BOB ABERNETHY, anchor:
During this month of Ramadan, Muslims traditionally listen
to the entire Qur'an recited in its original Arabic, part by
part, at prayers each night. But this year the members of
the Islamic Society of Northern Virginia had a problem. Most
of the adults there are from Pakistan and India and do not
speak Arabic. None could recite the whole Qur'an. So they
invited an Arabic-speaking imam from South Africa to come
lead them this month. When he arrived, however, for reasons
that have not been made public, U.S. officials turned him
back. That left the Virginia community with one day to find
a replacement. They canvassed their members with no luck,
until they remembered two of their teenage boys, one 13, one
16, who don't speak Arabic but who had memorized the Arabic
Qur'an. They put them to work.
UZAIR JAWED: I thought I wouldn't be able
to do it, but I knew that if I had someone helping me out,
it wouldn't be that hard.
AMAN CHHIPA: We would divide the part --
the section that we would have to do -- in half. He would do
half, and I would do the other half. In the Qur'an it said
to recite in a beautiful voice because that's how the
Prophet, peace be upon him, used to read.
JAWED: If you've been reading it for a
while, you just kind of learn it by yourself. You can make
up your own melody of your voice. The more beautiful voice
you have, the more the people will enjoy it. They'll want to
come.
CHHIPA: It takes some practice to make it
sound melodious with your regular reading strategy,
memorizing.
Teen Imam Leads Ramadan Prayers
Aman Chhipa at home.
Day to Day, October 19, 2006 · Two teenagers stepped in to lead Ramadan services this month when the Islamic Community Center of Northern Virginia could not find a cleric.
Aman Chhipa, a 13-year-old whose memorization of the Quran qualified him for the job, speaks with Alex Chadwick.




CHHIPA: Memorizing is just the first step.
We're going to learn how to speak Arabic and preach it to
the people. We might become Islamic scholars when we grow
up.