This
is an excerpt from the Book of : Imâm Ibnul Qayyim al-Jawziyyah رحمه الله , a famous book called Tuhfat al-Mawdood bi Ahkaam al-Mawlood.
One of the most important chapters of his book is the sixteenth chapter, which
is entitled 'Fi fusool naafi’ah fi Tarbiyat al-Atfaal tuhmad ‘awaaqibuha
‘ind al-Kabr' (Useful advice on raising children which will have good
consequences when the child grows up.)
Here
is a summary of what Ibnul Qayyim رحمه الله said:
1. The child should be breastfed by someone
other than his mother, two or three days after birth. That is better because
her milk after that time will be thick and contain different ingredients,
unlike the milk of one who has been breastfeeding for a while. All the Arabs
pay attention to that, and they give their children to desert women to
breastfeed, as the Prophet صلّى اللَّهُ عليه وسلّم was given to Banu Sa’d to be breastfed among them.
2.
They should not be picked up and carried around until they are three months old
or more, because they have only recently emerged from their mother’s wombs and
their bodies are still weak.
3.
They should be given only milk until their teeth appear, because their stomachs
are weak and unable to digest food. When the baby’s teeth appear, his stomach
has grown strong and is able to be nourished by food. Food should be introduced
gradually.
4.
When they approach the age where they will begin to speak and one wants to make
it easy for them to speak, a little honey and salt should be placed on the
infant’s tongue, because they contain substances that will reduce the excessive
moisture that prevents speech. When the child begins to speak, one should
prompt him to say, 'Laa ilaaha ill-Allaah Muhammad Rasool Allaah.
5.
When the time for the teeth to appear comes, the gums should be rubbed every
day with butter and ghee.
6.
Parents should not get upset when the child cries and yells, because he
benefits greatly from that crying. It exercises his limbs, opens his intestines
and chest, keeps his brain warm, warms his moods, provokes his energy, creates
suitable conditions for expelling waste matter, and helps rid the brain of
mucus and other waste.
7.
The child should be protected against everything that may scare him of harsh
and terrifying noises, frightening scenes and disturbing movements.
8. Complete
breastfeeding lasts for two years. This is the right of the child if he needs
it and cannot do without it. The Qur’aan confirmed that by adding the word
kaamilayn (meaning complete or whole), in the verse:
وَالْوَالِدَاتُ
يُرْضِعْنَ أَوْلاَدَهُنَّ حَوْلَيْنِ كَامِلَيْنِ
“The mothers shall give suck to their children for two
whole years.”
[al-Baqarah 2:233]
If
the one who is breastfeeding the child wants to wean him, she should wean him
gradually, and not wean him suddenly in one go; rather she should get him used
to it slowly because of the harm that may be done by changing the child’s food
and habit in one go.
9.
It is mistreatment of children to allow them to eat their fill of food, and to
eat and drink a lot. One of the most beneficial ways of training them is to
give them less than their fill, so that they may digest well and be in good
health, there will be less waste in their bodies and their bodies will be
healthy, and they will have less sickness because of having less food waste in
their bodies.
10.
One thing that the child needs most urgently is close attention to his moral
well being. He grows up with whatever the one who is raising him gets him used
to when he is small. [If it is] resentment, anger, arguments, haste, being
easily led by whims and desires, foolishness, hot temperedness and greed, then
it will be difficult for him to change that when he grows up. Hence you will
find that most people are deviant in their character, because of the way they
were brought up.
11.
The child’s guardian should keep him from taking from others because if he gets
used to taking, that will become natural for him, and he will grow up as one
who takes and not one who gives. If the guardian wants to give something, he
should give it by his hand [i.e., give it to the child to give away] so that that he will taste the sweetness of giving.
12.
He should keep him away from lying and treachery more than he would keep him
away from lethal poison. Once he lets him get the habit of lying and betrayal,
he will have corrupted his happiness in this world and in the Hereafter, and
deprived him of all goodness.
13.
He should keep him away from laziness, idleness, a life of ease and too much
rest, and he should force him to do the opposite. He should not let him rest
more than is sufficient to restore his energy so that he can do more work, for
laziness and idleness bring bad consequences and lead to regret.
Yahya ibn Abi
Katheer said:
“Knowledge cannot be attained by letting the body rest.”
14.
He should get him used to waking up at the end of the night, for that is the
time when reward is allocated and prizes are awarded; some will take less and
some will take more and some will be deprived. If he gets used to that when he
is little, it will be easy for him when he grows up.
[Tuhfat al-Mawlood (194-203)]
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