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#muslim family
godhasheardtruthfully · 6 months
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Jummah Mubarak to all my Muslim friends & believing people on this day.
Allah is Azim, full of wonders in each of our lives
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damiduck · 10 days
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Damian, handing Bruce a piece of paper with a very neat calendar on it: father, I will be taking a step back from my participation in our nightly patrols. I have carefully considered factors such as, but not limited to, school tests, most likely days for breakouts and when other people will be available. Here is my schedule.
Bruce: any particular reason you are stepping back from Robin?
Damian: I have reached an acceptable age and am by far mature enough, so I will be participating in Ramadan this year, father. Afterwards I will pick my duties up as normal, but with changed sleeping and eating patterns, this is the most logical step for now.
Bruce, who grew up with a jewish mother and christian father who were intent to raise him on some weird mix of the two, then a second father who was atheist, proceeded to lose his entire way in any form of religion due to losing himself in his teen years, took in Jewish boy, then a catholic one with religious trauma, then an atheist one who had no idea how to even approach the idea of religion, followed up by a pagan girl and already making seven different mental lists of things he will need to research, how to add aspects of Islam into their weird family holidays and trying desperately to show his support for his son: ....hnn
Damian: thank you father
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dearasiyah · 1 year
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Sibling Grief...
Sibling grief? I would have never thought to ever put those two words together, especially for my children. Not because I wasn't aware that these things happen to people, but I feel like we mentally block negative words and situations out of our heads during life in fear. Hoping that if we choose not to utter those words, it's less likely to be a reality.
My kids are young but they already know so much about loss. They know that Asiyah has died, and they know that she is loved. They speak of her name with ease and it rolls off their tongue so effortlessly.
When I had just got back home from the hospital, I would overhear their conversations and they would mention her name like she is sitting right next to them. I guess in a sense this was their way of coping too. It hurt at first, I'll admit it. I couldn't stand to hear them talk because It would make me so guilty, afraid, and mostly sad because they made her death even more real for me.
But I'm happy that we've been open to our kids about our grief. As our journey continues they have been slowly opening up about how they feel too. They are getting more comfortable asking deep questions, even if it's hard to understand fully at the moment.
A dear sweet friend of mine sent us a care package. Within the pile of beautiful gifts, this one stood out to my husband. He grabbed the book that was called “My Sibling Still: For Those Who've Lost a Sibling to Miscarriage, Stillbirth, and Infant Death” He started to read a little bit of the book and closed it with a quickness. He told me that it was about to make him throw up. I didn’t understand at that moment. I wasn’t even in the right mind to pick up the book and read it yet, so I knew it’ll have to wait for another day when I was ready.
Well, tonight I thought I was ready, but I really wasn’t. As I started to read the book I told them to just picture Asiyah telling you both all these words. And so they listened. At the end of the story, they had lots of questions. Hamza told me that he felt like he was about to cry, so I told him to let it out & that It’s okay to cry.
“Crying just means you miss your sister and you love her even if you can’t see her. Although Asiyah isn’t here with us, she’ll never stop being your sibling.”
This book really hit all the feels. I could tell. When I saw the tears starting to form from my son's eyes, we started sobbing with him. I didn’t expect my kids to cry, but it just made me realize more that they really do share our grief. I let my tears fall in front of my kids. I explained to them that adults cry when they are sad, too. I want them to know that's it's okay to let it out sometimes. To not bottle our emotions is because it does more harm than good. It only means...
we love and miss the person who has died.
I try to share when I feel better so that my kids can see how happy and sad moments are healthy parts of our life after loss. Our baby wasn't just another baby. Our loss is our kid's loss too. They grieve her as well, but I'm glad they have each other, Alhamdulilah.
I still wish they could have met her though. Looking back sometimes I feel guilty because I wish there was a chance for them to meet her. I didn’t think it about until after she was buried. That night I cried while wondering if what we did was right. Would it have been better for them to see her? Would it have made things worse for them? So many questions and maybe even regrets.
After I read the story I took a hot shower and just cried. When I got out I told my husband what happened and surprisingly he told me that his biggest regret is not taking them to see her too! And Walahi, I genuinely felt like I wasn’t alone in my thoughts! SubhanAllah. We were thinking the same thing at the same time which gave me slight comfort. We both agreed that we did what we thought was best at the time and only Allah (swt) knows if things would have been better or worse for them if they had seen her. I pray we made the right decision for our kids. Only Allah (swt) knows.
