Dakwah Di Amerika - Syaikh Dr. Tahir Wyatt - Ustadz Dr. Firanda Andirja, M.A.
cc7Zw72nol8 • 2020-07-27
Transcript preview
Open
Kind: captions Language: en foreign [Laughter] [Music] um a [Music] for the opportunity to address you all and after thanking allah i want to thank my colleague and the classmate dr philander for arranging uh this talk which happens to be during the best 10 days of the year last year uh sheikh randa and i were together in medina at this exact time and this year allah subhanahu wa ta'ala has decreed for uh this ummah and in fact for the entirety of the world to be in a semi-state of lockdown due to covet 19. and that being the case uh we have to find other ways to take advantage of the blessing of these 10 days and we ask allah to make us from amongst those who race to his mercy and race to seek his forgiveness and to take advantage of the seasons of the good that he has prescribed for us [Music] can you see me yes i can okay is there any way that they can set it up so that i can see you because it's going to make it easier for the translation process is that possible you see meow no no no i only i only see myself okay i'm not sure uh i'm looking for you but i i don't i don't see we should i i think that the uh the moderator is gonna have to figure out how to split the screen it's okay um it just would be easier if i can see you it's fine um you can hear me correct yes okay alhamdulillah so islam i know that the title of this talk is dawa in the united states of america and islam is the fastest growing religion in the united states of america but before we can talk about dawa in the united states it's going to be very important that we understand some of the history of islam in america there are currently uh estimates anywhere from four to ten million muslims in the united states there aren't any exact numbers uh how did we get that many muslims where are those muslims located and why some of those are the things that we have to talk about so that we can really understand uh dawah in america as it's as it is to death the america typically the history books will mention that christopher columbus discovered america in 1492 uh that also happened to be the year uh that the muslims were defeated in landolus and no longer maintained any form of islamic governance of that land history also records that some of the people who were navigating that trip with columbus to the united states to what is now known as the united states of america that some of those people were muslims and there's without a doubt uh evidence that indicates that the muslims probably 300 years before columbus ever made it to america that muslims had in fact made it to america christopher columbus foreign yeah so uh after after columbus made it to america many things happened and i'm not going to go through the whole history of the united states but it is important to note that in 1619 the first uh slave ship arrived in the united states of america now they're trying to the europeans who came to the united states many of them were protestant christians they needed labor they needed very cheap labor to begin to farm their lands and and build the country uh and and so they hurt they bought slaves um from mainly from west africa and the reason why this is important in the history of islam in america is that approximately a third of the slaves who were forcefully taken from their lands and brought to the united st [Music] foreign muslims a lot of people do not know about the history of the muslims who were brought from west africa uh the senate is primarily from senegal and along the west african coast but a lot of them as you probably are aware uh they were muslim people and they were brought to the united states and they were forced to convert to christianity however there are diaries that are left over accounts of their daily lives where they were praying many of them were praying five times a day they were still trying to fast the month of ramadan but over time as what happens in most lands is that the parents uh you know who have some cultural attachment to their people they hold on to their religion as much as they can and then as it goes down to the next generation of children um they're not holding on as much anymore they don't have that same cultural attachment and then it gets lost not to mention um that they were forced many of them to convert to christianity or they would face death foreign get back to why but i do want you to at least convey this message first that out of the all of the muslims in america today as it stands today in one out of five uh muslims in the united states and and maybe it's so 20 to 30 percent of the muslims in the united states today are actually uh african-american muslims they're black muslims and that's a that is the largest group of muslims in the united states i mean even though we have arab americans we have south asians so that's like indian pakistani and bangladeshi americans the largest single group of muslims in the united states today happens to be black americans and i'm going to talk a little bit about the relationship between that and slavery in a minute the americas uh so in 1865 uh slavery was abolished right but that didn't mean that uh everything magically changed overnight so uh black people were still looked at as second-class citizens um very difficult to get jobs there was no uh equality in terms of education there obviously wasn't equality in terms of housing in fact uh the government worked very hard to keep blacks and white people uh segregated and so the housing that was uh it to uh black people was usually inferior uh and this lasted for a very long time the the reason why i'm bringing this up is because the first major islamic or movement that had the name islam in america was back in the 1930s right