Live Event: Protecting the Trust We Carry: Why Muslims Must Relearn Health, Medicine, and Survival in the Modern World
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with Hakim Shabaz Ahmed
Sunday, February 15th, 2026
at 10:00 AM Los Angeles/ 1:00 PM EST/ 6:00 PM GMT-London/ 9:00 PM Amman
If you haven’t registered for the event yet, please use this link to register.

This live discussion asks a bold but necessary question:
Has reviving, teaching, and spreading a principled, holistic, and time-tested approach to health—one that openly challenges modern medicine and exposes its harms through a proven record of healing even the most complex conditions—become a fard kifaya in our time?
In this event, we explore this question through the work and method of Hakim Shabaz, examining whether raising awareness, restoring confidence, and offering a clear, parallel path of healing is no longer optional—but a collective responsibility owed to the Ummah and to humanity at large.
In recent years, unfolding world events have shaken blind trust in many mainstream systems—politics, economics, banking, and global power structures. For many Muslims, this awakening has opened the door to questioning ideologies once accepted as unquestionable norms.
Medicine is one such domain. Yet unlike politics or finance, its consequences are intimate and immediate. It acts directly upon the human body, mind, and soul—shaping not only health outcomes, but one’s agency, discernment, and relationship with Allah, and one’s trust in the wisdom embedded in creation itself.
Many conscientious Muslims have long sensed that something is deeply wrong with modern medicine. And yet, despite this awareness, they often feel forced into it—out of fear, lack of viable alternatives, or the absence of a confident, principled, and proven parallel that can challenge Western medicine on its own terms.
What has been missing is not critique, but confidence; not suspicion, but a system—one that speaks the language of results, foundations, and lived outcomes, and demonstrates with clarity that another way is not only possible, but necessary.
This discussion invites a serious re-examination of responsibility, trust, and the revival of a healing tradition aligned with fitrah, faith, and lived reality.
