MORE children died in NSW last year - 628 - than in any year since 2002. Of those 110 had been identified as "vulnerable", as their families had contact with the Department of Community Services.
The number of deaths rose from 599 in 2005. There were 84 deaths (13.5 per cent of the total) of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders, who make up 3.5 per cent of the population, the annual report of the Government's child deaths review team showed.
Deaths of children under the age of one rose from 367 to 401, including many cases involving conditions present from birth. There were 54 deaths of infants after they were left to sleep.
Sixty-five children died in traffic accidents, 15 from drowning and 10 from assaults. Seven children and young people died from suicide - the lowest number since 1996.
In one case a child's mother fell asleep in the bath with a child and one child died from injuries, including a fractured skull, suspected to have been caused by abuse.
The report said: "In another incident, risk of harm reports related to the physical and psychological wellbeing of the child as a consequence of exposure to domestic violence, parental drug use and neglect."
The Commissioner for Children and Young People and head of the review team, Gillian Calvert, said the increase in infant deaths was believed to be the result of the higher birthrate.
Half the children who had had contact with the department died from disease or morbid conditions, in a quarter the cause of death was yet to be determined and another quarter was from falls, traffic accidents or other incidents.
"It's not [all] about child abuse, it's actually a measure of whether they're vulnerable," Ms Calvert said.
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THE PROPHET OF ISLAM - MUHAMMAD
Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) is one the greatest benefactors of mankind. The Prophet of Islam undoubtedly proved a great blessing to humanity. It was he who preached for the first time complete equality of mankind. He gave a high sense of self-respect to an uncouth desert people among whom he was born. He removed all distinctions of caste, creed or colour, and introduced among his followers the principle of universal brotherhood. All these ideas were refreshing to those who were suffering under so many inequities and acts of injustice.
The Prophet of Islam, in
fact, revolutionized human thought by his preaching. He not only preached, but also acted
upon every word he spoke for the guidance of humanity. Thus his life became a source of
true inspiration to his followers. Even minute acts and deeds of him have been recorded by
his Companions and contemporaries for the benefit of mankind. His life was practical
demonstration of how high precept and noble example can be blended harmoniously in the
life of man.
The torch lit by the Prophet of Islam about 1,400 years ago should always be peoples'
guiding light to keep their steps away from the path of sin and error. The many phases of
Muhammad's unique personality must be studied carefully in order to draw up a system of
conduct for ourselves. Islam itself is a perfect code of life and hence, in every age and
clime, it can easily fulfil the moral and spiritual as well as material needs and requirements
of humanity.
Humanity needs a standard by which it may judge itself in all problems in every walk of life, social, economic, political, religious, commercial and cultural. Such a model is found in the life of Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him). He was born amongst a
people who had touched the lowest ebb of degeneration and degradation. His clarion call
not only aroused them from the slumber of ages and pulled them out from the shadows of
darkness and oblivion, but also converted a backward and primitive tribal community into
harbingers of one of the greatest civilisations on earth. From a life of ignorance, misery,
evil social customs, and blood feuds, they were transformed into champions of knowledge,
science, literature, medicine, astronomy and philosophy. They literally fixed a pattern of
high moral standards, socio-economic justice, and equality for all mankind. Never has the
world witnessed such a great transformation in such a short span of life.
Muhammad, Prophet of Islam, is the last of Prophets ; one who brought the Divine
Message in its final and complete form. Muslims are asked to look upon all other Prophets with equal reverence.
Islam seeks to bring about mutual understanding and reconciliation between the
followers of different faiths and to enjoin upon them to respect and honour one another.
The Quran says "Surely those who believe and those who are Jews and the Sabeans and
the Christians whoever believes in Allah and the last Day and does good - they shall have
no fear nor shall they grieve 1 " and " O, People of the Book, come to an equitable word
between us and you, that we shall serve non but Allah and that we shall not associate aught with Him, and that some of us shall not take others for lords besides Allah." 2
The life of Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him ) is unique among
the founders of faiths. He was a ruler, an administrative, a soldier and a states man. As a
husband and a father he sets an example which if carefully followed would eradicate many
evils and prevent destruction of family life. Gentleness and humility, courtesy and
hospitality, patience and tolerance, courage and fortitude, the warmity of his affection for
friends and his large-hearted magnanimity to his enemies were some of his qualities.
Above all, he was the man chosen by Allah to convey the Message of all good and
happiness to humanity.
Prophet Muhammad's life (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) can be described as a struggle between truth and falsehood, justice and inquity, good and evil and happiness
and misery.
