Sex Education Islamic Style.

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The state of sex education in Muslim schools

Islamic schools and sex education may seem like a contradiction for some. After all, don’t parents send their kids to these schools to protect them from sex?

Not so for Dalya Aglan. The 16-year-old, in the course of a biology class, was given the low down by her biology teacher on pregnancy, menstruation, and sexual maturation amongst adolescents at her Muslim school in Montreal, Canada.

“She talked about it Islamically,” says Aglan about the approach her Muslim teacher used. “She talked about what was Halal, Haram and Sunnah. It’s not like she was doing anything wrong. She was teaching us something we need to know.”

The class was mixed (boys and girls) but the question and and answer session was separate. Students were asked if they were uncomfortable. They all said no. The teacher also got the students’ parents to sign permission slips for this.

“There was so much stuff we didn’t know we could do like you can’t have sex while the woman has her period, none of us knew that,” says Aglan matter-of-factly.

Such candor, though, is not something expressed in most Islamic schools in North America.

“In most of the Islamic schools, they avoid to deal with these issues,” says Abdalla Idris Ali, a member of the Islamic Society of North America’s Majlis Shura. He is also the former principal of an Islamic school in Mississauga, Ontario in Canada.

Why sex is taboo in Islamic schools

Apart from the general embarrassment towards openly discussing sexual matters in most Muslim cultures, part of the reason also, it seems, is because parents assume Islamic schools are an environment where their kids don’t have to talk about this issue. This is not the case.

“We think if we’ve brought them into the Islamic school atmosphere that we will somehow protecting them and isolating them from mainstream society, and that is not the case,” notes Winnipeg, Canada-based social worker Shahina Siddiqui. She points to television, magazines, billboards, and even Muslim friends with lower standards of morality who can still influence kids even if they attend an Islamic school.

“This society is immersed in sexuality,” she says, and adds that children still learn and absorb information outside of school.

In this scenario, “I would rather that we teach our children [sex education] with Islamic values,” she tells Sound Vision.

Lack of proper curriculum

While public schools across the United States, for example, have an established curriculum for sex education, in the context of a Family Life Education program, there is nothing similar for Muslim schools.
”Right now we don’t have a curriculum for that and we should have an Islamic perspective,” says Siddiqui. “It can take any form, from starting with Tahara all the way to upper grades, but it should be customized and standardized for Muslims just to maintain the Adab (etiquette), to make sure what is being taught is appropriate, to maintain quality of education.”

But Idris Ali disagrees with making sex education a topic or a course in itself. He says it should come in “what we call a normal progression.” In other words, it should come in the context of things like for example, explaining Ghusl and mentioning when it is necessary (for instance, after sexual intercourse, and after menstruation).

“There is a wider context where these things will come, so they don’t come by themselves,” he says.

Make it age-appropriate

“The biggest fear we have is that our children will be exposed to these things before they are ready,” says Siddiqui.

Idris Ali suggests the topic in Islamic schools be introduced starting grade four in the context of hygiene. These classes should be separate for boys and girls if the classes are generally mixed.

“I don’t think a single Muslim parent would have a problem with introducing Tahara (personal hygiene),” says Siddiqui. During this discussion, menstruation for girls can be discussed and the appropriate method of cleaning, in this case Ghusl, when a period is over.

She recommends the following age-topic breakdown:

    1. starting discussions on Tahara in Islamic schools in grade six or seven.
      For girls, at the age of 13, talk about personal hygiene and menstruation.
  1. At 15, talk about the marriage relationship and the opposite sex. Here a discussion of the status of women in Islam and gender roles should be discussed in the course of sex education classes or discussion amongst both boys and girls.

  2. After this, discuss pregnancy and birth control.

Siddiqui points out that children who attend Islamic schools tend to know less about sex than their public school counterparts, which is why the topics discussed at the ages she has suggested may seem behind what kids in public schools already know.

Pick the right teachers

Both Idris Ali and Siddiqui advise having a teacher of the same sex, and Siddiqui adds preferably someone who is married.

Idris Ali says in the Islamic school in Mississauga, a Muslim sister who is a doctor would come in to speak to the girls.

