Tag: Islamic stories for children

  • halloween story for muslim kids

    halloween story for muslim kids

    Halloween story for muslim kids: This is a powerful Islamic tale about courage, faith, and choosing truth over tradition. Learn about Islamic values and why Muslim families choose alternatives to Halloween. For more Islamic stories for kids, visit our collection.

    Chapter One: The Whispering Wind – A Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    Zara loved mysteries. At twelve years old, she carried a notebook everywhere, its corners bent from adventures and its pages crowded with questions only a true Truth Seeker would ask. Her little brother Sami, eight and endlessly curious, had just started his own notebook, a tiny blue one with a sticker that read: “Seek the truth; Allah will guide you.” They both wore matching green backpacks with a crescent moon emblem that their Baba had sewn on.

    It was late October in Crescent Springs, the small town where trees curled like question marks and autumn leaves skittered along sidewalks like playful cats. Everywhere they walked, the world was dressed in orange and black. There were plastic skeletons in windows, fake cobwebs on bushes, and grinning pumpkins with candles inside. A cool wind weaved through the streets, carrying whispers of an approaching night when costumes would hide faces and strangers would knock on doors for candy.

    “Zara,” Sami said as a gust pulled at his scarf, “are we going to trick-or-treat this year? Everyone in my class is talking about it.”

    Zara glanced at the pumpkin on the porch next door. The carved eyes were triangles, the mouth jagged like teeth. It was supposed to be funny, but it made the shadows look sharp. “I don’t know,” she said. “We have to learn more first. Remember what Mama says? ‘A Muslim’s heart seeks truth, not trends.’ Let’s be Truth Seekers.”

    Sami straightened. “Truth Seekers!”

    They bumped fists and marched forward, their steps making soft drumbeats on the sidewalk.

    At the corner, the wind seemed to speak. Not like a voice, but like a hush that carried meaning. Zara paused. “Did you hear that?”

    “Hear what?” Sami tucked closer to her.

    “It sounded like… ‘Ask why.’”

    Sami’s eyes grew round. “Ask why what?”

    “Why Halloween,” Zara said, “and what it really is. If we’re going to make good choices, we need to understand. That’s what Truth Seekers do.”

    They agreed to begin their quest that afternoon. They would ask people they trusted, compare what they learned to Islamic values, and then decide together. No rushing. No copying what everyone else did. Truth first.

    Chapter Two: The Library Lantern – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    The town library smelled like paper and adventure. Sunlight poured through tall windows, making dust glimmer like tiny stars. Mrs. Noor, the librarian, waved from behind her desk. She wore a sky-blue hijab and had a smile as warm as tea.

    “What brings the Truth Seekers today?” she asked.

    “We’re investigating Halloween,” Zara said. “We want to know its origins and what it means. We want to know if it fits with who we are as Muslims.”

    Mrs. Noor’s eyes softened with pride. “That’s a noble quest.” She led them to a quiet corner where the history books lived. “Once, Halloween began as a festival where people believed the spirits of the dead could visit the living. They tried to scare away what they feared with costumes and fires. Over time, it changed shapes—ancient beliefs mixed with later customs until it became a night of make-believe, fear, and treats.”

    Sami tilted his head. “But it’s just fun now, right?”

    Mrs. Noor considered. “Fun isn’t always harmless, dear. Ask: What message is the fun carrying? What does it cheer for? What does it teach your heart to love?”

    Zara wrote in her notebook: Origins: ancient beliefs; fear celebrated; spirits; costumes to confuse and scare. “How does that fit with Islamic values, Mrs. Noor?”

    “Islam teaches tawhid—worship of Allah alone,” Mrs. Noor said. “We don’t mimic practices that started in beliefs we don’t share. We don’t celebrate fear or make friends with what frightens hearts. Our Prophet, peace and blessings be upon him, taught us to be truthful, to avoid imitating what goes against our faith, and to hold tight to our identity. And remember: the Qur’an teaches us to be people of truth and sincerity.”

    Sami scribbled: Be truthful. Don’t copy what’s wrong. Choose what pleases Allah.

    Mrs. Noor pulled out a small lantern from her desk drawer and switched it on. A soft, steady light glowed. “Truth is like this,” she said. “It doesn’t need to be scary. It shines quietly. That’s why we carry the lantern of knowledge. Now, what else will you explore?”

    “The jack-o’-lanterns,” Zara said, looking at the grinning pumpkin on a library poster. “Why do they look so… angry?”

    Mrs. Noor nodded. “In many stories, the jack-o’-lantern was meant to frighten or trick. It invites fear, and fear grows quickly when fed. As Muslims, we prefer courage born of trust in Allah. We don’t decorate our homes with fear.”

    Zara drew a lantern beside her notes, its light like a gentle promise.

    Chapter Three: The Candy Question – halloween story for muslim kids

    On their way home, they passed kids trying on costumes in a shop window—a pirate, a ghost, a witch with a crooked hat. A sign advertised “Trick or Treat Night! Knock on doors—fill your bag—no limits!”

    “‘Trick or treat,’” Sami read aloud, tasting the words. “It sounds like a game.”

    Zara curled her finger under the words on the sign. “‘Trick’ means a lie or a threat. It’s like saying, ‘Give me candy, or else.’ Even as a joke, it teaches the heart something wrong.”

    “Is it… cheating?” Sami asked quietly.

    “It can be,” Zara said. “When we pretend to be someone else to get treats, or use a threat to get what we want, that isn’t truth. Islam teaches honesty. We don’t pretend our way into gifts, and we don’t pressure people to give us things.”

    They rounded a corner and found Baba fixing Mr. Larkin’s fence. Baba looked up, his hands dusted with wood shavings, his eyes smiling. “Truth Seekers, what mystery today?”

    “Halloween,” Zara said. “We’re gathering clues.”

    Baba leaned on the fence. “Good. Do you know what the Prophet, peace be upon him, taught us? Whoever cheats is not from us. And the Qur’an warns us against falsehood. A Muslim’s honor is in truth. Even if the world points one way, we walk the path of Allah.”

    Sami’s fingers tightened on his notebook. “So ‘trick or treat’ is like… sneaking a prize?”

    “Or pressuring for it,” Baba said kindly. “And when fear becomes decoration, the heart can become numb to it. But your hearts are made for remembrance, for courage, for mercy.” He tapped their backpacks gently. “Keep seeking. The truth is a friend who never misleads.”

    Chapter Four: The Club of Truth Seekers – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    That evening, Zara and Sami gathered with their two best friends, Ayaan and Layla, in the backyard. They had made a club sign with copper letters: The Truth Seekers. A tiny solar lamp glowed in the center of their circle like a campfire.

    Ayaan adjusted his glasses. “I did some research, too,” he said. “Did you know that many Halloween games came from trying to predict the future? In Islam, we don’t play with that. We trust Allah and leave the unseen to Him.”

    Layla shivered. “I don’t like the scary decorations. They make my little sister cry.”

    Zara spread their notes like treasure maps. “We’ve learned: Halloween started with ideas we don’t share. The jack-o’-lantern’s job is to spread fear. ‘Trick or treat’ teaches a form of cheating—getting something by pressure or pretending. Islam calls us to truth, courage, and a strong identity.”

    Sami lifted his chin. “So what now?”

    “We make a choice,” Zara said. “But first, one more clue. We need to visit someone very wise.”

    “Teacher Hafsa?” Ayaan guessed.

    Zara grinned. “Teacher Hafsa.”

    Chapter Five: The Mentor on the Hill – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    Teacher Hafsa lived near the top of Crescent Hill where the wind drew soft lines through the trees. Her porch was a mosaic of potted herbs, and the air always smelled like mint and rain.

    She welcomed them with warm milk and honey. “Truth Seekers,” she said, her voice a gentle bell. “Your faces look serious. Tell me, what weighs on your minds?”

    Zara explained everything. When she mentioned the lantern, Teacher Hafsa’s eyes twinkled. “Light is a beautiful friend,” she said. “But it must burn in the heart, not just on the porch.”

    “We’re deciding about Halloween,” Layla said. “We want to be strong Muslims. But we also don’t want to feel left out.”

    Teacher Hafsa nodded slowly. “A wise person once said, ‘If you follow the crowd, you’ll get no further than the crowd.’ Islam teaches us to be leaders in goodness. The Prophet, peace and blessings be upon him, taught truth, bravery, and kindness. He taught us to avoid imitating people in what goes against our faith.”

    Sami traced a circle on his cup. “Sometimes, when the whole class is excited, I feel a pull. Like the wind.”

    “That pull is real,” Teacher Hafsa said. “It is called peer pressure. But you were given something stronger: your iman—your faith. Every time you choose Allah’s pleasure over people’s approval, your faith grows. And your heart becomes a home for courage.”

    Ayaan raised a hand. “Teacher, what should we say if someone asks us why we don’t do Halloween?”

