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Shaykh Saleem Dhorat

Naseehah for Madrasah Teachers

Naseehah (Principal Forum Conference)

Shaykh Muhammad Saleem Dhorat (hafidhahullāh)

1st September 2025

Those who have selected ta’līm as their occupation, they have been classed as the best of people by  Nabī ﷺ. 

خَيْرُكُمْ مَنْ تَعَلَّمَ الْقُرْآنَ وَعَلَّمَهُ

Abū Abdur-Rahmān as-Sulamī who narrated this hadīth to his students from Hadrat Uthman said that it is this hadīth which is the reason for me sitting here today. From the time of Hadrat ‘Uthmān to the time of Hajjāj bin Yūsuf, he continued teaching in one place, one Masjid – and it was due to this hadīth. Hence, those who teach are very valuable in the sight of Allāh. 

The ‘Ulamā are the inheritors of the Anbiyā. What is their duty? Ta’līm and Tarbiyyah.

لَقَدْ مَنَّ ٱللَّهُ عَلَى ٱلْمُؤْمِنِينَ إِذْ بَعَثَ فِيهِمْ رَسُولًۭا مِّنْ أَنفُسِهِمْ يَتْلُوا۟ عَلَيْهِمْ ءَايَـٰتِهِۦ وَيُزَكِّيهِمْ وَيُعَلِّمُهُمُ ٱلْكِتَـٰبَ وَٱلْحِكْمَةَ

What was the mission of Rasūlullãh ﷺ?

  1. Tilāwah – teach them the words of the Qur’ān
  2. Tazkiyah – purify their hearts from shirk, spiritual illnesses etc.
  3. Tafsīr of Qur’ān – teach them the explanation of the Qur’ān alongside the words
  4. Sunnah 

رَبَّنَا وَابْعَثْ فِيهِمْ رَسُولًا مِّنْهُمْ يَتْلُو عَلَيْهِمْ آيَاتِكَ وَيُعَلِّمُهُمُ الْكِتَابَ وَالْحِكْمَةَ وَيُزَكِّيهِمْ ۚ إِنَّكَ أَنتَ الْعَزِيزُ الْحَكِيمُ

After Ibrāhīm AS made the house of Allāh with Ismā’īl AS, he didn’t stop there, but he made the above du’ā – he asked to send someone with these specific four qualities. The first three of these qualities are connected to ta’līm and the last one is connected to tarbiyyah. 

If we summarise these missions, they come down to two things – Ta’līm and Tarbiyyah.

Nabī ﷺ has said,

إِنَّمَا بُعِثْتُ لِأُتَمِّمَ صَالِحَ الأَخْلاقِ

إِنَّمَا بُعِثْتُ مُعَلِّمًا

There is no one better than Nabī saw in this world – Allah gave him knowledge and did his tarbiyyah

وَعَلَّمَكَ مَا لَمۡ تَكُن تَعۡلَمُۚ وَكَانَ فَضۡلُ ٱللَّهِ عَلَيۡكَ عَظِيمٗا

Nabī ﷺ has said,

أدبني ربي فأحسن تأدیبي

So Allah gave Nabī ﷺ ta’līm, hence he was a muta’allim, and Allah did his tarbiyyah so he was murabba at that time. He then became the murabbī and mu’allim of this ummah. He did ta’līm and tarbiyyah of this ummah.

إِنَّ الْعُلَمَاءَ وَرَثَةُ الأَنْبِيَاءِ

This duty was then passed onto the people of knowledge. It is a great virtue and a tremendous ihsān from Allāh ﷻ upon those who take on this responsibility. Our job is Ta’līm and Tarbiyyah. Our responsibility is Ta’līm and Tarbiyyah. When we sit for 2–3 hours in a maktab, our purpose should always be Ta’līm and Tarbiyyah.

Take an example: if a man doesn’t know that his purpose is to go to town and buy a coat, he may go—but he won’t know which shop to enter or what to do. If he doesn’t know what he’s buying, he won’t know where to go. However, if a child knows his mother has given him money to buy chocolate, he will go to the right shop, in the right area, and buy the right thing. The point is: when you know the purpose of something, you won’t waste time—you’ll fulfil the duty.

The purpose of our teaching is Ta’līm and Tarbiyyah.

