“It’s a night when you don’t remember Allah,” says Amber Rehman, 20, about Prom night. “As a Muslim, that’s very hurting and corrosive for the soul.”
The Prom is a yearly social event commemorating students’ completion of high school.
While this in itself may seem like a good reason to celebrate, other activities at the Prom indicate it’s not just about academic achievement.
Sex, drugs, rockn’ roll and lots of alcohol are four crucial elements of Prom night. But it doesn’t stop there. Ask Shaema Imam, 21, who attended her 1994 Prom.
“It’s not just the drinking, it’s not just the hotel room and sex part, it ‘s the whole atmosphere that’s created where alcohol, dancing and varying degrees of nudity are correlated with a good time,” says the McGill University student.
It is also big business.
“[The] Prom isn’t about North American society wanting its youth to turn into well-adjusted people via grad night,” says Imam. “In fact, this is a multimillion dollar business of selling clothes, accessories, make up, limousine services, food, alcohol, condoms. You need to realize what this is all about.”
Prom night often starts off with dinner at a hotel organized by the high school. But that’s tame compared to what happens afterwards.
Many of the students head off to clubs, where mixed dancing and plenty of alcohol and drugs are part of the scene.
“Once this clubbing starts, the true face of the Kaffir party is exposed,” says Imam “This part is the part not officially sanctioned by the high school.”
Imam says students in her graduating class rented a club called The Underground for the post-dinner part of the Prom. She says she was disgusted by the club scene and compared it to Hell, describing it as smoky, dark and unsafe.
The 22-year-old recounted how a fellow student became so drunken that when he saw Sakr the year after high school graduation, he kept insisting Sakr was in the limousine with him during Prom night.
Sakr did not even go to his Prom.
He discovered the details of the evening from his friends who went.
“Once they’re drunk your non-Muslims friends are no longer nice-people-who-happen-to-not-be-Muslims,” says Imam.
“This is the point at which you realize that there is a fundamental difference between you and them. You are a Muslim and they are willing participants in this aspect of North American culture. This is where your Fitrah really kicks in,” she says.
Alcohol was also one reason Ali Shayan, 20, did not go to his Prom.
“I didn’t go to the graduation or the prom because I had just started practicing [Islam],” he says. “The fact that there was alcohol and you had to go with a date, because of those reasons I didn’t want to go.”
But alcohol can lead to more than making a fool of yourself on the dance floor: it could lead to death. According to the group Mothers Against Drunk Driving (M.A.D.D.), in 1995, 48.7 percent of traffic fatalities that occurred during the first week of the prom were alcohol related.
“I was worried there would be fornication,” says Sakr, explaining why he did not attend his Prom.
He added youth losing their virginity on Prom night is one of the foci of the evening.
”It’s the night where you become an adult, supposedly,” he says.
Hotel rooms are rented, in most cases for this very purpose.
In particular, clubs are where students “practice all [those] ‘girl-guy’ moves,” according to Imam and the situation is even more dangerous because they are most often under the influence of alcohol.
“There’s a whole building of an anticipatory culture around ‘the night’,” explains Imam.
Indeed, youth are bombarded through magazines, websites, television sitcoms, advertisements, and general peer pressure to participate in this most “essential” of teenage rituals.
Even parents who are strict with their children tend to loosen up for Prom night.
“This is the pinnacle of the night for you to go out and do what you want and non-Muslim parents let their children do whatever they want [that night],” says Sakr.
“The whole year, people were getting their licenses, deciding on what clothes they wanted to wear. Reserving their appointments six months in advance for the hair salon,” he adds.
But the experience of and letdown from the Prom are much greater.
“It’s almost impossible for any experience to live up to that build-up,” says Imam.
“This whole night there’s [an] aura of high class escapism, but the day before the Prom and the day after you’re still the same, unsure teen,” she says, adding it makes it seem almost like you have nothing to look forward to anymore.
”The next morning I went home on the city bus,” she says. “It’s almost like turning back into Cinderella’s pumpkin.”
The peer pressure to go to the Prom is intense.
“I had to be very firm and have a very forward opinion on it,” says Rehman about telling her friends she was not going to participate. “If I let myself, I could have been persuaded.”
Peer pressure is often the deciding factor for a Muslim youth about whether to go to the Prom or not.
“It depends on how dear you hold your non-Muslim friends,” says Sakr. “I would say most guys would follow the group. “
While on the surface, this may seem acceptable, the reality is very different.
“You’re seeing people you’ve spent the last five years [in some parts of Canada, high school is for five years] of your life with in their worst behavior, and you’re rationalizing it,” says Sakr of this kind of reasoning.
“It’s really hard to have a halfway thing,” says Imam.
“There’s no way your Muslim child can just go there and be a wallflower and not be affected,” she warns parents.
”Once you’re there, you can’t say ‘I refuse to participate in your evil kind of entertainment’,” says Imam, adding that most youth would probably feel it’s rude to leave.
“If you think that you can protect yourself, then you’re entrusting yourself to your own weakness,” says Rehman. She adds that Allah warns against even going near Zina. With the Prom, you’re not only going near that, but also near alcohol and drugs.
“You’re bearing witness to the Haram and ask yourself, if you were to die there, how would you face Allah, that this is the last time you would be with your friends?” asks Sakr.
“Many Muslim youth may be tempted to think that this night is their last foray into the Jahiliyyah culture,” says Imam.
But the result of this approach could be deadly: it could mean never coming back to Islam.
Or, judging from the statistics on traffic fatalities, not coming back alive.
“When I weigh the pros and cons of what happened, my Deen is still here and if I had had fun that night I would have forgotten easily,” says Rehman.
Although Sakr says the day of the prom, he just stayed home, was bored, and “sort of regretted the fun that I could have had,” he later found out almost everyone at his Prom was drunk, there was too much craziness in the hotels, and some people got kicked out.
The Prom is a major test for Muslim youth. It represents the struggle against some of the very basic elements of what is defined as a “good time” in North American teenage culture.
Muslim parents and communities need
to work together to recognize and help the youth fight against these pressures.
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