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Mufti
`Abdul-Fattah `Ashoor,
Yusuf Al-Qaradawi,
Faysal Mawlawi
In the Name of Allah, Most
Gracious, Most Merciful.
All praise and thanks are due to Allah,
and peace and blessings be upon His Messenger.
First of all, it goes without saying that every committed Muslim
is supposed to pay his parents, especially his mother, due
respect. One should try to show dutifulness to one’s parents,
even if they happened to be non-Muslims, let alone being
Muslims. What Islam goes against is to imitate non-Muslims by
marking a special occasion such as celebrating the Mother’s Day
in a way that shows that mothers do not deserve due respect and
care save on this very day. If we are going to make the whole
year a Mother’s Day, then Islam welcomes celebrating the
occasion with open arms.
Indeed, Muslim scholars have maintained various opinions
regarding the issue. Here below we will attempt to furnish you
with Juristic views as regard this issue:
First of all, Sheikh Faysal Mawlawi, deputy chairman of
the European Council for Fatwa and Research, states:
Dutifulness to parents,
especially the mother, and treating them kindly is an act of
worship enjoined in both the Qur’an and the Sunnah of the
Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him). Being dutiful to
parents is not confined to a specific time. It is an
obligation that should be observed every time, as all people
commonly know.
Yet, the Mother’s Day, as it’s known nowadays is a Western
habit. The Westerners specified a day and called it the
Mother’s Day. On that day sons and daughters show
gratefulness to their mothers and offer them presents. It
has become part of important feasts in the West, whereas we
Muslims have no other festivals except the Lesser and the
Greater Bairams. Any other celebrations are deemed mere
occasions or anniversaries; and this is applied to the
Mother’s Day.
The Mother’s Day implies paying more attention and exerting
more effort in expressing gratitude to mothers. So there is
nothing wrong in that.
However, there are two reservations worth mentioning; first,
considering the Mother’s Day a feast; second, confining the
task of showing dutifulness to mothers to that specific day,
giving implication that throughout the whole year, just only
one day is for showing love to parents. If such two
anomalous points are addressed, then there is nothing wrong
in considering the Mother’s Day a chance to give more care
to mothers.
Thus, we may take the Mother’s Day as a chance to lay more
emphasis on our duty towards our mothers, as Islam enjoins
us, because dutifulness to parents is a genuine Islamic
teaching. But Muslims, in doing that, should never deviate
from the Islamic teachings, they should do things in Islamic
manners, not in Western manners. Hence, they would not be
imitating the non-Islamic habits of the West.
Hence, viewed in juristic perspective, we can say that
celebrating the Mother’s day is controversial among the
contemporary scholars. While a group of them consider it
haram (unlawful) as a kind of blind imitation of the
Western non-Islamic habits, which have no benefit for
Muslims, another group see it halal (lawful) on
condition that showing gratitude and dutifulness to parents
should not be confined to that day only.
Moreover, the well known
erudite scholar Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi states:
The Arab tend to blindly
follow the Western in their celebration of the Mother’s Day,
without trying to understand the wisdom behind inventing
such an occasion.
When the European found that children do not deal properly
towards their parents nor give them their due right, they
resorted to specifying an annual occasion for children to
remedy the situation. But in Islam, mothers are to be given
due respect and love every time, not only one day a year.
For example, when one goes out, he kisses one’s mother’s
hand seeking her pleasure and blessing.
A Muslim must not allow any gap between him and his mother,
he must offer her presents every time. This indicates that
Muslims can dispense with such an occasion, the Mother’s
Day. Unlike the case in the West, where it’s a vogue for
some children to show indifference to their mothers’
feelings, and, what’s more, it is so common to see some
parents being dragged to infirmaries (as their kids have no
time for them), dutifulness to parents in Islam, alongside
with worshipping Allah, is a sacred duty.
In this concern, Almighty Allah says:
(And
We have commended unto man kindness toward parents. His
mother beareth him with reluctance, and bringeth him forth
with reluctance, and the bearing of him and the weaning of
him is thirty months, till, when he attaineth full strength
and reacheth forty years, he saith: My Lord! Arouse me that
I may give thanks for the favor wherewith Thou hast favored
me and my parents, and that I may do right acceptable unto
Thee. And be gracious unto me In the matter of my seed. Lo!
I have turned unto Thee repentant, and lo! I am of those who
surrender (unto Thee).)
(Al-Ahqaf 46: 15)
Reflecting on the aforementioned Qur’anic verse, we find it
stressing both parents’ right, but reviewing the following
verses we find them paying special care to the mother and
tackling the hardships she suffers in pregnancy, fosterage
and rearing children.
In this verse, Almighty Allah informs man of the debt he
owes his mother since he was a fetus, passing by the process
of childbirth, infancy, childhood until he comes of age. A
child normally forgets the hardship which his mother
underwent during pregnancy. Hence Almighty Allah draws his
attention to such hardships, laying emphasis on her great
status in Islam.
Finally, Dr. `Abdul Fattah
`Ashoor, professor of Qur’an Exegisis at Al-Azhar
University, concludes:
Holding celebrations in
honoring others and commemorating anniversaries are neither
feasts nor Islamic. But one may seize any chance to express
gratitude to those who deserve it. This is how we should
consider the Mother’s Day. The mother has a special place in
the Islamic culture, and all other civilized cultures. So it
is something good to do anything to please her and show
gratefulness to her.
So dedicating a day to showing good feelings towards
parents, especially the mother, is by no means blameworthy
as it does not contradict the Islamic teachings, nor can it
be merely considered a form of joining the Western vogue of
making celebrations. Conversely, it is a kind of devotion to
Allah’s orders that we should be dutiful to our parents.
Source:
Islam-Online |