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Sex education : an Islamic perspective / by Shahid Athar

By: Material type: ArticleArticleBatu Caves, Selangor : Masterpiece Publications Sdn Bhd, 2006Description: ix,154 pages ; 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9833710123 (paperback)
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • BP190.5.S4 S24
Contents:
SEX EDUCATION An Islamic Perspective S ex in the mind of some parents is a dirty word. They are uncomfortable in discussing it with their teenagers just as their own parents never discussed it with them. They leave it up to the Sunday school to teach Islam and up to the television and the secular school system to teach sex education. Thanks to the "birds and the bees" who taught mankind that sex is natural and a gift from God. No one can deny the power of sex and the built-in desires. A powerful genie, if not brought into submission to the Will of God, is certainly capable of causing tremendous destruction of the lofty Islamic morals which Islam builds for its believers. Muslim parents and teenagers are getting mixed messages about their roles. They are torn between what seems to be an Islamic perspective and what is actually being taught by the secular media and the education system. Children develop right and wrong concepts not from the books but from what they see on the television and what they see around them. For some of today's youngsters, it may not be enough to be told that they should not engage in sex because Islam forbids it. They also need to be advised of the hazards of early sex, sexually transmitted diseases, teenage pregnancy and sex education in the dimension of marriage and sex after marriage, in addition to the biology of development and hormonal changes at puberty. Their frank questions about sex should not be avoided but need honest answers from the Islamic perspective.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Personal Donated Collection (KWP) - 1st floor Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali First Floor (Gadong Campus) (KWP24) BP190.5.S4 S24 2006 c.1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available Donated by Pengiran Dato Seri Setia Dr. Haji Mohammad bin Pengiran Haji Abdul Rahman 1010038330

Includes bibliographical references.

SEX EDUCATION An Islamic Perspective

S ex in the mind of some parents is a dirty word. They are uncomfortable in discussing it with their teenagers just as their own parents never discussed it with them. They leave it up to the Sunday school to teach Islam and up to the television and the secular school system to teach sex education.

Thanks to the "birds and the bees" who taught mankind that sex is natural and a gift from God. No one can deny the power of sex and the built-in desires. A powerful genie, if not brought into submission to the Will of God, is certainly capable of causing tremendous destruction of the lofty Islamic morals which Islam builds for its believers.

Muslim parents and teenagers are getting mixed messages about their roles. They are torn between what seems to be an Islamic perspective and what is actually being taught by the secular media and the education system. Children develop right and wrong concepts not from the books but from what they see on the television and what they see around them. For some of today's youngsters, it may not be enough to be told that they should not engage in sex because Islam forbids it. They also need to be advised of the hazards of early sex, sexually transmitted diseases, teenage pregnancy and sex education in the dimension of marriage and sex after marriage, in addition to the biology of development and hormonal changes at puberty. Their frank questions about sex should not be avoided but need honest answers from the Islamic perspective.

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