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It’s Too late Yesterday
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A few weeks ago, a very dear local community leader announced that he is leaving the area and will be moving to
another state. Not only as he someone who our community needed and benefited from, he was a mentor to me, a teacher
and an incredible supporter. He was someone I looked up to and whose student I aspired to be.

Then this morning, right after I got to go to work, I did a quick Facebook check, only to find out that one of my
cousins who lived abroad passed away.

She had been fighting a deadly disease so courageously and God willed that it was her time to go. To God we belong
and unto Him we will return.

These two incidents touched my heart deeply and got me thinking about the concept of regret.
Over the past few weeks, many events have left me feeling down, sad and helpless. They left me with that intense
sence of remorse and regret.

My mind wouldn’t stop thinking about all the “should haves” and “should not haves”. I should have attended all of my
teacher’s classes; I should have asked him more question; I should have been a better student.

I also kept thinking that I should not have been so distant from not my cousin. I should have been around when she
was sick. I should be a better daughter, a better cousin, a better friend. The list is endless.

I should have done this, and I shouldn’t have done that.
How many of us have planned to do something for so long and never got it until it was too late? How many of us claim
that we want to spend more time with our parents, children or friends, and then they move or pass away.

How many say they want to do this or that until they are physically or financially unable to?
How many of us take everything we have for granted although NOTHING in life is guaranteed. We all do this ALL the
time.

Beloved sisters and brothers, I would like to remind us all to never take ANYTHING or ANYONE for granted. Not
your parents, not your family, not your job, not your health, not your community, and MOST impotantly, not your LIFE!
We only live once and nobody ever has lived twice (as far as I know!). Your life and the people in it are just too
valuable to not be invested in.

There’s a Chinese saying that goes something like: “The best time to plant a tree is twenty years ago.

The second best time is now.” Spend time with your family NOW, have a healthy lifestyle NOW (not tomorrow and
NOT this coming Monday), live the life you want NOW, do what you love NOW, volunteer for your community and those
who are in need NOW.

Do not wait beause tomorrow might never come. Reget will be the only thing left.

And yesterday is too late. Wa akhiru da’wana an-allhamdalillahi rabbil ‘alameen.(and the last of our prayers is praise be
to God, the Lord of all worlds.)

I came into class one morning excited to take my young students to the computer lab. “It’s computer lab day!” I
announced. Just as I had expected, the whole class was excited for change and ready to take the trip down the hall. Well
everyone except one student.

This little boy reminded me that it’s not the most exciting and fun things that should be our priorties in life, rether it is
those things that cause us get closer to god that are the most important.
He looked at me from behind his glasses with angry eyes, closed him arms, and firmly said, “No.” I was shocked, and
quite frankly, a little upset. I had been excited for them, and now he was looking me in the eye and telling me that he didn’t
care?
I took a deep breath, smiled and asked him to meet me at side of the room. I kneeled down so we could be at and
asked him, “What’s the problem? Don’t you want to go to the lab and hear the sheikh recite Quran so that you can be ready
for your test?
It’s always a lot of fun. “Again with full confidence he looked at me and said “No. I don’t want to go.No.”

I didn’t understand. I couldn’t comprehend why he would not want to go, and it wasn’t helping that hewasn’t explaining
his case. Some may heve just forced him and get it over with, but let me give you a little background on my classroom
atmosphere: I teach Quran, a Book full of love and mercy from the Lord above. I’ve seen classroom in which the Glorious
Book is taught but it fills children with fear and they do not enjoy what they are doing, at all.
years ago, I vowed that would never happen in my classroom Just like the Holy Book is filled with love and mercy, so
is my classroom. We have a welcoming and no-force atmosphere. And up until this day, it had been working quite well.
Again, I took a deep breath and leaned against the wall behind me, thinking of of how we could work this out. All of
his classmate were excited and ready to go. I couldn’t cancel lab day for him, but I couldn’t go against my ‘no force’
atmosphere either. I tried to ask him again, “I ‘m sorry that you don’t feel like going today, can you explain why?
So I understand? May be we can work this out. ” It was his turn to take a deep breath and explain his frustrations,
“Sister we go there every week and we listen to that man. He recites the Quran, and we listen.
Just like you said, for each letter he recites he is getting Jannah points time and time again-and what about us? Why
should I go and watch this man get points when I could be here in this classroom reciting it myself, and getting rewards for
ME!”
My heart almost exploded with joy, hearing how concerned he was for his ‘Jannah Points’ (or Paradise Points, our term
for hasanaat or good deeds). I explained to him the reality of the matter, that even by listening he was getting the points he
wanted so he needn’t worry.

