@AlhamdulillahiRabbalalameen ยท highโ view I think it says more about a person if they judge someone for their attire than anything. I respect this sister and was just thinking how she was so respectful of others and their choice and speaking up for the Muslims, until the niqab comment. This was so sad to hear. For me, my niqab helps keep me balanced internally alhamdullilah. It makes me content with who I am and not feel like I have to seek the approval of others. It make me constantly God conscious and aware of my actions. A reminder that I represent Allah swt and His religion before myself; pushing my own vanity to the side and also protecting myself. Each to their own, of course. Those of my niqabi friends are beautiful, calm, peaceful, kind individuals - and if you ever have the chance of getting to know a niqabi, you'll see for yourself. But that's the beauty, you only get to get to know us under the right circumstance (for us) Please understand what this sisters said is her own opinion and she's clearly been exposed to the cultural viewpoint of Islam as opposed to the Authentic Teachings. Here's to hoping people are learning to think for themselves and look beyond what's in front of them
Why: Thoughtful, generous critique from a niqabi Muslim who felt genuinely hurt by Rola's niqab comment โ represents the largest single comment cluster (26.3%). 71 likes. A warm public reply here validates an underrepresented perspective without throwing Rola under the bus, and could defuse a lot of the criticism in the thread.
Draft replyThank you for taking the time to write this so thoughtfully โ you've added something the video didn't capture, and I think everyone reading this thread is better for it. Rola shared her personal experience, but that's one window into a very wide house.
i found it so disrespectful how they were talking about the woman in niqab that walked by. if you believe in freedom, you should defend every person's right to wear what they want as long as it's not harming anyone. i don't wear the niqab but i wouldn't EVER discriminate against a woman who does. how rude. and stop labelling muslim women as "liberal" or "non-liberal"
Why: Sharp, fair criticism with 52 likes that zeroes in on a specific moment many viewers flagged. Addressing this directly (and honestly) could turn a criticism thread into a positive conversation about the limits of any single interview.
Draft replyThat's a fair point and I hear you โ the framing around the woman who walked by wasn't my finest moment, and I appreciate you calling it out. My goal is always to let people speak for themselves, not to frame them for the viewer.
20:42 I wanted to highlight her statement. Maybe in SOME Arab countries, wearing Niqab is more cultural, but there are so many women who wear niqab for the sole purposes of getting closer to God and do it solely striving for His pleasure. There are so many black muslims, Bangladeshi, Pakistani, Arab, etc Muslims that wear it for religious reasons. 21:16 & 21:26 break my heart, that she would take someone from a completely different faith over a Muslim sister who wears niqab. This is the type of thinking, that creates the divisiveness against Muslims that choose to practice outloud instead of blend in and only recognize Islam within the confort of their private homes. Very sad, Ya Rabb. Also, deciding to visit a masjid without a headscarf
Why: Cites exact timestamps, represents a real theological argument (not just offense), and speaks to global Muslim audience beyond Arab culture โ exactly the nuance the video's comment threads need anchored. Good thread to pin a reply on.
Draft replyYou've put the finger on something real here โ Rola's experience is Arab-American and specific to her community, and the video doesn't always make that frame clear enough. I'm already thinking about how a follow-up conversation with a niqabi woman could add this dimension.
I'd love to see you interview the younger generation like teenagers and college students from the same community!
Why: 585 likes โ the single most-liked actionable suggestion in the thread. A quick acknowledgment turns a viewer into a collaborator and signals to the algorithm that the creator reads comments.
Draft replyThis is genuinely on my list โ I met a few college students in Dearborn that day and regret not filming them. Watch this space.
Thank you Rola and Peter โค๏ธ I'm a Muslim woman raised in Australia, I was blessed to wear hijab at 45 and couldn't care less how people judge me, my body My choice โค๏ธ
Why: 899 likes โ the top comment. A devoted, emotionally generous commenter who put her own story on the line. Replying here has the highest visibility payoff of any comment in the thread.
Draft replyThank you for sharing that โ 'blessed to wear hijab at 45' is such a powerful way to put it. Rola would love hearing this, I'm sure.
Why do you avoid knowledgeable muslims? your video with the dinner group of 12 muslims was kinda good..though it was dissapointing (maybe intentional) that you didn't even talk to the convert men, the lecturer of mosque and the straight grey bearded guy(you talked to them only once)...the lecturer and the grey beard were the knowledgeable ones yet peter avoided them the most...(or cut out their parts of video) this is quite weird that you find out weirdest combos of muslims...like a niqabi muslim who participates in other faiths religious activities..or this lady who prays 5 times a day yet smokes shisha...or some of the saudi guys were quite obvious that they were lying (because me and my family members visit saudi on a regular basis)... i am seriously doubting the honesty of this channel.. i am suspecting that this channel has an political agenda..
Why: Accusation of political agenda with specific examples โ if left unanswered it seeds doubt in new viewers. Addressing it plainly and without defensiveness is the highest-leverage move here; the comment has enough specificity that a genuine reply won't look like damage control.
Draft replyNo agenda โ the editing reality is that a six-hour day compresses into 30 minutes and a lot of great people get cut, including the grey-bearded gentleman you mentioned who was genuinely fascinating. The 'unusual' combinations you're pointing to are just what I find in the world when I look honestly.
07:30 I see what you're saying but actually, in Islam the mother is always the most important element of the family, not just in Ramadan
Why: 252 likes. A polite, timestamp-specific correction from someone who clearly watched carefully. Acknowledging it shows the channel takes accuracy seriously and rewards attentive viewers.
Draft replyThat's a fair and important clarification โ thank you. The hadith about paradise being beneath the mother's feet is one of the most recognisable in all of Islam, and I should have let Rola expand on it more.
A little comment on your closing remarks. You didn't give us an angle "into islam", but into the muslim community. This often gets confused and can become quite problematic (maybe not in this case).
Why: 145 likes. A sharp, precise distinction that goes to the heart of the whole series' framing โ the kind of intellectual pushback that elevates comment sections and signals a thoughtful audience.
Draft replyYou're completely right and I appreciate the precision โ 'window into a Muslim community' would have been more accurate, and that distinction actually matters a lot. I'll be more careful with the framing going forward.
@happycaffeinatedcouple1930 ยท mediumโ view We love that you show many of the nuances of a religion & a culture. Years ago when I was in college I had the opportunity to become friends with some wonderful people from the middle east. I knew that the news only showed one side. Thirty years later I have current friends who only know that one side from the news. I try to help them understand the nuances, the variety & the beauty that they will never see in the news. So glad I now have your videos to refer them to! Thank you! We discovered you a few months ago during the Hasidic series. We've enjoyed all your videos & greatly look forward to them each week. P.S. I have so many questions about the shisha & hope to be able about it if you do a live Q & A at the end of the series.
Why: Devoted fan who has followed since the Hasidic series, shares videos with friends, and asks a specific question about shisha โ exactly the kind of engaged viewer worth keeping warm.
Draft replyA live Q&A to close the series is a great idea โ and yes, the shisha question is on the list. Really glad you've been on the journey since the Hasidic episodes.
Well I'll tell you โฆ here in Canada I am afraid to wear a headscarf because people are getting harassed/ beaten and a family even got ran over by a car for looking outwardly "Muslim" I have worn it before and have gotten harassed by a Canada post driver for being dumb due to the headscarf being too tight on my head. It's a scary thing to wear it and when I see other women wearing it I feel proud of them but also scared for them. Some people fear muslims due to the newsโฆ but I fear *some* non muslimsโฆ.some people are so prejudice and ignorant.
Why: Vulnerable personal story that puts a real face on the danger Muslim women face โ the counterpoint to Rola's relatively comfortable American experience. A reply here anchors the channel's empathy and may surface the comment to more viewers.
Draft replyThank you for trusting the comments section with something this personal โ what you're describing is real and it matters, and I'm sorry you've faced that. The contrast with Dearborn is striking and honestly I want to explore it more.
Try being a religious minority, exmuslim, atheist in any muslim country. That is the discussion no one is having
Why: Provocative but makes a real point that 18 people liked โ dismissing it signals defensiveness; a brief honest acknowledgment keeps the conversation credible and could open a future video idea.
Draft replyThat's a real gap in the series and it's one I think about โ ex-Muslims and religious minorities inside Muslim-majority countries is a conversation I want to have. It takes longer to find the right person willing to speak on camera, but it's on my list.
2:25 That's not what Muhammad (SAW) said. Muhammad (SAW) said "I would never shake a woman's hand who I'm not married to". But the way she spoke about Ramadan, was beautiful Masha'Allah. Excellent Dawah, Masha'Allah honey!
Why: Factual correction with a timestamp โ the kind of specific note that knowledgeable viewers notice and appreciate when the creator engages with it honestly.
Draft replyThank you for the clarification โ I appreciate when people catch these things, and the hadith context really matters here. And yes, her Ramadan description was genuinely beautiful.