I can't believe this is even a debate tbh. Women have always been attending mosques since the time of the prophet sawas. You can't treat women like diseased beings and wonder why many of them end up bitter or questioning their faith. Reminds me of an incident I saw of a mosque named after Aisha, one of the most influential women in Islam, ironically only allowing women to enter through a backdoor that was by a dumpster. These are usually the same people who go into hysterics about calling everything a bid'aa-well, that's an ACTUAL bid'aa there
It's very rare here in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh for mosques to allow women. I am 19 and Indian and I've never prayed in a mosque except for 2-3 times that too during a hajj program in a masjid. Now this ramdan, it's my first time reading isha+taraweeh in a mosque. Some mosques open for women only in Ramadan that too only for night prayers. Other than this I've never attended a Friday prayer and not even an eid prayer in a mosque. May Allah guide us all to the right path.
Yes, you're right prophet s.a.w. clearly states that we should not stop women from going mosque... well having two different doors, one for men and one for women, it is ordered by prophet s.a.w. and he (s.a.w.) also said that after prayer women allowed to leave first (before men) so to prevent mixing. {it is the early practice, at the time of prophet s.a.w himself.}
@@aftabahmad8658 that is fair, having two doors makes sense, but it is rather irksome and insensitive to have a door be by the dumpster especially in a mosque particularly named after a Muslim woman
@@fire.smok3 yes I agree that's disrespectful to Womens and it will also bother them, both genders should have clean and fine gates for entering. 👍 In our current muslim society, women are treated bad for sure and that's only because of this widespread ignorance in our society regarding islamic rulings, prophet s.a.w. Sayings practice and about out traditional scholars knowledge. And so,We are so much drived by our nafs. But I don't think if we sit complaint and criticize, it will make any difference because criticism is only useful on them who are introspective not on those who are arrogant. The solution is that we can make difference by taking right knowledge about islam and then acknowledging others with love and without judgment or any derogated way it will for sure penetrate there hearts and also by being example to those who are younger to us. We should try to hold to the character of Rasul Allah s.a.w.
@@aftabahmad8658 I can't disagree there. I suppose as frustrated as we get about certain things we are all Muslims in the end and we should be concerned greatly with our own faults and gentle with the faults of others, especially in times like this where patience is needed more than ever. May God have mercy on us all.
In Indonesia we allow women to pray in the masjid just fine. We even allow women to study in it, read any books on the bookshelves, and held women-only tadarrus qur'an on certain days of the week. That has been my experience anyway, but it saddens me to know that this is even an issue
I can't believe this is even a debate tbh. Women have always been attending mosques since the time of the prophet sawas. You can't treat women like diseased beings and wonder why many of them end up bitter or questioning their faith. Reminds me of an incident I saw of a mosque named after Aisha, one of the most influential women in Islam, ironically only allowing women to enter through a backdoor that was by a dumpster. These are usually the same people who go into hysterics about calling everything a bid'aa-well, that's an ACTUAL bid'aa there
It's very rare here in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh for mosques to allow women. I am 19 and Indian and I've never prayed in a mosque except for 2-3 times that too during a hajj program in a masjid. Now this ramdan, it's my first time reading isha+taraweeh in a mosque. Some mosques open for women only in Ramadan that too only for night prayers. Other than this I've never attended a Friday prayer and not even an eid prayer in a mosque. May Allah guide us all to the right path.
Yes, you're right prophet s.a.w. clearly states that we should not stop women from going mosque...
well having two different doors, one for men and one for women, it is ordered by prophet s.a.w. and he (s.a.w.) also said that after prayer women allowed to leave first (before men) so to prevent mixing. {it is the early practice, at the time of prophet s.a.w himself.}
@@aftabahmad8658 that is fair, having two doors makes sense, but it is rather irksome and insensitive to have a door be by the dumpster especially in a mosque particularly named after a Muslim woman
@@fire.smok3 yes I agree that's disrespectful to Womens and it will also bother them,
both genders should have clean and fine gates for entering. 👍
In our current muslim society, women are treated bad for sure and that's only because of this widespread ignorance in our society regarding islamic rulings, prophet s.a.w. Sayings practice and about out traditional scholars knowledge.
And so,We are so much drived by our nafs.
But I don't think if we sit complaint and criticize, it will make any difference because criticism is only useful on them who are introspective not on those who are arrogant. The solution is that we can make difference by taking right knowledge about islam and then acknowledging others with love and without judgment or any derogated way it will for sure penetrate there hearts and also by being example to those who are younger to us. We should try to hold to the character of Rasul Allah s.a.w.
@@aftabahmad8658 I can't disagree there. I suppose as frustrated as we get about certain things we are all Muslims in the end and we should be concerned greatly with our own faults and gentle with the faults of others, especially in times like this where patience is needed more than ever. May God have mercy on us all.
In Indonesia we allow women to pray in the masjid just fine. We even allow women to study in it, read any books on the bookshelves, and held women-only tadarrus qur'an on certain days of the week. That has been my experience anyway, but it saddens me to know that this is even an issue