Articles

12 Ideas for Teens to Help Reduce Poverty





Family and Society Team


31 January, 2022


What can you, a teenager who doesn’t have a lot of money or resources, do to help the poor and needy? More than you think! Most young adults are blessed with the creativity and intelligence to find ways to help others despite limited resources. If you don’t think you can make a difference – wrong! Poverty has actually been on the decrease. Perhaps this is due to globalization and our ability to learn about and fight poverty more effectively.





Here are some tips that can perhaps jump start your creative process, helping you to help others:





1- Give a portion of your allowance each week to a person in need or a cause that supports them


How much is your allowance or your salary from your part-time job? Not much, you might say. The great thing about giving though is that in about 99 percent of cases, you are not restricted to how much you can give to help the poor and needy.





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That means for instance, instead of dishing out a dollar a day for a can of soda from the vending machine at school or work, maybe you can save this money two days of the week. Then give this money to the Zakat and Sadaqa committee of your mosque, a poor person you know in your neighborhood, a local soup kitchen or to a worthy cause abroad.





2- Encourage your parents to pay Zakat


Zakat is something too many Muslims neglect. If you are eligible to give Zakat, you must pay. Not eligible? Ask your parents about Zakat and if they pay, how and to whom. If they do not give Zakat, respectfully and politely emphasize to them the importance of this necessary pillar of Islam and encourage them to start paying it. Use wisdom and beautiful preaching.





3- Encourage a family Sadaqa (charity) project


Get the whole family to pitch in at least once a month to a worthy cause by organizing a family Sadaqa project.





Call a family meeting (if you’ve never had one of these, this is a great time to start) and discuss your idea. Then come to an agreement on how everyone can help the poor. It could be contributing a set amount a week as a group with Dad giving the money to the Masjid after Friday prayers or setting up a box somewhere in the house where family members can privately donate. You all decide.





4- Talk about it with your friends


What are the first steps in finding solutions to problems? Du`aa’ (supplication) then brainstorming and discussion. At your next youth group meeting, put the difficulties of the poor and needy in your community on the agenda.





Simply discuss and brainstorm. You don’t have to come up with a plan all at once. But discussing this will start the process and keep it in people’s minds. If you don’t have a youth group, get your friends together.





Instead of having the usual hang out time one day, substitute this with a formal meeting. Now you have a youth group that can do this exercise.





5- Visit a part of town with low-income residents


How many big cities have “poor quarters”? Almost every single one. Sometimes, we need to see the reality of poverty right in front of us to really believe it’s there, especially if we live in a financially well-off part of a city.





Go with your youth group to visit these areas. You don’t have to necessarily bring money or food for them (although that wouldn’t be a bad idea). Research the area, find out how it came to be like that. Prepare yourself for an eye-opening experience. This may be where you find the organization you want to give to or work with.





6- Do a class presentation on poverty


Stumped about what to do for a school assignment? Why not talk about the plight of the poor in your community. Do your research thoroughly. Get statistics on poverty, real stories from books and perhaps even video- or audio taped interviews of the poor and homeless. Show the human face of poverty. Follow the presentation up with a class collection for the poor.





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7- Don’t just collect money


There are plenty of basic necessities that people have to meet. Some people can’t afford new shoes. So hold a shoe drive (some teens have already done this). Others cannot afford clothing. Hold a clothing drive. Collect the material, arrange for cars, vans or trucks to transport it to where it’s needed, then make sure the material is properly distributed.





8- Write about poverty


Have you got a knack for writing? Then write about poverty in your school newspaper or on your social media. Educate your student body and followers not just with words, but photos too, if possible. If you’ve visited a poor part of the city (see tips above), then you have plenty of material to write about.





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9- Write about Zakat and Sadaqa in your Masjid newsletter or website


Does your Masjid have a newsletter or website? If so, dedicate some space to the topic of Zakat and Sadaqa, and how they help the poor and the needy. You can interview an Imam to get the basics straight. You can also include various charitable causes readers can give their money to locally to help the poor and needy. If you don’t have a Muslim youth newsletter or masjid website, maybe this can be your fuel to start one.





10- Put the information on social media


If you put the above-mentioned newsletter or at least some of the articles on social media, you’ll probably have more young people reading it than if you limited the information to print only. You could even make this a group project, running social media for your masjid or group’s activities.





11- Collect money in your group


After your next group meeting, pass around a box to collect donations for the poor and needy. Better yet, make this a weekly practice. Make one person responsible for collecting the money and sending it off after consulting everyone on which cause it should be sent for.





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12- Organize a youth seminar on poverty


Get a youth-friendly imam or community speaker to come and talk about how Islam has successfully fought against poverty in the past and can continue to do so in the present. Or maybe this will a talk you can give based on your research paper. Then, after the lecture, hold a workshop with participants and come up with 21 ideas of how the audience and Muslim teens in general can help fight poverty.





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What ever you chose do to, remember that not only does every little bit help, but it’s our Islamic responsibility to do something. Who knows, you may even find your life passion in social justice and charity work.



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