Our job is to teach both ‘Ilm and ‘Amal. It’s not enough to just say, “We should lower our gaze.” We must also teach how to do that. A weakness today is that we say what needs to be said, but we don’t forbid the wrong in practice. If someone is doing something wrong, it’s either due to a lack of knowledge or a lack of tazkiyah.

Tarbiyyah is not done through r’ub and khawf , but through shawq (desire) and muhabbah (love). A child should look forward to your class and your lessons. From the morning, they should be waiting eagerly for 5pm. If they develop love for you, they will want to come. That is how you do their Tarbiyyah—through muhabbah. The child’s progress in Ta’līm and Tarbiyyah is directly tied to your progress towards the ākhirah.

Story of Muhājir Umm Qays: Nabī ﷺ was giving Tarbiyyah. If a mistake was not corrected, the mistake would have continued.

There is a difference between parhāna (to lecture) and sikhāna (to teach practically). If you take a recipe book and explain the recipe of biryani in an excellent manner, the girls won’t be able to make biryani just from that. That is parhāna. But sikhāna is different—you have to teach practically too. You teach the knowledge, but you also teach how to implement it.

A young man once came to Nabī ﷺ and said he felt the urge to commit zina. If it was only about propagating, Nabī ﷺ would have just said, “It is harām.” But Nabī ﷺ knew the boy already had the knowledge—what he lacked was Tarbiyyah. So Nabī ﷺ began his Tarbiyyah: he asked the young man how he would feel if someone did this with his mother, daughter, or sister. The boy replied that he would dislike it. Nabī ﷺ explained that the woman he wishes to commit adultery with is also someone’s daughter, sister, or mother.

Notice—Nabī ﷺ did not shout at him. He did not say, “How dare you ask such a thing? Don’t you know zina is harām?” Instead, he gave Tarbiyyah. Then, he placed his hand on the young man’s chest and made du‘ā:

‎اللَّهُمَّ اغْفِرْ ذَنْبَهُ، وَطَهِّرْ قَلْبَهُ، وَحَصِّنْ فَرْجَهُ

“O Allāh, forgive his sin, purify his heart, and protect his chastity.”

After this, the young man never even looked at a non-mahram. This was the extent to which Nabī ﷺ went in doing Tarbiyyah.

We really need to understand our purpose.

Before leaving the house, we should think: I am going to do Ta’līm and Tarbiyyah of my students. I must teach them knowledge and also how to practice it.

In the villages of India, even if a teacher wasn’t an ‘Ālim, he had concern (fikr) to see whether the students attended the masjid for ṣalāh.

A teacher should never be absent—not even once. Absence removes barakah. Be present physically, mentally, and wholeheartedly. The children’s time is an amānah. I go as far as saying that we shouldn’t even look at our mobile phones in class—that is khiyānah.

We should always feel the need for the suhbah of the buzurgs. When things succeed, we shouldn’t think it’s due to our own efforts, but rather the du‘ās of our teachers. 

The entire time should be spent behind the students—even during exams, don’t read your own books. Help them revise. Ml Islām ul Haq would listen to us—he didn’t just say, “Revise with one another” whilst he sat observing. He would listen to us even during exam time. He didn’t even need to open the kitāb. He listened to sabak every day of every child, sometimes even correcting us firmly when needed.

If you’ve finished sabak earlier one day, still occupy the children’s time. 

Qārī Raheem Baksh, a student of Qārī Panipatti, always arrived 5–10 minutes early and left 5–10 minutes late. If he had to travel abroad, even if his flight was at 2pm, he wouldn’t simply give a holiday. He would teach until he had to leave for the airport. And when he returned, if there was still time left in the day, he would first go to teach and only then return home.

Hadrat Qārī Siddīq Bandwi continued teaching even when his wife passed away. He was in great sorrow and wanted to cry—he would go to the toilet as an excuse to weep, then return to continue teaching. But he never left his Ta’līm.

If a madrasah is closed for a week due to issues in the building, how many teachers feel sad that the children are missing days of learning? Instead, many feel happy. This shows we don’t truly understand our purpose. If one madrasah has 50 days of holiday and another has 40, the second group should be happy for having ten extra days of Ta’līm, while the first should feel sad for having ten fewer—but today, it’s often the opposite.

