Saturday, 30 January 2010
Classic - One Sister Account of the Struggles In Modern Day to get married
This is an accounr from A Muslimat on one of the sites on behalf of market research, it speaks volumes:
Zara says:
December 10 at 11:05 am
1. Your age.
29
2. What is the biggest obstacle that has prevented you from getting married until now?
Where should i start from!
1a) My AGE – Muslim men seem to think that a woman post 21 has nothing to offer in a marriage! So us ‘oldies’ who didn’t wait to complete our careers or whatever but got stuck behind because we couldn’t find the right man or due to life’s struggles just found oursleves racing agaisnt time and kind of left on the shelf!
1b) SKIN COLOUR- There are some racists out there who will not consider a wife a shade lighter than almonds! lol. So being a light-skinned, tanned but not dark skinned lady, i simply get rejected by those who want the ‘tall,fair’ wife. I must add we’re also not good for those whose mothers want the ideal fair skinned daughter-inlaw/ bride for their sons.
1c) PHYSIQUE- There are some Muslim men who are no different to their non-Muslim counterparts and are obssessed with the s**y, babe image, so those of us who don’t have that physique aren’t quite up to it. Adding from the fair skinned comment, there’s the slim but healthy looking wife that is so desired.
1d) PROFESSIONALISM- If you have a degree but don’t work or aren’t career minded then for some brothers you won’t make a good wife. Even though you may be intelligent,smart and happy to work at home and don’t enjoy the rat race or the demands of working outside the home, you’re considered to be boring and un-adventurous!
1e) NOT AN ALIMAH/LADY AYESHA- So far all my obstacles have been dunya/materialistic but there’s a minority of men who are pious and willing to overlook the beauty,skin clolur thing but focus too heavily on marrying an angel. God forbid if you make a mistake or don’t wear abayah/niqaab, pr accept polygyny, or aren’t as dutiful as any of the sahabiyaat than your doomed for hell! This minorty can be just as frightening.
1f) TRIBALISM- Sadly there aren’t good quality men left in todays times. So looking outside your culture is an option although it presents its own issues. However, trying to get your parents to think out of the box and breaking their tribal mentality has got to be the hardest task really.
1g) MUMMYS BOYS!- Wants his wife to live at home, allows intefering parents and elders to control his marriage and wife. Only listens and obeys mummy even if she is an evil woman.( THE WORST OF THEM ALL IS THIS TYPE) lol
1h) HARSH/STRICT MEN!- The balanced man is hard to find! One who has understood Islam properly, who has the right balance, doesn’t enforce niqab and polygyny on his wife, isn’t demanding, hasn’t misunderstood the obedience issue, is happy go lucky and playful. Enjoys halal and forbids haraam. Lives according to the Sunnah and isn’t into culture or biddah!
3. What have you tried so far to overcome that obstacle?
Lots of du’a to Allah SWT to bless me with the coolness of my eyes, a righteous husband who is a blessing for me and i for him inshallah. I have challenged many neagtives out there, i have spoken to my folks greatly about the issue of triblaism and i have searched many times for my soulmate, am beginning to give up hope but believe too strongly in Qadr and have sabr in me yet! Mashallah. Any other suggestions, please let me know, there’s very little i can do to address the rest, i’m not prepared to bleach my skin colour, to invest in plastic surgery to grow the perfect body/image! Alhamdulillah, i like the way Allah swt has created me!
Thursday, 21 January 2010
The Ideal Muslim Husband
This is an article written by Aisha Lema:
The Ideal Muslim Husband
Much ink has been spilled, and much breath, in defining the role of Muslim women; the rights of Muslim women; the duties of Muslim women, what constitutes an ideal Muslim wife. Maybe because there has so much misunderstanding of the role of women, we seem to give it special emphasis in lectures and books. However since men and women are interdependent, it is not wise to concentrate on one and remain silent about the other.
The last time I was invited to speak about "The ideal Muslim Wife", I made a promise that my next assignment would be to prepare a lecture on " The ideal Muslim Husband". Many men seem to feel that women, and their wives in particular, should be ideal Muslims, while they themselves and their fellow men behave as they like without reference to the Qur'an and Sunnah, and unchallenged by the Shari'ah.
This paper is therefore intended to redress the balance; to turn the spotlight on to the men, so that they might be aware of the Islamic standard for an ideal husband, as they try to reach that standard as much as they wish their wives to reach the standard of an ideal Muslim wife.
The obvious place to look for these standards of behaviour is in the Qur'an and Hadith.
Let us therefore start at the beginning. How does the ideal husband behave before marriage? After all, a man does not totally change his character with effect from his wedding day. The bride is joining her life with that of another person whose personality and habits have been in some degree already formed. What then should be the behavior towards women by a young man before marriage?
Islam does not accept the view common in the western secular society that before marriage a young man is expected to "sow his wild oats" - whether by frequenting prostitutes or by sleeping around, or having any form of "trial marriage". For all such activities the Qur'an has prescribed a legal punishment of 100 lashes. [Qur'an 24:2]
The Qur'an moreover says;
"And as for those who are unable to marry,
let them live in continence until Allah grants them sufficiently out of his bounty...."
[Qur'an 24:33]
To assist young men in this situation the Prophet (saws) in a Hadith recorded in Bukhari further advised;
"Young men, those of you who can support a wife should marry, for it keeps you from looking at women and preserves your chastity; but those who cannot should fast, for it is a means of cooling passion."
For those who have the means to get married, how should they go about it? We have mentioned that the modern western practice of having girlfriends and trial marriages is emphatically unlawful for Muslims. Instead it is expected that the family and friends will play a big role in finding out in detail about the character and circumstances of the proposed partner before allowing the feelings of the boy and girl to be aroused has several advantages. Its effect is to cut out a lot of the embarrassment, temptation and heartache which are common in the western system of courtship and intimate relations before marriage.
The boy is expected to share with his parents certain priorities in the type of girl he hopes to marry, and this is mentioned in a Hadith related by Abu Hurairah in which the Prophet (saws) advised:
"A women may be sought for her wealth, her birth, her beauty or he religious character. But do look for the religious women. And if you do it for any other consideration, your hands be rubbed in dirt!" [Bukhari and Muslim]
In other words the key to success in marriage is seen as the moral quality of the partner. The ideal Muslim bridegroom therefore goes into marriage with the responsible attitude of a person establishing a family on the best possible foundation of love and mutual compassion, and not of infatuation over beauty, ambition for wealth or social position. The Qur'an has described the marriage relationship in these terms;
"Among His signs is the fact that he has created spouses from among yourselves, so that you may find tranquillity with them; and he has put love and mercy between you. In that are signs for people who reflect."
[Qur'an 30:21]
and again:
"They (wives) are garments for you, while you are garments for them."
[Qur'an 2:187]
Having sought his bride in an honourable way, and married her in the manner prescribed by the Prophet- that is with public celebration but the minimum of fuss and ostentation- what are the Muslim husband's duties?
His first duty is maintenance and protection, and overall responsibility for the welfare of his wife, which is prescribed in the Qur'an:
"Men shall take full care of women with the bounties which Allah has bestowed more abundantly on the former than on the latter, and with what they may spend out of their possessions....".
[Qur'an 4:34]
This includes feeding, clothing and shelter for the wife and for any children of the marriage. This is a legally enforceable duty, which remains even after divorce until the expiry of the Iddah or even longer in the view of some of the scholars. Financial responsibility for the family therefore rests squarely on the husband, and the wife has no duty to contribute to family expenses unless she has the means and the wish to do so.
The legal obligations of a husband do not stop with provision of the basic requirements relating to maintenance and protection. He is also expected to give her company and marital relations, and to avoid doing anything that would harm her.
These obligations are enforced by the Shari'ah. If a man fails to maintain his wife or fails to visit her for more than a certain period of time, the wife has grounds to be granted a divorce by a Shari'ah Court. Similarly, if she can prove to the court that the husband is doing harm (Idrar), be it by drinking alcohol, or beating her without lawful cause, or abusing her or her parents and so on, she is entitled to be granted a divorce. In none of these cases can the husband claim back any part of the dowry or presents he has given to the wife. I would like to make a note here that every situation has to be evaluated on its merits and circumstances by a Shar'iah Court. These points mentioned above are general precepts in the Shar'iah.