so we're talking uh 90 years ago right uh there was the beginning of a group called the nation of islam the americas um [Music] there were obviously muslims in the united states before the nation of islam uh but this was the first large movement that called themselves muslims now uh interestingly enough so this group was uh founded by a man by the name of elijah muhammad and elijah muhammad was in the nation the nation of islam was very much influenced by uh what what they call the the baltimore the ismailia uh these what we would call esoteric groups and also the ahmadiyya the the group out of pakistan who believed that was their prophet so i want to state from the very beginning that the creed of the nation of islam was not the traditional muslim creed uh in fact it is it really is not islamic at all but there was another part of this particular movement that is very important for us to understand and is important uh in the story of islam in america and where we are today in terms of dawah well uh [Music] yes okay make sure you get this point down okay because it's it's very important for us to understand that elijah muhammad who was the founder of the nation of islam he taught that he was the prophet of allah okay so with this is not islam as we know it he taught that he was the prophet of allah that he was sent to black people and he taught black people a form of black supremacy that now you this is this is a very interesting concept at that time because again we're talking about just a couple generations ago many black people in the united states were slaves and now and they were and they were taught that they were inferior uh in fact uh you know in terms of christian belief and this is what many of the christian uh black people believed at that particular time that white people were better than them and if white people were not better than them then god would have made them have a better life so the fact that they don't have a better life and that white people are in control of everything that means that white people are actually better than black people and we know that islam came to eradicate this type of mentality there is no racism in islam our prophet sallallahu alaihi wasallam taught us that there is no virtue for a white person over a black person or a black person or a white person except with uh at the top so this is totally outside of islam but elijah muhammad was teaching uh black people that they are better than white people he taught them about economic empowerment doing for self not relying upon other people but going out and working very hard this mentality caught on amongst a lot of black people because they liked his message the social part of the message a lot of them did not really understand the akhida or the theological side of his message but they understood the social part of his message and so they began to call themselves muslims and that is a very important point i want you to talk about that and then i'll i'll come back and finish okay elijah muhammad america [Music] right so at this point you have a a number uh you know thousands of people calling themselves muslims but it's it they don't believe the way that you and i believe about us and from amongst the most famous of them and the most prominent of them was a man who came to be known as malcolm x or al hajj is what is what he would call himself later on now initially he was a follow follower of elijah muhammad and that lasted for you know approximately a decade but then after that allah blessed him with guidance uh and and he made the hajj and on hajj that is when his views began to change radically because he saw that even though and i forgot to mention that part of their creed part of what they teach in terms of their ipeda is that white people are devils okay so black people are supreme and white people are devils well when uh malcolm x made hajj uh and he started to see he he saw people from all over the world including uh european muslims and he saw muslims with blonde hair and blue eyes and he began to reevaluate some of the teachings because he knew that these people were muslims and they're not devils and and so eventually malcolm x actually uh took shahada you know he he believed the way that sunni muslims believed and said and he met muhammad and he broke off uh from the nation of islam and he began to uh invite people to real islam you know real sunni islam uh and eventually uh he was assassinated [Music] so so this was um this was in 1965 that malcolm x was killed so we're talking about 55 years ago but what happened after that is that people now were exposed to sunni islam and if they weren't just now under the uh assumption that islam was a religion only for black people at the same time you had an influx of yemeni immigrants they were fleeing the war in yemen and the car factories in the united states needed labor they needed laborers and so many of the uh yemenis uh began to migrate to the united states at that particular time uh you also had a people coming over from south asia and so islam began to have some type of prominence uh in the late 60s uh in the early 70s you you know there were there started to be some pockets of muslims now it wasn't just widespread but there there were muslims now and people is [Music] yeah so so what happened in the 70s is that now you start seeing in the major metropolitan areas whether it's new york city uh philadelphia even down south in houston uh as far uh west coast as california los angeles and socal area there are mosques being built uh in detroit michigan um where where a lot of the the yemenis were and now uh certain cities in detroit uh certain cities in michigan 40 arab population the point is that the messages started being built with the messages being built and with their being muslims there