    “Say it with kindness and confidence,” she replied. “You can say: ‘We’re Muslims, and we don’t celebrate Halloween because it started with beliefs we don’t follow. We don’t decorate with fear, and we don’t go door-to-door asking for treats with tricks. We choose truth, courage, and remembrance of Allah.’ Then invite them to join you for something better.”

    “Something better?” Sami leaned forward.

    Teacher Hafsa smiled. “Plan a Night of Light. Fill it with knowledge, games of honesty, service to neighbors, and gratitude to Allah. Light candles of kindness—figuratively speaking—by doing good deeds. Replace fear with remembrance.”

    The Truth Seekers looked at one another, eyes bright.

    Chapter Six: The Challenge – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    News of their plan spread quickly. Some kids laughed. “A Night of Light? That sounds boring,” said Dylan from Zara’s class. “Halloween has costumes and piles of candy.”

    Zara felt a tremor in her heart. “Come and see before you decide,” she said calmly. “We believe light can outshine fear.”

    Others were kinder but confused. “Why say no to Halloween?” asked Maya. “It’s just pretend.”

    Zara answered the way Teacher Hafsa taught: “Because our faith teaches us not to copy what began with other beliefs, and not to make fun out of fear or cheating. We choose what brings us closer to Allah.”

    That night, the Truth Seekers gathered supplies. They made invitations with a gold star and a line of Qur’an in beautiful calligraphy: “And say: The truth has come, and falsehood has vanished. Indeed, falsehood is ever bound to vanish.” They planned games of honesty, a story circle, and a service project—baking bread rolls to share with a shelter nearby. Instead of masks, they made name badges with qualities they wished to grow: Courage, Kindness, Honesty, Patience.

    But the wind had one more test.

    On the morning of their event, the sky turned the color of old pennies. The wind whooshed through town, toppling a rack of fake spiderwebs onto the sidewalk. A carved jack-o’-lantern rolled off a porch and thudded near Zara’s shoes. It rocked and stopped, staring with its jagged grin.

    Sami picked it up. “It’s heavy,” he said. “And it smells like… burnt fear.”

    Zara ran her fingers over the carved lines. “It wants us to think fear is fun,” she whispered. “But we know better. We won’t build our joy on fear.” She set the pumpkin gently aside, as if returning a storybook to the wrong shelf.

    They went to Teacher Hafsa’s to set up, but a new challenge awaited. A flyer had blown across their welcome banner and stuck there, flapping. Zara peeled it off. “Costume Contest Tonight! Grand Prize: Tower of Candy!”

    A gasp moved through their group.

    Ayaan scratched his head. “That’s a lot of candy.”

    Sami rubbed his stomach. “A lot.”

    For a moment, silence curled around them. Choice is always quiet at first; it waits for the heart to speak.

    Zara lifted the lantern from the library and turned it on. Its steady glow cut through the windy gray. “Truth Seekers,” she said, “we know what to do. We don’t need prizes that pull us away from our values. We’ll make our own joy with what pleases Allah.”

    Layla smiled bravely. “Night of Light,” she said. “Let’s make it beautiful.”

    Chapter Seven: The Night of Light – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    The community hall hummed as families arrived. Warm lights pooled on the floor like friendly puddles. A banner sparkled: Night of Light—Truth, Courage, Kindness.

    Station One: The Honesty Trail. Children followed a path of cards with true-or-false questions about prophets and good manners. Each right answer earned a bead to thread onto a bracelet named Sadiq—Truthful.

    Station Two: The Courage Corner. Kids told a story of a time they chose right over easy, then stepped through a paper arch decorated with the words: “Fasbir—Be patient.” A small bell chimed for each step of bravery.

    Station Three: The Kindness Kitchen. Families kneaded dough and shaped rolls. Flour dusted noses and laughter drifted like cinnamon. A sign read: “Feed the hungry; Allah loves the doers of good.”

    Station Four: The Lantern Lab. Children made lanterns from paper and string, decorating them with verses about light. No scary faces, only patterns of stars and the word Noor—Light.

    At the story circle, Teacher Hafsa invited everyone to sit. The Truth Seekers took turns sharing their journey—their library clues, their notes about origins, the meaning behind scary decorations, and the problem with “trick or treat.”

    Sami stood before the circle, his voice steady. “Trick-or-treating sounds sweet, but the words ‘trick or treat’ teach us something wrong. It means: give me what I want, or I’ll do something bad. That’s pressure. That’s a kind of cheating. And dressing up to pretend you’re someone else to get more candy is also like cheating. Islam teaches us to be honest and brave, not to scare or pretend for prizes.”

    The room was quiet. Then a small hand went up. It was Maya. “So what do you do instead?”

    “We do this,” Zara said, sweeping her arm at the glowing room. “We celebrate truth. We help others. We replace fear with the remembrance of Allah. We enjoy treats given with love, not demanded with tricks.”

    Teacher Hafsa closed with a du’a, asking Allah to fill their hearts with light, keep them firm on the straight path, and make them leaders in goodness. The children whispered ameen, and the lanterns seemed to glow brighter.

    Chapter Eight: The Dark Street – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    After the event, Zara, Sami, Ayaan, and Layla carried baskets of warm bread rolls to the shelter. The streets beyond the hall were dark except for plastic decorations—glowing eyes in windows, crooked smiles carved into pumpkins, figures dressed like monsters.

    At one house, a tall figure in a long cloak stood very still beside a jack-o’-lantern. The pumpkin’s smile blazed. The figure whispered, “Trick or treat… trick or treat…”

    Sami squeezed Zara’s hand. “Should we cross the street?”

    Zara lifted her chin. “We’ll pass with kindness and courage.”

    As they drew near, the cloaked figure took a step. “Trick or—”

    “Peace be upon you,” Zara said clearly. “We’re sharing bread with neighbors tonight. Would you like some?”

    The figure paused. “What?” The cloak shifted—underneath was Dylan, their classmate. His face was painted to look like a skull, but his eyes were just eyes, surprised and a little embarrassed. “You’re… not trick-or-treating?”

    “No,” Zara said gently. “We don’t celebrate Halloween. We don’t like fear decorations, and we don’t ask for treats with tricks. We’re Muslims. We choose truth and kindness.”

    Dylan scratched his cheek, smearing the paint. “I didn’t think about the words. ‘Trick or treat’… it is kind of weird.” He glanced at their basket. “What’s this?”

    “Warm bread,” Sami said, offering a roll. “We baked them to share.”

    Dylan took one, blinking. “Thanks.” He looked at the pumpkin, then back at them. “You know, my little sister is scared of these decorations. Maybe… I’ll turn the candle off.”

    He blew into the jack-o’-lantern. The light went out, and the grin looked less fierce, more like a puzzle that had lost its answer.

    Zara smiled. “Good night, Dylan. May your night be peaceful.”

    They walked on. Behind them, more porch lights flicked off, as if courage were contagious. The wind’s whisper changed. It no longer said “Ask why.” Now it said, “Walk true.”

    Chapter Nine: The Classroom Test – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    Monday brought a crisp blue sky and the kind of sunshine that makes pencils feel lighter. In homeroom, Mrs. Ramos invited everyone to share their weekend. Costumes danced across the room—pirates and superheroes and one person who said they were a “walking burrito,” which made everyone laugh.

    When it was Zara’s turn, she stood with steady feet. “We hosted a Night of Light. We learned about the origins of Halloween and why we don’t celebrate it as Muslims. We made lanterns, baked bread for the shelter, and shared stories of courage.”

    A few kids shifted in their seats. Dylan raised his hand. “I saw them on Saturday,” he said. “They gave me bread. It was… really good.” A ripple of laughter gently warmed the room.

    Maya tilted her head. “I still don’t get why jack-o’-lanterns are a problem. They’re just pumpkins, right?”

    Zara nodded, thoughtful. “Pumpkins are great. Pumpkin soup, pumpkin pie—yum! But carving scary faces and lighting them to make fear look fun—that’s the part we don’t want to celebrate. We want our hearts to love what is pure and brave, not what is creepy or dark.”

    Mrs. Ramos smiled kindly. “Thank you for explaining with respect, Zara. And thank you for listening with respect, everyone. Different families celebrate different things, and kindness is the bridge between us.”

    At recess, a boy named Lucas jogged over. “Hey, uh… if I don’t want to do Halloween anymore, my friends might laugh at me.” He stared down at his shoelaces. “What should I do?”

    Sami piped up, voice bright. “Join the Truth Seekers!”

    Zara chuckled. “You don’t need a club to be brave. Start with one step. Tell one friend your reason. If they laugh, it’s okay. Courage grows each time you choose truth.”

    Lucas nodded slowly. “Maybe… I’ll try.”

    Chapter Ten: The Hallway Door – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    After school, the Truth Seekers stopped by the library to return a stack of picture books they’d borrowed for the Night of Light. The hallway outside the library was dim. A door at the end—the old auditorium—stood slightly open. Cold air drifted through the crack, and something tapped inside, tap-tap, like a finger on a window.

