• Campaigns
    • POMW
    • Guarding Innocence
    • Palestine Truth
    • Hold On
  • Articles
  • Podcast
  • More
    • About
    • Careers
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    • Submit
    • Subscribe
Be a Guardian
Islam21cIslam21c
  • Campaigns
  • Articles
  • Podcast
  • More
Search
  • Campaigns
    • POMW
    • Guarding Innocence
    • Palestine Truth
    • Hold On
  • Articles
  • Podcast
  • More
    • About
    • Careers
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    • Submit
    • Subscribe

Stay Updated

Stay updated to receive the latest from Islam21c

Subscribe
Made by ThemeRuby using the Foxiz theme Powered by WordPress

‘LGBTQ+’ History Month: Key messages for parents

By Yusuf Patel 11 Raj 44 ◦︎ 2 Feb 23 7 Min Read
Angyalosi Beata / shutterstock.com

As we enter ‘LGBTQ+’ History Month, many schools will be celebrating people who identify as ‘LGBTQ+’. Schools will confuse good treatment of all people with acceptance and celebration of lifestyles we deem morally unacceptable.

Contents
What is wrong with the way schools talk about ‘LGBTQ+’ during History Month?What should Muslim parents do?Our truths are built upon a recognition that:Also read

What is wrong with the way schools talk about ‘LGBTQ+’ during History Month?

Many teachers believe that there is nothing morally wrong with ‘LGBTQ+’ beliefs and lifestyles. It is their prerogative to believe what they do. This does not mean that they should impose their personal moral positions on Muslim children.

A teacher can hold a personal view that ‘LGBTQ+’ relationships are good, yet this should be acknowledged as a value position. It is not a universally acknowledged truth that must be forced upon others. They should not impose contested views on children who hold different moral positions.

Muslims, as well as many people from faith backgrounds, believe that any relationship outside of a marital relationship between a man and a woman is morally unacceptable.

A school can say that a man can legally marry another man. That is a legal reality.
But when a school asks Muslim children to accept such relationships, or to celebrate them, this is clearly overstepping their duty according to the Equality Act 2010.

When Muslim children are expected to wear ‘LGBTQ+’ insignia, wave pride flags, or take part in mock pride marches, a school has veered away from education and entered the realm of indoctrination.

When Muslim children are disciplined for expressing a contrary view, this is unacceptable. Muslim parents must challenge this.

It is a given that we teach our children to treat others with civility. But to expect acceptance of behaviours that contravene our faith perspective is unacceptable.

What should Muslim parents do?

Parents must:

  • Write to schools and ask that your children not be forced to take part in any activity that compromises their faith position on same-sex relationships or promotes the view that a person is born in the wrong body.
  • Ensure that your children must be allowed to hold and express contrary views about ‘LGBTQ+’ beliefs and lifestyles.
  • Outside of the school context, have simple discussions with your children about the ‘LGBTQ+’ narratives that have all too often gone unchallenged and respond to them with the normative Islamic position on same-sex relationships and ‘gender identity’, such as:
    • ‘LGBTQ+’ identity labels such as ‘gay’, ‘lesbian’ and ‘bisexual’ are rooted in ‘who someone is’. We believe every behaviour is changeable and all desires are controllable.
    • A child who feels some attraction or closeness to a friend of the same sex is made to feel that this desire equates to sexual longing. This is bound to happen in a society where the dominant culture sexualises everything. Yet desires and feelings are not permanent states; rather, they are temporary, and any single desire or feeling should not define a person.
    • The labels we often hear about (‘gay’, ‘lesbian’, ‘bisexual’, ‘homosexual’, ‘heterosexual’, etc.) are rooted in a 19th century, liberal, Eurocentric view of human behaviour that is untethered from objective truth. They are founded upon a belief that there is some kind of sexual attraction force – innate and unchanging – that defines people according to these 19th century labels.
    • The idea that people are born in the wrong body encourages children to make devastating, life-changing, and irreversible decisions based on a feeling that passes. If only they were given the space to explore what trauma underpins their drastic decision. Instead, the ‘adults in the room’ affirm these fleeting feelings and concretise them. As a society, we must question, not entertain, why so many young girls and boys, dissatisfied with aspects of their lives thus far, are socialised into making such a drastic change. They need love, help, and support – not hormones and surgery.
    • Just because people choose to live a particular way does not speak to the truth of an idea or behaviour. The majority position does not equate to truth; it simply means that lots of people hold that view.