Ya Allah, please reunite our kids with their sister in Jannah. Please give them patience, give them strength, and let them always find peace when thinking of Asiyah. And may Allah (swt) protect them from harm. Ameen.
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boc-news · 2 years
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মুসলিম পরিবারে গণেশের আরাধনা, সম্প্রীতির এক অনন্য নজির
বুধবার গণেশ চতুর্থী (Ganesh Chaturthi) ছিল। সারা দেশ জুড়ে সমারহের সাথে ধুমধাম করে পালিত হচ্ছে গণেশ পুজো। আর সেই আবহেই সাম্প্রদায়িক সম্প্রীতির এক অনন্য নজির গড়ল দুর্গাপুরের (Durgapur) এক পরিবার। সিদ্ধিদাতা গণেশ মর্তে বুদ্ধি ও জ্ঞানের দেবতা হিসাবে পরিচিত। মেয়ের ইচ্ছা পূরণ করতে এবার গণেশ পুজো করলেন এক মুসলিম পরিবার (Muslim Family)। ওই মুসলিম পরিবার গণেশ পুজো করে সকলকে ‘ধর্ম যার যার, পুজো সবার’ এই…
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booasaur · 8 months
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Special Ops: Lioness - 1x07
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runningwithscizzorz · 6 months
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I feel a deep sense of anger and grief for Palestine. I’m angry at God, at the world powers donating to those who are killing civilians, angry at people looking away and encouraging you to worry about yourself when people can’t even walk down their streets without being attacked. I’m angry that my friend donated, only for it to be stolen and taken by the soldiers abusing Palestine. I’m angry that I can’t do much of anything but tell you to at least CARE about the people being bombed and slaughtered. Please, if you can’t do anything please just CARE about these people and listen to their stories. Hold them in your hearts at the very least. Don’t pretend they don’t exist or just brush it off as “its been going on for centuries, there’s no point in stopping it.” I want to do more, I want to make people care and love those who need it, rather than continue spreading anger and hate.
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These are real people I’ve drawn. Keep the people of Palestine in your heart at the very least please.
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leroibobo · 5 months
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some of the architecture of zinder, niger. zinder rose from a small hausa village into an important center of trans-saharan trade during the 18th century, culmunating in it becoming the capital of the sultanate of damagaram in 1736.
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blossom765 · 1 year
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A police spokesman explained that "the soldier opened fire believing that the person was Palestinian", according to the Israeli daily 'The Times of Israel'.
If you needed any other proof of how little Israel considers the life of a Palestinian, here you go.
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nothingelsetobe · 21 days
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instagram
This is a documentary by Bisan on Ramadan in Gaza. Please watch this, Repost, Spread, Share, do any and everything you can to support the documentary, spread the word and help out!
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atiredmuslimah · 23 days
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رَبَّنَآ أَفْرِغْ عَلَيْهِم صَبْراً وَثَبِّتْ أَقْدَامَهُم وَٱنصُرْهُم عَلَى ٱلْقَوْمِ ٱلْكَـٰفِرِينَ
rabbana afrigh ‘alayhim sabran wa thabbit aqdaamahum wansurhum ‘ala al-qawm al-kafireen
our Lord! shower them with perseverance, make their steps firm, and give them victory over the disbelieving people.
dua for patience and victory for the palestinian people.
🇵🇸
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queerism1969 · 1 year
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be-a-muslim-1st · 10 months
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feluka · 4 months
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while i dont exactly hide it, i refuse to put the word coptic in my bio because it invites Certain Asks in my inbox, so when once again someone replies to my post calling me an islamist/arab supremacist..... bro............
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lem0nademouth · 10 days
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i need leftists to cope with their post 9/11 + Iraq/Afghan wars Islamophobia guilt in a way that doesn’t involve erasing the fact that, like it or not, Islam is a proselytizing religion that has fueled centuries of colonization, genocide, and imperialism. idealizing Islam as a purer, better alternative to Christianity is in itself Islamophobic, and it also ignores the many communities who have suffered at the hands of Islamic imperialism. it is possible to not be Islamophobic while acknowledging that.
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kleefkruid · 14 days
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one of the strays brought me a perfectly de-crusted(?) piece of bread which is the closest to an edible object (I mean, it's not a mouse) that a cat had ever given me thanks guys
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isittheghost · 1 year
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(wip) its ramadan so gotta draw my favorite (headcanon) Muslim
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