Recomended sites : 

www.quranexplorer.com
www.turntoislam.com
www.prophetofislam.com
www.watchislam.com
www.todayislam.com
www.ibnyahya.com
www.maktabah-ibn-badawi.com
www.islamicity.com
www.al-islam.com/mal/
www.understanquran.com
www.2mfm.org
http://www.al-baz.com/shaikhabdalqadir/

http://www.imranhosein.org/content/blogcategory/23/43/
Video Lectures
The Strange World of Today |  
Written by Mogamat    
Tuesday, 23 May 2006 
 
Shaykh Moulana Imran N. Hosein examines the strange world we live in and 
provides an explanantion and guidance from the Quran.
Part 1 | Part 2 



If you know any sites with Malay /B. Indonesia translation (recitation)as in 
quranexplorer please let us know.


Syukran.

pa ' shaik



----- Original Message ----
From: Islahonline <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Ikhwanul Muslimun <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, October 30, 2006 7:34:08 AM
Subject: Help Palestine [hidayahnet] A British Teacher Finds Islam in Ramadan

 

  
Discover Islam > My Journey to Islam > Contemporary Stories



A British Teacher Finds Islam in Ramadan 
By  Idris Tawfiq 


  



 
Idris Tawfiq
We can all look back at memorable times in our lives. People and places can 
have a special significance for us and we need to look back, from time to time, 
to see how the hand of Allah has been at work in our lives, even though we did 
not notice. 
We are often too busy to see the pattern which our life has taken and which has 
led us to where we are today. By reflecting on what has been, we can learn to 
be grateful and learn to see all things as part of Almighty Allah’s eternal 
plan for us.
I look back at my first Ramadan as a Muslim and ponder on all that has happened 
in my own life since then. That first Ramadan was very special. Before talking 
about that, though, I need to say something about the two Ramadans before it.
I was Head of Religious Education in a Boys' School in South London and it was 
my responsibility to teach the pupils about the world’s different religions. In 
English schools the pupils learn information about the six major world faiths: 
Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, Islam, Sikhism and Hinduism, although no 
preference is given to any.
My classroom was the only room in the school with a fitted carpet and a 
washbasin, essential for the prayers. 
Whilst providing information, it is supposed to be a way of encouraging 
tolerance and understanding in an increasingly multi-cultural world. It is one 
way, if handled sensitively, of counter-balancing the wrong ideas about Islam 
which British people get by the stories they see on the television news. 
I had already visited Egypt and seen for myself how sweet and gentle Muslims 
can be. Now, though, I had to teach about Islam. Since I was not Muslim, 
reading about Islam was one of the ways I prepared for my lessons, learning as 
much myself as I would teach the pupils.
In schools in the UK, as in many non-Muslim nations, there is usually no 
allowance made for pupils of any religion who wish to pray. Many of the boys in 
this school where I taught were Muslim, and many of them were from the Arab 
world.
Just before the first Ramadan I was at the school, the pupils approached me and 
asked if they could use my classroom to pray, even though they knew I was not 
Muslim. Allah works in very extraordinary ways, using the simple things of life 
to work marvels in our lives.
My classroom was the only room in the school with a fitted carpet and a 
washbasin, essential for the prayers, so it was my classroom that was to be 
used. I agreed to their request, but the head teacher asked that a teacher be 
present to supervise the pupils. So, for the whole of Ramadan I sat at the back 
of the classroom every lunchtime, while the boys prayed the noon prayer and, on 
Fridays, the Friday congregational prayer.
By the end of that Ramadan I knew how Muslims prayed and I could recite the 
prayers to myself, even though I didn’t know what they meant. After Ramadan we 
kept using the classroom at lunchtime for prayers, and this continued all year.
The following Ramadan, while still not a Muslim, I fasted along with the 
pupils, to show my solidarity with them. Not long after that, Al-hamdu lillah, 
I embraced Islam. But that is another story. The example of the students had 
led me to become Muslim. I then joined the pupils each day for prayers, the 
newest Muslim and the least knowledgeable of all.
That evening of my first Ramadan as a Muslim was a very special evening that I 
will never forget.
My first Ramadan as a Muslim, then, was to be very special. At the end of the 
holy month the pupils and I organized a special iftar meal for ourselves. Iftar 
is quite literally the breakfast, when the fast is broken. To celebrate the 
blessed night of Laylat Al-Qadr, when Prophet Muhammad is received the first 
revelation of the holy Qur’an, the boys stayed behind after school. 
During the time between the end of lessons and the Call to Prayer we watched a 
film about the life of the Prophet. We then prayed the sunset prayer together, 
with the oldest boy leading the prayers and reciting the holy Qur’an in a very 
beautiful voice.
As the sun was setting, gathered together in that simple classroom, it was as 
though an angel came down to visit us. After prayers we had an iftar party. 
Everyone had brought some food or drink, however little or how lavish, to share 
with the others and we had a splendid meal.
Although this took place after the events of September 11, 2001 when many in 
Britain were deeply suspicious about Islam and Muslims, many of the non-Muslim 
teachers came to congratulate us and to wish us a happy Ramadan.
The head teacher had to be in a meeting, but he took some dates with him to eat 
at the time we were going to break the fast. The headmaster had learned from us 
that the Prophet used to break the fast during Ramadan by eating some dates, 
and so he wanted to do this out of respect for what we believed.
In a Muslim country it is easy to take one's Muslim faith for granted. Friends 
and family are there to encourage us in our fasting. There are special programs 
on television to help us know more about Islam and to keep it constantly before 
our eyes.
Celebrating Ramadan in a country that is not Muslim, on the other hand, can be 
difficult. Often you can be the only one who is fasting. After breaking the 
fast there may not be anything special to do in the evening, especially if 
there is not a mosque nearby.
That evening of my first Ramadan as a Muslim was a very special evening that I 
will never forget. It gave witness to others about the message of Islam and, 
for those present, it was a real celebration of the joy and the brotherhood of 
Islam which touched all of our hearts. Al-hamdu lillah.



Idris Tawfik is a British writer who became Muslim a few years ago. Previously, 
he was head of religious education in different schools in the United Kingdom. 
Before embracing Islam, he was a Roman Catholic priest. He now lives in Egypt. 
For more information about him, visit www.idristawfiq. com. 









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