When the spirit leaves: Childhood death, grieving, and bereavement in Islam |
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Authors: | Hedayat Kamyar |
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Affiliation: | Pediatric Critical Care, Integrative Medicine, Sutton Children's Hospital, Shreveport, Louisiana 71101, USA. kamyar.hedayat@chrisushealth.org |
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Abstract: | The death of a child has a profound and often long-lasting impact on families. The parent's relationship and their ability to bond with and take care of surviving children may be affected. It is important for healthcare workers to understand the dynamics associated with bereavement, especially when the family comes from a non-Western culture. Islam is one of the three most populous religions along with Christianity and Hinduism and the fastest growing religion in the United States but remains largely misunderstood. This paper seeks to explain what Islam is, who is a Muslim, where they live, and what they believe and practice. It also explains how Islamic beliefs contextualize the meaning of life and death for Muslims and how they are exhorted to grieve upon a child's death. Reading this paper will enable those who care for Muslim families to better attend to the social and emotional needs of Muslim parents and siblings after such a tragic event. |
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