Recordings of talks and workshops that Ustadha Dr. Rania Awaad has delivered at the Muslim Community Center - East Bay in Pleasanton, CA.
- More from Dr. Rania: http://mcceastbay.org/rania
- More Dr. Rania's Friday Evening Halaqas: http://www.mcceastbay.org/womens-halaqa
- LinkTree for Dr. Rania Awaad: https://linktr.ee/drraniaawaad
Ustadha Rania Awaad
Shaykah Dr. Rania Awaad M.D., is a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the Stanford University School of Medicine where she is the Director of the Stanford Muslim Mental Health & Islamic Psychology Lab as well as Stanford University's Affiliate Chaplain and Affiliate Professor of Islamic Studies. In the community, she serves as the President and Co-Founder of Maristan, a holistic mental health nonprofit serving Muslim communities, and the Director of The Rahmah Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to educating Muslim women and girls. Prior to studying medicine, she pursued classical Islamic studies in Damascus, Syria, and holds certifications (ijaza) in the Qur’an, Islamic Law, and other branches of the Islamic Sciences. Follow her @Dr.RaniaAwaaid
Raised in the U.S., Ustadha Rania Awaad began her formal study of the traditional Islamic sciences when her parents permitted her to travel to Damascus, Syria, at 14. Her desire to continue studying the Deen resulted in multiple trips back to Damascus, interspersed between her high school, college, and medical studies. She was honored to receive Ijazah (authorization to teach) several branches of the Shari’ah sciences at the hands of many renowned scholars, including many female scholars. She has received Ijazah to teach Tajwid in the Hafs and Warsh recitations from the late eminent Syrian scholar Shaykh Abu Hassan al-Kurdi. In addition to completing several advanced texts of the Shafi’i madhhab, she is licensed to teach texts of Maliki fiqh, Adab, and Ihsan. Currently, Ustadha Rania teaches online and local classes for The Rahmah Foundation, Rabata. She is on the faculty of Zaytuna College, where she teaches courses in Shafi’i fiqh and women’s issues in fiqh. She has also helped develop and co-direct the Tajweed and Hifz program.
Ustadha Rania is also a medical doctor with a specialty in Psychiatry. She completed her Psychiatric residency and fellowship training at Stanford University, where she is currently on the faculty as a Clinical Instructor in the Stanford Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences department. Her medical interests include addressing mental health care concerns in the Muslim community- particularly that of Muslim women and girls. She has been awarded grants from the NIMH (National Institute of Mental Health) to research this topic and has presented her findings at several medical conferences. Other ongoing endeavors include compiling manuscripts addressing female-related mental health and medical issues from a fiqh-oriented perspective. She is the Director of the Rahmah Foundation, a non-profit organization that teaches Muslim women and girls traditional Islamic knowledge. In this capacity, she also heads the Murbbiyah Mentoring Program, which trains young women to teach and mentor Muslim girls and teens. Ustadha Rania is both a wife and a mother; she has been counseling and teaching women classes on Tajwid, Shafi’i Fiqh, Ihsan, marriage, and raising children since 1999.
Learn more about Dr. Rania and her work at http://med.stanford.edu/psychiatry/re...
Dr. Awaad was born in Cairo, Egypt, but moved to New York at age three because her mother was recruited as a translator for the United Nations in Manhattan, and her father was a physician.
Dr. Awaad is "particularly passionate about uncovering the historical roots of mental health care in the Islamic intellectual heritage" ("Profile, Rania Awaad, MD"). Dr. Awaad was the first female professor of Islamic law at Zaytuna College in Berkeley, California. While at Zaytuna, she taught Shafi'i jurisprudence, women's jurisprudential issues, and the Quran. She pursued her psychiatric residency training at Stanford, where she also completed a postdoctoral clinical research fellowship with the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH).
Dr. Awaad is recognized nationwide as a leader in Muslim mental health and has been invited to present her work at national conventions in Washington, DC by Presidents Obama and Biden, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), Health & Human Services (HHS), and Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). Dr. Awaad successfully established the first Muslim Mental Health Community Advisory Board (BAMMH CAB) in the US. In addition, she has established multiple Muslim mental health clinics as well as custom-tailored clinical and educational training programs for clinicians and religious and community leaders