    Sami swallowed. “What’s that?”

    Ayaan pushed his glasses up. “Probably a loose shutter.”

    “Or a raccoon,” Layla whispered.

    Zara looked at the small lantern hanging from her backpack. She clicked it on. Warm light pooled at their feet. “Let’s see,” she said, voice calm.

    They walked as one, the lantern a moving moon. Inside the auditorium, the wind had pushed a prop—an old wooden scarecrow—onto a platform. Its straw hands knocked against the wall with each gust. Tap. Tap. Tap.

    “That is extremely not a raccoon,” Sami said, half laughing.

    Layla exhaled. “Is this where we run away screaming?”

    Zara lifted the lantern higher. “We don’t run from shadows,” she said, quoting Baba. “We bring light to them.”

    They worked together to secure the window latch. The wind quieted, the tapping stopped, and the scarecrow sagged into stillness, just wood and straw again—not a monster, just a pile of parts.

    “I guess fear is like that,” Ayaan said, thoughtful. “Big when the room is dark. Smaller when a light is on.”

    “And truth is the best light,” Zara added.

    They left a note for the janitor about the loose latch and stepped back into the sunlit hallway, feeling taller than when they entered.

    Chapter Eleven: The Visit – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    That evening, Baba announced a surprise. “We’re visiting Grandma Safiya.”

    Grandma Safiya’s house was a museum of kindness. The living room held a globe with little stickers marking places she had helped after storms and floods. The kitchen smelled like orange blossoms and fresh bread.

    She welcomed the Truth Seekers with a hug each. “I heard about your Night of Light,” she said, eyes shining. “Tell me everything.”

    They did, all the way from the library lantern to the dark street. Grandma listened with the patience of trees and the curiosity of a child.

    “When I was little,” she said at last, “some neighbors celebrated Halloween. My father explained we don’t join, because it comes from ideas we don’t believe and it plays with fear. He told me, ‘Daughter, your laughter is a trust from Allah. Don’t tie it to shadows.’ So we made our own traditions—family service nights, poetry, and extra Qur’an recitation in the evenings.”

    She brought out a box from the top shelf. Inside were paper lanterns painted by hand—swirls of gold and sky blue, tiny stars and the word Noor in flowing script. “These are from our first Night of Light,” she said. “Decades ago!” She handed each of them a lantern. “Keep the tradition. Improve it. And remember, saying ‘no’ is only half the story. The other half is the beautiful ‘yes’ you build in its place.”

    Chapter Twelve: The Debate – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    A week later, Mrs. Ramos announced a class debate: “Traditions: Keep, Change, or Replace?” Students chose sides and prepared arguments. Dylan and Maya led the “Keep Halloween” team, while Zara and Ayaan led the “Replace with Light” team. The rules were simple: speak with respect, use evidence, and listen.

    Maya began. “Halloween is part of our town’s culture. It’s creative and fun.”

    Zara smiled. “Creativity and fun are wonderful. We’re not against those. We’re asking: what’s the root of this tradition? Halloween began with beliefs we don’t share, and it still celebrates fear. We choose to replace it with something better that matches our values—truth, courage, kindness.”

    Dylan said, “But costumes are exciting. You get to be someone else for a night.”

    Ayaan replied, “Islam teaches honesty. Pretending to be someone else to gain more treats—or using the phrase ‘trick or treat,’ which threatens a trick if you don’t get a treat—teaches the wrong lesson. We can be creative without dishonest play or pressure.”

    Another student argued, “It’s harmless!”

    Layla, from the audience, raised her hand. “My little sister had nightmares from the decorations. Fear can be sticky. We don’t want to make fear our friend.”

    Mrs. Ramos nodded. “Thoughtful points from both teams. Remember: traditions shape hearts. Choose the ones that help you grow.”

    Afterward, several classmates gathered around the Truth Seekers. A girl named Bree whispered, “My family doesn’t do Halloween either. I used to feel alone. Thank you for making something better.”

    Chapter Thirteen: The Storm and the Sign – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    November rolled in with rain that drummed on roofs and tapped on windows like polite knuckles. One afternoon, a storm knocked out power in part of Crescent Springs. The Truth Seekers met at the masjid to check on neighbors and pass out flashlights.

    Inside, Imam Kareem greeted them. He had heard of their project and wanted to share a hadith about identity. “The Prophet, peace and blessings be upon him, said the believer is strong and courageous. We do not imitate practices that go against our faith. We stand firm, even when the wind pushes.”

    As they left the masjid, the streetlight flickered on and off. In the gutter, a torn Halloween banner drifted, its letters broken: TR CK OR TRE T. The missing letters made the message honest by accident.

    Sami grinned. “Look, it says ‘Tr ck or tre t.’ Even the storm took the trick away.”

    Zara laughed. “Maybe that’s our sign.” She looked at her friends. “Let’s make a town tradition: an annual Night of Light with service, stories, and honest games. Not just for Muslims—for everyone who wants kindness without fear.”

    “Let’s do it,” Ayaan said.

    “Let’s make invitations,” Layla added.

    Sami bounced. “And bread! Definitely bread.”

    Chapter Fourteen: The Promise – Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    Winter came soft and white. The Truth Seekers grew their club—not to be exclusive, but to be inclusive of goodness. They visited the shelter once a month, started a reading circle at the library, and launched a “Kindness Quest” board at school where kids pinned notes about honest, brave choices.

    Sometimes, people still asked about Halloween. Zara would smile and say, “We’re Muslim. We say no to Halloween because its roots and rituals don’t fit our faith. We don’t make friends with fear or with cheating. But we say a big yes to light, truth, courage, and kindness.”

    On a clear night, the wind returned—not cold now, but friendly. It slid along rooftops and through trees, whispering like a lullaby for the town.

    Sami listened. “What does it say?”

    Zara closed her eyes. “It says, ‘Walk true, lantern hearts.’”

    Epilogue: The Lantern Hearts

    Years later, people would still talk about the first Night of Light. They would tell how a group of children asked questions and followed their faith, how they met a wise mentor and faced challenges with courage, how they turned from fear to service and from tricks to truth.

    They would remember how jack-o’-lanterns once tried to make fear look friendly, but lantern hearts made courage look brighter. They would smile at how “trick or treat” lost its shine when honesty became the sweeter prize.

    And parents would whisper to their children at bedtime, “Be a Truth Seeker. Ask why. Learn well. Choose what pleases Allah. Let your heart be a lantern that lights your path and warms every home you enter.”

    The wind would nod along the rooftops, and the children, wrapped in blankets of faith, would drift to sleep with brave smiles—because they knew who they were, and Whose they were.

    The End.

    Key Lessons from the Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    • This halloween story for muslim kids shows how to always seek truth through research and asking wise people before making decisions about traditions
    • This halloween story for muslim kids teaches that courage comes from choosing what pleases Allah over peer pressure and following the crowd
    • True Muslims don’t imitate traditions that conflict with Islamic beliefs and values
    • The halloween story for muslim kids demonstrates how our identity as Muslims is strengthened when we choose faith over fitting in with popular culture
    • Fear should never be made into entertainment—Islam teaches us to cultivate courage and trust in Allah
    • The phrase ‘trick or treat’ promotes dishonesty and pressuring others for rewards
    • When we say ‘no’ to what contradicts our faith, we can say ‘yes’ to beautiful alternatives that honor Allah

    Interactive Activities for Young Readers of This Halloween Story for Muslim Kids

    • Truth Seeker Journal: Create your own truth seeker notebook and write down three questions about traditions or beliefs you’d like to understand better
    • Lantern of Light Craft: Make your own paper lantern decorated with stars and the word ‘Noor’ (Light) to remind you of choosing knowledge over fear
    • Family Discussion Time: Talk with your parents or guardians about why your family celebrates or doesn’t celebrate different holidays
    • Kindness Challenge: Bake treats or make cards to share with neighbors—not for tricks, but from pure kindness
    • Prophet Stories Reading: Read stories about the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) and how he showed courage and honesty

    This halloween story for muslim kids teaches children about Islamic values and why Muslims choose alternatives to Halloween.

    For more Islamic stories in English, visit our Islamic Stories Collection where you’ll find engaging faith-based narratives for children.

    To learn more about why Halloween is forbidden in Islam from a children’s perspective, we recommend reading this article: Why Muslims Should Not Celebrate Halloween which provides a comprehensive guide for young Muslims and their families.


  • New Islamic Story No.22: Virtue is the name of Morality

    New Islamic Story No.22: Virtue is the name of Morality

    islamic story

    Is Morality different from virtue? Are these two separate things? Not.

    Then Why do people differentiate Morality from religion? Let’s read an Islamic Story about Virtue and morality.