The Husband is however urged in the Qur'an to avoid divorce and try to preserve marriage even if it is not ideal. This is to be done in the first instance by exercising patience with his wife's faults. The Qur'an say's;
"Live with them on a footing of kindness and equity. If you take a dislike to them, it may be that you dislike a thing while Allah brings about through it a great deal of good."
[Qur'an 4:19]
The Prophet (saws) also emphasised the undesirability of divorce in a Hadith found in Abu Dau'd's collection:
"The most hateful of all lawful things, in the sight of Allah, is divorce."
The ideal husband should therefore, if need arises, make full use of Qur'anic provisions for reconciliation and arbitration [Qur'an 4:34] before proceeding with divorce
If a man does divorce his wife, he should follow the steps approved in the Qur'an and Sunnah regarding a revocable divorce. This allows for cooling off and reconciliation before it becomes final on the final pronouncement. The divorce is not to be pronounced while the wife is in menstruation, but when she has finished menstruation and not yet resumed marital relations with the husband. (Qur'an 65:1) In other words divorce is not to be pronounced in anger or at random, but at a specific time when the husband is in control of his reason, and the wife herself is not in the state of emotional upset that sometimes occurs whilst she is pregnant or may accompany menstruation.
The husband is to continue good treatment of his wife even if divorce decided upon. He is to keep and feed her as before in his own house until the expiry of her iddah (waiting period) without harassment, [Qur'an 65:1, 65:6] and to make provision for her according to his means.
He is not to take back any of the gifts he may have given her before or during the marriage:
"The parties should either hold together on equitable terms or separate with kindness. It is not lawful for you (men) to take back any of your gifts from your wives."
[Qur'an 2:229]
On the contrary, the husband is to give her a gift or some form of maintenance to sustain her after divorce [Qur'an 2:241]. Moreover, he is not to interfere if after divorce she wishes to marry someone else:
"......and when you divorce women and they have reached the end of their waiting term, hinder them not from marrying other men if they have agreed with each other in a fair manner."
[Qur'an 2:232]
The husband should also know that according to the Shari'ah he is not always the one to have custody of his children after divorce, contrary to the common practice in some countries. It is the wife who is given priority in custody of children in many cases, in accordance with a Hadith related by Amru b. Shu'aib in Ibn Majah, which tells how a woman came to the Prophet (saws) and said:
"Truly my belly served as a container for my son here, and my breast served as a skin bag for him (to drink out of), and my bosom served as a refuge for him; and now his father has divorced me, and he (also) desires to take away from me." The Prophet (saws) said: "You have a better right to have him as long as you do not marry again." [Ibn Majah]
We would also like to point out again however, that the decision as to the custody of the children has to be evaluated by a Shar'iah Court, which will consider the particular circumstances surrounding the family and the children's best welfare.
In the Maliki School of Islamic Jurisprudence, this rule is systematised to give priority in custody of children to the mother and to 5 other relatives before the custody could be claimed by the father. This custody lasts until puberty for a son and until marriage for a daughter, while the financial responsibility for their maintenance remains with their father.
The knowledge of the necessity of separation from his children must certainly act as a reality check when a husband is indiscriminately deciding to divorce.
It should also be realised the husband is required to be faithful in marriage as the wife must. The punishment for adultery of a married person, male or female, under the Shari'ah is death. The fact that the punishment may not be applied in this world, does not make the sin any less in the sight of Allah. A sin that is not expiated in this world is after all going to follow a person to the grave.
Therefore the husband should not fail to follow Allah's command in the Qur'an:
"Tell the believing men to lower their gaze and to be mindful of their chastity: verily this will be most conductive to their purity (and) verily Allah is aware of all that they do."
[Qur'an 24:30]
Those married men who cruise around in their cars looking for school girls to pick up are surely disgracing themselves, and forfeiting all right to require chastity of their wives.
If for some reason, the husband cannot manage with his first wife but does not want to divorce her, he is not prohibited from contracting another marriage, provided it is done in a legal and honorable way.
The permission to marry more then one wife at a time is however conditional:
".......if you fear you cannot do justice between them, then marry only one." [Qur'an 4:3]
This condition is often taken very lightly in some countries, where polygamy has long been a social custom. No words in the Qur'an, however, are without meaning, this verse should not be taken lightly. A weak husband will not be respected and will not act fairly between his wives, whereby, his marrying more then one is likely to lead to injustice, constant disharmony and the break up of his family. This is not in his interests or theirs or in the interests of the Muslim Ummah.
If having married more then one, however, a husband finds his heart inclining to one at the expense of the other, he is warned that this inclination should not reach the stage of neglect of the needs of the other wife:
"And you will not be able to treat your wives with equal justice however much you desire it.
But do not incline towards one to the exclusion of the other, leaving her as it were in suspense."
[Qur'an 4:29]
This warning against injustice is strongly reinforced by the Hadith in which Abu Hurairah (raa) reported the Prophet (saws) as saying:
"Whoever has two wives and does not treat them equally, shall come on the day of resurrection with half his body hanging down." [Abu Da'ud, Nasa'i, and Ibn Majah]
We have so far examined the legal framework of marriage and divorce as outlined mainly in the Qur'an. This now needs to be filled in with illustration and elaboration drawn from the Sunnah, since the Qur'an tells us :
"You have in the apostle of Allah a beautiful pattern of conduct for anyone whose hope is in Allah and the last day."
[Qur'an 33:21]
How did the Prophet (saws) then, behave as a husband? Obviously he observed the legal framework, but how did he behave in his day-to-day relationships with his wives?
A lot of information is to be gathered about this from the Hadith, both directly and indirectly, and also from the Sirah (the biography of the Prophet (saws)).
His guiding principle on the treatment of wives is stated in some well known Ahadith;
"From among the believers are those who have the kindest disposition and are the kindest to their families- such are those who show the most perfect faith. "The best among them are those who are kindest to their wives." [Bukhari and Muslim]
How did the Prophet (saws) himself exemplify this kindness?
Firstly he was not a difficult or remote or tyrannical husband of the type who regards all household chores as "women's work". In a Hadith in Bukhari:
Aisha (raa) was asked by Al-Aswad b. Yazid what the Prophet used to do in the house. She replied: "He used to work for his family, that is serve his family, and when prayer time came, he went out for prayer." [Bukhari]
Other Hadith tell us that he used to mend his own clothes.
Secondly he didn't make a fuss about food. It is recorded in a Hadith from Abu Hurairah (raa) in the collection of Muslim:
"Allah's Messenger never found fault with food. If he liked something, he ate it, and if he disliked it, he just abstained from it." [Muslim]
Implying that he never complained about the food or it's cooking.
Aisha (raa) reported that whenever she was sick, the Prophet (saws) would come to her to show his sympathy. Nor, was he ashamed to let it be known that his love for his wife was greater then his love for any other human being. It is recorded in the Hadith collections of Bukhari and Muslim that someone asked the Prophet: "Who among all the people is most beloved by you?" And he said "Aisha".
This love and understanding for Aisha did not eclipse his high regard for his first wife Khadijah, who had been his only wife for about 25 years until her death. Aisha (raa) reported that he always treasured the memory of Khadijah who had supported and encouraged him through the difficult years in Mecca, and that he use to regularly give gifts to Khadijah's closest friends as an expression of his undiminished esteem and love for her.
The Prophet (saws) never held himself apart from his wives as if they were by their nature as women inferior. On the Contrary, he included "playing games with one's wife" as one of the legitimate entertainment's. According to the following Hadith:
".......There is no amusement which is praiseworthy except three, namely training a horse, sporting with one's wife and shooting arrows with a bow." [Abu Da'ud, Ibn Majah and Baihaqi]
In illustration of this practice, Aisha (raa) records that on more then one occasion she and the Prophet (saws) ran races and sometimes she won and sometimes he won. Most men nowadays consider it far beneath their dignity to play any sort of game with their wives, and their marriages are the duller and poorer for it.
