📜 Seerah · Kids & Teens

The Greatest Story Ever Told —
Lived by the Greatest Man Who Ever Lived

Walk your child through the life of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ — his childhood, his kindness, his struggles, his victories — taught chapter by chapter as living stories by a caring Ustad. Not dry textbook history. The Seerah told the way Muslim children have heard it for fourteen centuries: warmly, vividly, and with lessons they will carry for the rest of their lives.

Beginner → Intermediate Age 6–16 Live 1-on-1 Free Trial Class Female Teachers Available
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Why Every Muslim Child Should Learn Seerah

The Seerah (biography) of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ is not just history. For a Muslim child, it is the answer to a question the world is constantly trying to answer for them: who do I want to be like? Cartoons, influencers, and football players all compete for that role in a child’s mind. The Seerah gives them someone real, someone Allah Himself called the best of creation.

When a child knows the Prophet ﷺ — not as a name in a Dua but as a person, with a childhood and a mother and friends and feelings — something changes in the way they pray, the way they treat their siblings, and the way they handle being teased at school. They have a model now. A real one.

At IqraExpert, our Ustads teach Seerah the way it was meant to be transmitted — through storytelling. Each session is a chapter in the greatest life ever lived, told with warmth, care, and the moral weight every event carries. Not dry textbook facts your child will forget. Stories they will retell to their own children one day, InshaAllah.

لَّقَدْ كَانَ لَكُمْ فِى رَسُولِ ٱللَّهِ أُسْوَةٌ حَسَنَةٌ

“Indeed in the Messenger of Allah you have an excellent example.”

— Quran, Surah Al-Ahzab 33:21 — the ayah that defines why we study Seerah.
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The Eight Eras of the Seerah

The Seerah is taught in eight chapters — from the world before the Prophet ﷺ was born to his final farewell. Your child experiences it as a continuous story, with each chapter building naturally on the last.

01
Before the Prophet ﷺ — The Age of Jahiliyyah
The state of pre-Islamic Arabia, the family of Banu Hashim, the destruction of Abraha’s army in the Year of the Elephant, and the world that was waiting for guidance.
Pre-Islamic Arabia Year of the Elephant Banu Hashim
02
The Childhood and Youth of the Prophet ﷺ
The Prophet’s birth in Makkah, his foster mother Halimah Sa’diyya, the opening of the chest, growing up as Al-Ameen (the Trustworthy), and his marriage to Khadijah رضي الله عنها — the first woman to support him.
Halimah Sa’diyya Al-Ameen Khadijah رضي الله عنها
03
The First Revelation and Early Islam
The Cave of Hira, the first ayahs of the Quran (“Iqra Bismi Rabbika”), the first Muslims (Khadijah, Abu Bakr, Ali, Zaid), three years of secret preaching, and the persecution of early believers like Bilal and Sumayyah.
Cave of Hira First Muslims Bilal & Sumayyah
04
The Trials of Makkah
The boycott of Banu Hashim (three years in the valley), the Year of Sorrow when Khadijah and Abu Talib both passed away, the rejection at Taif and the Dua that followed, and the miraculous Night Journey — Isra wal Mi’raj.
Boycott Year of Sorrow Isra wal Mi’raj
05
The Hijrah and Building Madinah
The migration from Makkah to Madinah, the cave of Thawr, the first Masjid in Quba, brotherhood between the Muhajireen and the Ansar, and the Constitution of Madinah — the document that built the first Islamic society.
Hijrah Quba Masjid Muhajireen & Ansar
06
The Major Battles and Treaties
The Battle of Badr (313 against 1000), the Battle of Uhud and the lesson of obedience, the Battle of Khandaq and the trench of Salman al-Farsi, the Treaty of Hudaybiyah, and finally the Conquest of Makkah — when the Prophet ﷺ forgave those who had hurt him.
Badr · Uhud · Khandaq Hudaybiyah Conquest of Makkah
07
The Character of the Prophet ﷺ
How he treated children — sitting on the ground to play with them. How he treated animals — telling a man not to overburden his camel. How he treated his wives, his enemies, and the poor. The Akhlaaq that earned him the title Rahmatan lil-Alameen — a Mercy to all the worlds.
Kindness Forgiveness Rahmatan lil-Alameen
08
The Farewell Sermon and Lessons for Today
The final Hajj, the Farewell Sermon at Arafat (the human rights charter Muslims received 1400 years ago), the Prophet’s ﷺ passing, and how every event of the Seerah applies to a Muslim child’s daily life — bullying, honesty, parents, friendship, prayer.
Farewell Hajj Lessons for Today Daily Application
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How We Teach Seerah at IqraExpert

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Storytelling, Not Lecturing

Children remember stories — not bullet points. Our Ustads narrate Seerah events vividly, with details that bring scenes to life. Your child will be able to retell the story of the Cave of Hira like they were there.