    Dear Students Aslam O Alikum 

    Today’s Hadith is about morality. We had already done a hadith about this topic. And do you remember there were 7 Seerah stories in that hadith. . We need this topic and practice regularly. Today our manners and morality are decreasing. Many of us don’t even smile without reason. Our faces and our expression are at dead steam. We may be good with our friends and strangers outside.

    Our society did not understand that our charity and morality begin from home.  We forget the Sunnah of our prophet. We don’t deal appropriately with our youngsters, our servants, our children, and our family members. And children are the biggest victim of this behavior.  They misbehave and react poorly as well as they are also losing their temper at minor things. We have no relation to each other. So we must learn the Seerah of our prophet and the gems of Islam.

    Let’s start our today’s hadith. Sahih Muslim 2553

    Islamic Story

    My dear students, Our prophet was very kind and generous with others. He is the biggest example of Good morality. It is easy to show our morality to others, but when someone tries to hurt us or do bad to us, then how we behave shows our morality. Today I will tell you a story of a woman who behaved so badly with our Prophet SAW but in response, our Prophet SAW was so generous with her.

    Once there was an Old woman. She was not Muslim. She heard about our Prophet SAW that he is against idol worship. She was scared of the change. She can’t understand where this is coming from. She was in her old age and she could not understand anything.  She started to hate our Prophet SAW silently. She can’t do anything against Prophet SAW because she was old and lived alone at home. She started to show her hate by throwing garbage at Our prophet (nauozobillah). Our prophet SAW often passed through her street. She actually knows the time when Prophet passed through her street.

    She would keep garbage and wait for Him. When he passed through her street she threw garbage at him. Our prophet looked at her, She was so old, so in respect of her, he didn’t say anything to her. Now from that day, she did this every time when he passed this street.

    But do you know what happened?

    One day Prophet SAW passed from the street but she was not there to throw the garbage. The next day she was again not there. Our prophet SAW thought about the woman. And when the next day she was again not there, He asked her neighbor.

    Where is the woman who lived in this house?

    They told him that she is sick.

    The prophet SAW was worried about her. 

    He thought about visiting her. He entered his house after getting permission.

    When she recognized him, she was so afraid.

    She thought,

    I’m so weak now. He would take his revenge. I do so badly with him. Definitely, he will harm me.

    But she was surprised when he smiled softly. Asked her about her health. He also took care of her. And then left. Then he would visit her till she was healthy. Now she regretted it. She thought this nice man would not be a liar. So she accepted Islam. My dear kids. This happened just because of His Good morality.

    Only virtue, love, and sincerity could change a heart.

    We should also be very nice and noble with others even if they would be non-Muslims. It is a sunnah of our Prophet. 

    Now please write this hadith into your hadith journal and Learn it.

    You can make a video of any story of your Morality and send us. Share this story with your Grandparents.

    AslamoAlikum.

    Video of this Islamic story and Hadith

    Enrolments Available

    This is a short course of hadith and stories from My 30 short hadith with stories course. My hadith course is very much liked and appreciated by parents and students. Online group classes are available online for all time zones. Recommended age for the class Hadith for kids is 7+. These classes are available in English and Urdu. If you want to enroll your child in our classes contact us via.

    Other courses we have

    • Easy Tafseer for kids with interesting stories you can see that course in my hadith course tab.
    • Prayer for kids course is a short course to teach about taharat, Gusal, wudu, times of prayers, number and names of prayers, pillars and conditions of prayer, and method of prayer. Search as Prayer for kids course on the search bar.
    • Ramzan boost course we do start 2 weeks before Ramzan.
    • Faith boos course In December to say No To Marry Christmas.
    • Kindness to Parents

    If you want to start this course with me then leave a comment, Email me or enroll your child here.

    Download your free copy of 30 short Hadith book pdf in Urdu/Eng from the Posts tab.

    Worksheet for this Hadith and story.

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  • Story 10Eng|Story of a beautiful Princess with hadith

    Story 10Eng|Story of a beautiful Princess with hadith

    Welcome to our Hadith with stories short course for kids and adults. This course has been designed for personality development.

    Hadees no 10

    Lesson no 11

    Topic of hadithBeauty

    Story. A Princess

    Hadith about beauty

    Hadith

    Our Prophet Muhammad SAW said in this Hadith that,

    Allah is Beautiful and he likes Beauty. The topic of this hadith is Beauty and The name of the story is a beautiful princess. This hadith is taken from Sahi Muslim 91

    Dear kids this hadith is one of the attributions of Allah. If we see into nature, We will see beautiful flowers, butterflies, and many insects at them, mountains, stars, and moon in the sky, oceans, fruits, colors, and everything in this world is so beautiful. Babies and we also are the best and innocent creations of Allah.

    Now it is our duty that lives very cleanly and keeps things around us clean. Our prophet Muhammad SAW was also the cleanest and most well-dressed person. So following the Sunnah will make us happy and also reward us to be thankful to Allah.

    Story-A beautiful Princess

    hadith

    Once there was A princess who was very beautiful. Her parents took the best care. But she was very lazy. She always lives in dirty clothes, She often doesn’t care about hair and would leave them uncombed. Her teeth were yellow because she does not brush them for days.

    She had many servants and maids who were ready to offer their services. Instead of asking them to clean her room, her clothes, and her closets, she would play all the time with her maids. So her room was also dusty and dirty. Her mother queen also spent more time on other activities. So there was no one to guide her. 

     Once they had a family trip. They camped near the beautiful bank of a river. They were enjoying themselves. The servants were cooking and serving food.  After a meal, everyone started to wander here and there, Everyone was busy with their favorite activities. King started to play polo.

    The princess also went for a walk with the maids of her age. They go for a run on the bank of the river. They showered water on each other. She took off her shoes. Their clothes were wet. Then they plan to play hide and seek with her maids.

    She went too far from her camps and got lost. She wandered here and there to find her camping but no use. Now she was worried. She was running around. And in this interval, she was too far from her camp. Her clothes were now dirty and tortured in some places. But she did have no problem with it. She was also hungry.

    Finally, she reached a village. She saw a hut outside the village. She went there. She found an old man and an old woman. She told them that she is lost. She also told them that I’m a princess. My parents must be searching for me But the night is here. I want to shelter and some food to eat. Please allow me to stay with you. The old couple looked at each other.

     Her clothes were dirty and her hair was uncombed. Her nails were long and dirty. Both of them thought she must be lying. And she could harm them. But they do not want to say no. Because if she would be a princess as she is saying, then her father king May harm them for not helping his daughter.

    They were in big problems. Finally, they decided to keep her with them. They were judging her and were alert for any situation. She did not eat happily because the food was not like her royal style. Then she went to sleep. But she could not sleep. Because the bed was so hard.

    She was missing her soft and comfortable bed. Old people were observing her restlessness. Now they believe that she is really Princess. So in the morning, they asked her how was night. She said I can’t sleep overnight. Your beds are too hard.

    They smiled and said, Ooo poor girl you are a princess. We know our home and facilities don’t meet your status. Now it’s time to help you. Your family will be soon here, as we already had sent some boys from the village to find your camping place. But we want to say something.

    Ohh how kind are you? I’m really very thankful to you. Yes please say what you want to say. The old woman said,’ Little, beautiful girl, you are very nice and beautiful. Allah made you perfect. I must say you take care of yourself. It would help if you always kept it clean and  Neat.

    It’s Sunnah and half of our Iman. Allah Almighty is beautiful and he likes Beauty and cleanliness. You are a princess. You have many servants and maids to help you. But this does not mean that you live in such a rough outlook. Do you know that we did not believe that you are a princess?

    The girl was regretting herself. She noticed that the old woman is poor but her dress was so clean, Her hairs were white and made nicely. Her house was also maintained. She promised that she will always remember her advice. In the meanwhile, Some horsemen came there with her Horse cart and she rode on it. She waved her hands and left the hut with a very good lesson.

    Dear kids, you all are also very beautiful and perfect human beings. So always try to live clean and well-managed. So that Allah will love you and give you a reward to follow His Sunnah. 

    This story in Urdu

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    https://youtu.be/nJ9CEvtpHgY

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  • The Story of a Robber. Free stories for Muslim children

    The Name of the story is

     

     A Robber

    This topic is a bit difficult but its story is very interesting.
     
