Ma sha Allah! This will be more appreciated by those who understand that the purpose of their existence is nothing more than to 'worship Allah'. Kudos Ma'am
Jazakillahul khair for the knowledge dispensed. Indeed birthday celebration is not islamic. This norm have become so common that not celebrating or acknowledging the day is seeing a person as been unrealistic and weird. Thank God for islam. Islam is not what we think is right or wrong, its rather what the Quran and sunnah preaches. And Allah knows best
MashaAllah, jazakillahu khairun for sharing this.Try fasting on your birthday to show gratitude to Allah. Why does cake and gifts have to be the way we go about spending a birthday? Who does this practice come from? Definitely not our beloved Prophet (saws).
This is debatable, the prophet fasted on the day he was born MONDAY, not the date he was born, and that is why every Monday fast becomes Sunday. I hope this is clear
I listened to your position on celebration of birthday and l am so much impressed. Religiously it started as a worshipping of the idol of moon. However , l celebrate it not flamboyantly because of the opportunity of bringing my children and few others together to rejoice with me. But l later realize from the Rosoula position of birthday that the mother is the one to celebrate because she was at the point of death when she was delivering us naturally or through opening of the womb by the Surgeon. So the celebration is not supposed to be for but for our mama that went through the labour. In as much as it is good to number our days , moderacy and fear of God and remembrance of the suffering of our mother and the apprehension of our responsible of our fathers at that point in time should occupy our minds mostly. Thank you for your deep thought. I still love to celebrate it but very simply.
Your thought is so on point✌️
Jazakumullahu khoir
Ma sha Allah! This will be more appreciated by those who understand that the purpose of their existence is nothing more than to 'worship Allah'. Kudos Ma'am
This is soo insightful
11:31 😂 this reminds me of when a woman said I am a bad mum for not buying Easter egg for my child….
😲
Maa Shaa Allah sister. May Allah SWT rewards you abundantly and keeps us on the straight path till our end
Jazakillahul khair for the knowledge dispensed. Indeed birthday celebration is not islamic. This norm have become so common that not celebrating or acknowledging the day is seeing a person as been unrealistic and weird. Thank God for islam. Islam is not what we think is right or wrong, its rather what the Quran and sunnah preaches. And Allah knows best
Ma shaa Allah. So insightful. Barokallahu fee
Thanks for this .
May Allah make you and yours more steadfast in the deen
@@NaimatAbdulAzeez Aamin
MashaAllah, jazakillahu khairun for sharing this.Try fasting on your birthday to show gratitude to Allah. Why does cake and gifts have to be the way we go about spending a birthday? Who does this practice come from? Definitely not our beloved Prophet (saws).
This is debatable, the prophet fasted on the day he was born MONDAY, not the date he was born, and that is why every Monday fast becomes Sunday. I hope this is clear
JazaakumuLLaahu khairan
This is so thoughtful of you
I listened to your position on celebration of birthday and l am so much impressed. Religiously it started as a worshipping of the idol of moon.
However , l celebrate it not flamboyantly because of the opportunity of bringing my children and few others together to rejoice with me.
But l later realize from the Rosoula position of birthday that the mother is the one to celebrate because she was at the point of death when she was delivering us naturally or through opening of the womb by the Surgeon.
So the celebration is not supposed to be for but for our mama that went through the labour.
In as much as it is good to number our days , moderacy and fear of God and remembrance of the suffering of our mother and the apprehension of our responsible of our fathers at that point in time should occupy our minds mostly.
Thank you for your deep thought. I still love to celebrate it but very simply.
Interesting