We should note this and change our mindset. When school holidays began, my father would call students from the morning. Whether there was a wage or not, he would make them understand the value of using the holidays. He encouraged them to do a few extra ajzā’. He would take them with him to ẓuhr. If a child had not completed his lesson, he would keep him until he had finished—even if it was until 8pm because of just one student. It was not easy. 

Once, my father slipped due to a frosty surface and broke his hand. We rushed him to hospital, and by the time we returned home, it was nearly ‘aṣr. He quickly prayed ẓuhr and told me: “Go tell the mosque secretary that I have fever and a broken hand, so I cannot come to the mosque—but send the children to my house instead.” My mother said, “Leave it for one day.” But he replied, “Sabak cannot be missed.”

There are countless stories like this from our pious predecessors. Qārī Siddīq Bandwi writes about his teacher, Qārī Abdul Haleem. When asked to teach sab‘a qirā’āt, he replied: “I don’t have time. But after ẓuhr, the class I teach hidāyah to take 7–8 minutes to organise their kitābs. If you come then, I can teach you in those 7–8 minutes.” Later, he added: “Come after ‘ishā’ as well.” After some time he said: “Even this won’t be enough to complete within a year. So come from tahajjud till fajr.” The students would sleep in his house, and after praying tahajjud, he would wake them up and teach them until fajr.

We should put effort not only on the bright students, but also on those who struggle. A teacher once said to me that he wanted to stop teaching maktab because his class that year wasn’t as bright as previous cohorts. I told him to continue—and at the end of the year, he felt a great sense of satisfaction.

There was a ḥifẓ teacher who complained to me about a student who could only learn three lines a day. I asked him: “What would you do if he was your own child?” The boy continued and eventually completed his ḥifẓ in seven years, later becoming an ‘Ālim. Due to the patience of his teacher, the child achieved so much.

Nabī ﷺ said: “I am to you like a father is to his son.” Imām Shāfi‘ī mentioned that as a child, being an orphan, he received less attention from his teachers. Burhān al-A’immah, when students came to him after fajr, would teach them until midday, and only then would he teach his own son. His son complained: “You teach them at the best time, but me at the hardest time (when people are sleepy).” His father explained: “The others come from far away, so they deserve priority.” Both father and son sacrificed. Whoever puts effort on other people’s children, Allāh ﷻ will not deprive their own.

A teacher has limited time, but it is his duty that if someone does not understand, he should teach them again in his free time. Imām Shāfi‘ī explained something 17 times to a student who still didn’t understand. Out of embarrassment, the student left. Imām Shāfi‘ī called him back and said: “I will explain again.”

Rabi‘ ibn Sulaymān, a beloved student of Imām Shāfi‘ī, once heard his teacher say: “If I could feed you knowledge, I would feed it all to you.”

Every father wants better for his child. A sincere (mukhlis) teacher also wishes the same—that his students’ rank surpasses his own. Qārī Raheem Baksh could not eat if a student had failed to deliver sabak. At night, he would turn restlessly and do istighfār, thinking the fault lay in his own shortcomings.

We should have immense love for our students. Ml Mamlūk ‘Alī Sāhib would check on every student. If he heard that one was ill, he would travel far to visit him.

At Jāmi‘ah Islāmiyyah (Fatehpur), there was a principal, Maulānā Zuhoorul Islām. Once, a student became ill and cried when Mawlānā visited him. Hadrat comforted him, then went to the masjid to pray two rak‘ahs. His khādim overheard him making du‘ā: “O Allāh, this child has come from far. If shifā’ is not written for him, and death is written for him, then I also have a son—‘Aṭiyyatullāh. Take him instead.” Shortly after, he received news that his son was gravely ill. Before he could reach home, ‘Aṭiyyatullāh had passed away, while the student had recovered.

Even maktab teachers should do mutāla‘ah. They should think: How can I explain this to a child of such-and-such age? Mufti Sa‘īd Ahmad Pālanpūri once advised: “The time you spent in mutāla‘ah during your student days, now spend that much time thinking about how to teach in a way that your students can grasp that information.”