    This story is about a child and robbers.
    Kids, do you know who are robbers? 
    A robber is a person who snatches things and money from others by power.
    Once upon a time, there was a child in the old period who was taking basic  Islamic education. For further Islamic education, he had to go to another city Baghdad, as there were no vehicles in old age, it was difficult to travel from one place to another, people travelled on horses and camels in the form of groups called caravan.
    The child’s mother sent him with a caravan for Baghdad.
    Before leaving for the journey the mother gave some money to his son. She sew the money inside the pocket of his shirt to hide it so that no one can see it .
    She also advised him ‘O MY child never to tell a lie. Always speak the truth, and study well there.
    Dear kids as the journey was long, it took them many days to reach at the place. On their way one day the caravan stayed at a place near to the forest. When they were taking a rest a group of robbers came there. They went to all the passengers one by one and snatched the money from them.
    One robber came to the child and asked ‘what do you have with you?’
    The child answered ‘I have 40 rupees.’
    The robber laughed and said are you joking with me? Because he thought that he was a little child, he could not have money. Dear kids!  40 rupees had a good value that time. So he went away.
    Then another robber came he also asked the child what do you have. little boy? 
    The child said I have 40 rupees.
    This robber also thought that he was joking so he went away.
    A third robber came and asked the same question, the child said I have 40 rupees, the robber tried to find the money but could not get it. He got angry and took the child to his leader, and told him that this child is saying I have 40 rupees but he has no money in his pockets, he is telling a lie.
    The leader of robbers said!
    O, little boy, do you know if you tell a lie I will give you a strict punishment.
    Tell me where is your money if you have it? 
    The child said I don’t tell a lie, really I have 40 rupees.
    Now the leader asked him to show the money.
    The child said my mother sew the money inside my shirt. A robber came to check his shirt and found the money.
    They were shocked to see the money, the leader said, ‘ O boy why you spoke the truth, when you could save the money from us. The child said no I could not tell a lie because my mother advised me to speak the truth no matter how much it is harmful to me.
    The robber was surprised and said your mother was not watching you. You could tell a lie to us.
    The child said,’ what if my mother is not watching me, my Allah is watching me all the time. If I tell a lie, Allah will not be happy with me.
    After hearing this the leader of the robbers started to cry loudly and become unconscious. When he came to his senses he thought.
    The child is so good and pious that he obeys his mother and have Haya and fear of Allah, but I am so unlucky that I grew old and don’t have any fear of Allah.
    He felt guilty and cried a lot, he was not in his senses yet while crying. 
    After some time when he stopped crying and came in senses again he repentance of his sins and returned all the money to the people of the caravan. 
    After that, he started to live a good life.
    The child also got his education and became a pious man and Allah’s servant.
    Dear kids this is Haya that a person feels sorry and have fear of Allah all the time.
    Dear kids If we happen to do something wrong. We should repent to Allah.
    Feel Haya from Allah that he is watching us so that we can also become Allah’s servant.
    Dear kids, I hope you enjoyed this story.
     
    Share it with your cousin’s friends and family members.

    This story is written for my Hadith with stories for children course.  See hadith no 6  in our Hadith course.
    Leave a comment to get this Story in Pdf with your Email.



  • Hadees No 4 |Hadees- is Envy/Story of jealousy. | 30 short Hadiths for children with stories

    Written story in English

    Day .5…Hadees No 4 👇🏃‍♂️

    🌷Aslam-O-Alaikum Dear members.🌷
    Our today’s Hadees is Down 👇

    The Topic of the Hadees of the Day is Envy(Jealousy)

    For English members:-

    This hadith is one of the series of three hadith about anger, jealousy, and Irritation. This is a very bad habit and mental sickness. Almost this habit starts to develop in childhood. When parents do not do justice between siblings and do a comparison of their kids with others. Kids start to hate others and this habit turns into envy. It is very hard to overcome this sickness but we could do some remedies to reduce this Habit.

    Like, do not do a comparison. Praise your kids for their success but with limits. Do not praise kids much when other kids are present there. Do not criticize one kid in public. Talk about the losses of jealousy with kids. Tell them stories, hadiths, and verses of the Quran about envy. Our today’s hadith is presented with a very interesting story for kids.

    Please open the video of story. The link to the video is above. (If you want to get written story instead of the video you can comment bellow.)

    In the end, don’t forget to write Hadith in the Hadees book. And share the picture of the Hadith for other activities you did for this Hadith. So that your kids would get the certificate of completing their Ahadith.

    Revise the hadith every day and memorize it with code, story, and name. (According to age)

    Revise the previous hadith every week.

    May Allah make it easy for you.

     
    Video of the story
     

     

    For Urdu members

    حسد ایک انتہائی برا اور قابل مذمت رویہ ہے تقریباً بچپن سے ہی  بچہ اپنے بہن بھائیوں اور پھر دوستوں سے حسد کرنے لگتا ہے جس کی سب سے پہلی وجہ تو بچوں کے درمیان نا  مساوی تقسیم ہے اور دوسری بڑی وجہ  بچوں کے درمیان تقابل کرنا ہے.اس بری بیماری سے خود کو روکنااور اس سے نجات پانا تقریباً ہر عمر میں مشکل ہے . لیکن اس کے لیے کچھ اقدامات کیے جا سکتے ہیں مثال کے طور پر  بچوں کے درمیان مقابلہ بازی نہ  کریں،بچوں کی انفرادی صلاحیتوں اور کامیابیوں کو سراہیں دوسرے بچوں کے سامنے حد سے زیادہ تعریف بھی مت کریں اور تنقید سے بھی اجتناب کریں. سب بچوں کے ساتھ ایک جیسا سلوک  رکھیں. حسد کے نقصانات کے بارے میں بتاتے رہیں اور آج کی کہانی اور حدیث کی طرح کی مزید کہانیاں  سناتے رہیں 

    آج ایک بہت دلچسب کہانی کے ساتھ بچوں کے لیے حدیث پیش کی جا رہی ہیں

    کہانی اور حدیث کا ترجمہ اور تفسیر نیچے دیا جا رہا ہے.بچوں کو وڈیو دکھائیں اور ساتھ ساتھ ان  کے سوالوں کا جواب بھی دیں. اگر اس واقعہ کو تفصیل سے پڑھنا ہے تو آاپ انگلش والے سیکشن میں موجودلنک میں پڑھ سکتے ہیں

    میں نے بچوں کو سنت سیکھانے کے لیے انفرادی طور پر کچھ مطالعہ کیا ہے اور اپنے بچوں کو سیکھانے کے لیے کچھ چیزیں تیار بھی کر رکھی ہیں اگر کسی کو میری مدد کی ضرورت کو تو مجھے کومنٹ کر سکتےہیں

    Books recommended By me.

    Video of the story in Urdu

    Written story in Urdu

    If you want pdf of these 30 short Hadiths in Urdu or English comment below with your info and language.

    If you want to join my live sessions or subscribe to do online course email me.

    My students activities

    https://youtu.be/0NqtWP6SgkU

    Note: -Spread this Hadees with your family and friend so that more people would get benefit from it.

  • Hadith no 22 | Topic of the Hadith-Morality| Seerah stories of Prophets Muhammad SAW. | 30 short Hadith for children.

    Kitab-Ul-Hadees🌷 

    Day .23…Hadees No 22 👇🏃‍♂️

    🌷Aslam-O-Alaikum Dear members.🌷

    Our today’s Hadees is Down 👇

    The Topic of the Hadees of the Day is Morality.

    For English members:-

    Video of the story in English

     

     

     

    short ahadith for kids Urdu Englsih

    Dear members. Today’s Hadith is about morality. We had already done a hadith about this topic. This is an incident that we have the same topic again.
    But it is a very good incident. We need this topic and practice on it more than any other. Today our manners and our morality is at its lower level. Many of us don’t even smile without any reason. Our faces and our expression are at dead steam. We may good with our friends and strangers outside. But at home, we are at that footstep where Every Muslim must be ashamed. We forget the Sunnah of our prophet. We don’t deal properly with our youngers, with our servants, with our children and family members. And children are the biggest victim of this behaviour.  They misbehave and react poorly as well as they are also losing their temper at minor things. We have no relation bonding with each other. So it is very important that we introduce them with the Seerah of our prophet and the gems of Islam.

    Our today hadith about garbage thrower old women. But I just came to know that It is not from seerah stories. So tell this story to your kids. You can see the previous hadith no 7 To tell more seerah stories about Husn-ul-Khulaq

    In the end, don’t forget to write Hadith in the Hadees book. And share the picture of the Hadith for other activities you did for this Hadith. So that your kids would get the certificate of completing their Ahadith.

     

    May Allah make it easy for you.

    Note: -Spread this Hadees with your family and friend so that more people would get benefit from it.