needs to be a way to educate the children so also schools islamic schools are becoming more prominent in 1975 elijah muhammad died he was the leader right he was the the leader of the nation of islam uh his son took over whereas and eventually uh took the whole nation of islam took all of the followers of the nation of islam uh over to uh you know what they would what they would term orthodox islam um so mainstream sunni islam you know praying five times a day fasting the month of ramadan uh you know the shahid detain obviously and encouraging hajj and so forth which uh were not practiced um the same way uh prior to uh where does it be muhammad taking over so now you had this big influx of people into uh sunni islam this is oversimplified but it's just to give people an understanding of how islam became more and more prominent uh during those times throughout the 70s and then into the 1980s sorry chef what's the the the his name of birth was wallace mohammed okay metropolitan america new york city philadelphia houston america [Music] one point that's important here is that when the followers of wallace muhammad when they all entered into sunni islam it took away what may otherwise be known as the foreignness the foreignness of islam islam looking like it's just some foreign religion from people who are immigrants to the united states of america these are black americans they've been in america for 400 years they um they are looked at they don't speak with an accent right everybody recognizes them as americans and that is very important in establishing uh let's just say some degree of normalcy um for muslims in the united states of america you had you know very prominent converts people like luau syndor who's lou alexander whose name was changed to kareem abdul-jabbar the famous basketball player i mean that was a that was amazing you know you've got this you know this famous basketball player with the name kareem i mean that was amazing when when cassius clay changed his name to muhammad ali right so these were these were major changing points for um islam in the united states of america because it was no longer just seen as some you know uh immigrant religion but now they can't be gay and began to be seen as an actual major religion of the united states [Music] began to spread even more there were many many dawah efforts uh there were tawa organizations there were islamic organizations that spanned the entire nation uh one thing to note um and i know that this is um you know for indonesia indonesia is a very uh big country it's a it's a very uh expansive from east to west and likewise the united states uh from new york for example in the east coast to california on the west coast is like 5 000 kilometers or something like that six hours in an airplane i mean so it's a huge nation um you know how do we keep the ties uh between the muslims and we're talking about the early 90s there was no email and internet and social media and this type of stuff so there were national organizations um that had been formed prior to the 90s uh but began to become more prominent uh during the 90s there were many daoa efforts i mean people would actually get on public transportation buses and trains with pamphlets about islam and just talk to people about why they should be muslims um darwil was spreading in the prisons i mean people becoming muslim in the prisons left and right um definitely the the you know fastest growing religion at that point uh in the in the prison system in the united states of america and so islam was what was uh becoming more and more popular uh throughout the the 1990s [Music] is [Music] uh i i told the fironda maybe he needs to translate this next story but i want you to i want you to catch it uh i became muslim myself in 1993 uh so alhamdulillah 27 years ago and not too long after that a very good friend of mine who lived across the street from me he was he was a neighbor of mine he became muslim and we uh we used to read the quran together translation of the quran we used to read every day together you know we were very serious uh about learning more about islam and we were very serious about uh calling other people to islam even though we didn't know a lot uh we felt like we knew that islam is the truth and we need to convey the message to everybody we could so uh one of the things that we uh as we were reading uh we've read in sort of toba the iowa allah says if anyone of the muslim king comes to you and they ask for your protection then give them the protection that they're asking for so that they can hear the word of allah all right so this this i kind of stuck in our minds like okay this is important here uh a true story now mind you uh back then abu firaz we didn't have like shifts in the masjid and that type of thing and i'm not saying that nobody um you know that there was nobody who had learned to slam back then uh but we we didn't have like a lot of information available and like i told you there was no internet um we didn't just have uh accessibility to learning people so we would read the quran and try to understand it to the best of our ability you know we were reading in english and trying to understand it i was in high school at the time and uh i was in high school at the time and uh uh a guy came to me a friend of mine he was not a muslim and he said um he said uh listen uh i've got some problems these these guys are gonna come up after school and they're gonna attack me and uh will you help me so i i thought about that i in sort of to toba and i said i'll help you under the condition um that when when i get you out of this situation god willing and inshallah when i get you out of this situation uh you have to listen to the quran you have to listen to islam and so he said okay no problem anything i listen to anything you