We should have the following bātinī asbāb:

  1. Reverence

We should regard the spreading of knowledge as something great in our hearts. Allāh ﷻ sent an angel to our beloved Nabī ﷺ and chose the month of Ramadān and such a blessed place (Makkah). We should have love and reverence for this knowledge. There is a noticeable difference between a teacher who has azmat for knowledge in his heart and one who does not.

  1. Love

Have love in your heart—for Allāh, for the students, and for the knowledge itself.

  1. Sincerity

One should be sincere. There is nothing wrong with taking a wage. However, there is a difference between teaching for Allāh ﷻ and accepting a wage for livelihood, and teaching purely for the wage. Do we come to the madrasah just for the wage? Do we switch to another madrasah solely because it pays better? Teaching without ikhlās is one of the worst things. 

  1. Taqwā

We should maintain taqwā in our hearts. Find a murabbī who can guide you—there are many shuyūkh around. Be serious and have concern for your own Tarbiyyah. How can we give Tarbiyyah to others if we lack it ourselves? We should be good examples for our students. Often, we instruct students to do something, yet we do not follow it ourselves—such as giving salam when entering the classroom or sitting appropriately. Our environments of madrasah should also be based on taqwa.

Hadrat Mawlānā Hashim, a very affectionate teacher of mine, once said that next to Jogwar Dārul ‘Ulūm, there is a vast piece of land. He suggested to Qari Siddeeq Sb that we should establish a Dārul ‘Ulūm for girls there and construct a large wall as a barrier between the two institutions. He also proposed that the holidays be arranged so that when the girls are going home, the boys are not present, and vice versa. For example, boys would have a holiday one day, and the girls would have their holiday the next day. Qari Siddeeq Sb listened to this proposal but responded thoughtfully:

“You may build a physical barrier between the two, but there is no barrier between thoughts and hearts. What wall can prevent thoughts like, ‘Such-and-such a girl from such a place is studying there’?”

I mention this because today we are familiar with all the rules and regulations, but as Mufti Shafi Sb said, “The biggest mufti is your heart.”

What is the meaning of parda? It means ensuring that thoughts of non-mahrams or inappropriate thoughts do not enter the heart. A niqab alone cannot achieve this. Someone once remarked that he found niqāb-clad women more of a fitna than women without a niqab. When I asked why, he explained that with a woman without a niqab, her reality is visible, but with a niqāb, the imagination of the nafs takes over. Our elders were extremely cautious about this. There should be taqwā in the madrasah: no casual messaging between genders, no unnecessary interactions. A mahram is a mahram, and a ghayr mahram is a ghayr mahram. Meetings shouldn’t take place with both genders in the same room, even with a niqāb.

In our madrasah, IDA, we currently combine lessons for girls and boys in Mishkāt and Daurah years. Insha’Allāh, we plan to make it fully independent in the future. During lessons, complete seriousness is maintained. Even sensitive hadiths, such as those about nāqisāt-‘aql, are never joked about. Besides one teacher, no one knows how many girls are studying or whose daughters are enrolled. Even I do not know how many girls are currently studying in Daurah Ḥadīth.

Before going to a lesson, when leaving your home, start by making du‘ā—for protection from Shayṭān and that you may fulfill the duty entrusted to you. Ask yourself: have I made enough preparations? After teaching, do shukr and istighfār. Ask yourself: did I teach the way I was supposed to?

Keep a connection with your elders—they have basīrah, and the nūr of ‘Ilm and Taqwā!

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Shaykh Saleem Dhorat

Understanding Tazkiyah

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

By Shaykh-ul-Hadīth, Hadrat Mawlānā Muhammad Saleem Dhorat hafizahullāh

The Four Parts of Dīn

The sole objective of our lives is to acquire the Pleasure of Allāh ta‘ālā, which can only be achieved by following the whole Dīn. The whole Dīn can be categorised into four parts:

1.   External actions, which comprise of:

a.  Performing good actions e.g. Salāh;

b.  Refraining from sinful actions e.g. backbiting.

2.   Internal qualities, which comprise of:

a.  Purifying the heart from debasing qualities e.g. pride;

b.  Adorning the heart with praiseworthy traits e.g. humbleness.