Siddiqui also advises having someone with a counseling background to speak to kids about the topic, since other, more serious issues may come up which a teacher with no such background may not be able to handle. For example, if a child who has been sexually molested confides in a Muslim teacher after a class or discussion on proper gender relations (i.e. no touching between the sexes, and even between the same sex), the teacher must know how to handle this.

Siddiqui says a specific position should be created for this job at Islamic schools.

Use the right Adab (Etiquette)

“When you are teaching morality, you have to teach the Adab yourself, so you will not be graphic, even within the same sex class group,” says Siddiqui.

As well, she says when discussing pregnancy and childbirth, books that are used should not contain photographs, for instance. Biology diagrams should be enough to teach about the human body.

Use a comparative approach

Idris Ali took the skeleton of the Family Studies course and adjusted it to the needs of Muslim children when he was in Mississauga.

This makes the approach to the topic not solely Western, or solely Islamic, but comparative.

This way, he says, the basic information is there, but the Islamic alternative is also presented. “This is the Quranic approach,” he says. “[The] Quran tells you all kinds of good things on one side and the bad on the other.”

If parents still object to sex education of any kind within an Islamic school context after these guidelines are followed, Siddiqui suggests giving it time and waiting a year or two.

But Aglan sees it differently

“The parents should be grateful because she’s a Muslim teacher, she’s giving it to us in an Islamic perspective so there’s nothing to worry about.”

Re: Sex Education Islamic Style.

A positive development.

Re: Sex Education Islamic Style.

lol
dude
S education in islam is No S at all.

Re: Sex Education Islamic Style.

that sex is a taboo in Islamic schools is a myth....

evn the madrassahs that teach basic Islamic fiqh have to educate the students on the topic when they do the tafseer of the releavant Quranic verses and ahadith....

talking to a scholar who has close connections with many madrassahs in pakistan i learnt that boys around 10-11 years old r given the basic "sex education"....

thats exactly y 10yr olds go around looking at girls n drooling and thinking that condoms are a joke, this is of course in pak :halo: i have first hand experience lolz

Maaloomat main izafa farmanay ka shukria.

Re: Sex Education Islamic Style.

Have any of the parents here discussed sex education with your kids personally, or r u leaving it to schools?

I left it to the school.

Re: Sex Education Islamic Style.

I disagree with some of the stuff in this article (as usual). What the hey, I need a break, so here goes my schpeel.

Do not under any circumstance assume that the gender of the teacher educating students about sex education is such a big issue as played out by muslim-wannabe-preachers. I refuse to acknowledge these folks as clerics as there is no such concept in Islam, really. Basically, if you've got the right age group, and a teacher who is mature and objective in their education, it should not be an issue. I myself taught a sex-ed course to kids and frankly, it was the best darn course these kids ever had in sex-education, because they were free to ask whatever questions they wanted, and I actually gave them honest scientific answers. No morality mumbo-jumbo thrown in.

Secondly, teaching sex-ed with a moral twist, although comforting to parents, is not necessarily effective with all students. Now if you're speaking of an school where most students are muslim, then it can work, although don't expect 100% results. DO NOT be surprised if some kids end up having pre-marital or extra-marital sex anyway. And certainly do not blame it on the sex-education they got at school. And certainly do not feel obligated to change the curriculum based on how many kids are getting laid, all sexual education and moral preaching aside.

People in the end make their own independent decisions. Islam acknowledges that, and acknowledges that people have the right to make stupid decisions. It has nothing to do with you, and you should certainly avoid being the Nazi trying to control everyone's lives to prevent some kids from having sex, who will do it no matter what you do anyway.

Most importantly, adding in morality into sex education can sometimes cause science to be covered up - science that these kids have a right to know. For ex. They do have a right to know that sex between two women carries less HIV transmission risk than sex between two men. You have to teach them this stuff, but in an Islamic school setting, homosexual sex and the risk of HIV transmission wouldn't even touch upon this. Why should we keep our people in ignorance in the name of Islam? Teaching them about risks of certain behaviors should not be avoided just because those behaviors are not acceptable in Islam. But our Islamic school "curriculum advisor clerics" would probably disagree. They would say education about any sort of homosexual nature should absolutely not be discussed.

Restricting education to ghusl and when you can/cannot pray if you're menstruating is not an excuse for a proper sexual education.