Our truths are built upon a recognition that:

  • We were created by Allah for a higher purpose than the fulfilment of temporary desires.
  • He guided mankind to a lofty purpose connected with meaning, shunning the hedonistic lifestyle that propels the worship of one’s desires.
  • He created man and woman with profound differences, even down to the cellular level. He did not make any mistakes when He fashioned the differences that we know exist between men and women.
  • A woman can change her outward features, and remove parts of her body, but she remains a woman.
  • A man can opt to surgically remove parts of his body and take female hormones, but he will forever remain a man.
  • Masculinity and femininity have a universal reality that transcends cultural positions such as ‘boys like blue’ and ‘girls like pink’, or ‘boys like football’ and ‘girls like dolls’.

We need to teach our children that there are differences, these differences don’t make one sex superior to the other. We must discuss these issues outside of the battle of the sexes that has coloured this discussion.

Also read

  • Parental Guidance Series
  • My Same-Sex Attraction: Understanding & Healing
  • Stop “proselytising” LGBT ideology to pupils, demand parents
  • Joint statement of Muslim Scholars & Imams on LGBT row in schools
  • Yes, they ARE encouraging children to “be gay” in Schools. Or bisexual, pansexual, asexual, transsexual, hetero-flexible, heterosexual…

Source: Islam21c

TAGGED: LGBTQ, TRANSGENDER
Yusuf Patel 11 Raj 44 ◦︎ 2 Feb 23 10 Raj 44 ◦︎ 1 Feb 23
Share This Article
Copy Link
By Yusuf Patel
Follow:
Yusuf Patel is the Founder and Managing Director of Muslim Family Initiative, formerly known as SREIslamic, which provides advice, support and training to parents concerned with how Sex and Relationship Education (SRE/RHE/RSHE) is taught in schools, particularly at the primary level. Muslim Family Initiative has conducted hundreds of seminars across the country since it was founded in 2008 in order to inform Muslim parents of their legal rights in the area of SRE (RHE/RSHE) as well as running workshops covering the responsibility of Muslim parents to impart age appropriate sex education in line with their values. Yusuf works for a mental health charity.
Previous Article The case of the missing child asylum seekers
Next Article Canadian lawmakers vote to accept 10,000 Uyghurs
3 Comments
  • Ruth Mauger says:
    16 Raj 44 ◦︎ 7 Feb 23 at 4:32 pm

    Assalamu alaikum, essential article jazzakhum Allahu kheiran.
    There is an error that has been overlooked in the following paragraph it should say ‘any sexual relationship’ to clarify what is meant:
    Muslims, as well as many people from faith backgrounds, believe that any relationship outside of a marital relationship between a man and a woman is morally unacceptable.

    Reply
  • Sister says:
    13 Raj 44 ◦︎ 4 Feb 23 at 5:51 am

    This is very much appreciated. JazakAllah khairan.

    Reply
  • Sister says:
    10 Raj 44 ◦︎ 1 Feb 23 at 9:42 pm

    Very important article – JazaakAllahu khayrun

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related

The cure for our current crisis 2

The cure for our current crisis

Politics
Parent Power

Parent Power

Education
My 24 Hours in Israeli Detention

My 24 Hours in Israeli Detention

Opinion
Charlie Kirk, whataboutism, genocide, & Joseph Goebbels

Charlie Kirk, whataboutism, genocide, & Joseph Goebbels

Opinion
Show More
Facebook Youtube Instagram Telegram Whatsapp

© 2025 Islam21c | All rights reserved

Work with us

Whether you want to volunteer or be a part of our team, there are ways you can always make a contribution to the Muslim Ummah.

View vacancies

Stay connected!

We know how it feels to miss out on the latest breaking stories, exciting project announcements, and multimedia productions, so here is this handy box to make sure you don’t miss a thing! Signing up takes just 10 seconds.

Subscribe
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?