Sending older parents to the nursing home from the perspective of islamic law

In Muslim communities, there are nursing homes and elderly care facilities, some of which are operated by Islamic organizations such as Aisyiyah in Indonesia, which is part of Muhammadiyah. The community grapples with the question of how Islamic law views the act of children placing their elderly p...

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Main Author: Syamsul Anwar
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: Universitas Ahmad Dahlan 2023-10-01
Series:IJISH (International Journal of Islamic Studies and Humanities)
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal2.uad.ac.id/index.php/ijish/article/view/9280
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author Syamsul Anwar
author_facet Syamsul Anwar
author_sort Syamsul Anwar
collection DOAJ
description In Muslim communities, there are nursing homes and elderly care facilities, some of which are operated by Islamic organizations such as Aisyiyah in Indonesia, which is part of Muhammadiyah. The community grapples with the question of how Islamic law views the act of children placing their elderly parents in nursing homes, given that there are differing opinions on this matter. This article investigates the Islamic perspective on this issue. Using a library research approach, it explores whether it is considered disobedient and thus prohibited or whether positive aspects should be considered. The article concludes on several points, namely: (1) Islamic law strongly emphasizes the obligation of honoring the elderly both by the children or their families, as well as by society and the state; (2) It is obligatory for children to do good (iḥsān) to their parents, which is reflected among others in the form of providing them with proper support and maintenance when they are no longer able to be independent. Deliberately neglecting one's parents and avoiding responsibility for their upkeep out of laziness, despite having the economic and social capacity to do so, is a violation of the child's obligation and is a form of disobedience; and (3) Placing one's parents in a nursing home by the child due to social and economic conditions that make it impossible for them to take care of them on their own and with the consideration that the interests of the parents will be better secured and to avoid neglect and on condition that the parents are willing, is permissible. Placing parents in a nursing home is a last resort after other efforts have been exhausted.
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spelling doaj.art-c69905040127412ea5f5dfb8170e9c122024-02-27T04:21:53ZaraUniversitas Ahmad DahlanIJISH (International Journal of Islamic Studies and Humanities)2614-38362615-74032023-10-016210.26555/ijish.v6i2.9280Sending older parents to the nursing home from the perspective of islamic lawSyamsul Anwar0Universitas Islam Negeri Sunan Kalijaga, Yogyakarta, Indonesia In Muslim communities, there are nursing homes and elderly care facilities, some of which are operated by Islamic organizations such as Aisyiyah in Indonesia, which is part of Muhammadiyah. The community grapples with the question of how Islamic law views the act of children placing their elderly parents in nursing homes, given that there are differing opinions on this matter. This article investigates the Islamic perspective on this issue. Using a library research approach, it explores whether it is considered disobedient and thus prohibited or whether positive aspects should be considered. The article concludes on several points, namely: (1) Islamic law strongly emphasizes the obligation of honoring the elderly both by the children or their families, as well as by society and the state; (2) It is obligatory for children to do good (iḥsān) to their parents, which is reflected among others in the form of providing them with proper support and maintenance when they are no longer able to be independent. Deliberately neglecting one's parents and avoiding responsibility for their upkeep out of laziness, despite having the economic and social capacity to do so, is a violation of the child's obligation and is a form of disobedience; and (3) Placing one's parents in a nursing home by the child due to social and economic conditions that make it impossible for them to take care of them on their own and with the consideration that the interests of the parents will be better secured and to avoid neglect and on condition that the parents are willing, is permissible. Placing parents in a nursing home is a last resort after other efforts have been exhausted. http://journal2.uad.ac.id/index.php/ijish/article/view/9280Nursing homes Elder care facilities Muhammadiyah Islamic law Aisyiyah
spellingShingle Syamsul Anwar
Sending older parents to the nursing home from the perspective of islamic law
IJISH (International Journal of Islamic Studies and Humanities)
Nursing homes
Elder care facilities
Muhammadiyah Islamic law
Aisyiyah
title Sending older parents to the nursing home from the perspective of islamic law
title_full Sending older parents to the nursing home from the perspective of islamic law
title_fullStr Sending older parents to the nursing home from the perspective of islamic law
title_full_unstemmed Sending older parents to the nursing home from the perspective of islamic law
title_short Sending older parents to the nursing home from the perspective of islamic law
title_sort sending older parents to the nursing home from the perspective of islamic law
topic Nursing homes
Elder care facilities
Muhammadiyah Islamic law
Aisyiyah
url http://journal2.uad.ac.id/index.php/ijish/article/view/9280
work_keys_str_mv AT syamsulanwar sendingolderparentstothenursinghomefromtheperspectiveofislamiclaw