all aspects: faith, in tellect, moral, physical, psyehological, and
social aspects. If th is is observed then education may be fruitful in
forming a sound, integrated, balanced Muslim individual, who
gives everything its due in this li fe.
Obsc:ning the aspect of b(> licf in children
- The educator should I3ke of the principles, ideas, and beliefs that
the child is taught and who undertakes the orientation of the
child and his or her education at school or elsewhere. If he finds
these to be suitable, he should praise Alliih. If he fi nds them
defective, he should shoulder his great responsibility in implanting
the principles of monotheism and consolidating the bases of
belief, so that the child may be saved from sinful atheistic
teachings and dangerous secular orientation.
- He should take note of the books, magazines, and publications
which the child reads. If he finds that they include ideas of
misguidance, principles of atheism, and of missionaries, he must
confiscate these books, then show for the child how such books
and ~imilar ones corrupt the pure belief of Muslims.
_ The educator must also observe the companions and peers the
child befriends. Ir he fi nds the child'~ company one of atheism
and misguidance, he must severe their relation with them, and
secure virtuous and pious companions who Will refonn him and
make him strong in belief and inner peace.
- The educator should also observe Ihe groups and organilations
Ihe child is affi liated with. If he finds Ihat these groups are
alheistic in principles and orientat ion, he should be strict in
preventing him, should persevere in observing him, and sei7,C one
chance after another 10 convince and orient him until he sees thaI
it is wrong to be inclined towards other than what is right. He
should ensure that the child has returned 10 guidance, and is
continuing on the straight path.
Observing the moral aspect of the child
- The educator should observe how truthful the child is. If hc finds
that he lies, plays and appears in the commumty as a hypocrite
and a liar, he must lake care of the child the fi rst time he tells a
lie, and show him in great detail the consequences of lying and
liars, and hypocrisy and the hypocnles, so thaI he may never tell
lies again .
. The educator should also observe how honest his child is. If he
finds that the child is stealing even trivial things such as coins
from his siblings or a pen from his friend , he has to deal with this
very quickly and make him understand that this is prohibited
because it is usurping money unjustly. Hc also .has to sow the
seeds of observing A1Hih and fearing Him so that he may return,
be reformed, and make his manners straigh t. If this is not done,
the child will become dishonest, get accustomed to deceit and
theft, and even become wretched, betraying, and a criminal of
whose bad deeds prople and the community will complain.
- The educator should also pay attention to hi~ child's speech. lfhe
finds that he swears at people, calls them bad names, and utlers
impolite words. he has to deal with this wisely and give it due
attention and care. He should try to discover the reasons why his
son speaks rudely so that he may severe him from the causes,
then he should show him in an attract ive way the attributes of a
well-mannered child, and the merits of a polite person, so that he
may be attracted to the grace of the soul and to noble morals.
- The educator should also observe the psychological will-power of
the child. If he li nds that the child imitates others slavishly and
exaggerates in easy luxury, listens to music and un-Islamic
singing, has an effiminate appearance, behaves suspiciously,
mingles with women, watches improper tele vision movies. goes to
the cinema, reads indecent magazines, buys 5exy pictures and
love novels, he has to deal with this immorality by means of kind
admonition sometimes and threatening at other times, and by
ofTering incentives or innictmg punishment.
Obsen"ing the intellectual and acade mic aspect of the child
- The educator has to observe the child's academic achi evement
and his cultural formation, whether this education is an
individual duty or a common one. He should observe if the
child has learnt that which is an individual duty, such as reciting
the Qur'an, the rulings of worship, the l;.wful and unlawful, the
ballies of the Prophet tj., because he is responsible to learn these
things and will be accountable to Allah if he fell short of them.
However, if the child is learnin g that which is a sufficient duty
such as medicinc, or engineering fo r example, the educator
should ob5eTve hIS perseverance, excellence, and progress so that
when he gmduates he would benefit his nation th rough h,s
specialization and establish the bases of civilization in the
Muslim community th rough his scholarship and talent.