I think this is one of the problems we encounter in the way we learn about the life of the Prophet (saws). Most of the history books dwell on the political and military aspects of the Prophet's (saws) life, and his personality, which was obviously very attractive, eludes our knowledge. We tend to, for this reason picture him as always serious, while the Hadith informs us that although he rarely laughed aloud, "Nobody used to smile as much as he did." This is fully in accordance with the Hadith: "Smiling at your brother (Muslim) is a charity."
The Prophet's (saws) attitude towards female children and female education is a beautiful elaboration of what is found in the Qur'an. The Qur'an not only forbade the jahiliyyah practice of female infanticide, but even condemned the practice of showing disappointment or anger over the birth of a female child. [Qur'an 16:58-59]
A Hadith related by Ibn Abbas in fact encourages the reverse:
"Whoever has a female child and does not bury her alive, nor hide her in contempt, nor prefers his male child over her, Allah will make him enter Paradise." [Abu Da'ud]
The Prophet (saws) showed the greatest love and affection for his female children, particularly for Fatima. Aisha (raa) related that:
"Whenever the Prophet (saws) saw Fatima (raa), he would welcome her, and rising from his seat would kiss her, and then taking her by the hand would seat her in his own seat." [Bukhari]
He decreed that every Muslim - male and female- must as a duty seek knowledge and prescribed education for all children in the following words:
"No present or gift of a parent, out of all the gifts and presents to a child, is superior to a good broad (general) education." [Tirmidhi and Baihaqi]
He laid special emphasis on the education of daughters:
"Whoever brings up two sisters or two daughters, and gives them a broad education, and treats them well, and gives them in marriage, for him is Paradise." [Abu Da'ud, Tirmidhi]
This concern for the education of girls was reflected in his teaching of Aisha (raa), who was still a young girl when he married her, and was only 18 when he died. She had a natural ability for learning and a strong sense of reasoning, and he taught her as much as she was ready to learn. He was so impressed and pleased with her learning that he even told people:
"You can learn half your religion from this rosy-cheeked girl."
He therefore encouraged people to consult her in religious matters, and after his death she became one of the major sources of Hadith.
From all this we can see that some people's resistance to allowing their daughters to have access to knowledge is not only misguided but quite contrary to all the Prophet (saws) preached and practiced. An ideal-Muslim husband is therefore expected to be deeply committed to and involved in the education of all his children - the daughters as much as the son's.
The Prophet (saws) respect for a wife's intelligence and understanding was also reflected in his readiness to consult his wives and respond to their good advice. An instance of this practice is recorded on the occasion of the signing of the treaty of Hudaibihiyah. Many of the Muslims were reluctant to accept treaty. They did not want to go home without performing pilgrimage and they considered some parts of the Treaty disadvantageous to the Muslims. They were therefore reluctant to obey his instructions to slaughter their sacrificial camels and shave their heads, which would symbolise that the Pilgrimage was over and the matter closed. The Prophet (saws) withdrew to his tent in perplexity, and told his wife Umm Salamah what had happened. She advised him: "Go out and speak to no man until you have performed your sacrifice." The Prophet (saws) followed her advice, and slaughtered the camel calling: "Bismillah, Allahu akbar" in a loud voice, whereupon the Muslims forgot their reluctance and raced to make their own sacrifices.
The presence of Umm Salamah on this journey exemplifies another aspect of the Prophet's (saws) dealings with his wives. One or more of them almost invariably accompanied him on his journeys and campaigns. To ensure fairness they would draw lots as to which wife or wives would accompany him.
His wives were thus not kept locked up so that they could not experience what was going on in the outside world. They wore modest clothes (hijab) and went out and saw everything that was going on, and they participated when necessary, for example in nursing the wounded on the battlefields.
The following Hadith is narrated by Aisha (raa):
"Umar once criticised the Prophet's wife Saudah for going out, saying he had recognised her in the street. So she appealed to the Prophet (saws) for support and he supported her saying: "Women have the right to go out for their needs." [Bukhari]
Similarly the Prophet (saws) allowed his wives and other women to go out to the Mosques for their prayers. He also advised other men:
"Do not prevent the female servants of Allah (i.e Mosques)" [Muslim]
The ideal Muslim husband therefore does not impose restrictions on his wife greater then those imposed by Allah (swt), or by the Prophet (saws) on his own family.
All the foregoing indicate that the women who is married to an ideal Muslim husband is protected but not suppressed, and is therefore likely to be happy and contented.
However, the Muslim husband is not expected to please his wife at all cost, if what pleases her may be wrong or against her interests or the interests of the family.
The Qur'an say's:
"O you who have attained to faith! Ward off from yourselves and your families
that fire (of the hereafter) whose fuel is Human beings and stones."
[Qur'an 66:6]
In this respect a husband has a duty to ensure that his wife is fully educated as a Muslim. If this has been neglected in her parents' home, he must take necessary steps to remedy it. Either by teaching her himself or by arranging for her Islamic education by other means. The husband is expected to give leadership in the family. We have seen that this form of leadership is not dictatorship or tyranny. The wise husband will, as indicated, consult his wife on important matters concerning the family, and if he sees her advice is good, accept it. However, Islam has given the man authority as the head of the family, and he is expected to abide by the Qur'an and Sunnah and endeavour to ensure that his family do not violate Islamic norms of behavior. The kind of treatment required should not therefore include condoning her misbehavior.
The Qur'an has prescribed a specific graded series of three steps, which the husband should take if the wife shows that she is rebelling against Islamic norms of conduct.
His first step should be to speak to her seriously about the implication and likely consequences of what she is doing. If she fails to respond to this sincere admonition, his next step is to suspend marital relations with her for a period of time, If this also fails he is permitted to beat her lightly as a final act of correction. If she then complies then the husband should take no further action against her. [Qur'an 4:34]
This beating is the last resort, and not the first one, and the Prophet (saws) placed some limitations on it, as follows:
(a) It should not be on the face or on any easily injured part of the body;
(b) It should not be hard enough to cause pain or injury or leave a mark.
The Prophet (saws) indicated that if a man must beat his wife it should be more or less symbolic, with something like a toothbrush.
The Prophet (saws) himself very much disliked the beating of wives, and never beat any of his own. In Abu Da'ud's collection of Hadith he is reported by Laqit B. Sabrah to have said:
"Admonish your wife, and if there be any good in her she will receive it; and beat not your wife like a slave."
In another Hadith from Ayas b. Abdullah he specifically said:-
"Do not beat Allah's female servants (i.e women)" [Abu Da'ud, Ibn Majah]
In Tirmidhi's collection is another Hadith related by Amru b. al Ahwas:
"And enjoin on one another goodness towards women; verily they are married to you: you have no power over them at all unless they come in for a flagrantly filthy action; but if they are devoted to you, then seek no way against them. And verily, you have rights over your women, and they have rights over you." [Tirmidhi]
The Muslim husband therefore has no right to beat his wife indiscriminately or habitually for petty offences, and if he does, the wife has a right to seek divorce by a Shari'ah court. Similarly, as we can see, Islam has not authorised men to beat up their wives.
The phenomenon of wife beating is not peculiar to Muslim's- it is found in all parts of the world among certain types of men. However, some Muslims unjustly claim that they have religious sanction when they beat their wives, while in most cases they are beating them only because they themselves are brutal by nature, or just in a bad temper.
Bad temper is to be controlled, not vented on the weaker sex. The Prophet (saws) referred to this in another Hadith when he said:
"He is not strong who throws people down, but he is strong among us who controls himself when he is angry." [Bukhari and Muslim]
Aisha observed this self-control in the Prophet (saws) behavior:
The Prophet (saws) never beat any of his wives or servants; in fact he did not strike anything with his hand except in the cause of Allah, or when the prohibitions of Allah were violated, and he retaliated on behalf of Allah.
