Istikhara Prayer

Question:

How and when does one perform the Istikhara prayer. And what should one perform this prayer for ?

Answer:

In making important decisions it is recommended to ask advice when one is not sure about the right course of action. The first type of advice is from those whom one trusts and considers competent to answer. This is istishara. If this is insufficient then one makes istikhara, which consists in two raka`at on a fresh wudu prayed to that intention and followed by a du`a asking Allah to clarify the matter for us: if good, to facilitate it for us and if not, to distance it from us. The exact wording is found in many books.

One may repeat the istikhara as many times as one wishes until one feels certain of the course to follow.

When the breast expands for something one cannot miss it. Similarly if one’s unease remains or increases then the decision on the matter is clearly no. The seat of the fruit of istikhara is the conscience and the understanding both of which, however veiled over by our disobedience, nevertheless speak eloquently enough in each and everyone of us, and Allah knows best.

Hajj Gibril Haddad

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Mash on Socks

Question:

Is it permitted to make mash (wiping) over ordinary socks?

Answer:

It is not permissible to make mash (wiping) over ordinary socks (cotton, woollen, nylon, etc. — i.e. all socks other than leather socks, khuffs) in wudu (ablution). There is no authentic narration sanctioning this practice. In the commentary of Tirmidhi, Tuhfatul Ahwadhee, the famous Ahl al-Hadith scholar Allamah Mubarakpuri, has written that this practice of making mash on woollen, cotton, nylon socks and socks made from similar materials is not established from any authentic Hadith (vol. 1, pg.333). Many other high ranking scholars of the ghayr muqallid sect (those who do not prescribe to taqleed) have refuted this practice and declared it as impermissible. (see Fatawa Nazeeriah; 1:423)

See also Wiping Over Socks in Ablution.

Hajj Gibril Haddad

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Why Do the Imams Differ?

Question:

If all the Imams deduced the laws directly from the Qur’an and Hadith, how is it possible for them to differ on various aspects?

Answer:

In order to understand the reality of these differences, we will have to go back in history right up to the time of the Sahaba (r).

Once Rasulullah (s) had just returned from a battle when he ordered the Sahaba (r) to immediately proceed to the place of Banu Quraizah — a clan who lived on the outskirts of Madina al-Munawwarah. The purpose was to lay a siege upon them for having broken the pact that they had made with the Muslims. In order to impress the urgency of the matter upon the Sahaba (r), Rasulullah (s) said to them: “None of you should perform your Salat al-`Asr except in Banu Quraizah.” While the Sahaba (r) were still en-route, the time of `Asr arrived. Some Sahaba (r) felt that they should perform their `Asr immediately. They regarded the instruction of Rasulullah (s) as actually being a command to proceed very swiftly to their destination. It did not imply that the `Asr salat could not be performed en-route. They thus performed their salat there. Another group of Sahaba (r) viewed the instruction literally. They therefore continued and only performed their `Asr salat after having reached Banu Quraizah. Later when Rasulullah (s) was informed about this, he did not rebuke either group. [Sahih Bukhari]

Thus we find that the difference arose from a point of interpretation. However, this difference of interpretation is only entertained when it comes from a person who has in-depth knowledge of Deen and has attained a mastery in the Qur’an and Hadith and the other related aspects. At times a difference of opinion occurs due to the different narrations that are found with regards to a particular aspect. One Imam gives preference to one narration on the basis of various criteria while the other Imam, in the light of his knowledge, prefers the other narration. This is basically the manner in which these differences occur. However, just as Rasulullah (s) did not rebuke either of the two groups in the incident mentioned above, similarly since the Imams have attained the status of a mujtahid (one who is capable of deriving the laws directly from the Qur’an and Hadith), they will not be blame worthy even if they have erred. Rasulullah (s) is reported to have said: “When a hakim (ruler) passes judgment, and after having exerted his utmost effort he arrives at the correct solution, he gets a double reward. And if he errs after having exerted his utmost ability, he gets one reward.” (Sahih Bukhari, vol. 2 pg. 1092). Ibn al-Munzir (ra) while commenting on this hadith writes that a ruler will only get this reward if he has thorough knowledge and in the light of his knowledge he passed judgment. (see footnotes of Sahih Bukhari; ibid). The four Imams had the ability and necessary knowledge to practice ijtihad. Thus they fall under the ambit of this hadith.

