niversal
Chaplaincy
Become a Ḥakīm / chaplain: Mercy for all people
Level I focuses on refining chaplain-formation, reflections, and developing basic skills:
Unit 1: Refining our Awareness
Unit 2: Refining our Characters
Level II focuses on advancing chaplain formation, reflections, and competencies:
Unit 3: Refining our self-expressions
Unit 4: Refining our Actions
General Course Outlines
- Introduction to Pastoral Care and Chaplaincy
- Spiritual & Professional Development of the Chaplain
- Theories in Human Development and Personality
- Spiritual Care for multi-cultural communities
- Professional Ethics for Chaplaincy
- Methodologies of Spiritual Assessment
- Understanding Grief and Dying
- Crisis Intervention
- Conflict Resolution
- Forgiveness and Reconciliation in the Healing Process
- Psychology of Sufism
- Philosophy of Mysticism in Spiritual Care
- Sexuality and Spiritual Health
- Spiritual Care for Sexual Trauma
- Providing Spiritual Care for LGBTQ
- Qur’anic Hermeneutics
- Hadith Sciences
- Principals of Jurisprudence
- Fiqh for minorities
- Practical Application of Fiqah in Chaplaincy
- Sacred Art in spiritual care
Program Outcomes
Hakim-Formation:
309.1 to develop students’ awareness of themselves as ministers/hakims and of the ways, their ministry affects individuals.
309.2 to develop students' awareness of how their attitudes, values, assumptions, strengths, and weaknesses affect their ministry care.
309.3 to develop students’ ability to engage and apply the support, confrontation, and clarification of the peer group for the integration of personal attributes and Hakima functioning.
Hakim-Competence:
309.4 to develop students’ awareness and understanding of how persons, social conditions, systems, and structures affect their lives and the lives of others and how to address effectively these issues through their ministry.
309.5 to develop students’ skills in providing intensive and extensive spiritual care and counseling to individuals.
309.6 to develop students' ability to make effective use of their religious/spiritual heritage, theological understanding, and knowledge of the behavioral sciences and applied clinical ethics in their spiritual care of persons and groups.
309.7 to teach students the Hakima role in professional relationships and how to work effectively as a spiritual care provider, and a member of a multidisciplinary team.
309.8 to develop students’ capacity to use one’s theological, philosophical, and spiritual perspectives in ministering, teaching, engaging in interfaith dialogues, providing spiritual care, and spiritually counseling leaders, and managers.
Hakim-Reflection:
309.9 to develop students’ understanding and ability to apply the scientific method of learning.
309.10 to develop students' abilities to use both individual and group supervision for personal and professional growth, including the capacity to evaluate one’s ministry.
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Unit1 Outline
I. Refining Self-Awareness
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Getting to know one another: Sharing our lives’ stories:
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Understanding what formed our personalities and made us who we are today.
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Know your teachers: Amany & Rifqa will share their lives’ stories.
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Introduction:
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The difference of the Ḥakīma’s work from psychologists, counselors, social workers, and life coaches.
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The difference between a regular conversation and a conversation with a Ḥakīma.
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Methodologies of spiritual assessment.
Understanding our feelings: (based on the vocabularies in the Holy Qur’an for feelings):
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The Seven Levels of Anger: causes, purpose, and cures.
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The Seven Levels of Desires: causes, purpose, and cures.
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The Seven Levels of Fear: causes, purpose, and cures.
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The Seven Levels of Sadness: causes, purpose, and cures.
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The Seven Levels of Joy: causes, purpose, and cures.
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The Spiritual Purpose of Relationships:
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The Epistemic tools of Acquiring Knowledge:
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Senses
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Feelings
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Rationality
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Imagination
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Intuition
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Sharing Midterm Self-Evaluation in class: Every student must submit a midterm self-evaluation report, and answer by answering questions to show their Hakim role formation, competency, and personal reflections on their participation in class with clients, peers, and supervisors.
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The role of analogies in self-reflection and in raising self-awareness
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Grief and Loss: Understanding and intervention
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Crisis: Understanding & Intervention
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Death & Dying
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Facilitating end-of-life reflections.
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Providing spiritual care for those who are afraid of death.
