Heyat Foundation — Islamic octagram symbol representing gathering and light

Welcome to Heyat Foundation

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم This is a welcome from our community to yours. Heyat Foundation exists because a group of people decided that gathering — regularly, consistently, with intention — was not optional. That knowledge about the faith is not a luxury item to be fitted in when life allows. That the Ahlulbayt of the Holy Prophet ﷺ left us a complete guide, and that following it is a communal responsibility as much as a personal one. ...

January 1, 2025 · 3 min · Heyat Foundation
Geometric tree with roots and branches — representing legacy and future

What We Owe the Next Generation

At some point every community has to reckon with a simple question: are we building something that will outlast us? It is easy to focus on immediate needs — the program this weekend, the rent for this month, the logistics of this event. These things matter and they demand attention. But they can also become the whole horizon if we are not careful, and a community that only manages the present has no particular reason to expect a future. ...

March 13, 2026 · 2 min · Heyat Foundation
Chain of interlocked circles — representing continuity of tradition

On Keeping Our Gatherings Alive

Every community has its moments where things could go either way — where a program quietly fades or finds its footing and grows. These moments rarely announce themselves. They just pass, and you realize later which way things went. The gatherings held in the name of Ahlulbayt have survived across centuries and across continents. They have been held in basements, in living rooms, in hushed tones under circumstances we cannot fully imagine. The people who kept those gatherings alive did not always have the resources or the comfort or the stable community infrastructure we have access to now. They had conviction and they had each other. ...

November 7, 2025 · 2 min · Heyat Foundation
Radiant geometric star — representing light of knowledge

Knowledge Is Not a Luxury

We treat religious education as optional in a way we would never treat mathematics or language. A child who cannot read is considered to have a serious problem. A child who reaches adulthood not knowing who Imam Hussain (عليه السلام) was, or what the event of Ghadir means, or why we follow Ahlulbayt — that is somehow considered normal. It is worth sitting with that for a moment. The first word revealed to the Prophet ﷺ was Iqra — read, learn, engage with knowledge. This was not incidental. Islam arrived with a command to think, to seek, to understand. And yet for many of our families, Islamic learning occupies a distant place in the weekly schedule — if it appears at all. ...

August 22, 2025 · 2 min · Heyat Foundation