Before Muhammad's mission (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him), the world, as
described by Allah in the Quran, was as follows "Indeed, there has come to you from Allah
a Light and a clear Book whereby Allah guides such as follow His pleasure into the ways of peace, and brings them out of darkness into light by His will, and guides them to the right
path". 3
MUHAMMAD IN THE EYES OF NON-MUSLIM THINKERS AND SCHOLARS
It is a difficult task to describe the versatility of character of Muhammad, the Prophet of Islam, and it would indeed require volumes to do justice to him, to his sincerity, generosity, frugality, broad-mindedness, firmness and tenacity of purpose, his steadfastness, and calmness in adversity, his meekness in prosperity, his humility in greatness, his modesty in character, his anxious care for animals, his passionate fondness and love for children, his bravery and fortitude, his magnanimity of spirit, his unbending sense of justice and above all his noble mission to save humanity from destruction.
In the face of those who do not understand him and still pour forth torrents of abuse on the Prophet and shamefully scandalise him, what better homage to Prophet Muhammad can we pay than quote the testimony of great Western historians, thinkers and scholars who expressed their views on the greatest of benefactors of humanity.
In his famous book "The Heroes", Thomas Carlyle says the following about Muhammad:
"Muhammad is no longer an imposter, but a great reformer. He is no longer a neurotic patient suffering from epilepsy, but a man of tremendous character and unbending will. He is no longer a self-seeking despot, ministering to his own selfish ends but a beneficent ruler shedding light and love around him. He is no longer an opportunist, but a Prophet with a fixed purpose, a man of strong will, undeviating in his consistency....
"Muhammad was the man of truth and fidelity, true in what he did, in what he spoke, in what he thought; always meant something, a man rather taciturn in speech, silent when there was nothing to be said, but pertinent, wise, sincere, when he did speak, always throwing light on the matter...
"A poor shepherd people roaming unnoticed in the deserts since the creation of the world; a hero Prophet was sent down to them with a word they could believe; see the unnoticed became world noticeable, within one century afterwards Arabia is at Granada on this end; at Delhi on that; glancing with valour and splendour and the light of genius, Arabia shines through long ages over a great section of the world."
George Bernard Shaw said:
"I have always held the religion of Muhammad in high estimation of its wonderful vitality. It is the only religion which appears to me to possess that assimilating capability to the changing phases of existence which can make itself appeal to everyone. I have prophesied about the faith of Muhammad that it would be acceptable to the Europe of today. The medieval ecelesiastics either through ignorance or bigotry painted Islam in the darkest colours. they were, in fact, trained to hate the man Muhammad and his religion. To them, Muhammad was anti-Christ. I have studied him-the wonderful man, and in my opinion, far from being an anti-Christ, he must be called the saviour of humanity. I believe that if a man like him were to assume dictatorship of the modern world, he would succeed in solving its problems in a way that would bring it the much needed peace and happiness. But to proceed, it was in the nineteenth century that honest thinkers like Carlyle, Gibbon and Goethe perceived intrinsic worth in the religion of Muhammad-already, even, at the present time many of our people have gone to his faith , and Islamization of Europe may be said to have begun.
Lamartine, the famous French historian, said:
"Philospoher, orator, apostle, legislator, warrior, conqueror of ideas, restorer of rational dogmas, of cult without images the founder of twenty terrestrial empires, of one spiritual empire, that is Muhammad. As regards all standards by which human greatness may be measured, we may well ask: Is there any man greater than he?''
Alfred Martin said in (In Great Religious Teachers of The East):
"Nor is anything in religious history more remarkable than the way in which Muhammad fitted his transfiguring ideas into the existing social system of Arabia. To his everlasting credit, it must be said that in lifting to a higher place of life the communities of his day and place, he achieved that which neither the Judaism nor Christianity of Medievel Arabia could accomplish. Nay more, in the fulfilment of that civilising work Muhammad rendered valuable service, not only to Arabia, but also to the entire world."
J.H. Denison said in (Emotion as the Basis of Civilisation) the following:
"In the fifth and sixth centuries the civilised world stood on the verge of a chaos. The old emotional cultures that had made civilisation possible, since they had given to men a sense of unity and of reverence for their rulers, had broken down and nothing had been found adequate to take their place...
"It seemed that the great civilisation which it had taken four thousand years to construct was on the verge of disintegration and that mankind was likely to return to that condition of barbarism where every tribe and sect was against the next, and law and order was unknown...
"The old tribal sanctions had lost their power. The new sanctions created by Christianity were working division and destruction instead of unity and order. It was a time fraught with tragedy. Civilisation, like a gigantic tree whose foliage had over arched the world and whose branches had borne the golden fruits of art and science and literature, stood tottering... rotted to the core.