_ The educator must also ohserve the intellectual enlightenment of
the child regarding his association with [slam both as a religion
and as a State, with the Noble Qur'ii.n as the creed and
legi,lation , with the Messenger 3. as the !cilder and example to
be foHowed, with [slamie history as the source of pride. with
Islamic culture ,I, the spirit and thought, and with calling \0 the
Way of AI1ii.h enthusiilstically. This cannot be achieved except by
keeping the child's company, orienting and arousing his interest
in reading intellectual books, religious magazines, Islamic
brochures. listening to useful Islamic lectures and effective
orations. The educator's heart is broken when he finds that the
child is memorizing the biographies of Western philosophers at
school, knows much about great Eastern figures and their
opinions and theories. but knows only very little about the
hIstory of Muslims, the life of greal pious people men,
conquerors, and disting uished Muslim scholars.
- The educator should also observe the mental health of the child,
paying attention to the corruption of drinking intoxicants and
us ing narcotics because they ravish the body and cause hysteria
and madness. He also has to watch fo r thc secret habit of
masturbation because it is a sin.
OlJ,;crving the phy~ica l sta tus of the child
- The educator has to make sure that he provides for his children
adequately, including good food, shelter, and clothing, so that
their hodies are not prone to illness and disease.
- The educator should also take note of the hygenic rules which
Islam ordained regarding eating, drinking, and sleeping. The
educator should make sure that the chi ld does not overeat, eat
more than what is normal or more thun what he really needs. He
should muke sure that the child drinks in two or three gulps,
prevent him from breathing into the drinking vessel, or drinking
while standing up. He should also make sure that the child sleeps
on his right side, and docs not go to bed immediately after eating.
- The ducator, especi311y the mother, should take procautions if her
child contracts an in fectious disease, through sec luding the sick
child from the rest of the children so that the disease may not
spread.
- The educator has to watch for the preventive means of preserving
his child's health through directing him not to eat unripe frUlt or
unwashed vegetables. He should also wash his hands before
eating, and not blow into the food vessel, and observe other
hygenic instructions ordained by Islam,
. The educator should watch for all the factors tbat attack the
body, ham health, and cause diseases, such as intoxicants,
narcotics, smoking, masturbation, adultery, and homosexuality,
which have many negative affects on the physical and emotional
hcalth of the individual.
Obscn-iug the psychologiclIllIspect of the child
- Paren ts should watch for shyness. If he finds that the child suffers
from seclusion and shunning away from people and the
community, he has to encourage him to overcome his syhness
and to mingle with others, and to promote in him intellectual and
social understanding, enlightenment, and maturity,
- He should also observe the phenomenon of fear. H he finds that
he suffers from cowardice, fear, and low self-esteem before
incidents and tries to escape hardships, he should cultivate in him
self-confidence, steadfastness, forwardness, and bravery so that
he may be able to face life with all its problems with a satisfied
spirit and a smiling face, The mother, particularly, should not
terrify her child by talking about ghosts, dark, strange creatures,
jinn, to prevent the child from becoming fearful, so that fear will
not control him .
. Parents should also watch out for an inferiority complex in the
child. If he finds that h,s child suffers a litt[e from this reding, he
has to deal with it with wisdom and hnd admonition, and
eliminate the causes that led to it.
- He should also deal with the phenomenon of anger. If he finds
that the child gets angry for the slightest reason, he has to deal
with this by emdicating the causes. [f it is caused by sickness, the
parent should hasten to treat him medically. If it is caused by
hunger, he has to feed him at the proper timc_ If the cause is
unjust reprimanding, he has to punfy his tongue from the words
of insult and blame.
- If anger is caused by his being spoiled, he has to treat him
norma!!y, and get him accustomed to be satisfied with simple
things in life_
Obsen 'ing the social as[lC'Ct of the child
- Parents should make sure that the child is doing his duly towards
others. If he finds that the ehild is not doing his duly towards
himself or his mother, his sibhngs and relatives, his neighbors, his
teacher, or older people, he has to show him the negative
consequences of this, and the result of this treatment so that he
may understand, hcar, and stop not giving everyone his due, and
stop his carelessness aOout social docorum.