Shaykh Muhammad Ilyas Faisal
Madinat al-Munawwara

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Why Follow an Imam?

Question:

Why should I follow an Imam?

Answer:

The question that arises here is that why then should one follow any of the four Imams? This can be answered by posing a counter-question: “Do you know all the various laws of deen, religion? Are you capable of extracting and deriving the laws pertaining to wudu, salat, zakat, etc. directly from the Qur’an and Hadith? Do you know which hadith has abrogated another? Do you have the ability to reconcile between the various ahadith which apparently contradict each other? Do you know which verses of the Qur’an are general in their application and which verses are qualified by other texts? etc., etc.”

If one does not have the knowledge of these aspects, then one definitely does not have the ability to derive the laws directly from the Qur’an and Hadith. In that case the following aayah applies directly to oneself: “Ask those of knowledge if you do not know.” (43:7) Hence when we do not have the enormous amount of knowledge and expertise that is necessary to derive the laws directly from the Qur’an and Hadith, we have opted to follow one of those great people who had attained that distinguished mastery in this field, among whom is Imam Abu Hanifa (ra).

Imam Abu Hanifa (ra) is a Tabi`i (one who has seen a Sahabi, Companion). He attained the knowledge of Hadith from approximately 4000 teachers. His piety was such that for forty years he performed Fajr salat with the wudu of Isha salat (i.e. he did not sleep the entire night) [Tarikhu Baghdad]. His knowledge, brilliance and righteousness was such that all the great scholars of his time attested to his mastery. Thus one can be well assured that such a person is absolutely capable of deriving the laws directly from the Qur’an and Hadith.

Another reason for adopting one of the Imams as a guide is the following ayah of the Qur’an: Allah Ta`ala says: “And follow the path of those who turn to me” (31:15). In order to “turn” to Allah Ta`ala, two aspects are basic requisites — knowledge and practicing according to that knowledge. In this regard the four Imams were in an extremely high category. Imam Abu Hanifa (ra) was regarded by various `ulama (Islamic scholars) of his time as being the most knowledgeable of the people of that era (footnotes of Tahdheebu ‘t-Tahdheeb vol. 1 pg. 451). Makki bin Ibrahim, who was one of the renowned teachers of Imam Bukhari (ra), was a student of Imam Abu Hanifa (ra). Imam Abu Hanifa (ra) compiled a book of hadith entitled Kitabu ‘l-Aathaar from among 40,000 ahadith. Thus those who follow such a guide can be satisfied that they are strictly following the commands of Allah Ta`ala and His Rasul (s).

Shaykh Muhammad Ilyas Faisal
Madinat al-Munawwara

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Prophet’s Marriage to `Ayesha

Question:

I should be much grateful to you if you could tell when our Beloved Prophet Hazrat Muhammad (s) and Hazrat Aisha (r) got married.

Answer:

The Prophet (upon him blessings and peace) contracted the marriage with`Ayesha (Allah be pleased with her) between one and two years after Abu Talib and Khadija died (Allah be pleased with her) – which was three years before the Hijrah – and they began to live together three years later as reported from her in the books of Sahih, Sunan, and Musnads.

Hajj Gibril

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Information on Sunnah for New Muslim

Question:

A convert sister ask me for a book on the SUNNAH OF MOHAMMAD (s). Please let me know what to suggest thank you. ALLAH SWT bless you and your family.

Answer:

A Day with the Prophet – by Ahmad Von Denffer

Hajj Gibril

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Taqleed, Following a School of Thought

Question:

What is taqleed or ittiba`? Is it it wajib (compulsory) upon Muslims.

Answer:

Yet there are many Muslims in the present age who have hardly heard of the words taqleed or ittiba`. Others who may have heard about it, do not fully comprehend its meaning. This has led to people even rejecting taqleed – thereby rejecting a wajib, (a compulsory aspect of the religion). As a general rule, man is suspicious and afraid of that which he does not know. Therefore a proper understanding of the issue of taqleed or ittib`a would dispel the ignorance surrounding it, Insha-Allah.