"Was there any emotional culture that could be brought in togather mankind once more into unity and to save civilisation? It was among these Arab people that the man Muhammad was born who was to unite the whole known world of the east and south".
Sir William Muir said in (The Life of Muhammad):
"For few and simple were the precepts of Muhammad. His teaching had wrought a marvellous and mighty work. Never since the days when the primitive Christianity startled the world from its sleep and waged moral combat with heathenism had men seen the like arousing of spiritual life, the like faith that suffered sacrifices and took joyfully the spoiling of goods for conscience's sake.''
Johnson in (Oriental Religions) also said:
"Muhammad's thoroughly democratic conception of the divine government, the universality of his religious ideal, his simple humanity, all affiliate him with the modern world."
Sir Philip Gibbs said in( the Glory of Muhammad):
"Islam (meaning resignation), as the religion of Muhammad is properly called, has done more for the progress of civilisation and morality than any other faith which has animated the souls of men since the creation of this world. Through many centuries and at the present day it has been, and is, a power for good among hundreds of millions of the human race, and without its high moral code there is no doubt that the blackest barbarism and the most idolatrous worship would reign omnipotent where Allah and faith of nobility lead men to light."
Major A. G. Leonard said:
"If ever a man on this earth found Allah, if ever a man devoted his life to Allah's service with a good and great motive, it is certain that the Prophet of Arabia (Muhammad) is the man. Muhammad was not only the greatest but truest man that humanity has ever produced."
Sadhu T. L. Vasvani said:
"I salute Muhammad as one of the world's mighty heroes. Muhammad has been a world force, a mighty power of the uplift of many peoples."
Mahatma Gandhi said:
" When I closed the second volume of the Prophet's Biography', I was sorry that there was no more for me to read of that great life. I was more than ever convinced that it was not the sword that won a place for Islam in those days in the scheme of life. It was the rigid simplicity, the utter self - efacement of the Prophet, the scrupulous regard for pledges, his intense devotion to his friends and followers, his intrepidity, his fearlessness, his absolute trust in Allah and his own mission."
Bertram Thomas said:
"His moral teachings sprang from a pure and exaltedmind aflame with religious enthusiasm. From being a persecuted preacher exiled to Madina, he rose to political power. This he enjoyed only in the last few years of his life, and this he used for the spiritual and material welfare of Muslims.
Such indeed was the magnificence ol his good works that he died in debt, some of his belongings in pawn with a Jew-among them his only shield for which he obtained three measures of meal.
"He lived in great humility, performing the most menial tasks with his own hands; he kindled the fire, swept the floor, milked the ewes, patched his own garments and cobbled his own shoes.
"He laboured for the amelioration of the slaves' lot, liberating any that were presented to him."
Stanley Lane-Poole said:
"He who, standing alone, braved for years the hatred of his people is the same who was never the first to withdraw his hand from another's clasp; the beloved of children, who never passed a group of little ones without a smile from his wonderful eyes and a kind word for them, sounding all the kinder in that sweet-toned voice. He was one of those happy few who have attained the supreme joy of making one great truth their very life-spring. He was the messenger of the one God; and never to his life's end did he forget who he was, or the message which was the marrow of his being. He brought his tidings to his people with a grand dignity sprung from the consciousness of his high office, together with a most sweet humility whose roots lay in the knowledge of his own weakeness."
D. S. Margoliouth said:
"His humanity extended itself to the lower creation. He forbade the employment of living birds as targets for marksmen and remonstrated with those who ill-treated their camels... Foolish acts of cruelty which were connected with old superstitions were swept away by him...
No more was a dead man's camel to be tied to his tomb to perish of thrist and hunger. No more was the evil eye to be propitiated by the bleeding of a certain proportion of the herd. No more was the rain to be conjured by tying burning torches to the tails of oxen;... The manes and tails of horses were not to be cut, nor were asses to be branded."
In (The Ethics of the Great Religions) Gorham said:
"Sleeping one day under a palm-tree, Muhammad awoke suddenly to find an enemy named Du'thur standing over him with drawn sword. "O, Muhammad, who is there now to save thee?', cried the man. `Allah!', answered Muhammad. Du'thur, while trying to strike, stumbled and dropped his sword. Muhammad seizeit and cried in turn: "O, Du'thur, who is there now to save thee?'. `No one', eplied Du'thur.Then learn to be merciful', said Muhammad, and handed him back his weapon.Du'thur became one of his firmest friends."
Pierre Crabites said:
Muhammad was probably the greatest champion of women's rights the world has ever seen. Islam conferred upon the Muslim wife property rights and juridical status exactly the same as that of her husband. She is free to dispose of and manage her financial assets as she pleases, without let or hindrance from her husband.
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