- The educator should also pay attention to the rules of docorum
concerning mixing with others. If he finds that the child fai ls to
observe table manners, or the manners of jesting, speaki ng,
sneezing, condoling, or any other social manners, he has to cxert
his best effort to acquaint the child with the manners of Islam,
and to make him accustomed to the best habits and manners.
- Parents should also be sure that his child has noble feelings
towards others. If he finds that the child is selfish. he should
guide him to preferring others to himself; and if he finds that he is
inclined to hatred. he should implant in him the seeds of love and
friendliness. If he finds him failing to abide by the lawful and not
avoiding the unlawful, he should command him to piety and
remind him of AlI iih's torture and the Hereafter, so that the creed
of observing Alhih and fearing Him would become deeply rooted
ill his soul. Should the p;lrent find that the child is affiicted with a
hateful situation or a disease, he should teach him to accept fate .
Thus an educator can implant in the soul of the child these
psychological bases of belief, piety, and being conscious of Alliih
fi , and implant in his pure heart the feclin g.~ of preferring others
to himself, sympathy, and punty so that when he grows up and
attains the age of ordinance, he gives Allah and people in general
their due.
Obsl.'ning the chi ld 's spiritual aspects
- Parents should observe in his child the quality of being aware of
Allah Sl!: through making him feel that AIEih hears him, sees
him, and knows his secrets. what he looks at, what his bosom
hides, and that nothing is hidden from Allah the heavens and the
earth. This cannot be achiev~-d except by guiding him to belief in
Allah, His miraculous Omniscience. His magnir~ent creation,
and submission to Him in all things. Thus he would feel the
Greatness of Allah 1l'II this observance while he is work ing,
th inking, and feeling. Observance would even become a deeplyrooted
principle in his inner feelings, and a basis of responsibility
in his heart, feelings, and emotions.
- Parents should also observe the aspect of submission, piety, and
bondage to Alliih, the lm d of the worlds. This can be achieved
through calling the chi ld's attention to the all -incl usive greatness
of AHah in the young and the old, the inanimate and the living, in
a fully-grown plant, a growing tree, a fragmnt colorful nower,
and in millions of millions of diverse, wonderfully and
magnificently-composed creatures. Thus the human soul cannOI
help but feci piety and submission to Allah 1ft. Among the
things which strengthen the child's submission to Allah, and
consolidate in his inner feelings the true essence of piety is to get
him accustomed, when he is at the age of reason and
discrimination, to show submission in prayers, and crying or
attempting to do so when hearing the verses of the Qur'an. If he
gets accustomed to these qualities and applies them, he will be
among those about whom All5h said:
ii"-:J if;1: -.:::::J.J( 0 0;;;': ~ 1; 'j:" ...J;" 1 Ji ;t;J} ...... >t '11,
A. ./ ~~, '( ..;.;......,.
"No doubt! Verily, the Aufiya. ' of Alfih ( i.e. Ihos~ ",ho befie .. , in
the Oneness of Affih and f ear Affiih milch (ab.lfain from aff kinds
of sins and e"if du ds "'hieh He has/o,bidden), ond fo~e Aftlih much
(pe,fo,m oil kinds 0/ good du ds lI'hieh lie has ordained)) no feDr
sha.1f come upon lhem nOr shall tfrey K,iut!. Those ",ho belie.ed (in
the Oneness of Afflih - Islamic Monotheism), and used to feur
Alliih much ( by abstaining from evil du ds and sins and by doing
righteoo. duds)." (Yunu., 62.63)
- Parents should also observe how the child performs worship by
means of commanding him to pray at the age of ~evcn in
fulfillment of the saying of the Prophet $, "Command your
chiM'lm /0 pray whl!ll Ihey arl! seW'n years old:' By analogy,
through training h'm when he is still young to fast some days m
Ramadan if he is able to do so, and to take him to perfonn
pilgrimage if the parent can afford it, and also to get him
accustomed to spend m the way of Allah, even a small amount
every now and then, so that he may get used to the obligatory
worship of paying the poor-dues when he comes of age.