The ideal Muslim husband therefore strives to emulate the Prophet's (saws) practice by avoiding beating completely and discouraging it from others. It is not at all becoming for a Muslim to be a wife-beater in defiance of the Prophet's (saws) explicit dislike of the practice.
This brings us to another interesting aspect of the Prophet's (saws) relationship with his wives.
He apparently allowed his wives to do what is called "answering back" to men who think that women, like children, should be seen and not heard. There are several recorded instances of the Prophet's (saws) companions remonstrating with him or with his wives about this practice. Nevertheless he chose to allow his wives to speak their minds.
An incident related in Ibn Ishaq's sirat Rasul Allah (An early biography of the Prophet*) makes an interesting reading:
One day Umar rebuked his wife for something and she sharply answered him back: and when he expostulated with her she replied that the wives of the Prophet (saws) were in the habit of answering him back so why should she not do the same? "And there is one of them," she added, meaning their daughter (Hafsah), "Who speaks her mind unabashed from morning until night." Greatly troubled by this, Umar went to Hafsah, who did not deny that what her mother said was true. "You have neither the grace of Aisha nor the beauty of Zainab," he said, hoping to shake her self confidence; and when these words seemed to have no effect, he added: "Are you so sure that if you anger the Prophet (saws), Allah will not destroy you in his anger?" Then he went to his cousin Umm Salamah (another wife of the Prophet) and said: "Is it true that you speak your minds to Allah's messenger (saws) and answer him with no respect?". "By all that is wonderful,"said Umm Salamah, "What call have you to come between Allah's messenger (saws) and his wives? Yes, by God, we speak our minds, and if he allows us to do so that is his affair, and if he forbids us he will find us more obedient to him then we are to you." Umar then realised he had gone too far and withdrew.
In this anecdote we can clearly hear the voices of women who respect their husband not because they are afraid of him or out of hypocrisy, but out of genuine admiration and love. The fact that he allowed them to speak their minds shows that the Prophet (saws) never regarded women as slaves or second-class citizens but as human beings to whom Allah (swt) has given reason and the ability to distinguish right from wrong as he has given them to men.
Aisha went further in a Hadith to say that when the Prophet (saws) told her something she would question him closely about it so that she could understand its justification before she was satisfied. The Prophet (saws) did not tell her she had no right to cross question him because he was a Prophet and a man, while she was only a young woman. It appears on the contrary that he appreciated her critical faculty and clear thinking.
*Retold in Muhammad- his Life based on the Earliest Source by Lings (Islamic Texts Society/George Allen & Unwin 1983)
From this we can see that the Prophet (saws) had such calm inner certainty and natural leadership qualities that he did not need to assert himself over his wives, or be on the defensive against them. Those men who behave like tyrants in the home, who assert their rule in an arbitrary or violent manner, are usually the weak ones who actually suffer from hidden inferiority complexes and are afraid of being shown up as mentally or morally inferior to their wives. To forestall this they physically frighten their wives, who are then afraid to open their mouths in their husband's presence, let alone to disagree with him.
Another incident illustrates how the Prophet (saws) asserted his leadership of his family without harsh words or violence. This is revealed in the way he treated his wives when they became too demanding of the comforts of this world. Aisha (raa) related that before the capture of the oasis of Khaybar she had not known what it was to eat her fill of dates. The Prophet's wives, fully aware of the general poverty of the Muslims in Medina, asked only for their basic needs. After the capture of Khaybar with it's rich agricultural produce, the Muslims were better off, and the Prophet (saws) was able to give his wives some presents, and they were not slow in learning to ask for more comforts. This led to problems because in fairness, what was given to one should be given to all, and this could not always be exactly fulfilled. There developed considerable resentment among some of his wives, which disrupted the peace of the household. When his advice to them was not heeded he followed the next Qur'anic step and withdrew himself from them all and stayed in a roofed verandah that was the only room he had apart from his wives' apartments.
Rumor soon spread that the Prophet (saws) had divorced his wives, and the wives, in suspense, regretted bitterly their demands on him. He then let it be known through Umar that he had not divorced them but that he did not wish to see any of them until a full lunar month had elapsed.
At the end of the month he asked his wives one by one to make their own choice in accordance with the newly revealed verses of the Qur'an:
"O Prophet, say to your wives: If you desire but the life of this world and it's charms, then come and I will bestow it's goods upon you, I will release you with a fair release. But if you desire Allah and his messenger and the abode of the hereafter, then verily Allah has laid in store for you a mighty reward, for such of you as do good."
[Qur'an 33:28-29]
Aisha replied without hesitation: "Verily, I desire Allah and his Messenger and the abode of the hereafter" and there was not one of his wives who did not choose the same. These events are related in a number of Hadith books, including Bukhari and Muslim. *
Here we see a husband who in spite of his love and sympathy for his wives, would not be carried away to commit injustice between them, not put himself into difficulties or wrong -doing in order to satisfy their desires beyond what was necessary. He was not ready for the role of the "hen-pecked husband." His firmness in the matter quickly made his wives see it in its proper perspective, and peace was restored to the household without recourse to divorce or even harsh word.
It is incidents like these that make it quite clear why the Prophet (saws) is held up a beautiful example to the Muslims in every aspect of his life.
There are of course numerous other facets of his personality and behavior, which contributed to making him an ideal husband.
He was of course clean and pure both in his thoughts and person, and very generous in accordance with his own saying:
"Verily Allah is pure and loves the pure, is clean and loves the clean, is beneficent and loves the beneficent, is generous and loves the generous." [Tirmidhi]
Another very important characteristic was his love of children. Love of her own children is almost automatic to a mother and with that love goes a care and concern for their children in any matter with the same degree of love, and consider the children to be "women's affair". In our own society today this is a common phenomenon where it is the mother who often plays the major role in ensuring that the children are clothed and cared for, that their school fees are paid, that they learn good behavior and so on. While it is good that the mother shows this love and concern, it is not approved for father to abandon his own moral and financial responsibilities and ignore the proper education and upbringing of his own children.
We have mentioned the Prophet's (saws) own role in the upbringing of his own daughters (it was only the daughters that survived to maturity) and on his emphasis on education for both sexes. There are also numerous Hadith indicating his love for children and his practice of showing his love for them.
For example in a Hadith from Abu Hurairah (raa) it is related as follows:
"The Prophet of Allah kissed his grandson Hassan the son of Ali in the presence of Agra' B. Habis, whereupon Agra' said: "Verily, I have children and yet I have not kissed any of them." The Prophet looked towards him and said: ' What can I do for you if Allah has taken away mercy from your heart. He that shows no mercy shall have no mercy shown to him." [Bukhari and Muslim]
The Muslim family is therefore ideally a very united family. Mutual understanding between husband and wife lies at the root of it. The Islamic upbringing of children is one of its most important functions. For it to succeed as the basic unit of the Muslim Ummah, both husband and wife need to know their duties and to practice self-control in trying to abide by the Islamic code of conduct within the family.
I wish to draw this paper to a close by approaching the subject briefly from a different angle. We have so far looked at the duties of the Muslim husband as spelled out in the Qur'an and seen how these points were expanded and added to in the Sunnah. We have also taken recorded incidents in the life of the Prophet (saws) as an illustration of an ideal Muslim husband in action.
Lastly, I approached the question "What is an ideal Muslim husband" by asking Muslim women to tell me what they thought.
To this end a questionnaire was passed to a random group of Muslim women, who informed me what they considered the most desirable qualities for an ideal Muslim husband to be.
To this end, a random group of 35 Muslim women living locally, mainly married ones were selected.
