Family
From The
Perspective of Children
by Minister Louis Farrakhan
In the Name of Allah, The Beneficent, The
Merciful.
Allah (God)
says in the Qur�an that each creature is created in need.
Therefore, Allah (God) is the supplier of all needs. Allah (God) is
independent of His creatures, but, He created all of His creatures
to depend on Him. Allah (God) supplies the needs of all of His
creatures through what He has created. Each creature has the duty of
doing something for its self. This is the nature in which all living
things are created.
Every human need is a human right. When
we are born into this world we are complete yet incomplete,
therefore, we have needs. All human beings have a need to be made
secure or to feel safe. As we grow in life, our needs may change,
but the need to be made secure will follow us from birth until
death. The baby is secured in its mother�s womb, but when it comes
into its new environment it cries because it is insecure. The baby
is secured by the love and warmth from the mother�s body; it is
secured by the milk that flows from its mother�s breast; it is
also secured by the loving care of a mother who makes sure that the
needs of the baby to be fed, to be changed, to be in a clean and
safe environment is met. All of this must be provided by the mother,
with the help of the father.
Love is a human need. Therefore, to be loved is
a human right. To feel the warmth of a loving embrace is a human
need. It is a human right to be encircled by the love of a mother,
a father, a sister, or a brother who love each other. To have a
sense of family is a human need. Therefore, to have a family or to
be apart of a family is a human right. We are born into the world
knowing nothing, but, we are born into a universe filled with
knowledge.
Allah (God) gives us a curious nature and has
placed within us a hunger to learn what is in our environment and
to master what is in our environment. To learn, or to grow in
knowledge is a human need. Therefore, the attainment of knowledge
is a human right. Every mother and every father should strive to
provide the tools of learning for the new life, for, it begins to
learn from the moment it leaves its mother�s womb. Each child is
gifted from the Creator with a very special gift that is unique to
itself, but, these gifts must be discovered; must be cultivated;
must be exploited for the good of the individual, the family, and
the nation.
America and the industrial nations are
concerned about human rights violations in the under developed or
newly developing nations of the earth. However, with the criteria
that we have mentioned, all nations in some way or another are in
violation of the human rights of the people, for, all nations in
some way interfere with the attainment of the needs of the human
being.
Children desire validation from their parents.
"How do I look mommy?" "How did I do
daddy?" No matter what the child does, it desires to be
approved by those who mean the most to it: (1) Mother (2)
Father (3) Sibling (4) Friends and Playmates.
Children need encouragement when they falter
that they may do better. The misuse of language and/or the
harshness of language in rebuke can hurt the emotional and
psychological development of the child. Remember, the need to be
made secure is with us throughout our lives. So, as we grow, what
it takes to secure us mentally, spiritually, morally,
economically, and politically is always at work, even in the home.
The child wants to know that we are aware of its presence. Even
though consciously the child may not be aware, subconsciously, it
wants to know that its rights even as a child are respected and
protected in the family environment when dealing with parents,
guardians and when disputes arise among the siblings.
The need for justice at all levels of
development is that which helps to make the human being secure.
Each child looks to the parents to settle their disputes with
justice. When disputes arise in the family, it gives the mother
and the father a chance to teach and instill family values, moral
values and also to build good character in the children. All of
the aforementioned are needs. All of the aforementioned are
rights. Some of us think that disciplining our children is
abuse, but, everything in creation has its affair regulated by
law.
In the home there is a need for rules,
regulations or laws. Rules and regulations are a human need, and
to deny our children the discipline of rules is to deny them that
which ultimately will make them secure. There must be rules
in the home. There must be rules that teach us how
to relate to one another properly in the home. There must be rules
of respect for parents, children, self and one another that are
taught in the home because everywhere we go we will find existing
rules and regulations. Where there are no rules, there will be no
order. Chaos will be the result. Where there is chaos, it will
bring to an end the activity or the life of the home, school,
community, nation, and the world.
Having discipline in our homes is not abuse of
our children. We learn to respect rules in our home so that when
we go to school and meet with the children in the neighborhood,
rules of social behavior if taught, accepted and practiced in the
home means that our children will be more apt to accept and obey
the rules of society, then, jail or prison will not be an end for
us. The respect of rules and regulations starting in the
home could mean the end of prisons.
Children have a need for attention. "Look
at me." "Listen to me." These are not words
coming from the lips of the children this is written in the nature
of the child.
We must be careful in disciplining our
children. There is a line, which if crossed in disciplining our
children could be labeled as abuse. In a world that is prophesied
to come to an end; where human beings are suffering loss and
enduring great levels of stress, as parents, as teachers, as
leaders, as preachers, as foremen, and as authority figures, we
must be careful not to take out our stress on those under our
authority, thus violating their rights. More and more there are
children killing their parents, killing their teachers; workers
killing their foremen, or bosses; spouses killing each other
because of abuse and violation of rights.
I believe this is why Jesus said that, "Nation
will rise against nation and kingdom against kingdom � and the
mother-in-law will be at variance with the daughter-in-law � and
they of a man�s household will be his worst enemy."
Corporal punishment is not abuse if it is done
with moderation, with the thought in mind of correction and not
the thought of afflicting pain, but, to bring about change in the
behavior to make a better child and a better human being.