    For Urdu members.

    short ahadith for kids Urdu Englsihہماری آج کی حدیث حسن اخلاق  متلعق ہے.
     اس موضوع پرہم پہلے بھی حدیث کر چکے ہیں. جس میں  ہم نے نبی محمد کی سیرت کے  تقریباً ٧ واقعیات پڑھے تھے یہ اتفاق ہے کہ آج پھر اسی موضوع پر حدیث ہے مگر یہ بہت اچھا حسن اتفاق ہے کیوں کہ آج ہم لوگ اخلاق کے جس درجے پر کھڑ ے ہیں.اس پر جتنی بھی بات کی جایے کم ہے.
    آج ہم غیروں سے مسکرا کر با ت کر لیتے ہیں. مگر ہمرے گھروں کے اندر ھمارے اخلاق کی گراوٹ کھل کر سامنے آ رہی  ہے-میں  کبھی کبھی اپنے رویے پر غور کروں تو معلوم ہوتا ہے میں بہت کم مسکراتی ہوں.یاد رہے ھمارے  اس رویہ کا شکارسب سے  زیادہ بچےہو  ہیں  وہ جہاں عدم برداشت اور اگتایے ہوۓ  رویے کا شکار ہو رہے ہیں وہاں ان کی جسمانی اور ذہنی نشو نما بھرپورنہیں ہو رہی -ماتھے پر تیورریاں اوربد  مزاجی دن بدن بھرھتی جا رہی ہے آج ضرورت اس بات  کی ہےکہ بچوں کو نبی کے اخلاق  سے متعارف کروایا جایے اور ان کو اسلام کا مزاج بھی بتایا جایے 
    ہماری آج کی کہانی نبی کی سیرت کےنام سے   مشہور ہے. مجھےابھی معلوم  ہوا کہ یہ کہانی سیرت کی نہیں.اس لیے نبی محمد کا نام استعمال نہیں کیا اس لیے بچوں کی یاد دہانی اور اخلاق سنوارنے کے لیے پہلے والی ویڈیو جو حدیث ٧ میں کی تھی وہ  بھی شامل  کر دیں
    اس کے لیے ہم ایک اکٹویٹی بھی کر سکتے ہیں اگر آپ سب چاہو گے 
     
    کہانی اور حدیث کا ترجمہ اور تفسیر نیچے دیا جا رہا ہے.بچوں کو وڈیو دکھائیں اور ساتھ ساتھ ان  کے سوالوں کا جواب بھی دیں. اگر اس واقعہ کو تفصیل سے پڑھنا ہے تو آاپ انگلش والے سیکشن میں موجودلنک میں پڑھ سکتے ہیں
    میں نے بچوں کو سنت سیکھانے کے لیے انفرادی طور پر کچھ مطالعہ کیا ہے اور اپنے بچوں کو سیکھانے کے لیے کچھ چیزیں تیار بھی کر رکھی ہیں اگر کسی کو میری مدد کی ضرورت کو تو مجھے کومنٹ کر سکتے ہیں

    Video of the Urdu Story and Hadith. 

     

     . 

  • Hadith no 21 | Topic of the Hadith is The importance of Salah| Story A friend of Allah and devil| 30 short hadith for children.

    Video of story in English

     Al-Kitab-Ul-Hadees🌷

    Day .22…Hadees No 21 👇🏃‍♂️
    🌷Aslam-O-Alaikum Dear members.🌷
    Our today’s Hadees is Down 👇
     
    The Topic of the Hadees of the Day is The importance of Salah. 

    For English members:-

    3o short Ahadith for kids English and Urdu

    Today we will teach our kids about the importance of Prayer. We all know that Namaz is compulsory, not optional, but only a few people offer their prayer. And those who are punctual, Their actions are also not according to true Muslims.
    Prophet Muhammad SAW said, Pray Differs a Muslim from a kafir. If we want to guard our children against kufr and kafir then we have to teach them the importance and punctuality of Prayer. So that they would offer their pray like Shabah. So that they would get close to Allah and live a sin-free life. But the point to ponder is that, if our good Terbiyat makes them punctual to offer prayer and one from the parents don’t offer the prayer, then there is a high risk that our child would say us, kafir. So we should be punctual and sincere in our actions. Here is no leave from Salah. And if we will skip Salah for our other activities, then It is not Allah who needs us. He will also forget us. He will not feed us at the bed, but he will be kicked us away and we will get tired of achieving the goal for this world. The message of out today’s story is that the door of Jannah will not be opened without a key to Salah. And without Salah our all other good deeds will be wasted. Salah protects us from Shaytaan and sins.
    Our today’s story is The friend of ALLAH and Devil. I don’t have the written content of this story. As I wrote this with the help of my memory. So I’m giving an outline of this story. Please read this story as a bedtime story for your kids. And make sure to write this hadith at any board or hang the t wall to memorize.
    The outline of the story is 
    Once there was an old man. He was very poise and a true believer of Allah. Because of his Abadah, Good character, and helpful nature, Allah had made him His friend. Shaytan tried his best to indulge him in any sin but failed. He came to him again and again but his Salah was protecting him from shaytan. Shaytan was not happy that this old man would go into Jannah. So once he though a very powerful trick and he decided to do something to keep that old man away from Salaah. He comes to the old man in the face of an angle. He praised the old man. He said to him that Allah is very happy with you. And he sent me to you to give you news of Jannah. The old man was happy and asked again if it is true? He (devil) Said yes, and Also also appointed me to tell you that you are a true believer. You made me happy. Your struggle to help people and offering prayer on time was a trial and you succeed in it. So Allah says that now you are free to fulfil my rights. You don’t need to offer prayers. Instead, you should spend more time helping my people. The old man was not happy with this. He remains silent. He thought something and stood up saying, get away from here you bastard Shaytan. You are here to mislead me. It was you who denied fulfilling order of Allah. Allah had never said to his prophets to leave any prayer than how would give me permission to do this.
    Shaytan was frightened and run away.
    Tell your, kids, that shaytan comes in many faces to us and whispers us to not obey. But we have to say him no to become a good friend of Allah.

    Please open the video of this story and Play video for kids. The link to the video is above. (If you want to get 
    In the end, don’t forget to write Hadith in the Hadees book. And share the picture of the Hadith for other activities you did for this Hadith. So that your kids would get the certificate of completing their Ahadith.
     
    May Allah make it easy for you.
     
    Note: -Spread this Hadees with your family and friend so that more people would get benefit from it.
    Video of Hadith no 21↓


    For Urdu members.

    3o short Ahadith for kids English and Urdu
    ہماری آج کی حدیث نماز کی اہمیت کے بارے میں ہے. ہم سب اس کی فرضیت اور اہمیت سے آگاہ ہیں. مگر بارے افسوس کی بات ہے کہ بہت کم لوگ نماز پڑھتے ہیں اور جو پڑھتے ہیں ان کے عمل بے نمازیوں سے مختلف نہیں ہوتے 
    اللہ کے نبی نے بتایا کے نماز مسلمان کو کافر سے الگ کرتی ہے. اور اگر ہمیں اپنے بچوں کو کفر سے اور کافر سے بچانا ہے تو اس کی لیے نماز کی عادت اور نماز کی اہمیت ان کے دلوں میں ڈالنی ہو گے. تا کہ اللہ کا قرب حاصل کر کے بچے گناہ بھری زندگی سے پاک رہیں. لیکن یاد رکھیں اگر والدین میں سے کوئی نماز نہیں پڑھتا اور بچے کی تربیت میں نماز کی پابندی شامل ہے. تو اس بات کا بہت خدشہ ہے کہ بچہ والدین کو ہی کافر سمجھنے لگے -نماز اختیاری نہیں بلکہ ایک فرض ہے. جس سے چھٹی کسی صورت نہیں. اور اگر آپ نماز کو پیچھے ڈال کر دوسرے اہم کام ختم کرنے میں لگ گئے تو یاد رکھیں اللہ بے نیاز ہے وہ آپ کو بیٹھا کر نہیں کھلاۓ گا. بلکہ اس دنیا کے پیچھے دوڑا دوڑا کر تھکا  دے گا.
    آج کی کہانی میں  بھی یہی پیغام ہے کی نماز جنت کی چابی ہے اس کے بغیر دروازہ نہیں کھلے گا سارے عمل ضائع ہو جائیں گےاور جو نماز پڑھتا ہے شیطان اس پر کبھی قابو نہیں پا سکتا لہذا اس کا سب سے مضبوط وار نماز چھڑوانا ہے  
    کہانی اور حدیث کا ترجمہ اور تفسیر نیچے دیا جا رہا ہے.بچوں کو وڈیو دیکھیں اور ساتھ ساتھ ان  کے سوالوں کا جواب بھی دیں
    میں نے بچوں کو سنت سیکھانے کے لیے انفرادی طور پر کچھ مطالعہ کیا ہے اور اپنے بچوں کو سیکھانے کے لیے کچھ چیزیں تیار بھی کر رکھی ہیں اگر کسی کو میری مدد کی ضرورت کو تو مجھے کومنٹ کر سکتے ہیں 

    Video of the Urdu Story and Hadith.

    Recomended Books for kids.

    Follow me on social media for updated. If you want register your child in this course then contact me via email or comment below. I will provide you info.

    Pdf of these 30 short hadiths is also available. Comment to get pdf.

    These stories written in English are also available. go to the stories tab of website and get free stories.

    For Enrolments in this course comment or Email me. I have weekly two groups weekdays and weekend.

