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Islam

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🕋 Spirituality, hadiths, Islamic history and teachings. Connect with fellow members in enlightening conversations as we seek a deeper understanding and appreciation of Islam.

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Anonymous

3 days ago

Yes

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Normalize being a boring Muslim. Go to bed after Isha. Wake before Fajr. Sit with Qur'an to understand. Take dhikr walks. Your life doesn't have to be loud to have barakah. Sometimes, the magic is in being unreachable. In becoming the Muslim, nobody can disturb.

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Hijab applies to both: a woman's obligation to observe parda, and a man's obligation to lower his gaze. True strength in faith means both sides taking ownership of their commanded duties. 🎯⚓️

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Salam brothers and sisters,

I am on my way to Jumah right now.

Please keep me in your dua, I become so weak that even going to Jumah feels so heavy.

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Imagine your religion allows you polygyny but you can't find single one 😭😭

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What is something beautiful Islam taught you that non-Muslims might not know?

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Ask me

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I've noticed something deeply troubling in our community — teenagers, often between 16 and 22, being pushed into marriage, sometimes having children soon after, and then ending up divorced before they've even had the chance to figure out who they are.
We need to ask ourselves: what kind of society normalizes this?
For a long time, I blamed it solely on the orthodox mindset of parents — the rush to "settle" kids before they're ready, the fear of "log kya kahenge," the belief that marriage will somehow fix immaturity or instability. And honestly, that mindset does play a huge part. Marrying off a 17-year-old because a "good rishta" came along, without asking if she's emotionally or financially ready, is a failure of responsibility disguised as tradition.
But the deeper I think about it, the more I realize it's not just about orthodoxy. It's about a system that doesn't prepare young people for what marriage and parenthood actually demand — emotional maturity, financial stability, communication skills, the ability to navigate conflict. None of that is taught. Instead, we throw two people who are barely adults into a lifelong commitment and expect them to "figure it out."
And when it doesn't work — when two kids who never had a real childhood suddenly find themselves parents themselves, trying to survive a marriage they didn't fully choose — we call it their failure. Rarely do we call it ours.
If we want fewer broken homes, fewer children growing up between two households, fewer young people carrying the weight of decisions made for them — we need to start having honest conversations. About readiness. About consent. About what marriage actually requires beyond a nikah and a wedding card.
Tradition isn't the enemy. But blindly following it without question — at the cost of young lives — is.
#SocietalChange #EarlyMarriage #MentalHealthMatters #BreakingTheCycle

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hi Smile first, judge later 😊”

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Anonymous

3 days ago

Assalamun^ alaikum
Jummah mubarak to.
My Muslim ☪️ ummah

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