Punishment must always be in accord with the violation, and devoid
of anger. The love that we have for our children is the reason why
we punish them because our desire is to make the child better.
In today�s society the rights of parents are
gradually being taken away and although this is supposed to be a
Judaeo-Christian society, the Bible�s teaching of how to rear
the children is being ignored and uprooted. The Bible says, "Spare
not the rod and spoil the child." It also teaches, "Train
up a child in the way he should go and, when he is old, he will
not depart from it." The Qur�an is the best
companion of this scripture because it gives us guidance on how to
train the child. If we as parents coming into the knowledge of
Allah (God) are instructed by Jesus in these words, "Except
you become as a little child, you cannot enter the Kingdom of
God." If we follow these instructions, they will give
us a greater understanding of how our minds, and our children�s
minds should be in listening to instructions that we may be
trained in the Way of Allah (God).
These are areas that must be studied and
approached with wisdom. Every child is not the same, but, every
child hungers to be disciplined. The teachers that we remember
most are those who were firm, yet, just. Where there is no
discipline, there really is no love.
PARENTS TOO BUSY; CHILDREN
NEGLECTED
When we do not get sufficient attention as a
child, we act in a manner to get attention and sometimes this
results in anti-social conduct or behavior. When the need for
attention and validation is not supplied in the home or in the
school, and we find that we have a gift or talent, that sets us
apart and gives us attention, we have a tendency to focus on that
talent and give all of our time to that talent, gift, or
profession because it has given us the attention, acceptance and
validation that we missed coming up as children.
As Black
people growing up in a society where we feel rejected by the
larger society, and, are mistreated by the larger society,
we grow up with a mentality desiring attention and validation from
the members of the larger society. When we discover a gift or
talent that sets us apart from the rest of our un-validated people
that gives us attention from our former slave masters and their
children, we give all of our time to that talent, gift or
profession because it has given us the attention and acceptance
that we have not experienced growing up Black in White America.
Sometimes when we marry and have our children,
we choose our gift and our talent and its ability to create wealth
over the needs of and our duty to our wives and children.
Oft-times as we become "great" in our
profession, getting the attention and validation for our gift,
skill, or talent, we may find that somewhere along the line we
have lost our balance and neglected our duty to our wives, and our
children. While we bask in the adoration of our fans, patients,
students, clients, and congregation, we may find that we have lost
something more precious than what we gained in the world, because,
in our blindness, we did not look at life and the needs of our
children and our wives from their perspective, and, therefore,
failed in our duty to them. This is why people whom we look up to,
that have everything in life that we think we would want are very
unsuccessful in marriage, and very unsuccessful in parenting their
children.
In going through life, we really cannot see
until we can see from the perspective of others. When there is
argument and we try to see from the side of the person with whom
we have a disagreement or variance, as you would want them to see
from your side, more than likely seeing from the other person�s
perspective can cause us to arrive at a balance and accomplish the
reconciliation of our differences.
Our children will not voice their opinions or
share their perspectives in a home that it is ruled by fear, and
they will never say to the parents what they really feel. If our
homes are ruled by love, and governed by the principle of justice,
then, we will encourage our children to speak to us so that we may
know how they think and what they see and feel. We then have the
task to either help them to see better, or in listening we may
find ourselves at fault and we correct ourselves.
This is why the principle of atonement works so
well in the home, if we allow our children to point out to us
where they see or feel we have treated them unfairly or handled
them improperly. As parents, we carry the pride of parenting and
oft-times the arrogance of parenting disallows us to listen to the
child�s perspective. In this type of home, the old adage is, "A
child should be seen and not heard." Suppose those in
authority over us as grown ups feel that we, under their authority
should be seen and not heard, and if we voiced our grievance and
were punished by those in authority, we would then say that we are
living under tyranny and some of us would plan or take part in a
revolt. This is the same spirit that will come into the hearts and
minds of the children in the home by disrespecting their rights
and by not allowing our children to share their feelings and
thoughts with us as their parents.
This attitude of not listening will lead to a
hostile attitude in the children toward their parents. A gulf then
develops between the children and the parents that oft-times is
never bridged. If the children in the home do not find the
attention, the love, the validation and the sense of family that
they need, they will take to the streets and find what they have
missed in the homes in what is called the gangs.
As a parent, teacher, preacher, politician or
leader, those under our authority have rights that must not
be ignored by those who have authority. Children have rights.
Parents have rights, but, parents have authority.
How authority is used is critical to the development of those
under our authority. Using our authority to trample on the rights
of our children is a violation that there may not necessarily be a
law on the book of society for which to punish us, but the law of
justice is written in the nature of creation, therefore, at some
point, we will have to face the fact that we have not looked
through the eyes of our children and have not listened to the cry
of those under our authority.
We think that providing for them a home, food
and some of the amenities of life is all that we have to do to
expect complete submission from our children. When we understand
that they too have rights and try to see from their perspective
and be balanced in sufficing their needs, we will produce better
human beings, better and stronger families, a stronger, more just,
and peaceful society.
Remember, those in authority are the custodians
of our needs and the guardians of our rights.
Thank you for reading these few words.
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