Taqleed is a part of everyday life

Taqleed or ittib`a in essence, simply refers to the practice of an unqualified, lay person (in a specific field of specialization) submitting to and accepting the authority of an expert in that field, without demanding proof and justification for every view, opinion or verdict expressed by such an expert authority. This is a natural state of human existence, practiced by millions of people worldwide in every facet of life.

The simplest and most tangible example of taqleed or ittib`a is that of a child learning his basic alphabets at school. Every child learning his alphabet is unconsciously practicing taqleed. A learner driver taking instructions from a driving instructor is practicing taqleed. People going to a specialist doctor for medical treatment and following his instructions is another glaring example of taqleed or ittib`a. A lay person soliciting a legal opinion from an advocate or following the advice of a tax consultant is another common case of taqleed. A client at an engineering firm, asking for the engineer`s advice on complex engineering calculations is yet another instance of taqleed or ittib`a in action. The millions of ‘facts’ in the myriad of sciences such as astronomy, archaeology, etc. are all distinct examples of taqleed or ittib`a. Whoever questions the ‘fact’ or asks for proof that the sun is really 93 million miles away from the earth! It is taken for granted that this is the findings of the ‘experts’ in these fields and everyone simply accepts it as such. Schoolteachers teach these to their pupils as ‘gospel truth’ and children learn and memorize these ‘facts’ with the hope of succeeding in their exams. There are countless such examples of taqleed or ittib`a in everyday existence. It is quite clear from the above, that taqleed or ittib`a is a natural way of life, and is not specific to Islam or Islamic fiqh alone.

Taqleed is the easy option for ordinary people

In the context of Islamic fiqh or Law, taqleed or ittib`a simply refers to accepting and following the verdicts of expert scholars of Islamic fiqh in their exposition and interpretation of Islamic Law, without demanding from them an in-depth explanation of the intricate processes required in arriving at such a verdict, called ijtihad. It simply means that ordinary folk do not have to do ijtihad, i.e. the intricate and complicated procedures involved in deriving Islamic rulings that scholars exercise when issuing a fatwa (legal verdict). The duty of ordinary people is to trustingly accept the authority of the learned scholars in this matter and act upon their verdicts.

In this sense, taqleed is a great blessing for common people, for it is beyond their capacity to understand the extremely complex and complicated mechanics of ijtihad. The ability to do ijtihad requires many long years of study and erudition and a great deal of exertion (ijtihad means to exert oneself) in acquiring a mastery of various Islamic sciences, among other varying requirements.

Misunderstandings regarding taqleed

Recently, misunderstandings have arisen regarding the issue of taqleed. It has become a theme of major debate in many parts of the world among Muslims. This debate has naturally resulted in arguments being promulgated by both the protagonists and the antagonists of taqleed.

The best way of removing such misunderstanding is to view the original sources of Islam – the Quran and Hadith and the teachings of the learned elders of Islam (`ulama) on this subject. After a study of this subject, the correct interpretation and understanding of taqleed and ittib`a would emerge. This would lead to a better understanding and analysis of the arguments and counter-arguments of protagonists and antagonists.

Mufti Zubair Bayat
Council of Muslim Theologians, Bishopsgate, South Africa

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Women and Mosque Attendance

Dear Hajjah:

I have lived in the U.S. for several years now and attend my local mosque regularly, something I was prevented from doing in my homeland. I observe many women at the mosque are busy gossiping and talking loudly, and do not control their children. Would you please mention the adab (etiquette) of women attending the mosque?  – P.N.

