertinent article for our ummah today. I agree with the post above that this must be discussed during the jummah khutbah.
  • Anonymous
    excellent article.
  • Sumaiya Umm Imran  - What an excellent article mashallah!
    Assalamu alaikum, Jazakallah khairan for such an excellent article. After a long time, I have read a briliant article by a brother mashallah. I hope more brothers will follow your example. Can't agree more with you! Keep up the good work bi'idnillah! I am always looking for brothers to write for our Muslim family magazine Aaila. I hope to hear from our brothers who strongly believe that parenting is indeed a job for both parents and we both will be accountable for our responsibilities. Thanks. ****aaila.org A better upbringing, A better life!
  • Sarah  - Let's continue this topic!
    AsalamuAlaikum, MashaAllah this piece brings to light a major issue in our ummah! In fact, I think it deserves more than a single article--perhaps the Muslim Link could begin a weekly column on "How to Be a Man," with a new practical piece of advice every week: an activity that a father could do with his child, an idea for a father to set a good example as a role model, a tip for a husband to ensure harmony with his wife, or a simple hadith to resolve to put into practice practice. I think we need constant reminders, and judging from the popularity of this article, I believe that people would read, and inshaAllah practice the guidance from such articles, every week!
  • yahya  - From the author
    Wa alaikum assalam, Thank you for your input. I compiled a list of activities to do with your children in an article entitle "Hanging Out With Your Kids" on muslimfathers****. A lot of the items on the list came from people in the DUS community.
  • Abdurrahim  - Responce
    As salaam Alaikum No doubt men must stand up to their responsibility, however your missing a very very important stumbling block the sisters in our community who use their children as a tool or pawn to be revengeful and spiteful, and seek legislation other than Allah legislation.Most Muslim men i know are excellent fathers and providers even after divorce. When we trust in Allah and follow the authentic sunna of Muhammad we don't have most of those issues.
  • abdullah abdul
    Mashaa Allah. Until and unless Muslim parents especially the father takes his children as his friends on whom he can confide in and share discuss both spiritual and contemporary issues, I'm afraid we all will be living under the same roof but different personalities. At most, we will nurturing social monsters of which Allah is going to ask us. May Allah guide one and all.
  • abdurrashid  - Indeed
    Years back in Kosovo after women and children were brutalized, murdered and buried in mass graves, CNN ran video of the men crying with hands outstretched begging for the UN to save them. Cowards. Maybe the only real men at that scene took a bullet and died with their families. Even a baby will bite back if you stick your finger too close. About this article I had not given much thought until today, after a Muslim brother told me how he can't find work he likes and so he collects financial aid for his children at Al-huda. He works 3 days out of 7. I asked "what do you do the other 4 days?" and he reasoned that government aid is ok. I suggested that we walk to the nearest gas station and take whatever job they have, or clean bathrooms...ANYTHING! No, he wouldn't do that. I would. I will shovel pig dung on the floor of a liquor store if that is what it takes to feed, shelter and educate my family. Some brothers beg while they could work. Some brothers expect schools to educate their children while they could at least help with homework. Allah keeps account of all that, and Rasulullah(saw) taught you better. In my shock and anger at this brother I realized that many Muslim sisters "man up" more. One sister, for example, upon whom we rely to manage the chaos of hundreds of Al-Huda students each day, also has her 6 children in school--that's not cheap, even with a staff discount! She drives to College Park from far away, and she tutors after school. That's a hard, costly sacrifice...yet she stays so positive about it that many Al-Huda kids (including my daughter) just love her. And unknown to many of you she is also a retired Army soldier, masha'Allah. Man up, indeed. Women are the backbone of the community. If some men dislike this, good. That indignation you feel means a tiny spark of manhood still burns somewhere inside you, and it's telling you that you're soft. It's asking you to let it earn for itself because that is what your family deserves, and your best is what you owe to Allah. May Allah forgive us, improve our condition and guide us right, Amin.
  • yahya  - From the author
    You have definitely touched upon a serious issue. For whatever reasons, many men of this generation, in their 20s-40s, seem to have lost their sense of self-respect and pride. They are afraid to fail, afraid to achieve, and are unwilling to do what it takes to provide for their families. They languish in dead end jobs. They stagnate intellectually, personally, and spiritually. I wish I had a handle on the tangible reasons for why this trend exists and could express confidence in a certain solution, but I don't. In sha Allah, I will try to investigate this issue and shed some light on the problem, to at least promote discussion.
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