Dr Mustapha Abdul-Hamid, Chief Executive Officer of the National Petroleum Authority has stated that changing the Arabic and Islamic educational curricula to suit modern trends is the ideal way to place Muslim students at par with others in secular education.
That, he said must come with hard work, effective collaborations, and unity of purpose to move Muslim children from the “conservative syllabi” to modern-day trends that would broaden the horizon of the students.
He said Muslims could no longer continue to dwell on Syllabi that are always theory in nature and completely out of practicality, a situation he described as “dry theology.”
“Muslim children cannot be knowledgeable in ICT, Environment, Technology, Science, and creative arts if our syllabus is still based on religious tenets instead of the Broadway educational system non-Muslim students enjoy.”
Dr Abdul-Hamid stated this during a three-day seminar with the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment on developing Islamic studies curricula for the Muslim community in Ghana.
The Seminar which was organized by T’alim Ghana, a Ghanaian Islamic Non-Governmental Organisation in collaboration with The World Muslim Community Council, from Abu Dhabi, United Arabs Emirates, and Education without Borders attracted 30 participants.
Themed: “Islamic Teaching and Learning; Training for Specialists and Developing Islamic Curricula”, the Seminar would among other issues come out with challenges of Arabic and Islamic education, what they can do to equal other students in the secular realms, and the way forward to fast-track educational progress among Muslim students.
Dr Abdul-Hamid said from his experience as the former Minister of Inner-Cities and the Zongo Development, he realized that Muslim students lagged behind in the secular education sector, chiefly because Arabic and Islamic studies were more religious-based than secular.
He called on Muslim Scholars to be assertive in their engagement with the government to be able to come out with good and effective syllabi and curricula that would uplift Muslim students and eschew individual ideological beliefs that could lead to disunity and disintegration among Muslim sects.
On wearing of hijab among Muslim ladies, Dr Abdul-Hamid said it was a manifestation of the faith of Muslim ladies, equating it to the wearing of school uniform, used in identifying students and their schools.
As Muslims, he urged them to be assertive in their engagements by giving benchmarks that they would not fall below, but build their capacities in curricula development that would inure to the benefit of Muslims in Ghana and beyond.
He said the state had over the years recognized that religion was part of Ghanaians, hence the establishment of Catholic, Presbyterian, Anglican, Methodist, Islamic, and Ahmadiyya Educational Units across the country.
“If you want to know much about Catholicism, ask a Catholic and if you want to know much about Islam, ask a Muslim.”
He said the Islamic Holy Book was eternal and spoke about all generations, and should not be changed but the Experts need to redesign and develop new ways of meeting the demands of the current Muslim generations to be at par with others.
He said times were changing and Dubai, a typical Islamic state would soon host COP 28 to deliberate on Climate Change, Environment, Science, and other development issues and Muslims need to re-adjust their understanding of development through such topical issues.
“That will show the world that our religion has the principles for development and not just dwelling on only Hadiths.”