The five most important qualities scored 2 points each and the five next most important qualities scored 1 point each. The result is shown below:
Women's Order of Priority in the Desirable Qualities of an Ideal Muslim Husband
Points
1st. A Pious Muslim 49
2nd. Truthfulness and honesty 47
3rd A good leader 40
4th Justice and fairness 38
5th Love of children 37
6th Kindness and consideration 31
7th Readiness to consult his wife 30
8th Good manners 29
9th Chastity and good morals 26
10th Trustworthiness and reliability 25
11th Avoids quarrelling and beating 22
12th Clean habits 20
13th Strength of mind and will 19
14th Gentleness 17
15th Generosity 14
16th A loving nature 16
17th Ability to be contented with one wife 15
18th Sense of humour 13
19th Reasonableness 11
20th Firmness 9
21st Intelligence 8
22nd Seriousness 7
23rd Good looks 6
24th Physical strength 4
25th Wealth 1
This list of qualities is not of course comprehensive, and there are a few important omissions. However, it raises many interesting points for our brothers to consider in their endeavor to qualify as a potential or actual ideal Muslim husband.
Those who feared that by adhering to Islamic piety and moral standards they would frighten women away will see that they are actually at the top of the league.
This information also confirms the natural order of things referred to and upheld in the Qur'an, in that women do apparently want their men folk to lead and not be led. Leadership has to be deserved and qualified by all the other qualities mentioned in the upper part of the list, such as piety, truthfulness, fairness, kindness, consultation, good manners, good morals and so on.
It is interesting to go over in one's mind the qualities of the Prophet (saws) mentioned in the earlier part of this paper and match them with this list to see how far the Prophet's (saws) behavior to his wives demonstrates perfectly those qualities to which women give priority.
Therefore any man who wants to make a success of his marriage cannot go wrong if he takes as his model and example the practice of the blessed Prophet (saws).
For our brothers I pray for Allah to give them the faith and moral strength to attain those great qualities and thereby make a success of their marriages.
For our sisters I pray for Allah's guidance to make each of us worthy of being the ideal wife of an ideal Muslim husband.
By B. Aisha Lemu.
Letter of Nasihah with a Difference...
This is a letter of advice to a fellow Brother, after the first and only interview in respect to proceeding to marry thy sister, which took all of 59minutes!
From: The Grrrrr-ooom!
To: The Brides Hench Man Brother
Subject: Well Read on and you will know more
Date: On a Cold Winters Day in Londres
Wa Salaam Wa Rahmatullah Wa Barakatu,
InshAllah you and your family are well.
Aameen to your dua.
I accept your decision. I have done Istikharrah too and the feeling have been negative too.
I was very disappointed not at the decision as that has been decreed by Allah swt, and Alhamdullilah Allahu Alum. However I was extremely disapointed on your general adhab on the day.
I truly want for a Brother what I want for myself and thus I have made my comments known below to you on this email so you can open your heart and take these words and ponder on your actions on the day with sincereity.
I understand it is your right to ask about a prospectives family and job. However, to make comments, opinions and suggestive remarks upon my family, my job (within a space of an hour of meeting me) to which you have made conclusions upon is totall disgraceful, especialy from a Brother in Islam (who claims to be a seeker of Ilm).
Comments such as "I will take the issues with your job and the family situation" to a scholar like I was a leper needing attention from a surgeon. If I asked for a Faqih on such matters I would have gone to a person least a person who claims to have gone to Egypt for 9 mths to learn Arabic. I was meeting you for the intention of marriage not jurisprudence on my personal matters.
You do not know how this feels to be judged and more so judging ones blood relation with very little information hurts even more which resulted in you looking down on me and my family. May Allah forgive you, if you repent with sincerity.
Take for example the Prophet (PBUH) family, where it has been narrated that his parents went to Hell. See below.
It was narrated from the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) that his parents are in Hell. Muslim (203) narrated that a man said: “O Messenger of Allaah, where is my father?’ He said: “In Hell.” When the man turned away, he called him back and said: “My father and your father are in Hell.”
If all people at the time of the Prophet (PBUH) the utlimate role model for Humanity, judged him based on his Parents like the way you have done on my family (albeit with very little information), then this World would perhaps not have recieved the devine message from Allah swt due to ignorance and arrogance of oneself.
I am so proud to be a Muslim, and Allah has reminded me from meeting people like you, that Muslims with bad adhab do exist. May Allah swt protect me from such people, as who needs enemies when you have neighbours like yourself. Aameen.
If you really wanted to seek someone pious brother for your sister with your narrow mindedness you need not look at Muslim Public especially with your adhan, and search at the Madinah University.
I will continue to make dua for you and your family, May Allah guide you to the truth and make you patient with those around you. Aameen.
Wa Alaykum Salaam,
Its not Quantum Physics.....
Anonymous Unique Sister writing her tale of her quest:
It's weird, you don't even realise that anybody's interested in you. You're living a relatively carefree life when one day your parents say, "Hey kiddo, it's about time you got hitched, so we've invited a gentleman round to meet you". My parents prefer that I meet people rather than deciding by looking at a picture and bio-data ('bio-data' - I love the word, it's so bad it's got be Asian).
Come the day, I was nervous (naturally), I dressed myself appropriately (nice Aarong suit and not too much make-up, cos when I do I always end up looking like I'm in drag which I'm sure you'll agree is definitely not a good look). I went downstairs, took a seat while my brothers and sisters gathered around me like my personal henchmen while we made conversation.
I really tried to like him, but all I could think was he didn't look anything like his picture - he looked about 45 years old, with a pot belly, receding hairline and had teeth like Shrek with beetlenut stains all over them (UGH)!!! He turned up with every certificate he had ever gained from school, college and uni and for somebody with a degree in English, the spelling mistakes on his bio-data were simply unforgivable. Worst of all, he kept talking about how much money he'd made, which I thought was really crass and vulgar. I'm sure he's a really nice person, and I honestly hope he is happy wherever he is now. I'm just eternally grateful, he's not with me.
Discovering Mars..
Discovering Mars Posted by a Sister on her bloggger site on: http://ummibraheem.wordpress.com/2009/10/05/discovering-mars/
Below is the full article:
I figure writing about Martians would make sense as they are the ones I want to understand
One thing I repeatedly hear from my husband is that just because he is quiet does not mean he’s ignoring me. When I talk and he doesn’t reply or even acknowledge that I’ve spoken, that is a good thing. Why? Because martians are Mr. Fix Its.
Let me explain. On Mars, power, efficiency, competency and achievements are valued.
Their sense of self is defined by their ability to achieve results.
Men are more interested in objects and things rather than people and feelings. For example, while a woman may fantasize about romance, men fantasize about powerful gadgets (I tried not to laugh at that…
Another thing that I discovered – It is important to them that they achieve these goals by themselves. The #1 mistake a woman can make is giving a man unsolicited advice or correcting them - which, simply put, can come across as telling them what to do
A man may feel offended by unsolicited advice because he feels that the woman doesn’t trust his ability to do it himself. It can make him feel incompetent, weak and unloved.
On Mars, you rarely talk to others about your problems. Why ask someone else when you can do it yourself? If a Martian does need help, he’ll ask an expert in the area. And the other Martian, honored by the request for help, will quickly put on his Mr. Fix It hat, access the situation and give his professional advice. It’s quite simple, actually (if your brain just works in logical equations and not emotional ones).
And THAT is why a man will stay quiet even after you have finished talking, because he is trying to come up with solutions to your problems. That is his way of showing love.
When women react by getting frustrated at their lack of sympathy/empathy, Martians react negatively because they feel that their advice is rejected and in turn, they feel useless.
Here on Venus
Initially, I wasn’t even going to write about our point of view, but I realized that it’s important to so that we can understand ourselves (if we don’t already!) and also so that we can explain to our spouses in words they can understand why we behave the way we do
Simply put: Martians are goal oriented, whereas Venesians are relationship oriented.
Women are intuitive and they pride themselves on being considerate of others’ needs and feelings. While Martians may be irritated or offended by advice that wasn’t asked for, Venesians consider it a great sign of love.
While the motto of Martians is: “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”, Vensias believe that everything has potential for improvement. Hence wives always trying to subconsciously (or consciously!) improve their husbands
A big tipper for guys: women don’t talk to get solutions. Well, sometimes they do, but when we are emotional and upset and seem to be blabbering about all kinds of junk, it’s because we want someone to listen. Plain and simple As I tell my husband, it’s therapeutic.