have to say just just help me out so that i don't get attacked translate and then i'll tell you the rest of the story it's a bit uh the longer efficiency well uh um [Music] uh foreign so so what happened after that was he he said he said um uh oh well who else uh who else is gonna be with you i mean we you know these guys man it might be like seven or eight of these guys and i said who else could be winners i said i'm a muslim uh i believe in allah and you don't have to worry about it now mind you i understand looking back on it that that really wasn't the proper attitude to have but again this is my understanding at the time so we go out to school uh these guys pull up in cars they jump out the cars like they're gonna attack him and i had him with me i had him on the side of me and um and uh as soon as they jumped out the car i said he's with me right i said he's with me and they said oh okay we didn't know we're sorry that's exactly what that's exactly how it happened and he was looking at me like he could like in disbelief like what in the world just happened and i don't know what happened maybe one of them was muslim i really don't know but allah protected us and so he went with me to the masjid and uh you know i had somebody talk to him about his name i talked to him about saying and he said okay i believe in islam the only thing is my mother's a christian i just need her to agree he said you don't need your mom to agree um all you have to do is just take the shahada you don't have to tell her that you're muslim right away he said no i can't do that you know i really love my mind and you know so and so forth in any event what happened was he said that he believed in islam uh but his mother's subhanallah she was totally against the idea of him becoming a muslim and he never did uh enter into the fold of islam but i'm bringing that up because this is just one example out of many examples and i mean people have dao's stories for days you know of people trying to encourage other people to enter into the fold of islam and teach them about the truth of his name and i will tell you another story after you translate that okay well foreign [Music] um foreign um uh it reminds me of one of the statements of the salaf who [Music] foreign is that allah guides them to a person of the sunnah who will carry them and this is very important and i i hope that you know everybody who is listening right now really understands the the minima of having somebody who can actually teach you islam uh according to the teachings of the prophet muhammad sallallahu alaihi wasallam the way that he taught his companions the way that they understood islam and who passed that on you know to the scholars generation after generation that is a big huge number from allah to have somebody to teach you the sunnah uh at that stage we just did not have that and we were left to our own understanding of islam and though alhamdulillah nothing bad happened there is you know many many many examples countless examples of people who have gone astray uh trying to understand the texts of islam uh without the proper understanding without the proper training and without being taught properly um [Music] is another time at this point i was in in university at temple university this was a year before i actually was accepted into the university of medina and went to the university of medina to study i was i was in i was walking uh from one class to another class in the university and a young woman stopped me in the hallway she said excuse me are you a muslim and i said yes she said i have a class on islam and i need to interview um a muslim student about certain things about islam so she said can i interview you and uh i told her that that's fine she could interview me uh i said however we cannot sit in the room alone um somebody else needs to be in the room and you have to excuse me i'm not gonna look you you know uh in the eyes i'm not gonna look at you face to face uh so she said okay translate that and then i'll finish the story the uh temple in the first is the temple university [Music] so she began to ask me questions about islam and a lot of times in academia they ask you questions and they're just looking for a very uh let's just say a factual response uh i looked at this as an opportunity to uh make her interested in islam i wanted her to feel like she needs to know more about this i wanted her to understand that her salvation in the next life depends on her being a muslim and that true happiness in this life depends on her uh embracing islam and so we finished the interview and he said i have so many more questions to ask you um can i call you later on tonight and finish the interview and i said uh instead of you calling me i said how about you give me your number and i'll have my wife call you so i got home and i told my wife to about what happened and i said i want you to call this young lady and talk to her about islam uh long story short she called her up and alhamdulillah uh what happened was she asked some more questions and i was telling my wife i said listen just tell her ask her is she ready to accept this now so she sounds like she's interested enough and alhamdulillah she took shahada on the telephone uh that night and became a muslim the next day uh she got hijab and she started you know practicing uh islam alhamdulillah [Music] um [Music] um [Music] i want to change the style a little bit okay so i'm going to speak and then you speak right after me okay ready yeah okay like you're not going to have to write down anything inshallah okay i'll try okay inshallah uh so uh the events of september 11th changed everything for muslims in america uh uh all of the muslims now were painted as being terrorists it was very difficult to just go out and talk to people about islam because now