My student learned something new that day, but it is nowhere near the lesson that he taught me, Something in life we get
so lazy that we love to take the easy way out. To make ourselves feel better we cut corners and miss out on amazing
‘Jannah Point’ opportunities.
This little boy reminded me that it’s not the most exciting and fun things that should be our priorities in life, rather it is
those things that cause us to get closer to God that are the most important.
And it’s okay to sacrifice an hour of fun, if in turn we are we working towards an eternity of bliss by the Mercy of God.

Muslim youth are under the hammer of two extremes; forced to live in virtually two different worlds. In homes; which are culturally Muslim, and in an environment outside the home, which tends to be challenging in many ways as well as Islamophobic in some circumstances. Youth fail to understand where they belong. Whatever they hear in many Mosques may seem meaningless to them in their daily lives, while in the real world they are exposed to the pressures of multiculturalism, assimilation and peer-pressures. The result is that they suffer from Identity Crises. Identity, we must remember, is vitally important for self-esteem and self-esteem is so crucial for mental, emotional and personality development.

The home and madrasah/school atmosphere has a significant impact on the youth’s attitude towards Islam. We focus here on 7 facets that need our attention:

1. Too often when parents/teachers think about talking to their children about Islam, they concentrate on the ritual of the five pillars. They expect teachers at school/madarasah to teach their children how to make salaah and memorize some short Qur’anic surahs. These are important, but don’t forget that Islam is a total way of life; not mere memorization and ritual. Many children know how to pray; very few feel the need to pray, fewer still understand its importance. Quite a large number of children know how to read the Qur’an. Only a few read the Qur’an in order to understand it and fewer still in order to find solutions.

2. Many parents grew up in areas where colonizing rulers maintained schools for acquiescence. That is, pupils were taught to merely repeat exactly what the teacher told them. If the test question asked for 3 reasons why you pray, the answer had to be the exact three reasons that the teacher had told them in class. In the process, personal understanding is undermined.

3. Throughout much of the Muslim world, Islamic education itself has been, so to speak, self-imitative for centuries. A teacher is expected to teach what he was taught, using the same methods by which he was taught. Hence it is extremely difficult to get most Islamic Studies and Arabic teachers to look at any textbook other than the textbook from which they learned, or to consider any change in the method which might speed up the pupils’ learning and enhance their understanding.

4. The pupil is not supposed to think; he is supposed to accept everything without questioning. If students do question, they questions are mistaken as a rebellion.

5. The prevalence of the Fear and Guilt approach is still prevalent. Instead of seeing the world as an opportunity, it is seen as a trap; instead of enjoying the gifts of life, everything is seen through the prism of ‘haraam’; instead of basking in the mercy of Allah, we are gripped in fear of God… This approach is most counter productive and often achieves the very result we are trying to avoid. Stressing the negative makes the child want to avoid anything to do with the religion. Children grow up thinking that it is religion that keeps one from enjoying life. The notion of wanting and having the best of this world and the best in the Hereafter is undercut.

6. Our children’s first experience of Islam is based almost entirely on the memorization of many sounds and words of unknown meaning, of actions of unknown significance and of facts of no obvious relevance to the question of what is Islam and what does it mean to be a Muslim. This is after all the way most born Muslims are taught Islam, and they tend to feel it is the only way in which it can be passed on to the next generation. The children are therefore naturally under the impression that Islam is something you memorize and hopefully are able to repeat when asked.

7. Learning “Islamic Studies” has often normally helped the growing child to understand much. It has not given him any insight and he was not encouraged to ask questions. By the time he reaches teen age he is quite likely to drop the subject and because of a lack of affinity to the subject, he tends to grow up as a virtual “religious illiterate.” Little wonder why so many Muslims have such little understanding of Islam despite having spent much time attending classes on Islam.

Parents have the basic responsibility of providing the young ones a loving family circle, a nurturing and protective home, a good name, good education, health care and preparation for independent life (marriage, work, responsibility . The duty now is to ensure that the content and method of teaching be practical and relevant.

 

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