So we learned that Martians are problem solving Mr. Fix Its and Venesians are people loving Home Improbers. There’s nothing wrong with that; we’re just wired that way
Women need to remember that unsolicited advice or criticism, especially if the guy’s made a mistake, make him feel unloved and controlled. Men need to remember that when women seem upset and they are talking about ther problems, it is not the time to offer solutions. Instead, she just needs to be heard and she will gradually feel better on her own.
PRACTICE!
If you are a woman, practice not giving advice or criticism for a week. I know this is really difficult (being a woman), so maybe talking less in general may help (hmm…that seems to be even harder… ) To help, here are some phrases to try and avoid:
1.“You should call a plumber. He’ll know what to do.”
2.“You should spend more time with the kids. They miss you.”
3.“You forgot to bring it home again. Maybe you could put it in a special place where you can remember it.”
4.“Abdullah called for the third time. When are you going to call him back?”
See you next week!
What did you say Honey...
This is a great Article by Suhaib Webb "What did you say Honey", on Communication between Spouses.
http://www.suhaibwebb.com/personaldvlpt/what-did-you-say-honey/
Wednesday, 20 January 2010
The Elasticty of Man...
Another great read from an article on the good old web.
The author of the book, Doctor Gray, gives a very interesting analogy for he intimacy cycle of men: he says
they are like rubberbands. They pull back occasionally, but can only go so far before springing back. They have to pull away to get close and intimate again. If a man never pulls away, he doesn’t get the chance to feel the strong desire to be close again.
As they say, distance makes the heart grow fonder Unlike women, though, they do not need to get reaquainted before feeling close again. Once they shoot back, they are just where they were before (in terms of intimacy).
So what happens is, men get intimate and close, and then suddenly they feel the urge to pull away. They want a feeling of independence. Once they pull away, they may stretch quite far. Once they are fully stretched, they feel that strong urge and come back.
Why Men Pull Away
To put it simply, that’s just the way Allah made them
A man automatically alternates between needing intimacy and autonomy (or independence).
Basically: men need their space. If you chase him while he is pulling away, he’ll never get to reach his limit and feelthat pull to be close again.
To a certain extent, a man loses himself through connecting with his partner. By feeling her needs, problems, wants and emotions, he may lose touch with his own self. Pulling away allows him to reestablish his personal boundaries and fulfill his need to feel autonomous.
I actually think that women need this too – especially mothers!
Interestingly enough, men may seem to pull away precisely when women want to talk and be intimate. This occurs for two reasons:
1.A woman sometimes unconsciously senses when a man is about to pull away, and then tries to reestablish the intimacy by trying to talk.
2.When a woman shares her more intimate feelings, it may trigger the man’s need to pull away. A man can only handle so much intimacy before his alarm bells go off, telling him to find balance and pull away.
When to Talk
It doesn’t have to do with the fact that she says these things that trigger his departure, but when she says it.
Obviously not when he is pulling away He’ll be loving and supportive soon enough and want closeness. and that is the golden oppurtunity to talk. By this time, women usually either are too afraid to talk from feeling rejected last time, or they are waiting for him to initiate conversation. Miscommunication, again.
Men don’t talk to share, but if a woman initiates the conversation and talks for some time (without him feeling blamed or pressured), a man will start to open up as well. If a woman demands him to talk, she’ll turn him off by making him feeling interrogated.
A man who needs to pull away a lot before he can learn to share and open up will first need to listen a lot. He needs to be appreciated for listening, then gradually he will say more.
Directly getting a man to talk is not the best way. Start out by encouraging him to listen to you. Realize that Martians don’t feel the need to talk much. Let him know you appreciate him listening, so it’s important to let him know the listening is valuable to you.
It is more effective to teach a man to listen to open up and be vulnerable. As he learns to listen to someone he cares for and is appreciated in response, he gradually will open up and share more automatically.
How Women Punish Men for their Elasticity
Women often unknowingly obstruct a man’s natural intimacy cycle (his rubberband-ness, if you will) by either chasing him when he is pulling away or punishing him for pulling away. They may exhibit either of these physically, emotionally, or mentally.
Physically chasing would of course be to follow him around. ”Emotional chasing” might be constantly worrying about him. Mentally chasing a man could come in the form of asking him guilt-inducing questions like, “How could you treat me this way?”
Physically punishing a man for his natural cycle could be by refusing him physical, or even sexual, intimacy. Emotional punishment would be disapproving of him. She may mentally punish him by refusing to open up after he returns.
All of these behavior are obviously very unhealthy for a relationship. Pulling away is a natural process for men. They should not have to feel guilty about it.
Wise Men & Women
At the same time, a man needs to keep in mind how his sudden pulling away affects his woman. Whenever he isn’t pulling away, he can take time to initiate conversation so taht she knows he is interested in her and he does care. Also, he should reassure her before pulling away by saying something like, “I just need some time alone. I’ll be back soon.”
A wise woman doesn’t give up on her man. She waits, because she knows he’ll be back in a snap
Why Women Talk So Much....
An extract taken from a wordpress site:
I don’t think I talk too much, but BS thinks otherwise. To him, I “talk differently”. That was probably his way of testing waters and it could mostly likely meant that I talk more than I have to, think more than I need to, seem to have a thousand problems going on at the same time when it isn’t the case at all – you know, the usual dilemma men have about women. Apparently women are difficult to be understood and even more difficult to please. On the other hand, I thought men can be quite dumb about the most obvious things and totally insensitive during crucial times. (Men, do forgive me for being so straightforward!)
Anyway, if you think that women really talk too much, talk irrelevantly, talk confusingly, you might as well find out why we do so. I feel so amused reading from the famous book Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus (a Christmas present from Jellio). I actually discovered why I talk so much and how confused BS can get just by listening to me talk for a few minutes!
Below is a wonderful excerpt from the book in Chapter 3: Men Go to Their Caves and Women Talk.
“When a woman is stressed she instinctively feels a need to talk about her feelings and all the possible problems that are associated with her feelings. When she begins talking she does not prioritize the significance of any problem. If she is upset, then she is upset about it all, big and small. She is not immediately concerned with finding solutions to her problems but rather seeks relief by expressing herself and being understood. By randomly talking about her problems, she becomes less upset.
As a man under stress tends to focus on one problem and forget others, a woman under stress tends to expand and become overwhelmed by all problems. By talking about all possible problems without focusing on problem solving she feels better. Through exploring her feelings in this process she gains a greater awareness of what is really bothering her, and then suddenly she is no longer so overwhelmed.
To feel better, women talk about past problems, future problems, potential problems, even problems that have no solutions. The more talk and exploration, the better they feel. This is the way women operate. To expect otherwise is to deny a woman her sense of self.
When a woman is overwhelmed she finds relief through talking in great detail about her various problems. Gradually, if she feels she is being heard, her stress disappears. After talking about one topic she will pause and then move on to the next. In this way she continues to expand talking about problems, worries, disappointments, and frustrations. These topics need not be in any order and end to be logically unrelated. If she feels she is not being understood, her awareness may expand even further, and she may become upset about more problems.
Just as a man who is stuck in the cave needs little problems to distract him, a woman who doesn’t feel heard will need to talk about other problems that are less immediate to feel relief. To forget her own painful feelings she may become emotionally involved in the problems of others. In addition she may find relief through discussing the problems of her friends, relatives, and associates. Whether she is talking about her problems or others’ problems, talking is a natural and healthy Venusian reaction to stress.“
So next time when we talk about anything and everything under the sun, kindly bear with us coz it’s our natural way to de-stress. Or at least, pretend to be listening. But be reminded that we are so sensitive we most probably know that you are not listening at all and then go on to erupt like a volcano, making matters worse from where they first started.