Allāh ta‘ālā has laid down commands relating to both the external and the internal aspects of Dīn. In both, there are Do’s and Don’ts. For example, performing Salāh, giving Zakāh, fasting and performing Hajj are external actions which must be carried out; whilst causing physical harm, stealing and consuming harām are external actions which must be avoided. Similarly, jealousy, malice and pride are debasing qualities of the heart which are prohibited; whilst Shukr (being grateful to Allāh ta‘ālā) and Sabr (patience) and humbleness are praiseworthy qualities with which every Muslim should strive to adorn his heart.

We can therefore conclude that our duties as Muslims are: to carry out good actions; to refrain from sinful actions; to purify the heart from debasing qualities; and to adorn the heart with praiseworthy qualities. All four are termed as Al-A‘māl As-Sālihah (good deeds) and our success lies in carrying them out. Allāh ta‘ālā states:

Verily those who believe and do good deeds, for them shall be gardens beneath which rivers flow. That is the great success. (85:11)

Tazkiyah and its Importance

The process of removing the debasing qualities from the heart and adorning it with the praiseworthy qualities is known as Tazkiyah (soul purification). Through Tazkiyah a person first begins to recognise the shortcomings in his inner traits, such as the existence of pride and miserliness. As a result, he is able to exert effort and replace them with praiseworthy qualities such as humbleness and generosity. Allāh ta‘ālā has emphasised the importance of Tazkiyah in the Glorious Qur’ān by taking oath of seven different things before stating:

Undoubtedly, the one who purified it (the soul) has succeeded and the one who soiled it (through kufr, shirk, sin) has certainly failed. (91:9-10)

‘Ilm and Tazkiy

In order to understand the Commands of Allāh ta‘ālā and to carry them out, it is necessary to acquire ‘ilm. Through ‘ilm, we will be able to understand what we are required to do in every situation. Regarding the external actions for example, ‘ilm is required to understand the pre-requisites of Salāh as well as all the necessary aspects within Salāh. Similar is the case for the inner qualities; a person will require ‘ilm to understand which qualities are prohibited and the consequences of having such qualities. For example, our beloved Nabī sallallāhu ‘alayhi wasallam has informed us that a person with pride equivalent to a mustard seed in his heart will not enter Jannah (without first going in Jahannam). (Abū Dāwūd, At-Tirmidhī, Ibn Mājah).

However, without Tazkiyah ‘ilm is not beneficial, as we find that a person has ‘ilm but is unable to practice according to it despite having the desire to do so. For example, a person is aware that offering Fajr Salāh is compulsory, but is unable to leave his bed and go to the masjid.  Similarly, despite being aware that sinful glances are not permissible, he is unable to control the gaze from lustful glances. The reason for this is a lack of spiritual stamina to carry out the Commands of Allāh ta‘ālā. Through the process of Tazkiyah, a person purifies his heart from debasing qualities and as a result gains the spiritual stamina required to fulfil all the external actions Commands of Allāh ta‘ālā.

External Actions Hold No Value without Tazkiyah

Another important point to understand is that without purifying the heart, despite carrying out the external actions of Dīn, they may not be accepted in the Court of Allāh ta‘ālā. This is because a corrupt heart could lead to a person performing deeds with the wrong intention. For example, if a person performs a good action with the intention of acquiring fame, he will gain no reward whatsoever, rather he will be answerable in the Court of Allāh ta‘ālā. Even though outwardly his action may appear perfect and in accordance with the Commands of Allāh ta‘ālā and the Sunnah of Nabī sallallāhu ‘alayhi wasallam, due to his insincerity his action will yield no benefit.

The importance of a purified heart has been explained by Nabī sallallāhu ‘alayhi wasallam in a hadīth:

Indeed there is a piece of flesh in the body; if it is sound, then the whole body will be sound and if it is corrupt then the whole body will be corrupt. Indeed it is the heart. (Al-Bukhārī)

Tazkiyah: The Key to Practising the Whole Dīn

From the above, it is clear that Tazkiyah is the path that leads to the reformation of the heart, providing the spiritual stamina required for external actions; and making them perfect and worthy of acceptance.  Having understood the importance of Tazkiyah, the question arises as to how it can be achieved. For this, read and study ‘The Path to Purification’, published by At-Tazkiyah. 

