Summer is not a time of idleness — it is a golden opportunity that shapes a generation. It is the season in which a student possesses the most precious thing adults have: time. The question that separates a generation that wastes away from one that builds itself is: how do we use that time?

Summer is a generation of character-building before qualifications.

Study builds the mind; summer builds the person. It is in summer that the talents hidden behind books reveal themselves. A young man discovers his passion for programming, a girl tries her hand at design, a child learns swimming or Arabic calligraphy.

These experiences forge an identity. The summer generation is the generation that tried, failed, learned, and then decided who it wanted to be. Do not postpone self-discovery until "after graduation" — summer is the beginning.

Summer is joy, energy charged rather than squandered. Fun is not the opposite of achievement. An exhausted mind does not create. Our young people need laughter, trips, games, and family evenings without screens. Structured fun is what recharges psychological energy.

A scout camp, a football league among friends, or even a cooking competition at home. Sharing in reading a special book — all of these are moments that create memories and strengthen bonds. A generation deprived of joy becomes a burnt-out generation before it has even begun.

Achievement in summer does not mean 8-hour courses every day. It means one new habit. Reading 5 books, memorising 5 surahs, learning a digital skill, or a volunteer project for an hour a week.

Do not make summer a dividing bracket between two school years. Make it a bridge.

Let us give our children a summer in which a generation builds itself, joy recharges it, and achievement elevates it. Because the summer invested today is the future made tomorrow.