we were on the defensive all the time uh even muslims who were at one time proud to openly look like muslims did not want people to know that they were muslim muslim young things changed politically they changed laws they made it a lot more uh difficult for you know people to interact with uh uh muslims from overseas you know there was a lot of suspicion uh there's a lot of prejudice uh against uh muslims uh young muslims being bullied in schools uh difficult to get jobs if you have a muslim name [Music] this was the uh general sentiment that or the the this was the way that many muslims felt from east uh coast all the way uh to the west coast uh and it was even more difficult in places where there weren't a lot of muslims all of this talk about islam and all of the uh islam in the media and portraying muslims as terrorists did force some of the muslims to to kind of fight back and say wait a minute we're not terrorists this is what islam is really about and began to uh have various platforms to teach people about the real teach the uh real uh creed of islam and the real tenets of islam is so even though there was a lot of difficult in the very beginning after 9 11 it actually forced the muslims to get better at giving dao it also made the muslims realize that they would never totally assimilate into american society and that it's important for us to build our own institutions so in the 10 years after 9 11 the misagid in america grew by 74 percent the number of misogyny grew by 74 percent they want to extinguish the light of allah with their mouths but allah is going to complete his life [Music] foreign uh i i know that we have to uh begin to wrap up so that we can take questions but i i just want to say that um obviously we face as muslims in america a new challenge uh when the last president was elected [Music] the american uh the the nation uh basically kind of split into two different camps there on the on the one hand you have uh like the white supremacists and on the other hand you have this very uh liberal ideology that kind of claims to be tolerant of everything and accept anything [Music] but the muslims don't fit into this camp and they don't fit into that camp as muslims we believe in the ultimate authority of allah allah is the one who determines what is right and what's wrong what is moral and what is immoral what we should do and what we should not do and so as we try to navigate uh our path as muslims in today's america we face so many challenges because our children and you remember you remember earlier i talked about how children often times don't have the same cultural connection uh as their parents the children are being um indoctrinated with the prevalent ideologies of society and they are very much uh against islam in principle america [Music] muslims that being said allah has blessed us with more students of knowledge now than we've ever had in the past we have uh misagid now close to 3 000 misaji in the country we have more islamic schools uh we have more islamic centers and institutions than we've ever had in the past the american and we have many cities with large muslim populations uh like new york city with close to a million muslims uh over half a million muslims in texas and a half a million muslims in chicago muslims chicago and like 250 000 muslims in philadelphia which is where i am and alhamdulillah you'll see men walking down the street visibly muslim with those on with uh you'll see women with full hijab one and everything [Music] but there are still places in america where islam is almost non-existent where a person has to drive four hours to get to the masjid about four hours is the closest message so there is still a lot of dawah that needs to be given and much of that has to do with person to person uh interaction because the media's is still very strongly uh again against this land and portraying islam a certain way and so our job as muslims is still to get out there to know who our neighbors are to invite them to the beauty of the dean of islam the american america what the [Music] to guide one person by your hands is better for you than red candles and the red camel was the best wealth of the arabs that for one person to be guided to islam through you is better for you than any form of wealth [Music] i want to conclude by uh mentioning that for those of you who are living in indonesia or malaysia or any of the other muslim countries thank allah subhanahu wa ta'ala islam for the enigma of being able to hear the event for the nima of being able to you know have your children educated in an environment that is not contrary to your values [Music] islam and one of the ways that you thank allah for blessing you with this man is to continue to try to learn your religion and teach it to as many people as you can again for allah to guide to islam someone through your hands or for it's law for allah to help someone to stay a muslim through your hands there's a great reward in that [Music] uh [Music] uh okay so um uh the question from sheikh philander was to talk briefly about how i became a muslim and the very brief story about how i became muslim is that i was actually working with someone who was a muslim and from birth my name was taught here um and that's another story in and of itself it's not because i was born a muslim but it's because there was in the 1970s when i was born there was a lot of anti-american sentiment or anti-government sentiment from uh american people and that was because of what was going on in terms of civil rights movement in the 60s uh and then the war in vietnam and a lot of the americans did not approve of that and so they began to look outside of what was traditional american culture in any event uh my parents named me talia um and uh so a person who i was working with um actually the