Let us recognise the importance of Tazkiyah and exert effort towards its acquisition, so that we may practice the whole Dīn and acquire the eternal bliss of the Hereafter.

© Riyādul Jannah (Vol. 26 No. 11/12, Nov/Dec 2017)


We are witnessing an era where Islām, in spite of its vastness and applicability in every sphere of the human life, has been confined to mere beliefs and a handful of rituals. As with some other important obligations of Islām, the obligation of ensuring the correct procedures in the field of inheritance has also been subjected to gross disregard and outright neglect. In fact, this section of Dīn can be said to be the most neglected one among all. Seeing such state of affairs, the respected Shaykh hafizahullāh embarked on the task of acquainting the Muslims on the importance of this vital duty. The lectures delivered proved to be highly informative and beneficial, but only to a limited audience. In order to extend the benefits to a larger part of the Ummah, it was decided that two of these lectures be selected and published in booklet form.

A few topics mentioned in the booklet are as follows:

• Equality in inheritance
• What can be drawn from the estate
• The importance of drawing up a will
• Causes of incorrect wills
• Criteria for wasiyyah (bequest)
• What to do following a death
• Common errors and customs

To order the above book or for details of our other publications, please email info@idauk.org or call 0116 262 5440.


• Please forward this message on to all your contacts

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Shaykh Saleem Dhorat

The New Year


 The New Year
by Shaykh Mawlānā Muhammad Saleem Dhorat hafizahullāh

Having just completed the year, the ‘New Year’ is seen and heard all around us. However, the question remains as to what should be a Muslim’s take on these events.

Upon the passing of a year, the common trend is to celebrate; people have birthday parties, wedding anniversaries etc. However, in certain spheres this is not the case; take the example of a businessman who at the end of the (financial) year will first take stock of the past year. He will meticulously go through the accounts of the past year taking into account every single penny. He will check to see if he made a profit, and if so then how can he make more in the coming year. He will check his expenses: where did he spend his money? Can he make further savings? All of this is done so that he can make the coming year more profitable than the one that has passed.
This should be the case at the end of the year in every Muslim’s life for we too have been sent to this world as businessmen with the commodity of time; which is life. We will have to one day give account for every second in the Court of Allāh ta‘ālā, when our books of deeds shall be presented.

We will bring forth a book for him that he will find wide open, (and We will say to him) ‘Read your book. Enough are you today to take your own account.’ (17:13-14)

‘Umar radhiyallāhu ‘anhu, emphasising the same, says:

Take stock of your own lives before Allāh ta‘ālā reckons you. And assess yourself before you are assessed by Allāh. And prepare yourselves for the great summoning.

It is our belief that on the Day of Judgement Allāh ta‘ālā will reckon us for everything that we did in the world.

On the day when everybody shall find present before him whatever good he did and whatever evil he did, he will wish there would have been a wide space between him and that (day). (3:30)

No matter how minute or trivial an act we did, we will find that it is present in our book of deeds.

So, whoever does any good act (even) to the weight of a particle will see it. And whoever does evil (even) to the weight of a particle will see it. (99:7-8)

This will be to the extent that in awe people will say:

‘Woe to us! What a book is this! It has missed nothing, minor or major, but has taken it into account.’ Thus they will find whatever they did present before them, and your Lord will not wrong anyone. (18:49)

We need to keep this reality in mind and spend our lives with regular reflection on our actions with Murāqabah and Muhāsabah. Murāqabah means to supervise and oversee oneself to ensure that he/she stays away from disobediences of Allāh ta‘ālā and spends every moment seeking the Pleasure of Allāh ta‘ālā. Muhāsabah means taking account of one’s activities at the end of the day, week and year; and thanking Allāh ta‘ālā for the ability to have performed any good actions and seeking forgiveness for any sins one may have committed. Inshā’allāh, if this is adhered to, then we will see a great change in our lives. We will find ourselves spending every second of our lives with great care.

The end of a year is a time to reflect and say to yourself, ‘Another year from my precious life has passed. Who knows how many more years, if any, I have remaining?’ Let us spend them in those avenues that bring the pleasure of Allāh ta‘ālā and stay away from those things that bring His displeasure, so that we can meet Allāh ta‘ālā in a state that He is pleased with us.

© Riyādul Jannah