Dear P.N.:

You have mentioned that in your homeland you were not allowed to attend the mosque. Unfortunately, this is true of many women from Muslim countries, a situation which has deprived generations of Muslims from becoming familiar with the adab of the mosque. Women attended the mosque in the time of our beloved Prophet (s) and the Mothers of the Faithful (ra) attended the mosque daily. Specific rules of conduct which apply to visiting the mosque were revealed in the Qur`an and were applied through the Sunnah of our Prophet (s). While in Islam the mosque is a focal point for group worship, it also serves as a safe meeting place for Muslims, where they may study their religion and maintain ties of familiarity with others. Through the many rights and privileges afforded Muslim women, Allah subhana wa ta`ala never intended that they become cut off from their community and locked in their homes. While they are exempt from attendance and are allowed to stay at home, there is no harm if women attend Jumma (Friday congregational prayer), Eid prayers, or even tarawih prayers (thirty nightly congregational prayers of Ramadan). However, the Four Righteous Imams (Hanafi, Maliki, Hanbali and Shafi`i) each agreed that women should not attend the mosque during their monthly periods, except in cases of extreme need (i.e., if a woman is traveling with her mahram and he stops at a mosque to pray Jumu`ah, and she has nowhere to wait for him, she may enter the mosque but remain close to the door, not joining the congregation).

An obvious side-effect of women having been prevented from attending the mosque in their homelands is evident in how they behave in this country, as if the mosque is a community center and social outlet. Unfortunately, most of us have experienced the disarrayed prayer ranks in the women’s section of the mosque, the loud talking of women during worship and lectures, the disorderly children running and screaming as if on a playground.

Muslim women have the right to attend the mosque, with or without their families. However, women are not exempt from having good manners at the mosque, and it is the responsibility of both parents to teach and enforce appropriate conduct for children. Every individual is required to respect the mosque as a place of worship. From the time we enter until the time we leave, and even in front of the mosque, no one is allowed to talk loudly or to shout. We are commanded in the Qur`an not to run to prayer, but rather to walk with dignity. How then can we allow our children to run inside the mosque? From the time infants can sit, teach them to remain near you when you pray. Do not allow children to walk around at random during prayers and khutbahs. Take quiet toys and favorite books to the mosque to occupy your children if they become bored. Wear clean clothes and set the example for your children that visiting the mosque should be observed with respect.

Women should be assertive in forming regular women’s meetings at their local mosques to study Islam and to discuss Islamic solutions to women’s issues. Such meetings keep women informed, provide a healthy social outlet, strengthen ties of Muslim sisterhood, and thus, strengthens the community, and are a natural addition to teen groups and children’s classes, often held on weekends. Women should also be encouraged to add written comments to and make written announcements in mosque newsletters, and to have their group announcements included with main announcements after Friday prayers.

Hajjah Naziha Adil

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Requirements for Women Fasting Ramadan

Dear Hajjah,

Please provide some guidelines on the requirements of women fasting during Ramadan.

– S.K.

Dear S.K.:

Thank you for your thoughtful inquiry. This lengthy reply includes brief points of Islamic Law that apply to women.

It should be understood that Islam is intended to bring ease to all aspects of our daily life. Allah grants special mercy for women, and requirements of worship are less stringent for them than for men. Women and men are exempt from fasting during extended travel away from home (beyond fifty miles and a duration of more than one day), and during illness which is too severe to continue the fast, and if they are very old and/or weak. Women, however, are further exempt from the fast if they are pregnant or are breast-feeding, unless fasting does not interrupt feeding schedules nor creates a serious imbalance in the natural supply and quality of milk so as to disturb the baby. This exemption is again to the favor of women, as Allah intends the mother should not have to undergo undue hardship.

A nursing mother cannot fast without the permission of the infant’s father, as she may be emotionally moved to observe fast when doing so may impair her health, or that of the baby. As the protector of the mother and child, the father is expected to be objective when taking his decision, not overly strict and not overly soft.

Women are also exempt from the fast of Ramadan during their monthly periods, a time when they are also given leave from performing the five daily prayers. While some Muslims believe this state renders a woman unfit to pray or fast because she is “unclean”, the reality of the matter is that Allah subhana wa ta`ala in His Infinite Mercy has relieved women of their religious responsibilities during this period so that they may relax. During Ramadan and all other times throughout the year, part of the woman’s biological monthly cleansing process is that she not obstruct or collect the flow of unclean matter which issues from her womb, such as with the use of tampons, which is categorically haram (forbidden) and can cause severe toxic reactions in the body. A woman’s duty to fast in Ramadan resumes at the time when prayer becomes binding.

