... And whoever saves a life it is as though he had saved the lives of all mankind." - Quran 5:32

Why Suicide Response Training?

In a JAMA Psychiatry study, approximately 8% of the sample of American Muslims reported a lifetime suicide attempt compared to ~1% of the general American population.

This finding has been eye-opening for Muslims across the world and has motivated many Muslim leaders and institutions to address the topic of suicide in Muslim communities.

Let's Save Lives

The Suicide Response Training increases the capacity of religious and community leaders to address suicide within our communities. This training is a unique learning opportunity for Muslim Religious and Community Leaders to learn about suicide prevention, intervention, and postvention.

Evidence-Based Training​

This unique program is the result of years of research by the Muslim Mental Health and Islamic Psychology Lab at Stanford University and is now being offered to Muslim religious and community leaders across the United States.

Designed and peer-reviewed with contributions from leading mental health researchers and Islamic scholars worldwide, this training brings together research, clinical expertise, and Islamic tradition.

For the first time in Muslim American history, Muslim leaders can train alongside researchers and clinicians at the forefront of Islamic Psychology to build professional skills in community suicide prevention, intervention, and postvention.

  • Developed through years of research at Stanford’s Muslim Mental Health and Islamic Psychology Lab.
  • Evidence-based and peer-reviewed by global experts in mental health and Islamic scholarship.
  • Specifically designed for Muslim community leaders across the U.S.
  • Builds skills in suicide prevention, intervention, and postvention.

Registration and Training Complete

Maristan’s Suicide Response Training is an in-person training designed to accommodate 35–45 trainees who meet the following criteria:

Eligibility: This training is specifically for Religious and Community Leaders including Imams, Chaplains, Sheikh/a, Ustadh/a, Hafidh/a, Religious Directors, Youth Leaders, Islamic School Teachers, Board Members, Islamic Scholars, and other community gatekeepers.

All attendees who complete the full day-long training will be certified in Suicide Response and receive a certificate upon completion.

Who are the trainers?

Dr. Rania Awaad M.D.

Dr. Rania Awaad M.D., is a Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the Stanford University School of Medicine where she is the Director of the Stanford Muslim Mental Health & Islamic Psychology Lab, Associate Chief of the Division of Public Mental Health and Population Sciences, and Co-Chief of the Diversity and Cultural Mental Health Section. She is also the Co-Founder and President of Maristan, a non-profit organization dedicated to reviving the Islamic heritage of holistic wellbeing. She is currently a Senior Fellow at Yaqeen Institute and ISPU. In addition, she serves as the Director of The Rahmah Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to educating Muslim women and girls. She has previously served as the founding Clinical Director of the Khalil Center-San Francisco as well as a Professor of Islamic Law at Zaytuna College. Prior to studying medicine, she pursued classical Islamic studies in Damascus, Syria and holds certifications (ijaza) in Qur’an, Islamic Law and other branches of the Islamic Sciences. 

Dr. Sadya Dhanani M.D. ​

Dr. Sadiya Dhanani is a Resident Physician in Stanford’s Psychiatry Residency Program. She is currently in her last year of training as an Adult Psychiatrist and will be doing a two-year fellowship at Stanford in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry beginning in July 2023. She has particular interests in Muslim mental health and Islamic psychology, psychotherapy, cultural psychiatry, anxiety disorders, and identity-based trauma in the Muslim community and first- and second-generation immigrants. She serves as a Psychiatric Consultant for Stanford’s Muslim Mental Health and Islamic Psychology Lab and has worked on a number of publications, trainings, and projects alongside Dr. Rania Awaad.

Dr. Dhanani has additionally completed a one-year intensive Quranic Arabic program and has spent time studying the Islamic sciences. She intends to continue her Quranic and Islamic Studies education in the future alongside her medical career.

Request Suicide Response Training

If you’re interested in bringing Maristan’s Suicide Response Training to your community, please fill out this short intake form and our team will follow up with you.  Need more info? Email education@maristan.org.

Download the Prevention Khutbah

Fill out the form below to access

By submitting this form, you agree to receive the full Suicide Prevention Khutbah and occasional email updates from Maristan.

Download the Post-Suicide Khutbah

This khutbah was written by Sheikh Hosam Helal in partnership with Maristan and the Stanford Muslim Mental Health & Islamic Psychology Lab. It provides guidance for imams and khateebs on addressing suicide with compassion, dignity, and faith.



Please note: This khutbah is intended as a resource and is not a replacement for professional mental health counseling.