first day we met he asked me and he was a muslim he asked me uh how my name could be taught here and i'm not a muslim and he was just like perplexed so uh in any event um you know he gave me a book about islam i was actually from the saudi uh embassy in washington dc uh and and that is how my journey began i began to read about islam uh islam made a lot of sense to me christianity did not make sense to me but islam did the creed of islam was very clear um the worship of one guy to recognize that there is a creator and that he deserves to be worshipped alone to recognize that he sent uh prophets to convey to mankind uh what it is that we are supposed to be doing what this life is about what our purpose in life is uh all of that made a lot of sense to me and uh eventually i lost mantada opened my heart uh to islam approximately two months after uh i began to uh read about this thing um [Music] um [Music] islam uh america foreign uh okay so uh the the question is about what is the uh position of the muslims towards some of the policies and laws that have been uh issued by donald trump that may have some may cause the muslims some difficulties our reality here as uh muslims in the united states is that any type of injustice towards the muslims as you know the the situation here in the united states it is it is uh permissible to voice your dissent and your disapproval of laws so it's not like in a place uh where you know you have a muslim government and uh as people of the sunnah we're going to avoid you know protest or we're going to avoid those type of things that would cause a the gov that would would be considered to be anarchy right um that we're trying to uh have a revolution and overthrow the government and those type of things uh which ultimately uh usually bring about more harm than good as it relates to the united states situation is very different and the way that we address a lot of these situations is the same way that other organizations address those laws that they deem to be uh unfair and unjust and that's through petitioning uh through uh non-violent forms of protest and and most importantly is through lobbying um and i'm not sure uh i will fairness are you familiar with lobbying at all sure that terminology because i don't yeah okay i'm doing that good so so uh that is actually more effective um than usually it's more effective than like going out in the streets and just um you know protesting or marching and these type of things like that it's to use your power um to use what they call voting blocks um and to use the other tools that that you have to fight against those things that are unjust so i i'll just give one example um when donald trump first took office there was what was famously known as the muslim ban and that did cause a lot of difficulty for muslims especially people who had families uh in those countries that were banned um so that that was that was like splitting up families keeping people from getting back to the jobs uh that was was a very uh different situation from other uh you know laws that may have been passed the policies that were put into place so when that happened uh many of the muslims uh actually went and and you know uh formed a demonstrations and uh eventually you know got laws passed uh through other court systems because it's very difficult again i mean to talk about these issues really require some knowledge of the politics of the united states of america uh but they they challenged it legally uh that's that that'll make it simpler inshallah they challenged it legally and in many cases uh uh won and were able to overturn some of those uh oppressive and unjust laws you can summarize that answer yes [Music] summarizing you don't need to say um [Music] foreign [Music] be i used to imagine how muslim people in america handled their eyes seeing other american people doing something like kissing on the street lgbt people come out on public celebrity on tv and other activities which are haram in islam it's even very hard in indonesia we accidentally use the to see woman be doing hijab on the street on youtube instagram facebook and other situations uh you know it reminds me of how some of the uh the scholars of hadith um how they would cover their ears like this uh anytime they would hear uh anything that would distract them from hadith because they their memories were so strong and they didn't want to pollute their minds with with anything outside of of the deed and [Music] right and to protect their private parts uh to protect their chastity so it's a struggle it is a struggle and there's nothing else to that can be said about this except that this is our jihad uh and the prophet sallallahu alaihi wasallam said that the mujahid is the one who you know strives against his own nufs and so with these type of situations yes it's difficult um but the the reality is is that for many of us uh we have figured out a way to exist um in this society and minimize the harm right to minimize the damage because islam comes with right which is to uh repel all evil or to minimize the evil so when you don't have the ability to repel it then you try to minimize it so you're going to spend as much time as you can around other muslims you're going to spend time in the islamic centers and the misogyny and so forth and you're going to minimize the time uh that you spend uh with people who do not uh share your uh values and who do not have the same outlook on life that you have there's absolutely nothing else that you can do uh because you do not govern uh the society um [Music] foreign um foreign from the audience from you uh [Music] i'm working in one of english courses and i'm and in my working place there are some americans as a muslim of course i'm suggested conveying islam to all the people in the world especially these