The Ideal Muslim Woman and Her Children
Sheikh Muhammad Abdallah swaleh
The above heading can be summarized as at-Tarbiyah al-Islaamiyah
(Islamic Upbringing). The building of an Islamic personality
lies on the correct Islamic upbringing. This usually commences
when one is looking for a suitable partner in marriage,
marriage and lastly training the children.
Marriage
in Islam is tranquility of the soul, comfort of the heart,
stability of consciousness and the living of the husband
and wife with affection, mercy, harmony, co-operation, sincere
advice and mutual forgiveness, to enable the establishment
of a felicitous bond and a pure Muslim family.
Allaah (Subhaanahu wa Ta'ala) has elaborated this relationship
saying: "And of His signs, another one is that He created
for you mates from among yourselves that you may find comfort
(tranquility) with them, and He planted love and kindness
(mercy/ tenderness) in your hearts; surely there are signs
in this for those who think about it" (30: 21). Undoubtedly
children are a source of great joy and delight; they make
life sweet, bring more rizq into a family's life and give
hope. A father sees his children as a future source of help
and support, as well as representing an increase in numbers
and perpetuation of the family.
A
mother sees her children as a source of hope, consolation
and joy in life, and as hope for the future. All of these
hopes rest on the good upbringing of the children and giving
them a sound preparation for life, so that they will become
active and constructive elements in the society, a source
of goodness for their parents and the community at large.
Then they will be as (Subhanahu wa ta'ala) described them:
"Wealth and sons are allurements of the life of this world"
(Qur'an 18:46).
If
their education and upbringing are neglected, they will
become bad characters, a burden on their family, community
and society as a whole. Understanding Her the Great Responsibility
The Muslim woman never forgets that the mother's responsibility
in bringing up the children and forming their characters
is greater than that of the father, because children tend
to be closer to their mother and spend more time with her;
she knows all about their behavioral, emotional and intellectual
development during their childhood and the difficult years
of adolescence.
Hence
the woman who understands the teachings of Islam and her
own educational role in life, knows her complete responsibility
for the upbringing of her children, as is referred to in
the Qur'an: "O you who believe! Save yourselves and your
families from a Fire whose fuel is Men and Stones" (66:6)
The Prophet (sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam) also referred
to this responsibility in his hadith: "Each of you is a
shepherd and each of you is responsible for his flock. …
a man is the shepherd of his family and is responsible for
his flock; a woman is the shepherd in the house of her husband
and is responsible for her flock; …"
Islam
places responsibility on the shoulders of every individual;
not one person is left out. Parents - especially mothers
- are made responsible for providing their children with
a solid upbringing and sound Islamic education, based on
the noble characteristics that the Prophet (sallallahu 'alayhi
wa sallam) declared that he had been sent to complete and
spread among people: "I have only been sent to make righteous
behavior complete" . Nothing is more indicative of the greatness
of the parents' responsibility towards their children and
their duty to give them a suitable Islamic upbringing than
to heed the words of the Prophet (sallallahu 'alayhi wa
sallam): "Instruct your children to pray when they are seven
and beat them if they do not do so when they are ten" .
Parents
who are aware of this hadith but do not teach their children
to pray when they reach seven or beat them if they do not
do so when they reach ten, are parents who are sinners and
failing in their duty; they will be responsible before Allaah
(Subhanahu wa ta'ala) for their failure.
The
family home is a microcosm of society in which the children's
mentality, intellect, attitudes and inclinations are formed
when they are still very small and are ready to receive
sound words of guidance. Hence the parents' important role
in forming the minds of their sons and daughters and directing
them towards truth and good deeds is quite clear. Muslim
woman have always understood their responsibility in raising
their children, and they have a brilliant record in producing
and influencing great men, and instilling noble values in
their hearts.
There
is no greater proof of that than the fact that intelligent
and brilliant women have produced more noble sons than have
intelligent and brilliant men, so much so that you can hardly
find any among the great men of our ummah who have controlled
the course of events in history who is not indebted to his
mother.
Az-Zubayr
ibn al-'Awwam was indebted for his greatness to his mother
Swafiyyah bint 'Abd al-Muttalib, who instilled in him his
good qualities and distinguished nature. 'Abdullah, al-Mundhir
and 'Urwah, the sons of az-Zubayr were the products of the
values instilled in them by their mother, Asmaa' bint Abi
Bakr, and each of them made his mark in history and attained
a high status. 'Abdullah ibn Ja'far, the master of Arab
generosity and the most noble of their leaders, lost his
father at an early age, but his mother Asmaa' bint 'Umays
took care of him and gave him the virtues and noble characteristics
by virtue of which she herself became one of the great women
of Islam.
Mu'awiyah ibn Abi Sufyan inherited his strength of character
and intelligence from his mother, Hind bint 'Utbah, not
from his father Abu Sufyan. Mu'awiyah was unable to instill
his cleverness, patience and skills in his own son and heir,
Yaziyd, because the boy's mother was a simple Bedouin woman,
whom he had married for her beauty and because of the status
of her tribe and family.
History
records the names of two great men of Banu Umayyah, the
first of whom was known for his strength of character, capability,
intelligence, wisdom and decisiveness, and the second took
the path of justice, goodness, piety and righteousness.
The
first 'Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan, whose mother was 'Aa'ishah
bint al-Mughirah ibn Abil-'Asw ibn Umayyah, who was well-known
for her strength of character, resolution and intelligence.
The second was 'Umar ibn 'Abd al-'Aziz, whose mother was
Umm 'Aaswim bint 'Aaswim ibn 'Umar ibn al-Khatwtwab, who
was the most noble in character of the women of her time.
Her mother was the righteous worshipper of Allaah (Subhanahu
wa ta'ala) who was honest and truthful, and clearly following
the right path, when she refused to add water to the milk
as her mother told her to, because she knew that Allah (Subhanahu
wa ta'ala) could see her.
If
we turn towards Andalusia, we find the brilliant, ambitious
ruler 'Abd al-Rahman an-Nasir who, having started life as
an orphan, went on to establish an Islamic state in the
West, to which the leaders and kings of Europe surrendered
and to whose institutes of learning the scholars and philosophers
of all nations came to seek knowledge. This state made a
great contribution to worldwide Islamic culture.
If
we were to examine the secret of this man's greatness, we
would find that it lay in the greatness of his mother who
knew how to instill in him the dynamic spirit of ambition.
During the 'Abbasid period there were two great women who
planted the seeds of ambition, distinction and ascendancy
in their sons. The first was the mother of Ja'far ibn Yahya,
who was the wazir of the khalifah Harun ar-Rashid.
The second was the mother of Imam al-Shafi'iy, he never
saw his father who died whilst he was still a babe in arms;
it was his mother who took care of his education. There
are many such examples of brilliant women in our history,
women who instilled in their sons nobility of character
and the seeds of greatness, and who stood behind them in
everything they achieved of power and status.