Parents must educate children about puberty: Jawadi

ISLAMABAD – Social restrictions and existing cultural taboos shun discussion about sensitive issues in Pakistan. Only 29 per cent girls and 41 per cent boys, therefore, have access to correct information about puberty and hygiene. The remaining millions, in their quest for knowledge, often seek information from unreliable sources, which makes them vulnerable to exploitation and life threatening diseases.
Prominent religious scholar Maulana Aftab Hussain Al Jawadi from Jamia Al-Kausar, Islamabd, in a statement issued here on Wednesday, stressed on the importance of parents educating their children and providing proper guidance about puberty.
“When adolescent boys and girls enter puberty and start getting young, it is the duty of their parents to guide them properly about these changes,” he said and added: “Parents must communicate openly with their children about the physiological changes of puberty and how it is a normal aspect of growing up.
They must also be informed about personal hygiene related issues.”
Maulana Jawadi also emphasised the role of teachers in imparting knowledge on sensitive personal issues.
“It is the responsibility of teachers as well to make them understand the emotional and psychological aspects of growing up. With this guidance, we can save all our future generations from moral deprivation.”
“Open and honest communication between parents, teachers and children about sensitive matters provides comfort and confidence to children in that delicate transitional period of growth.
Absence of such guidance causes anxiety, frustration and confusion and increases vulnerabilities to sexual abuse, exploitation and life-threatening diseases.
The lack of timely and proper information from the right sources also misleads the adolescent to wrong, illegitimate, immoral, exploiting and abusive sources of information and misconduct,” he concluded.

ePaper - Nawaiwaqt