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PODCAST · kids

Under a Crescent Moon

Timeless stories of the prophets, for little believers

Publisher-supplied feed metadata · PodParley refreshed May 26, 2026 · Source feed

  1. 1

    The Man Who Never Gave Up

    Yusuf is home sick and miserable - he missed his best friend's birthday party at the trampoline park, and it feels so unfair. Baba tells him about Prophet Ayyub, who lost his wealth, his children, and his health, suffering through years of illness with nothing but his faith. When Ayyub finally turned to Allah, his prayer was simple and beautiful: "My Lord, adversity has touched me, and You are the Most Merciful of all who show mercy." And Allah answered. A story about patience, gratitude, and finding peace in dua even when life hurts.The lesson: Being patient does not mean you never feel sad. It means you keep trusting Allah even when things are hard. He always has a plan.Sources: 21:83–84 (Ayyub’s prayer; Allah removes his adversity and restores his household); 38:41–44 (Allah tells Ayyub to strike the ground; healing spring appears; ‘We found him steadfast, how excellent a slave!’); Sahih al-Bukhari, Book of Prophets (While Ayyub was bathing, golden locusts fell upon him; he gathered them and said he could not shun Allah’s blessings); Stories of the Prophets by Ibn Kathir, Ch. 13 (Ayyub’s trials, his wife’s faithfulness, his patience, and Allah’s restoration)Music created in collaboration with ElevenLabsQuran translation graciously provided by Clear Quran, with permission from Talal Itani.

  2. 0

    The Shepherd Boy and the Giant

    Yusuf's soccer team just found out they're playing a team of bigger, older kids - and everyone wants to forfeit. Baba tells him about Dawud, a young shepherd boy who stepped forward when an entire army of grown men was too afraid to face the giant Jalut (Goliath). With nothing but a sling, a few smooth stones, and complete trust in Allah, Dawud defeated the mightiest warrior on the battlefield. A story about faith over size, heart over fear, and why you should never count yourself out.The lesson: It does not matter how small you are or how big the challenge. Size does not decide who wins - heart, courage, and trust in Allah do.Sources: 2:249–251 (Talut tests his army; the faithful few; Dawud slays Jalut; Allah gives him kingdom and wisdom); 38:17–26 (Dawud praised as ‘lord of might’; the mountains and birds hymn praises with him; wisdom and decisive speech); Stories of the Prophets by Ibn Kathir, Ch. 19 (Dawud volunteering to fight Jalut; using his sling and stones; the rout of the enemy)Music created in collaboration with ElevenLabsQuran translation graciously provided by Clear Quran, with permission from Talal Itani.

  3. -1

    The Bravest Yes

    When Mama asked Yusuf to donate toys for the masjid drive, he said yes - but secretly hid his favorites under the bed and only gave away the broken ones. Baba tells him about young Ismail, whose father Ibrahim had a dream from Allah asking for the ultimate sacrifice. Ismail didn't hide, didn't argue, didn't hold anything back. He said yes with his whole heart - and Allah replaced the sacrifice with a ram and honored them both forever. A story about sincerity, generosity, and what it means to truly give for the sake of Allah.The lesson: When Allah asks you to give, give with your whole heart. Do not hide the best for yourself and offer only the leftovers.Sources: 37:99–111 (Ibrahim prays for a son; the dream of sacrifice; Ismail’s willing response; Allah stops the sacrifice and ransoms with a ram); 2:127 (Ibrahim and Ismail raise the foundations of the Ka’bah); 14:37–38 (Ibrahim’s prayer after leaving Hajar and Ismail in the uncultivable valley); Sahih al-Bukhari, Book of Prophets (Ibrahim leaving Hajar and Ismail at Makkah; Hajar’s running between Safa and Marwa; Zamzam; building the Ka’bah); Stories of the Prophets by Ibn Kathir, Ch. 7 (Ismail in Makkah, Hajar’s search for water, Zamzam, the sacrifice, and building the Ka’bah)Music created in collaboration with ElevenLabsQuran translation graciously provided by Clear Quran, with permission from Talal Itani.