Narrative method
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Live Discussion, Not Monologue

Every class is interactive. The Ustad asks the child questions: “What do you think the Prophet ﷺ felt at that moment?” Children think, answer, and remember more deeply because they are part of the story.

1-on-1 only
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Lessons That Apply Today

Every event ends with a “today” question: How does this apply to you? When the Prophet ﷺ forgave his enemies, what does that mean for how you handle a friend who hurt you? Real, daily, relevant.

Akhlaaq-focused
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Age-Appropriate Pacing

A 7-year-old gets the story simply, with vivid imagery. A 14-year-old gets the historical depth, the political context, and the deeper lessons. Same Seerah, different telling — matched to your child.

Age 6 to 16
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Course Details

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Duration

6–12 Months Complete Seerah

From birth to passing — the full Seerah taught chronologically. Pace adjusted to the child’s age and comprehension. Younger children take longer; older students move faster through context.

Schedule

2–3 Classes per Week · 30–40 Minutes

Runs alongside Quran and Islamic Studies classes perfectly. Flexible morning, evening, or weekend timings to match your child’s school schedule.

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Prerequisites

None Required

Suitable for children with zero prior Islamic knowledge. Basic Islamic Studies for Kids helps but is not required. The Seerah itself teaches everything else along the way.

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Fees

From ₹2,999 / Month

Free trial class included — no payment required. Sibling and family discounts available. View full pricing →

💡 Sisters & girls: The Seerah course is fully available with certified female Alimahs through our Sisters Private Classes programme — Pardah-friendly, camera-optional, completely private.

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Curriculum Reviewed By

Mufti Mohammed Salim Qasmi — Founder and Academic Lead at IqraExpert
Mufti Mohammed Salim Qasmi
Founder & Academic Lead · Darul Uloom Deoband Graduate
Mufti Salim Qasmi personally reviews IqraExpert’s Seerah curriculum to ensure every event is sourced from authentic Sahih references — Sahih al-Bukhari, Sahih Muslim, Ibn Hisham’s Sirat, and the works of Ibn Kathir. Every Ustad assigned to teach Seerah is trained by him to deliver the story with the warmth, accuracy, and Adab the Seerah deserves.
Darul Uloom Deoband Mufti (Ifta) 20+ Years Teaching Authentic Sources

Common Parent Questions

What age is this Seerah course suitable for?
The course is designed for children aged 6 to 16. The content and storytelling style adjust based on age. Younger children (6–9) get simpler, vivid storytelling with focus on the kindness and miracles. Older students (10–16) get more historical depth, the political context of Madinah, and deeper analysis of the Prophet’s ﷺ leadership decisions.
How is this different from the general Islamic Studies course?
Islamic Studies for Kids is a broad foundation — Aqeedah, Fiqh, Akhlaaq, daily Duas, and Adab. This Seerah course is a dedicated, in-depth study of the complete life story of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ from birth to passing. The two complement each other beautifully — many parents enroll their child in both.
Are there female teachers available for this course?
Yes. Certified female Alimahs are available through the Sisters Private Classes programme — at the same fee, with the same Seerah curriculum. For girls and women who prefer or require a female teacher, this is the default. Led by Dr. Alima Faiza Salim, our Head of Sisters Programme.
What sources do you teach the Seerah from?
Our Seerah curriculum is drawn from authentic classical sources — Sirat Ibn Hisham, the Seerah works of Ibn Kathir, the Sahih hadith collections of Bukhari and Muslim, and contemporary scholarly works like Ar-Raheeq al-Makhtum (The Sealed Nectar). We do not use unverified stories or weak narrations. Every event taught is from authenticated sources.
Will my child be able to retell the stories at home?
That is the goal — and yes, regularly. Our storytelling teaching method is designed for retention. After most classes, parents tell us their child came home and retold the entire Seerah event at the dinner table. The Ustad also gives small retelling tasks at the end of major chapters so your child can practice articulating what they have learned.
Can my child take Seerah and Quran classes together?
Absolutely — and we recommend it. Seerah and Quran classes complement each other deeply. Many ayahs of the Quran make perfect sense only when you know the event of the Seerah they were revealed about. Children who study both together develop the strongest connection to their Deen.
What if my child misses a class?
Missed classes can be rescheduled within the same month — up to 3 times. Just inform your Ustad or our team on WhatsApp in advance and we will arrange a make-up session. The Seerah is taught in continuous chapters, so every missed class is fully covered before the story moves forward.
Is the free trial class a real lesson?
Yes — completely real, completely free. The Ustad assesses your child’s age and current Islamic background, then teaches a full Seerah session — usually starting with the birth of the Prophet ﷺ and his early life. Your child walks away having genuinely learned something. No payment, no commitment, no high-pressure sales.

Let Your Child Meet the Prophet ﷺ

Book a free Seerah trial class. Your child will hear their first chapter of the greatest life ever lived — and walk away knowing a real hero who lived 1400 years ago and is still teaching the world how to be human.