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Madrassahs
have flourished throughout Muslim lands for centuries teaching
the sacred Islamic sciences and cultivating a cultural environment
rooted in knowledge. The Nizamiyyah in Baghdad, al-Azhar in Cairo,
and the Qarawiyyin in Fez produced some of the best and most
outstanding scholars of our Ummah. As Muslims today seek to build
communities on a traditional ethic of learning, we are forced
to seriously consider the modern
challenge of schooling and education. Should Muslims reach back
in history for an educational model that worked then, or should
they attempt to create a fertile synthesis between the traditional
and modern methods of learning? In this three-tape set, Shaikh
Abdal Hakim Murad takes the audience on a tour through the process
of education, from the origin of knowledge (the teaching
of the Names to Adam) to humankind's great "falls"
and "reclamations" and finally to the Adamic ideal.
Examining the underpinnings of modernity and by extension the
Western social structure, the shaikh unveils the achievements
and the shortcomings of this educational model. He establishes
that today the only significant alternative to the Western educational
model is the Islamic model. And by examining the Islamic model,
one sees that education is the means by which Allah takes His
servants from darkness to light. In this series of talks, Dr.
Murad expounds the concepts of wilayah (sainthood), nafs (worldly
soul), the types of knowledge, and aspects of a curriculum taught
in traditional madrassahs, as well as the role of the female
scholar in the classical Islamic system. These talks will be
of benefit to not only teachers, but to students, parents, homeschoolers,
and non-Muslims interested in alternative forms of education.
These sessions were delivered at the 2001 Florida Deen Intensive
Program in Fort Lauderdale.
This series is available on
video only.
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