  4. -2

    The First Mistake

    Yusuf broke Baba's favorite mug this morning and hid the pieces in the trash. He carried the guilt all day before finally confessing. Baba tells him about Adam and Hawwa in the garden - the first humans, the first mistake, and the first act of genuine repentance. When Adam owned his mistake before Allah instead of making excuses, Allah didn't just forgive him - He chose him and guided him. A story about honesty, accountability, and the mercy that follows a sincere "I'm sorry."The lesson: Everyone makes mistakes - even the very first human being. What matters most is what you do after: tell the truth and ask Allah for forgiveness.Sources: 2:35–37 (Allah commands Adam to dwell in the Garden; Satan causes their fall; Adam receives words and is forgiven); 7:19–25 (The full Garden narrative: Satan’s whisper, the tree, shame, Adam and Hawwa’s repentance); 20:115–122 (Adam forgets; Satan whispers; Adam disobeys; Allah chooses him, relents, and guides him); Sahih al-Bukhari, Book of Prophets (Hadith on Adam’s creation and his encounter with the angels); Stories of the Prophets by Ibn Kathir, Ch. 1 (Adam’s creation, life in Paradise, the forbidden tree, the fall, and Allah’s forgiveness)Music created in collaboration with ElevenLabsQuran translation graciously provided by Clear Quran, with permission from Talal Itani.

  5. -3

    The King Who Stopped for Ants

    Kids at school were stomping on a line of ants and laughing about it. Yusuf told them to stop, but they said, "Who cares about bugs?" Baba tells him about Prophet Sulayman - the mightiest king who ever lived, who commanded armies of men, jinn, and birds - and one day halted his entire army because he heard a tiny ant warning her colony to get out of the way. A story about compassion, humility, and how every creature matters to Allah.The lesson: Kindness is not just for people. Every living thing Allah created deserves our gentleness - even the ant beneath your shoe.Sources: 27:15–19 (Sulayman inherits prophethood; his armies gather; the ant’s cry; Sulayman’s grateful prayer); 27:20–28 (The hoopoe bird reports finding the Queen of Sheba); 38:30–40 (Allah’s gifts to Sulayman: the wind, the jinn, a kingdom unlike any other); Sahih al-Bukhari, Book of Prophets (Sulayman inherited prophethood and knowledge from Dawud); Stories of the Prophets by Ibn Kathir, Ch. 20 (Sulayman’s kingdom, the ant’s warning, the hoopoe’s discovery, and the Queen of Sheba)Music created in collaboration with ElevenLabsQuran translation graciously provided by Clear Quran, with permission from Talal Itani.

  6. -4

    The Man Who Was Afraid to Speak

    At the park, Yusuf watched a bigger kid push little children off the swings. He wanted to speak up - but he froze. Now he feels terrible. Baba tells him about Prophet Musa, who struggled with his speech and was terrified when Allah asked him to confront the most powerful tyrant on earth: Pharaoh. Musa asked Allah for help, and Allah gave him strength, his brother Harun, and miracle after miracle. A story about finding courage even when your hands are shaking.The lesson: Being brave does not mean you are never afraid. It means you ask Allah for help and then you go anyway.Sources: 20:9–48 (Musa at the burning bush; the staff miracle; prayer for courage; Harun appointed; command to go to Pharaoh); 26:16–33 (Musa and Pharaoh’s dialogue; the staff and shining hand before Pharaoh’s court); 28:15–35 (Musa flees; his fear; ‘We will strengthen your arm with your brother’); Stories of the Prophets by Ibn Kathir, Ch. 16 (Musa’s birth, flight to Midian, the fire on the mountain, the confrontation with Pharaoh)Music created in collaboration with ElevenLabs

  7. -5

    The Brother Who Forgave

    A classmate said cruel things behind Yusuf's back and now wants to be friends again. Yusuf refuses - why should he forgive someone who hurt him? Baba reminds him that he's named after Prophet Yusuf, whose own brothers threw him into a well and left him for dead. Yet when Yusuf rose to power in Egypt years later, he forgave them all. One of the most powerful stories in the Quran about mercy, forgiveness, and the strength it takes to let go of anger.The lesson: Forgiving someone does not mean what they did was okay. It means you are strong enough to let go of the hurt - and that takes real courage.Sources: 12:4–21 (Young Yusuf’s dream; brothers plot and throw him in the well; sold into slavery); 12:33–57 (Yusuf in prison; interprets dreams; freed and appointed over Egypt’s storehouses); 12:84–100 (Yaqub’s grief and blindness; Yusuf reveals himself; forgiveness; family reunited); Sahih al-Bukhari, Book of Prophets (The Prophet called Yusuf ‘the most honourable of people’ — a prophet, son of a prophet, son of a prophet, son of the friend of Allah); Stories of the Prophets by Ibn Kathir, Ch. 12 (Full narrative of Prophet Yusuf: jealousy, the well, slavery, prison, rise to power, reunion and forgiveness)Music created in collaboration with ElevenLabs