american colleagues of mine in the office and of course before i try to convey islam to them i need to make them like me by building up a good rapport one of the efforts is to have things in common with them but the problem is what they like culturally is different from what i like as a muslim for example they like going to a cafe or any place which there is a lot of music inside well i must stay away from the music and in this situation we know there is no match between us so we know there's no match between us so what should i do to confirm islam while they are not interested at all in our cultures or habits that they think are not fun okay alhamdulillah so uh first of all i'd like to uh commend the questioner because that understanding is important which is that in order to convey a message to people you do have to have some level of rapport with them at the very least they need to have some kind of respect for you or some level of trust for you and uh this is this is important because the prophet alaihi wasallam himself uh he was assadic right he was the truthful and the trustworthy before he was sent with the message uh the the people that he was sent to uh they were not rejecting him it is not you that they are rejecting allah but it is the these wrong doors it is the ayat of allah it is the size of allah that they are in fact uh rejecting and so uh what i think is important here is for us to understand that being trusted uh gaining a people's respect does not mean that you have to do the same thing that they do um and you don't need to do those things that are displeasing to allah subhanahu wa ta'ala to try to get to the objective of pleasing allah so the way that you can build rapport with them uh is is not by obviously going to cafes or clubs or things like that with them if that's not something that you you know feel is going to be pleasing to allah subhanahu but perhaps you can get to their heart other ways by giving them gifts um and it doesn't have to be something that's expensive uh by just uh you know being someone who is always truthful uh doing your best at the job that you do in allah has written excellence for everything that you that you do things in an excellent manner let them see that from you and when you talk to them about islam you don't have to talk about a whole lot of details uh you know stick to the very basics and the very basics of his fan is that we have a creator we are here for a purpose life is going to end you have to prepare for what's after that um the creator who created us deserves to be thanked he deserves to be worshiped you know sticking on those very basic topics and figuring out ways to to talk about them is going to be the best means and allah knows best that's going to be the best means for calling them to the religion of islam [Music] and [Music] is [Music] the first point is that what happened to his name was george floyd uh what happened to him was an execution that was a murder that took place in front of everybody's eyes on a camera and islam uh as we know teaches us to stand for justice start there uh and then i'll finish transfer i'll finish with the answer inshallah [Music] um uh as a result uh of that action the american people uh you know took to the streets uh they protested they marched uh and some of them a minority of them uh became violent and burnt down you know business establishments and so forth but the majority of the protests that were done by the american people were not violent and they were not destructive in nature but they wanted to uh draw attention to what had happened and the importance of there being some level of police reform number one on a broad level and specifically that the police officers who were involved in the killing of george floyd that they be arrested and charged for murder foreign murder of black people by white police officers is not something new however the way that this particular killing was done on camera brought out a lot of emotion and it was a teaching opportunity for us as muslims to because again this is this is the product of a racist society it's a product of one people believing that because of the color of their skin that they are better than other people and as a result uh these things become uh commonplace because you almost dehumanize the person who is being killed it's almost like they're not a human because they don't share your skin color and we know from the islamic perspective that allah has informed us [Music] you from a male and female and i have made you into tribes and nations so that you may know one another the best of you uh according to allah are those who have the most taqwa and the prophet is you all of mankind is from adam adam is from toronto adam is from dirk this these teachings uh to get rid of racism to eradicate and extinguish racism these were explicit teachings of the prophet muhammad and you don't find it that explicit in the texts that remain from the previous prophets and so we highlighted that as muslims we also you know supported efforts uh that dealt with police reform so that there was more accountability so that people could not just be murdered uh you know subhanallah for what you know by by police officers just because they are police officers does not give them the right to execute people and take their lives and so we we supported efforts and continued to i mean this is still going on this is not over yet but we're still continuing to support uh the efforts to reform the system uh and also to recognize uh that we are people as muslims who as elizabeth has commanded us to stand for a pistol right [Music] so we have to stand you know as witnesses for allah and we have to stand for for justice foreign [Music] is uh foreign [Music] uh foreign [Music] a [Music] foreign [Music] foreign you
Resume
Categories