    Students activities

    https://youtu.be/p2Xnl2bvrxk
    https://youtu.be/0MdstF1xkEY
  • Ramdan and Eid of expats. With Eid and Ramdan arts and Crafts for kids

    eid and ramadan crafts for kids
    Ramadan And Eid of Expats.
    The First Ramadan and Eid as an expat was at the stage of self-pity and made me homesick. But now after 8 years when my kids grow up and we are 5 members at home,
    I enjoy blissful Ramadan. with arts and crafts for Eid and Ramadan. But living as an ex-pat is a little hard thing itself when we have zero Muslim community around us.Especially for children its hard to understand the difference between religious rituals. Here the non-Muslims celebrate their rituals with much excitement and community involvement.In this condition, it’s very important for us to make our rituals more attractive and charming with its soul. That’s why. This year The theme of our Ramadan is about a Verse of a Quran which is In Surah Baqra 183.

    Because Some non-Muslims think it’s very cruel to live hungry for the whole day. And Muslim children feel pity for them-self. So we will explain and follow these three Conceptions of Fasting...

    1. Fast was also Fardh in other religions like Hinduism and Christianity. But they forget their prayers and added new things in their rituals.
    2. We can’t leave Fast in any condition. We can delay it if we are Sick or traveling.
    3. The purpose of Ramadan is increasing our level of Taqwaa.
    In the light of this Verse we will plan our all activities covering two things.
    1.Ramadan eid decorations and planners. 2. Ibada activities to get Taqwa
    Ramadan/Eid decorations and planners. Ramadan preparations Start from the month of Shawwal when we start to clean home and prayer mats. To follow Sunnah It is the best thing to practice more fasts in the month of Shawwal..
    My kids start to countdown the Ramadhan and excited about the happiness of the daily iftar table.

    Here I will describe some things we will do in Ramadan.

    1.Wishing Crads and Self evaluation cards for nonemuslim fellow.

     Alhamdulillah we have made planned to give Ramadan wishes, self-evaluation cards and a pack of some dates to class fellows of elder one who is turning 9yrs this Ramadan. In this activity, he will share a short introduction/Ramadan story in his class. Then he will give wish card to his class fellow with a self-evaluation card in which every student will ask a question (how am I?) to his parents, friends, and people around him. And get good behavior starts and hearts from others.

    Eid and ramadan crafts
    Eid and ramadan crafts

    2.Prayer Corner.

    Our first and Welcome Ramadan activity is Making of a prayer corner.
    In a less messy room, we choose a corner and decorate it to offer our prayers and Ibadah here.
    In this corner, we have prayer mats, Table of Quran and Seerah books, Tasbeeh. I also added some sticky notes Color/pencils and some other activity materials in this corner to do some activities(described down)We made this corner full with fragrance and charming lights or candle. A video of prayer corner
    Eid and ramadan crafts for kids

    3.Shopping;-

    All necessary Grocery and new summer clothes shopping should be done before Ramadan. So we will buy clothes to wear in Jummah prayers and Eid Before Ramadan. 4.Wishing cards. During Ramadan, kids will make some eid wishing or Iftar invitation cards which they could do best. It depends on them whatever they will use to decorate and write on them.
    5.Iftar preparations
    Every member of the family will volunteer in preparation of after. Of Course, the kids are too young to practice Fast, but they do Iftar. It’s the best time where we could learn to eat Sunnah foods, manners of eating and welcome every food.
    6.Eid gift packs
    This Ramadhan I’m planning to make eid gift packs. Living in abroad we don’t have other kids surroundings to give these gift packs. But This year we would make these packs for their schoolfellows. Because kids feel a little complex when they can’t take part in school celebrations and the rituals of their friends. So I think our kids should feel proud of their rituals. And doing this will also raise awareness in their friends that they also have their religious rituals. Here is the picture of the gifts I gave them last year. This year I’m planning to give something else to my kids and adding some candies and chocolate bars in the gift packs of other children.

    eid and ramadan crafts for kids

     Ibada activities to get Taqwa1.Alhamad Garden.

    eid and Ramadan crafts for kids
    Every day of Ramadan is a blessed month. So we have this beautiful garden with our name tags. We will add a flower daily to say Alhamdulillah for the blessing of the day.

    2.Wall hangers

    We prepared wall hangers with the verses like.
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    Eid/ramadan crafts for kids
    1. Allah is watching. AL-BASEER(For Kitchen)
    2. Forgive others      Al-Ghafoor(kids room)
    3. Allah is listening   Al-same (prayer corner)
    4. Prayer is better than sleep     (Bedroom)
    5. Ifter and Sehri Supplications  (wall of the dining table)

    Eid ramadan crafts for kids

    3.Quran memorizing.

    My elder one is already doing Hifz. So, this year I planned my self to memorize at least one Surah in this month. And younger kids will also take part in memorizing. For this, I think listening of audio is the best way for kids. I have apps of Quran recitation which they will listen and learn.
    Stories About the Ramadhan of Sahaba 4.Daily Ayat e Tadabbur. Daora e Quran is my favorite thing to do in Ramadan. It’s also Sunnah that Prophets Muhammad SAW did Dora e Quran every night of Ramadan with Jibraeel A.S. For kids its better I will choose any Ayat for them and do tadabbur on it.
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids5.Charity box
    Like last year we will  have a charity box in which we will add some money to donate kids.
    eid and ramadan crafts for kids
    6.A Ramadhan schedule/Planner
    This year we have a planner with us in which we have tick option for

    Prayer,..A hand made Ramadan countdown and Prayer countdown. Big sticker for Fast and small stickers for daily stickers.
    Recitation,
    Daily some verses age according and Dora-e-Quran for kids a video of9 minuts daily and 3 hrs daily for elders.Good Deeds..For kids we make good deeds tree. Which will get fruits of good deeds in stickers.

    Tasbeeh... Ziker is complspry thing to do. We have made these short tasbeehat from beeds of broken tasbeehat. Our one bucket is for Tasbeehat. Second jaar of countdown beeds and second to keep counted beeds.

    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    7.Bonding with Grandparents and other relatives.

    Every Ramadan and Eid we all miss our relatives and country rituals and homesick. I miss my parents and my Husband so as. So to make strong bonding and attach kids with our bondings, we will try to make more live calls to get connect with them.

    Eid room decorations
    Last week of Eid is good to start Eid decorations.

    Last year we did it with balloons, stars, Crescents and fresh flowers. Let’s see what we added more.

    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kidsEid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    Eid/Ramadan crafts for kidsEid/Ramadan crafts for kidseid and ramadan crafts for kidsEid/Ramadan crafts for kids
    In’sha Allah. This is My Planner and pre and in Ramadan preparations. Hope everyone will get a blessed Ramadan.
    Allahumma ballighnaRamadhana.
    Adiba Anwar. How to make clay candels?watch video.
  • Awesome Facts About The Birds Mentioned In The Quran

    Birds in Quran. This is a unit study activity for kids. How did we complete this unit study? You can read in the article, which birds are mentioned in Quran.

    There are 3 birds mentioned in the Quran with names and there are several places where birds are recalled as Tayr in different verses. such as

    1. Hud-hud (Hoopoe bird): Mentioned in Surah Al-Naml, Chapter 27, Verse 20-22.
    2. Crow: Mentioned in Surah Al-Maidah, Chapter 5, Verse 31.
    3. Tayr (Birds): Mentioned in multiple Surahs, including Surah Al-Baqarah, Chapter 2, Verse 260, and Surah Al-An’am, Chapter 6, Verse 38.
    4. Al-Batta (Duck): Mentioned in Surah Al-Maida, Chapter 5, Verse 4, where it is mentioned as a permissible food for Muslims.
    5. Ababeel: Mentioned in Surah Al-fil verse no 3

    How we will complete this unit study of birds mentioned in the quran stories, facts, and crafts? You can read here

    As it is stated above, we are going to learn the names of birds with their stories, verses, facts, and art and craft work.

    let’s start our unit study part 3. We are going to learn about 2nd bird mentioned in Quran. Let’s see

    Names of the 3 birds mentioned in the Quran.

    There are three birds that are mentioned in Quran. 1 Crow in the story of Adam A.S Hoope (HUDHUD) in the story of King SOLOMON and Ababeel in the story of the Elephants. here we are going to see facts of hope (hud hud) with the story of Solomon.

    King Solomon and Hud Hud

    The project is based on these simple and easy steps like our first story.

    birds in quran
    1. Storytelling
    2. Finding the birds and Animals mentioned in that story.
    3. Facts of the mentioned birds HUDHUD(Hoopoe).
    4. Crafts of the story
    5. Benefits of the HudHud and other birds.
    6. Verses of the Quran about the benefits of birds.
    7. Lessons and important points of the story.

    1. The story of King Sulemon A.S and hud hud(Read the story in Urdu)

    The story of King Solomon is very much interesting and attractive as it has many magical lyrics and is divided into many small parts. In this story Ants, Fish, Hud Hud, Crow, and Jins are mentioned. 

    The story of Prophet Solomon (Sulaiman in Arabic) and Hud-hud (Hoopoe bird) is mentioned in the Quran in Surah Al-Naml (Chapter 27, verses 20-28).