Hehe… awful I know, but this is just too bad. Please blame the X chromosome
Stress Relief: the Cave of Solitude
Men and women cope with stress VERY differently. Men tend to become increasingly focused and withdrawn, while women become increasingly overwhelmed and emotionally involved. Men feel better by solving their problems and women feel better by talking about them
That is because martians are cavemen at heart A man will retreat to his cave (deep, deep in his cave…) to find a solution to his problem. And he will become so focused on solving his problem that he will temporarily lose awareness of everything else. This translates into becoming distant, forgetful and preoccupied. After all, Martians feel good about themselves when they accomplish goals themselves; there is no reason to bother anyone else. When he does solve his problem, he’ll feel better and reemerge from his cave.
If he can’t find a solution, he will remain stuck in the save. To become unstuck – and to help him focus better – he may solve problems of a smaller degree to help him forget the bigger problem. For example, he may read the news, exercise, etc.
How Women Feel About the Cave
In three words : We hate it
That’s because we feel ignored by his withdrawing and powerless that we can’t “hear a man out” to make him feel better. (Remmeber, it’s all about perspective. For a woman, hearing her out would be helping her). Not talking to her is hurtful because she feels that he doesn’t love her.
Stress Relief: When Women Talk
When women are stressed out, they like to talk. It relaxes and makes a woman feel good when she feels someone is there to listen to her. Men, however, may feel that the woman is blaming him. Because men talk about problems for only two reasons: they are blaming someone or seeking a solution.
Ah, that explains so much
Very simple, ladies: just tell your man that you talk when you are upset because it is a way of siphoning out all those overwhelming emotions, frustration and anger. Once you are emotionally stable, you can deal with your problems. All he has to do is listen and sympathize. (And you may want to add that “listening” translates to “undivided attention” in Venesian).
A few reasons why men get frustrated by our venting sessions:
1. They become impatient by details because they feel that they are necessary to solve the problem. And since men are problem-solvers, they are trying hard to keep up with all of the gibberish we spit out. (Although, I felt like this totally didn’t apply to me…unnecessary details are my pet peeve).
2. He assumes that there is a logical order to the ranting. It’s hard to link up all of the different problems. They are not related at all, in fact.
3. He is looking for the bottom line.
As a woman, we know how we work. Explain the concept of talking to your husband Let him know that when you’re upset about something, it reminds you of other problems and suddenly you’re incredibly overwhelmed by everything. All you need is a good ear and some sympathy.
Practice
Next time your hubby goes to the cave, let him Realize he’s just trying to work though a problem and when he’s ready, he’ll come out. In the mean time, go shopping, listen to a lecture…have some girl time
Also, if your hubby is acting like a space cadet, it’s probably because he’s stressed. Ask him point blank. Makes things easier.
[This is not me talking like an Agony Uncle, its taken from Peeps who have had experience on the Marriage front]
Random Q from a Man - What does it mean.....
Q: When your husband says he’s had a tough day at work, what do you think you should do?
A) Leave him alone and not talk about it.
B) Ask him, “How do you feel?”
C) Tell him you have faith in him
D) Make suggestions and tell him how he can make the problem better
If you chose “C” then congratulations! You have and inkling of what the hell guys are thinking. When guys have a problem, they feel like they have to figure it out for themselves. Solving a problem for a man fulfills what he likes most which is to feel like “a man.” So when a women tries to help a man solve his problem, he feels weak and… girly. Though when a women tells their man that they can solve the problem, men feel like Superman and can do anything.
IF YOU DIDN’T CHOSE “C” THEN GET A CUP OF COFFEE AND PAY ATTENTION!
I’m about you tell you 13 THINGS YOU DIDN’T KNOW ABOUT GUYS.
1. Men like to say, “I love you” on their own time. Don’t nag them until they say it.
2. They’ll do anything for sex. Yes, even marrying you.
3. They dig long hair.
4. When women speak softly, men like to listen.
5. Guys hate arguing. They’d rather compromise.
6. Men admit that they need to be told “no” sometimes. Not all the time, but once in awhile.
7. Don’t ask a man what he thinks of your outfits unless you can handle what he’s going to say. Don’t make it hard for them.
8. The angrier you are with them for staring at other women, the more they stare.
9. When women are happy, men want to please women.
10. If men think they can’t make women happy, they feel less like a man.
11. Men expect women to be ready when they pick them up.
12. Cigarettes make women look cheap and easy.
13. Men are scared to let women into their hearts, because they are afraid to be taken advantage of.
So there you are. 13 things you didn’t know before!
Manufacturing a Match Made in Heaven
This is an article I read today and it made for interesting reading especially being a 2nd Generation Muslim in the UK, I can definitely relate to this:
Manufacturing a Match Made in Heaven
Yesterday at 2:18am
So here's a random thought.
I think a lot of Muslim marriages are slapped together on this metaphorical production line. As they whizz down the line the different parts are primed and trimmed, they get their coat of spray paint and eventually they're stuck together. They mostly work, but maybe for a long time people are not sure if the end product will stand the test of time. Sometimes they only work because they have to. After a while the cheap coat of shiny spray paint peels off revealing the true colours of the constituent parts; they're not always the prettiest underneath.
Poor build quality is not uncommon, various cracks exist beneath the surface. Parts are prone to break easily and people generally lack the competency and patience to piece things back together. Few understand how to use the trouble-shooting manual that comes free with each product; it is after all in a different language. The novelty wears out quickly and people envy the latest designs on the market. With the slightest scuff or scratch people are quick to rush to the manufacturer and too often they find their way back to the factory to find a replacement. Sometimes broken parts will be recycled but sadly, more often than not, broken pieces are quickly forgotten about.
I guess you used to find a lot of little family run production lines, each offering unique customisations, service with a smile. Increasingly there are fewer and fewer of these, instead we are seeing the dominance of more and more mass production lines.
(Still with me?)
So the picture you can see here is probably the most random image I have pulled off Google. The punch bowl on the right came off a production line, the one on the left is hand made.
I guess they both fulfil the function they're designed for, but there is a value to the handmade one that you cannot really put a price to. Painstakingly, with so much care to detail that bowl was put together. Only the people who made the bowl (and the little cups) know its true value. There's nothing else like it. It is the imperfections that make it perfect, as opposed to the machine made bowl whose pseudo-perfection renders it worthless in comparison to the handmade.
British Muslims in their twenties are met by a plethora of challenges as they face the prospect of getting married. There are various obstacles to manoeuvre around, each compounding and intertwining with the other. The fusion of our tangled British identity with our parents Asian/Arab/African culture presents one such challenge, this is clouded by the general confusion that surrounds the whole marriage process, and how best to ‘approach things. Further complicating matters is our inability to separate the (not always bad, but often skewed) Hollywood, Bollywood and Disney images and expectations of love and marriage that have been imprinted on us. We also have to be honest about the streaks of emotional immaturity and lack of wisdom and foresight that taint our relationships (men plagued by this moreso) as well as well as our mental fragility and deficit in our psycho-social prowess to deal with life changes in general (women ever so slightly more)
Most importantly, however, is the weakness of our Islamic grounding and our relative distrust with what we know to be the loftiest principles to which we should choose our partners.
I apologise for focusing on the bleaker side of things, in any case, the resolution?
With ever increasing divorce rates, prevalence of hostile domestic environments, unidentified masses of empty shell marriages, as well as a scary rise in the number of unmarried Muslims in their late twenties and thirties; we are yet to find model solutions to the marital conundrums that afflict generations of Muslims in Britain. The issues are real and aren’t going away, and it can only be enriching to reflect upon how we each stand in relation to them.
At least on an individual level, before going about finding a partner we need to appreciate that each and every one of us are misshaped, quirky pieces with our own unique history. The conventional assembly line marriage machines may give the illusion of a shiny flawlessness counterpart, but know that no two pieces fit together exactly, in fact there is a third piece in this jigsaw.