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Helping in explaining Advanced Directives and life will.
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Understanding Groups Dynamics
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Final Reflections - Sharing End of Unit Self-Evaluation: Every student must submit an end unit self-evaluation report, and answer by answering questions to show their Hakim role formation, competency, and personal reflections on their participation in class with clients, peers, and supervisors.
Unit 2 Outline
II. Refining Our Characters
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Understanding the spiritual purpose and the meaning of sexuality
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Providing spiritual care for the sexually assaulted, abused, and harassed
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Providing spiritual care for LGBTQ
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Providing Spiritual Care for pornography addicts
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Providing Spiritual Care for Parents/Guardians
Character Building: Understanding Virtues & Ethical Theories
1- Revenge - Mitigating harm - Subservience
2- Diffidence – Modesty - Conceit
3- Extravagance – Generosity – Miserliness
4- Arrogance – Dignity – Worthlessness
5- Indulgence – Restrain – Deprivation
6- Recklessness – Courage – Cowardliness
7- Wastefulness – Frugality – Parsimony
8- Circumespection – Cautiousness – injudiciousness
9- Speculation – Intuition - Overthinking
10- Backbiting – Consulting – Helplessness
11- Impulsiveness - Patience – Passivity
12- Bribing – Gifting – Unappreciation
13- Compliance – Pardoning – Cynicism
14- Carelessness – Caring – Intruding
15- Indecisiveness - Confidence – Presumptuousness
16- Wishful Thinking - Hope – Despair
17- Boastfulness – Speaking of one’s blessings - Disparaging
18- Gloominess - Cheerfulness – Facetiousness
19- Envy – Aspiration – Apathy
20- Agony – Sadness – Indifference
21- Dictatorship - Leadership – Subordination
22- Love with Allah - Love in Allah – Hate
23- Dependency – Trusting – Independency
24- Rudeness - Politeness – Timidity
25- Scolding – Advising – Ignoring
26- Rushing – Initiating – Procrastinating
27- Flattering – Thankfulness – Ungratefulness
28- Lust – Desire - Celibacy
29- Greed – Enterprising – Inactiveness
30- Bias – Fairness - Unconcern
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Sharing Midterm Self-Evaluation in class: Every student must submit a midterm self-evaluation report, and answer by answering questions to show their Hakim role formation, competency, and personal reflections on their participation in class with clients, peers, and supervisors.
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Final Reflections - Sharing End of Unit Self-Evaluation: Every student must submit end unit self-evaluation report, and answer by answering questions to show their Hakim role formation, competency, and personal reflections on their participation in class with clients, peers, and supervisors.
Unit 3 Outline
III. Refining Our Expressions
Art as a Tool for Spiritual Care & Enlightenment
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The Art of Living: Witnessing The Beautiful Names of God
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Reflections on The Beautiful Names & Qualities of Allah and their empowerment of the human beings' qualities.
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Sacred Geometry & Mandalas as Meditative and Emotional Healing Tool
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Islamic Art and Spirituality.
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Colors and Their Spiritual Meanings, and emotional healing qualities.
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Poetry as Spiritual Meditation and its Emotional healing Quality.
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Poetry in Palliative Care
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Islam and Music in Spiritual Healing ”
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Vocal Music Therapy for Chronic Pain
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Therapeutic Storytelling
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The World of Imagination and the Concept of Space.
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The Significance of the Void in Islamic Art & its Thurabetic Effect.
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The Art of Rising Above Trivialities
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Midterm Self-Evaluation.
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Symbols and Signs in Islamic Architecture
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Substance and Sustenance in Space
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The Spiritual Message of Islamic Calligraphy.
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Calligraphy and meditation for stress reduction.
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Painting and its therapeutic and meditative effects.
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Art role in self-care.
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Sufi Dance & Body Movements Spiritual Meditative and healing effect.
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Acting and Role Playing and its Spiritual Healing and Meditative effect.
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Final Reflections - Sharing End of Unit Self-Evaluation: Every student must submit an end unit self-evaluation report, and answer by answering questions to show their Hakim role formation, competency, and personal reflections on their participation in class with clients, peers, and supervisors.