  8. -6

    The Ship That Saved the World

    Yusuf knocked on door after door trying to find someone to play with, and every friend said no. He's ready to give up. Baba tells him about Prophet Nuh, who called his people to Allah for 950 years and was rejected over and over again - yet never stopped trying. When the great flood came, Nuh and the believers were saved aboard the ark that everyone had laughed at. A story about persistence, resilience, and trusting that your effort is never wasted with Allah.The lesson: Being kind and calling people to what is good is never a waste. Even if no one listens today, you did your part - and Allah sees that.Sources: 7:59-64 (Nuh’s proclamation; people accuse him of error; they are drowned); 11:25-48 (Full ark narrative: Nuh’s call, command to build, the son’s refusal, the flood, Nuh’s grief, Allah’s response); 23:23-30 (Nuh sent to his people; command to build the ship; boarding and prayer of thanks); 54:9-17 (“He cried unto his Lord: I am vanquished”; gates of heaven opened); 71:1-28 (Surah Nuh: full account of Nuh’s patient calling, rejection, and final prayer); Sahih al-Bukhari, Book of Prophets, Hadith 14 (Nuh’s testimony on the Day of Resurrection); Sahih al-Bukhari, Book of Prophets, Hadith 15 (Nuh called ‘a thankful slave’); Stories of the Prophets by Ibn Kathir (Details of the five idols, mockery during ark construction, the oven sign, the boarding, and the flood)Music created in collaboration with ElevenLabs

  9. -7

    The Prophet and the Whale

    When nobody listened to his idea during a group project, Yusuf got frustrated and walked away - only to end up left out entirely. Baba shares the story of Prophet Yunus, who walked away from his people in frustration and found himself swallowed by a whale in the depths of the ocean. Inside the darkness, Yunus turned to Allah with one of the most powerful duas in the Quran - and Allah answered. A story about patience, perseverance, and never giving up on the people around you.The lesson: When things get hard, don’t walk away — turn to Allah. And it’s never too late to come back and try again.Sources: 10:98 (The people of Yunus: the only community that believed and was spared); 21:87-88 (Yunus’s prayer in the darkness); 37:139-148 (The full narrative: fleeing, lots, whale, gourd plant, 100,000 believers); 68:48–50 (“Be not like the companion of the fish”); Sahih al-Bukhari, Book of Prophets, Hadith 69 (None should say I am better than Yunus); Sahih al-Bukhari, Book of Prophets, Hadith 85–88 (The Prophet’s statements about Yunus); Sahih Muslim, Book of Virtues, Hadith 209, 217–218 (The Prophet’s statements about Yunus); Tafsir Ibn Kathir (Surah Al-Anbiya) (Details of the three darknesses, the whale, the gourd plant, and the repentance of Nineveh)Music created in collaboration with ElevenLabs

  10. -8

    The Brave Boy Who Broke the Idols

    Yusuf stood up for a classmate who was being teased about her hijab - and ended up sitting alone at recess because of it. Was it worth it? Baba tells him about young Ibrahim, who stood alone against an entire city of idol worshippers, faced his own father's anger with kindness, and was thrown into a fire that Allah turned cool and peaceful. A story about courage, conviction, and trusting Allah when doing the right thing costs you something.The lesson: Standing up for what is right is never easy, but Allah is always with those who are brave and truthful.Sources: 6:74–83 (Ibrahim questions his father about idols; observes star, moon, sun); 19:41-48 (Ibrahim’s appeal to his father; his father’s threat; Ibrahim’s peaceful response); 21:51-71 (The full idol-smashing narrative and the fire); 37:83-98 (Ibrahim’s courage and the fire miracle); Sahih al-Bukhari, Book of Prophets, Hadith 33 (The Prophet’s mention of Abraham’s three occasions); Sahih al-Bukhari, Book of Prophets, Hadith 34 (The salamander and the fire of Ibrahim)Music created in collaboration with ElevenLabs

  11. -9

    Welcome to Under a Crescent Moon

    A first listen at Under a Crescent Moon. Gentle bedtime stories of the prophets for children ages 4-8. Each week, a father named Baba tells his son Yusuf a calm, screen-free story drawn from the Quran and trusted Islamic sources. No frightening scenes, no loud surprises. Just beautiful storytelling and a soft voice in the dark. Follow now, and the first story arrives this week. Sleep well, little star. 🌙

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Timeless stories of the prophets, for little believers

HOSTED BY

Arin Bakht

Frequently Asked Questions

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Under a Crescent Moon currently has 11 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

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Timeless stories of the prophets, for little believers

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Under a Crescent Moon has 11 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

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Who hosts Under a Crescent Moon?

Under a Crescent Moon is created and hosted by Arin Bakht.
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