- Parents also have to strike a balance while bringmg up their child,
between the spiritual struggle and striving for the sake of Alliih,
so that he may fight rnjustice and disbelief as much as he resists
the e~il-inciting of the so ul. This is because if parents neglect to
arouse in the child the duty of calling to the way of Alliih, or the
duty of striving in His way, the duty of enjoining goodness and
fo rbidding evil, the child wi ll undoubtedly get used to seclusion,
inactivity, accepting the status quo, escaping from struggle, and
submItting to the power of tyrants and unjust people.
- Parents should also observe the application of supplication
through helping their children memorize the most import.1nl
supplications of the day and night, going to sleep and waking up,
eating, entering the house and leaving it, puning on clothes and
taking them off, as well as the invocation when travelling,
invoking Allah for guidance during the fall of rain and the time
of the crescent, insomnia, illness, and sadness, as well as other
invocations and sound, firm ly established supplications.
V. Education by Appropriate Puni~hm cnt
The ru lings of the Islamic Jarisprudence (Fiqh) with their
complete justice and comprehensive principles focus on guaranteeing
the necessities which man cannot do without. The scholars of
Fiqh concluded that they are five in number. They called them
"the five necessities" or "the five generalities." These are:
maintaining religion, self, chastity, mind and wealth. They said
that all that was included in the Islamic system of rulings,
principles, and legislations aim at securing these generalities and
maintaming them. For Ihe sake or preserving these generalilles.
Islamic Jurisprudence has laid down severe punishments for those
who trespass and breach them. These punishments arc known as
"hut/ud" or "prescriped punishment"· and "Ia'z ir" or "discretionary
punishments." The set !imits are punishments determined
by Jurisprudence as the rights of Allah !.ii. These arc:
1. The punisllmcnl for a poslacy: this is death if onc insists on
Icaving the religion or on atheism aner his rerusa l lo repent, [f he is
killed he is not to be washed, shrouded. pnlyed on, or buried in
Muslims' graves, The basIs for this punishment is what was
narrated by the six narrators and Ah mad Ibn Mas'tid 4;. quoting
Alliih's Messenger 3. as saying, " The shedding of II Muslim's blood
is 1101 lawful excepl in Ihree cases: an udullaer ",1.0 is Mu.lfim
married. life for life. ulld Ihe uposlille who departs fTllm Ihe
commrmily . ..
2. The punisllmenl for murder: If it was murder in cold blood, lhe
punishment for it is death, because of Alliih's saY'"I:.
:;:. '&'i\ &\iG ,.:;.i~ .t:it .J~ )S J!.ii ~ ;'l-::';ii ~ -; ;1; ~,; ~i c::~ ,
4. ~'~ ·\,.II ft~\· "::"\ ~'':ii !.~ .... ~ : ~ ' ,' 'I: r., "'. !J y~ <..""" .r' ,', ,,!, .J;"
"0 )"ou who fHliel'e! AI-Qislls ( rhe Law of Equufity in punishment)
is preserihed for )"ou in cau of murder: Ihe fUI! for Ihe frue, the
sla ~e for Ihe sla re, and Ihe female fOT the femule. Bul if/he killer
is forgh'en hy the brother (or the re/ati,'u, fl C.) of Ihe killed
against Mood-money t"en adhering to it "'ilh fairne ss. and payment
of the blood-money, 10 the heir should fH made in fairnus." (AI.
Baqarah. (78)
3. The punisllmenl for theft : tllis is cuUmg olT the tlliefs hand from
the wrist if lhe lheft was nOI motivated by need or compelling
circumslanccs. This is ordained by AlIiih's .aying •
.J. ~ !,' ~f ~{ "{ ., -l!t J , ~~ . .;n c_ r t:.• t;j.".I 'C ( ""J.' 1~-' (1l i ~~ t::J1J' "~. ....--:'LJI' T).