Women and men are each responsible for days of obligatory fasting which were not fulfilled. However, in the case of women who are aged and extremely weak or who suffer from long-term illness, Allah has allowed that their children may fast on their behalf to make up unfulfilled days of obligatory fasting. Under these circumstances the adult children make their intention to fast on behalf of the exempted parent, and each day of fasting must be observed independent from any other fasts.

For each day of obligatory fasting (in Ramadan) missed due to travel or temporary illness, both men and women must fast one day sometime before the next Ramadan. However, a pregnant woman or nursing mother who did not fast the entire month of Ramadan has been given the option to make up one day of fasting for one day missed (which is best), or she may feed two poor individuals for thirty days (sixty meals), or give sadaqah to the equivalent of sixty meals. Again, this option is intended to help women who are unable to make up an entire month of fasting, either due to illness, weakness, or because they are again pregnant or still nursing their baby, but who nevertheless need to make up missed days of fasting, which are a debt we are all held accountable for.

Women and men are not exempt from fasting simply because they work outside the home or because their jobs require long or irregular hours, or a long commute. As these days many Muslim women are working outside the home, some are finding it much easier to request flexible work hours during Ramadan, reporting to work earlier and leaving earlier in the day, to alleviate the burden of fasting and to allow them be at home with their families in time to prepare for and break fast at sunset.

Hajjah Naziha Adil

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Differences in Times of Imsak

Question:

My head is reeling having tried to navigate this thread:

http://www.sunniforum.com/forum/showthread.php?60632-The-Imsak-issue

Actually, I wasn’t looking for this, I just wanted some background on the issue of why there seems to be so much disparity on the time for when suhur ends and fajr starts. This led me to read about imsak and fajr, subh al-kadhib vs subh al-sadiq. But even that doesn’t seem to be the core contention here. It cuts deeper, to how best to qualify the timings, and which measurement is valid. I can understand that we bicker over moonsighting (even though we shouldn’t), given the polarisation in the Ummah as a whole. But it stupefies me how, given not even that Ramadhan is an annual occurrence, but that salah is a five-times-a-day occurence, that “we” still seemed to have not obtained clarity on how best to establish the time for fajr (and by association, imsak)?!

That thread is very involved, and it made me wonder what the responsibility of the layman is here? The whole 15 degrees vs 18 degrees debate is not something I’ve looked into, and reading that thread, there are claims and counter-claims, questions around the integrity of the sightings done for research, controversey surrounding the methodology itself, and demands for rootedness in fiqh. After a while the words just become a blur…

I mean, the entire timetable for fajr salah is being questioned in some cases, because the time gap between one locality and another (in neighboring counties) is so far apart that laymen begin doubting themselves (in terms of whether what they’re following is actually right?). So you have some people finishing suhur 45 minutes before they believe fajr has kicked in. Which leads to hardships. Still, the simplest solution I see is to do just that, i.e. eat suhur early and do fajr late(r).

Is this a country-specific issue, or does it affect other countries, this 15 degrees vs 18 degrees (I know there are different figures others take, too, apparently) question?

Can somebody break it down in simple terms for a non-specialist like myself, please? What a miserable state to be in at the outset of Ramadhan, imposing unnecessary hardships on oneself and one’s family because those whom we’re supposed to look to as reference points, don’t seem to be able to agree on a basic criteria to move forward on. Where are the lights?

Subhan’Allah…

Answer:

`Alaykum as-Salam wa rahmatullah,

Perhaps it is not the difference in calculating methods, which has always been around, that creates hardship but rather excessive scrupulosity or unwarranted suspicion of the local method by comparing it to a neighboring country. Fiqh-wise even in the improbable case that one’s entire community is wrong in determining the times for fajr and imsak one would be excused in following the same error that was committed in good faith. Computer programs are not that far off but differ only up to 5-10 minutes, which never leads to up to 40 minutes pre-fajr imsak time but half that time at most.


was-Salam,

Hajj Gibril

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