Mentoring programs specifically for youth
Grounded in Amānah (trust) and the duty to protect from harm (La ḍarar wa la ḍirār), the program provides safe, structured ṣuḥbah with clear boundaries, supervision, and accountability. Assesses the structured program connecting youth with vetted role models for holistic nurturing (Tarbiyah). This is vital for excellence, operationalizing the duty of sincere counsel (Naṣīḥah) while preventing spiritual or positional abuse. It directly impacts community resilience and Ukhuwwah by developing confident, values-driven future leaders.
Maṣlaḥah Mursalah (Consideration of Public Interest)
A structured youth mentoring program directly serves the public interest of the Muslim community by nurturing the next generation.
Sadd al-Dharā'i' (Blocking the Means to Evil)
Proactively blocking means to harm through vetting, supervision, and faith-safe controls.
La ḍarar wa la ḍirār
No harm and no reciprocating harm; operationalised through strict boundaries and non-coercive counsel.
Naṣīḥah
Sincere counsel, requiring trained mentors to provide purposeful and ethical guidance.
Tarbiyah
Holistic nurturing that demands structured, staged development plans.
Ukhuwwah
Brotherly solidarity reflected in safe, trusting relationships.
Adab
Islamic etiquette, including confidentiality and respect for boundaries.
Ṣuḥbah
Righteous companionship institutionalized through formal mentoring.
Qudwah Ḥasanah
Excellent role model; ensuring mentors are worthy of emulation.
Amānah
Trustworthiness; mentors are trustees of the youth's development.
Ri'āyah
Duty of care and protection owed to those under one's charge.
Ḥikmah
Wisdom in providing advice without coercion.
Discussion (1)
📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Updated islamic_references from mizan-297.json
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