"And (aJ for) Ihe male thief and the f emale, cut off (from Ihe
"'risl joint) their ( right) hand a.< a recompense for that "'hieh they
committed, a punishment hy "'ay of I!xample fmm Alliih. And AI/iih
;s AII- Po,,'erful, All-Wise." (At -M.·j.dah, 38)
4. The punishment for slander: this is eighty lashes and non·
270 ~======================================== PanTh~
acceptance of testimony, according to All:1h'$ saying,
'> .... ,, - "'i -., .• " ",. , " "'~ 7:" N ~ "t" '" ''''u ", 'J .. , u.,1;~ r ~ ~-'; ..... ~: .. ;>~ ;~';"..>\!i. J (';" .I ""'.:..: i.!:~ r
.I. "{ ~~) • ,'~-I "~: '..'.'..;.J. ·!1.'t
"And the "n~~ II'ho throw accusalion upon 1O'0mell in wedlock. And
thereafrer they do I/ot come up "'itll four "'itnesus, then lad them
with eighty /ru bes, "lid do not aca pt any /eslimony of theirs at all;
and thou aYe the ones who lire immoral." (An_Nfir, 4)
5. The punishmrnt for adultery: Ihis is onc hundcrd lashes if the
adulterer is unmarried, and stoning to death if he is married. The
QUI'an declares:
~ ?{ l;~ 1':=: ~5 J ~~ J)I~ ~3i ,
" The womun and the man gll;lly of illegal sexual inlerciJurse, jlog
each of them "'itb a ""ndu d stripes ... " (An-NUT, 2)
"Stoning to death is based on the Prophetic Tradition about
Ma'iz Ibn Mii lik and the Ghlmidi woman whom AlHih's
Messenger 3- commanded that they be stoned to death because
they were both married.
6. The punishment for spreading corruption on earth: this is to be
kIlled or crucified, or their hands and legs be cut alternately, or
exile from the land. The majority of religious scholars, including
Ash-Shiifi'j and Imam A~mad , arc of the opinion that if
highwaymen kill and take money they are to be Killed and
crucified, but if they only take money without killing, their hands
and legs are cut asunder alternately, and if they terri fy people but
do not take money they are to be exiled from the land. The basis of
this is Alliih's saying, j' IJV~ jll;:;;; J I~G J:j)i :;. ':'7!J ;1;.;;.if ':;;.,l~ ~Ji Ij'5.; Cl'
C•~ i <..! •... . ,-.- .."....",1 -/-."...h..~ '~.~ ·'- .Ji ~~.. >"r"
.I. .!.J.; ~ I~ . - . :Yr . _w '" _ .... I.J'; ~ ..-+' ..
"Tu recompenu of those "'ho ,,'all" "'lIr against Afliih and lIis
Messenger and du mischiefin the land i$ Qn/)' Ihllt they shllll be killed
Qr crucified 01' their hllnds lind their feet he cui off from 0ppo$i/t
sides, or he ailed from the /tmd, That is Iheir disgrace in this ,,'arId,
and a ~ rerlf lormenl ;$ theirs in the Hereafter." (At_Ma'idan, J)
7, The punishment for drinking intoxicants: this is for ty to eighty
lashes, based on the fact that the Prophet's Companions ~
estimated the penally during the time of the Prophet e to be fo rty
lashes_ Ash-Shawkani reported that the Prophet ~ lashed those
who drink in toxicants with two lashes about forty times,
'Urnar suggested eighty lashes after consullmg the Companions
and they made the penalty eighty lashes when they saw that some
people went too far in drinking intoxicants. Their reasoning for
this is that Ali " said, " If someone dnnks an intoxicant, he ge ts
drunk and if he gets drunk, he raves, and if he raves he WIll
slander," and they made thi$ analogous to the penalty for
slandermg women in wedlock.
Discretionary punishments an: undefined penalties which are due
to a human being for any wrongdoing for which Ihere is no dearly
stated penalty or expiation. They are similar to set punishmenlS in
deterrence and in reformation. If the quantity of discretionary
penalty is nol set a ruler has Ihe right to determine a proper
punishment, which may be reproach, beating, imprisonment, or
confi scation provided that il is nOI as severe as a sel puni'hment.
No two people would disagree about the f;'c t thl.t Is\;.m
legis lated these established and discretionary penalties for the sake
of achieving a happy life filled with security and stability so that no
one would show injustice 10 anyone else, no strong person would
hann a weak one, and no rich man would control a poor one. All
people lITe equal in fron t of Allah, with no advantage of an Arab
over a non-Arab, or a while over a black, except by piety_ This is
272.",======================================== Pa"TO~
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |