Seerah for Family: A Six-Month Sīra Plan
A calm, weekly plan to read the Sīra of the Prophet ﷺ as a family in six months — without overwhelm and without skipping the soul of it.
The Sīra of the Prophet ﷺ is the most quoted, least read book in many Muslim homes. We listen to lectures, we hear stories, and we celebrate the mawlid — but a calm seerah for family routine that actually moves from beginning to end is still rare. Here is the six-month plan we use at Waraqa with families who want to study the Prophet’s ﷺ life together gently, weekly, and without overwhelm.
A seerah for family routine that actually lasts
Each month has a theme. Each week has one chapter, one short reflection, and one du‘ā or sunna to practise. Children sit in for the same chapter; their version is just shorter and gentler. By the end of six months, the whole family shares the same map of the Prophet’s ﷺ life.
You can use whichever well-known Sīra book you like — Sealed Nectar, When the Moon Split, Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources by Martin Lings, or a children’s Sīra paired with an adult one. Pick one and stay with it.
Month 1 — Arabia and the early life
Week 1: Arabia before the Prophet ﷺ. Tribes, idols, the ka‘ba, the fractured moral world of Arabia. Helps children understand why the Prophet ﷺ was needed.
Week 2: His ﷺ birth, the year of the elephant, his mother Āmina, the first years.
Week 3: Childhood with Ḥalīma, the loss of his mother, the care of ‘Abd al-Muṭṭalib and then Abū Ṭālib.
Week 4: The young man — his trustworthiness, the journey to Syria, the marriage to Khadīja (RA).
Month 2 — The first revelation and Makkan da‘wa
Week 5: The cave of Ḥirā’ and the first revelation. The fear, Khadīja’s reassurance, Waraqa ibn Nawfal.
Week 6: The first three years of secret da‘wa — Khadīja, Abū Bakr, ‘Alī, Zayd.
Week 7: The public call from Mount Ṣafā, Quraysh’s mockery, the slow rise of resistance.
Week 8: The early converts — Bilāl, Sumayya, Yāsir, ‘Ammār. The first martyrs.
Month 3 — Persecution and the migrations
Week 9: The torture of the weak, the migration to Abyssinia, the just king Najāshī.
Week 10: The boycott of Banū Hāshim, three years of hunger, the death of Abū Ṭālib and Khadīja.
Week 11: The journey to Ṭā’if, the rejection, the angel of the mountains, his ﷺ du‘ā after.
Week 12: The Isrā’ wa-l-Mi‘rāj. The five prayers as a gift.
Month 4 — Madinah and the new community
Week 13: The pledges of ‘Aqaba, the migration to Madinah, the cave of Thawr.
Week 14: Building the masjid, the brotherhood between Anṣār and Muhājirūn, the constitution of Madinah.
Week 15: The battle of Badr — the first major test, the angels, the prisoners.
Week 16: The battle of Uḥud — the lesson of obedience, the Prophet’s ﷺ wounds, the resilience of the companions.
Month 5 — Trials and treaties
Week 17: The battle of the Trench (al-Khandaq), the long siege, the wisdom of Salmān al-Fārisī.
Week 18: Ḥudaybiyya — the treaty that looked like a defeat and turned out to be a victory.
Week 19: The letters to kings — Heraclius, Chosroes, the Negus. The Prophet ﷺ as a global da‘ī.
Week 20: Khaybar, the return of those who had migrated to Abyssinia, family reunion.
Month 6 — Conquest, farewell, and legacy
Week 21: The conquest of Makkah — the entry without violence, the famous “go, you are free.”
Week 22: Ḥunayn and Ṭā’if revisited, the gentle handling of new Muslims.
Week 23: The farewell ḥajj — the sermon, the rights of women, the universal address to humanity.
Week 24: The final illness and death of the Prophet ﷺ. The sahaba’s grief. The succession.
How to make this weekly read sustainable
Pick one fixed time. Sunday after ‘Asr, Friday evening, or Saturday morning. Same time, same room.
Read aloud, not silently. Even if everyone has read it before, hearing it together creates a shared memory.
End each week with one du‘ā or sunna to practise. The Sīra is not just history; it is a model.
Forgive missed weeks. If life pulls you away, restart at the next week, not from the beginning.
What this gives your family
By month six, your children will know the Prophet’s ﷺ life better than most adults. They will recognise his companions by name. They will pray for him in their du‘ās with a personal connection that no lecture can give. And the family will have a shared frame of reference — when something hard happens, you can say, “Remember Ṭā’if?” and everyone will know what you mean.
If you would like a teacher to lead a family Sīra circle weekly, with the children at their level and the parents at theirs, book a free evaluation. You may also like our piece on the first-year Islamic studies pathway and our gentle ‘aqīda for children, or look at our Islamic Studies course.
Frequently asked questions
Which seerah book is best for families?
For ages 8–12, The Sealed Nectar abridged edition works well. For mixed ages, parents read a short summary aloud and adapt the vocabulary. Our teachers can recommend a level inside a free trial lesson.
How long should each session last?
Ten minutes of reading and five minutes of conversation. Anything longer drifts. The Prophet ﷺ taught in short, vivid pieces, and the seerah remembers his rhythm best.
Can a six-month plan include Qur'an study?
Yes — that is the natural pairing. We sequence one short surah per month with the matching seerah event inside our family Quran program, so the verse and the story arrive on the same Friday.
What about teenagers who already know the basics?
Layer in the fiqh and adab dimensions: how the Prophet ﷺ negotiated treaties, how he disagreed without insult, how he handled wealth. Older readers stay engaged when seerah meets real life.
Ready to start? Book a free family seerah trial or browse our family plans.
A simple six-month seerah plan for busy families
The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ said: "The best of you is the one who learns the Qur'an and teaches it" (Sahih al-Bukhari 5027). Studying the seerah for the family is the natural companion to that command, because every verse breathes inside a moment of his life. A six-month family seerah plan keeps the load light: one short reading on Friday, one short reflection over Sunday lunch, and one verse from our Quran recitation classes or your own mushaf each week. That rhythm fits real homes — school runs, work, soccer practice — without turning seerah into homework.
Month-by-month seerah for the family
- Month 1 — Before the call: Mecca, the Quraysh, the Ka'bah, and the early life of the Prophet ﷺ until age 40. Read one short story aloud each Friday; ask the children one question each Sunday.
- Month 2 — The first revelation: Cave of Hira, Surah al-'Alaq, Khadijah (radiyallāhu ʿanhā), the first Muslims. Pair with one ayah from Surah al-Muddaththir.
- Month 3 — The years of patience: The boycott, the year of sorrow, al-Isra wa al-Mi'raj. Talk about how the family of the Prophet ﷺ stayed gentle under pressure.
- Month 4 — Hijrah: The cave, Abu Bakr (radiyallāhu ʿanhu), the welcome of the Ansar in Madinah. This is a strong month for our family classes — the kids love the cave scene.
- Month 5 — Madinah builds: The masjid, the brotherhood between Muhajirun and Ansar, the Constitution of Madinah, Badr.
- Month 6 — Mercy returns to Mecca: Hudaybiyyah, the conquest of Mecca, the farewell sermon. End the half-year with the farewell verse "Today I have perfected for you your religion" (al-Ma'idah 5:3).
How to make a family seerah plan stick
Three small habits do more than one big push. First, anchor reading to an existing routine — Friday dinner, Sunday breakfast, the ride to memorization class. Second, keep each reading under ten minutes; long sessions break the week. Third, give every child one question to answer aloud — children remember what they say more than what they hear. Parents who follow this rhythm finish the seerah twice a year without feeling rushed.
Frequently asked questions
Which seerah book is best for families?
For ages 8–12, The Sealed Nectar abridged edition works well. For mixed ages, parents read a short summary aloud and adapt the vocabulary. Our teachers can recommend a level inside a free trial lesson.
How long should each session last?
Ten minutes of reading and five minutes of conversation. Anything longer drifts. The Prophet ﷺ taught in short, vivid pieces, and the seerah remembers his rhythm best.
Can a six-month plan include Qur'an study?
Yes — that is the natural pairing. We sequence one short surah per month with the matching seerah event inside our family Quran program, so the verse and the story arrive on the same Friday.
What about teenagers who already know the basics?
Layer in the fiqh and adab dimensions: how the Prophet ﷺ negotiated treaties, how he disagreed without insult, how he handled wealth. Older readers stay engaged when seerah meets real life.
Ready to start? Book a free family seerah trial or browse our family plans.
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