    According to the story, Prophet Solomon was a righteous and just king who ruled over a vast kingdom with the help of Allah. One day, he noticed that Hud-hud, one of the birds in his kingdom, was missing. Prophet Solomon asked his courtiers about Hud-hud’s whereabouts, but no one knew where the bird had gone.

    Then, Hud-hud returned to Prophet Solomon with some news. The bird had discovered a kingdom ruled by a queen who was worshipped by her people instead of Allah. Prophet Solomon was curious and ordered the bird to lead his army to that kingdom to investigate.

    When they arrived, Prophet Solomon saw that the queen and her people were indeed worshipping idols instead of Allah. Prophet Solomon invited the queen to worship Allah instead and warned her that if she did not abandon her false beliefs, her kingdom would be destroyed by Allah.

    The queen realized the truth and submitted to Allah. Prophet Solomon then asked Hud-hud why he had not brought the news of this kingdom to him before, to which the bird replied that it had traveled far and wide to bring the news to Prophet Solomon.

    Prophet Solomon was pleased with the bird’s loyalty and intelligence and thanked Allah for the guidance. The story of Prophet Solomon and Hud-hud serves as a lesson about the importance of seeking knowledge and guidance from Allah, as well as the importance of remaining steadfast in one’s beliefs and worship of Allah.

    2. Bird of the Story HOOPOE (HUDHUD).

     Hoopoe or hud hud is the bird on which our project was going ahead.
    The bird of this story is HUDHUD which has beautiful feathers like the crown of a king at his head and a curved beak. It is revealed in the Surat al-Namal Verse no 20 that:-

    ‘Why do I not see the Hud Hud.’

    We point out the Verses about the story from the Quran.

    3. Facts about Hud Hud

    1. The word Hoopoe is their call ‘Hoo-poo’ which they repeat 4/5 times.
    2. Hud has a long beak to dig the ground to find insects and to crop trees to make nests.
    3. With beautiful and attractive colors they look and
    4. Fly like a butterfly.
    5. They sing nice songs
    6. They have two human habits.1 Male presents the insect to the female to eat as they know the women’s nature.2. Male feed the chicks for some days and later female.
    7. They can see deep into the ground, so kings in the old ages used to bring them with them on travels to find underground water.
    8. They like bad smells.
    9. Hud Hud Doo Migrations.
    10. They like to take a sunbath and dust/sandbath. 

    4. The crafts of the story.

    As I mentioned above this story is consists of many short parts and has more things to work on. So we made many crafts for the story. So we decided to make the nest of the hud which is a unique and different nest from all other birds. We tried to make the nest in many ways. Kids were trying to make the same nest as Hud Hud by making the whole in a small log. We got three logs and nails and hammers to drag a hole. All three kids tried for two days but it was a hard thing so they ended up with a paper craft(milk pack)

    free Islamic stories for children. Crafts and creative work.
    birds in quran
    free Islamic stories for children. Crafts and creative work.

    5. Benefits of Hud Hud.

    Like other animals, insects, and birds’ HudHud'(Hoopoe) are also created for the benefit of all humans kinds. 

     Muslim children Must know that Hud Hud is not a useless bird. It has its importance as a bird. We could learn:-

    1. Emotional attachment and love and care with family.
    2. Importance of observing every thing.Importance of knowledge and wisdom.
    3. Loyalty towards our master.
    4. They add beauty to nature.
    5. Hard work to make beautiful homes.
    6. The bird Hud Hud is a source of information. It is a humble creation of Allah. 

    6. Verses of the Quran about birds and benefits.

    Allah created this nature for mankind so we could get benefits from the birds and other things around us with a little wisdom.

    Follow these (verses)Ayats for reference of benefits and facts of animals, birds, and Insects. 

    • Al-Quran….surat-ul-Nakhal, 5-7, 66,68-69, 79,80,115).
    • Emotional attachment.  (Similarity between Humans and animals, They teach us to show love and kindness towards other humans.)(..Al-Quran, Al-Alnaam-38)

    7. Discussion:- Important points of the story.


    Keen insight on wrong things happening around us and trying to overcome these wrong things like Hud Hud is a supper skill for kids.
    King Suleman was a great king and a noble messenger of Allah. He got all the power Knowledge and wisdom from Allah after this supplication.

    You must introduce this bird to your kids. Bring them close to the beauty of nature. Quran and nature is the best source of connecting kids with Allah.
    Did you enjoy this journey of Our second story of Three birds three stories of the Quran,
    Read these article 

    Crow in Quran

    Ababeel in Quran
    The story of ADAM A.S and Crow with facts and crafts.
    Educational videos for children to make easy nests for birds.

    Books to read

    Online classes

    We have online classes and Islamic courses for kids. You can visit our website to see what and how we teach.

  • A complete nutritional Sunnah break fast for Muslim Parenting.A motivational Article.

    Healthy breakfast Ideas with Sunnah Meal/ ingredients.

    Last week we had a school meeting. The agenda was full of tummy breakfast and healthy meal awareness.

    muslimparenting sunaah foods.

    There It was a shocking comment from the teachers of nursery classes. 
    They were telling the ratio of kids coming with a complete breakfast is 2:20 and with a light breakfast is 3/5 out of 20, and the rest of the students are coming without breakfast. And they summed up that sugar and white floor is lowering the hunger and making them weak inside. That’s why children especially girls get weaker and complain about the ache in the joints and bones.
    I was surprised. I know many children don’t like to eat in the morning. So many parents seem to be grateful if they are at least taking a cup of milk. So there was a campaign started in the school and the target was sending children in the school with a full tummy breakfast.
    Alhamdulillah, my all children have a habit to take a complete and healthy breakfast every morning.so I’m not much worry about them. But I felt Proud of being  Muslim that we have Sunnah food in our life when teachers recommended ‘Honey’ instead of Jams and other topping ingredients. Many Mothers are in need a good recommendation and motivation of healthy breakfast for the little ones. That’s why I decided to write an article to share some tips and ideas about a complete nutritional breakfast every morning.

    muslimparenting Sunnah foods.

    Tip 1.

      Breakfast is the first meal of the day. We need more energy and a pleasant mood to begin a worthful day. This is the time when our body and stomach could absorb heavy meals. Make a healthy and rich meal menu for breakfast
      Here is a set of breakfast ingredients.
      1.  A brown toast topped with honey and butter, half egg and the half cup of milk.
      2. A brown Rusk with cheese or butter and yogurt.
      3. A Bowl wheat porridge with and a spoon of honey and 3dates.
      4. A Brown chapatti bread made in olive oil and a cup of yogurt.
      5. A glass of fresh juices and with the role of brown bread filled with cream and chicken.
      6. Mouselli with milk/yogurt and Banana. 
      7. Black chocolate with milk and bread.
      Muslimparenting Sunnah foods

      Tip 2.


      After a long sleep, children don’t want to eat. So give them a break of 1:30 to 2 hrs between awakening and breakfast.

      Tip 3. 

      Motivate them to eat healthy foods in the morning. Mostly girls like to look pretty and glowing and boys want to be more strong and healthy. So encourage them to eat a more and more healthy thing in the morning so that could achieve their target.

      Tip 4. 

      Change the menu often. So that they do not feed up with the same things every morning.

      Tip 5.

      Sit and do your breakfast with them and show your interest in eating more in the morning.

      Tip 6.  

      At the start, children will not be ready to eat so much in the morning. slowly and steadily they will get used to it. But you live constant and force them to take breakfast. In some days, they will change their behavior.

      Tip 7. 

      Provide a relaxed and calm atmosphere at the time of Breakfast. Don’t show the hurries, otherwise, the children will make the reason to avoid breakfast.
       In the end here is a list of Sunnah foods that are rich nutritional.

      • Dates
      • Olive/olive oil
      • Milk
      • Brown bread
      • Honey.
      • Dry fruits.
      • Meat
      • Apple Cider.
      • Pomegranate.
      • Fig
      • Watermelon.
      • Cucumber.
      • Barley
      • Water.
      • Grapes

      In holidays when the children stay at home before noon try to add more sunnah foods in their diet. 

      Note:- The foods that are not good for children are enlisted.
      1. Fast foods 
      2. White floor,
      3. Suger.
      4. Brown and fatty Chocolates 
      5. Candies, 
      6. Tetra pack juices and soft drinks.
      7. Broiler meats and eggs.
      8. Jams and artificial coloring items.

      Foods are the fuel of our body. Do not spoil the habits of children. The rest of the life of children depends on what they eat At a young age. So do not compromise with it. Good health promises a productive energetic and strong body.

      What is the favorite breakfast of your children? Share your tips and ideas with us.
      Here is a motivational video for kids of Fruits mentioned in the Quran with Playdough. I hope your kids will enjoy it.
      Here is my video of the making of fruits mentioned in the Quran with play dough. Kids love to play with playdough and make these things.