The Master Craftsman in His Wisdom created us with our bumps and flaws. But know that regardless of how misshapen you are, you can ‘fit’ into His Divine jigsaw piece; the way of the best of creation (peace and blessings upon him,) the way of al-Islam. I read once, that “your heart should be so close to God, that one must seek Him in order to find you.” The issues and challenges that surround getting married are plentiful and complex, but what we are charged with is to work on ourselves: “Truly, God does not change the condition of a people until they change what is in themselves.” (Quran 13:11)
One of the surest ways of securing a fruitful and happy married life is to develop a deep and wholesome understanding and grounding in Islam, this coupled with a constant beautifying of your character. A believer loves and is loved easily. Early 21st century psychologists explored how young Men look for wives that resemble the endearing qualities of their mothers. Taking a step further we can look to the beautiful nature of the Mothers of the Believers, the wives of the Prophet (peace be upon them.) Often you will see brothers gazing into the distance, saying “I want to find my ‘Khadijah’... my ‘Ayesha’...” But what they fail to realise that they first must become as ‘Muhammadi’ as they can, embodying the best of men (peace and blessings be upon him,) before hoping to find such a gem of a woman. Expect your partner to be nothing but a reflection of you and your state, after all “A believer is a mirror to another believer”
Prophetic tradition recognises the important role that beauty, attraction, wealth and family background play when choosing a life partner. But what is stressed beyond everything else is ‘Deen – (piety)’ and ‘Akhlaq – (character)’. We read in numerous hadith that one of the most desirable character traits in a partner is that of God consciousness; that a pious partner is the most valuable treasure on this earth. What is interesting, however, is the mentioning of character; that decorating a secure Islamic foundation is the subtleties of one’s personality. We cannot underestimate this issue of compatibility, and this is where seeking the counsel from family and friends plays an integral role in giving an objective, detached perspective.
Rumi once wrote “if you are irritated by every rub, how will you be polished?” Just like the time and effort put into the handmade punch bowls, the sincere tears, the nights in prayer and the days fasting adds a unique and deep value to your persona. It’s easy in the confusion of it all to feel disconnected from Allah, but remember it is in these moments when He's inviting you to Him.
Ibn Ata illah wrote:
"If you make intense supplication
and the timing of the answer is delayed,
do not despair of it.
His reply to you is guaranteed;
but in the way He chooses,
not the way you choose,
and at the moment He desires,
not the moment you desire."
Remember this path we find ourselves on is a well-trodden one. After striving to better yourself, put your trust in your Creator for truly “Allah loves those who put their trust (in Him)” (Quran 3:159)
Manufacturing a Match Made in Heaven
Yesterday at 2:18am
So here's a random thought.
I think a lot of Muslim marriages are slapped together on this metaphorical production line. As they whizz down the line the different parts are primed and trimmed, they get their coat of spray paint and eventually they're stuck together. They mostly work, but maybe for a long time people are not sure if the end product will stand the test of time. Sometimes they only work because they have to. After a while the cheap coat of shiny spray paint peels off revealing the true colours of the constituent parts; they're not always the prettiest underneath.
Poor build quality is not uncommon, various cracks exist beneath the surface. Parts are prone to break easily and people generally lack the competency and patience to piece things back together. Few understand how to use the trouble-shooting manual that comes free with each product; it is after all in a different language. The novelty wears out quickly and people envy the latest designs on the market. With the slightest scuff or scratch people are quick to rush to the manufacturer and too often they find their way back to the factory to find a replacement. Sometimes broken parts will be recycled but sadly, more often than not, broken pieces are quickly forgotten about.
I guess you used to find a lot of little family run production lines, each offering unique customisations, service with a smile. Increasingly there are fewer and fewer of these, instead we are seeing the dominance of more and more mass production lines.
(Still with me?)
So the picture you can see here is probably the most random image I have pulled off Google. The punch bowl on the right came off a production line, the one on the left is hand made.
I guess they both fulfil the function they're designed for, but there is a value to the handmade one that you cannot really put a price to. Painstakingly, with so much care to detail that bowl was put together. Only the people who made the bowl (and the little cups) know its true value. There's nothing else like it. It is the imperfections that make it perfect, as opposed to the machine made bowl whose pseudo-perfection renders it worthless in comparison to the handmade.
British Muslims in their twenties are met by a plethora of challenges as they face the prospect of getting married. There are various obstacles to manoeuvre around, each compounding and intertwining with the other. The fusion of our tangled British identity with our parents Asian/Arab/African culture presents one such challenge, this is clouded by the general confusion that surrounds the whole marriage process, and how best to ‘approach things. Further complicating matters is our inability to separate the (not always bad, but often skewed) Hollywood, Bollywood and Disney images and expectations of love and marriage that have been imprinted on us. We also have to be honest about the streaks of emotional immaturity and lack of wisdom and foresight that taint our relationships (men plagued by this moreso) as well as well as our mental fragility and deficit in our psycho-social prowess to deal with life changes in general (women ever so slightly more)
Most importantly, however, is the weakness of our Islamic grounding and our relative distrust with what we know to be the loftiest principles to which we should choose our partners.
I apologise for focusing on the bleaker side of things, in any case, the resolution?
With ever increasing divorce rates, prevalence of hostile domestic environments, unidentified masses of empty shell marriages, as well as a scary rise in the number of unmarried Muslims in their late twenties and thirties; we are yet to find model solutions to the marital conundrums that afflict generations of Muslims in Britain. The issues are real and aren’t going away, and it can only be enriching to reflect upon how we each stand in relation to them.
At least on an individual level, before going about finding a partner we need to appreciate that each and every one of us are misshaped, quirky pieces with our own unique history. The conventional assembly line marriage machines may give the illusion of a shiny flawlessness counterpart, but know that no two pieces fit together exactly, in fact there is a third piece in this jigsaw.
The Master Craftsman in His Wisdom created us with our bumps and flaws. But know that regardless of how misshapen you are, you can ‘fit’ into His Divine jigsaw piece; the way of the best of creation (peace and blessings upon him,) the way of al-Islam. I read once, that “your heart should be so close to God, that one must seek Him in order to find you.” The issues and challenges that surround getting married are plentiful and complex, but what we are charged with is to work on ourselves: “Truly, God does not change the condition of a people until they change what is in themselves.” (Quran 13:11)
One of the surest ways of securing a fruitful and happy married life is to develop a deep and wholesome understanding and grounding in Islam, this coupled with a constant beautifying of your character. A believer loves and is loved easily. Early 21st century psychologists explored how young Men look for wives that resemble the endearing qualities of their mothers. Taking a step further we can look to the beautiful nature of the Mothers of the Believers, the wives of the Prophet (peace be upon them.) Often you will see brothers gazing into the distance, saying “I want to find my ‘Khadijah’... my ‘Ayesha’...” But what they fail to realise that they first must become as ‘Muhammadi’ as they can, embodying the best of men (peace and blessings be upon him,) before hoping to find such a gem of a woman. Expect your partner to be nothing but a reflection of you and your state, after all “A believer is a mirror to another believer”
Prophetic tradition recognises the important role that beauty, attraction, wealth and family background play when choosing a life partner. But what is stressed beyond everything else is ‘Deen – (piety)’ and ‘Akhlaq – (character)’. We read in numerous hadith that one of the most desirable character traits in a partner is that of God consciousness; that a pious partner is the most valuable treasure on this earth. What is interesting, however, is the mentioning of character; that decorating a secure Islamic foundation is the subtleties of one’s personality. We cannot underestimate this issue of compatibility, and this is where seeking the counsel from family and friends plays an integral role in giving an objective, detached perspective.
Rumi once wrote “if you are irritated by every rub, how will you be polished?” Just like the time and effort put into the handmade punch bowls, the sincere tears, the nights in prayer and the days fasting adds a unique and deep value to your persona. It’s easy in the confusion of it all to feel disconnected from Allah, but remember it is in these moments when He's inviting you to Him.
Ibn Ata illah wrote:
"If you make intense supplication
and the timing of the answer is delayed,
do not despair of it.
His reply to you is guaranteed;
but in the way He chooses,
not the way you choose,
and at the moment He desires,
not the moment you desire."
Remember this path we find ourselves on is a well-trodden one. After striving to better yourself, put your trust in your Creator for truly “Allah loves those who put their trust (in Him)” (Quran 3:159)
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