Question & Answers
Question: If I am performing prayer with jama`ah and the
jama`ah is for qasr prayer, and for me it is not qasr, what should I do? Also,
can you tell me for the other way if I am to read qasr and jama`ah is not what
should I do then. Also, if I have traveled to some place for dinner which is
about 60 miles from home, this will be qasr but if I will reach home before the
time for the prayer ends (like `Isha') then should I wait to get home so I can
read full prayer or can I make qasr prayer on my own. I do not mean jama`ah--
this is for my sister.
Answer: In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.
All praise and thanks are due to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon His
Messenger.
As a follower, you should follow the imam, but when the imam finishes his qasr
Salah, you get up and complete the rest of the Salah (2 rak`ahs) as you are not
traveler.
If you travel over 60 miles, you are considered as traveler and therefore you
can do the qasr, but if you return to your city you should pray the Salah
completely. Allah Almighty knows best.
Question: Asalamu alaykum. I came to U.S. during a
visit, and I pray duhur with asr & magrib with isha, but I was here 2 months, so
how many months can I pray like that. jazakumu allahu khayra. asalamu alaykum
Answer: As long as you are a traveler you can shorter the
salah and not combine.
Question: As-salamu `alaykum. I am a 40-year old who
recently converted to Islam. I am an English male living in the UK. I work as a
Heavy Goods Vehicle driver, traveling distances greater than 48 miles Monday to
Friday from approximately 5am – 4pm on a daily basis.
I work during the day, Monday to Friday, I miss Jum`ah prayer on a regular
basis. I understand there is dispensation for the traveler. But as of late, I
have been feeling very uneasy about missing Jum`ah Prayer for such long periods
of time. In the last year I attended Jum`ah Prayer less than 10 times only (from
days off, holidays, etc.) Is it permissible to do this or am I in gross error by
missing Jum`ah prayers so frequently?
Answer: Wa `alaykum As-Salamu wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.
All praise and thanks are due to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon His
Messenger.
It depends whether you travel such long distance outside the city or inside IT.
If you are working in the same city and such distance is regarded as normal
driving, then you are not considered as traveler no matter how far the distance
would be.
If you are driving outside the city, then you are considered a traveler and the
traveler is not required to pray Jum`ah. But if you find a place where Jum`ah
can be performed, then you should do so, so that you don't end up having the
same situation of praying few times a year.
Question: Asalamualekum Shiekh. After how many miles
does a Salat beome Kasar? Jazakallah
Answer: There is no clear cut for the distance through
which a Muslim is considered a traveler. Some companions of the Prophet (SAAS)
used to shorten their salah when they went farms in the outskirts of Medinah
City. The distance could be a mile or a bit more than a mile. A Muslim can
shorten a salah when he has the sense of being a traveler.
Question: Asalamu alaikum. My question is about
combining prayers- I heard that the Prophet did this without the reason of
travel or illness. So if we are out on a trip which is not far enough to be
considered for travel (about 40 mi.), and its after maghrib when we head home,
can we combine maghrib and isha upon arrival home, or do we have to pray on the
way (which is kind of dangerous at night) Jazakumullahu khairen. A similar
question: can I combine prayers if the imam is a traveler, and just make my
prayer the normal length (i.e. not shorten it), e.g. maghrib and Isha? or do I
have to consider my joining of the second prayer a sunnah for me if I am not
traveling (which is what I normally do) Jazakumullahu khairen.
Answer: 1) Combining the salah is possible when you
are in need of it, but you are not guided to combine the salah for no reason.
2) You need not miss the Jama’ah because of combining salah. If the imam
combines the salah then you have the option to combine it with him. If he is the
main Imam in the area, then it is preferred to follow him in salah.
Question: I have a question concerning prayers while
traveling. When being a traveler, I happen to be in a Mosque for combining
prayer ( such as dhuhr and `asr) – How do I behave? Do I only pray 2 rak`ahs and
let the other finish their 4 rak`ahs ?
If I pray all 4 rak`ahs with them, do I then loose my status as a traveler and
do I then pray for all following prayers the normal number of rak`ahs?
Can I offer 2 rak`ahs Sunnah when entering a Mosque while traveling?
Answer: In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.
All praise and thanks are due to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon His
Messenger.
"When you are a traveler and you pray your own prayer or you pray behind a
traveling Imam, so you perform qasr Salah. However, if you are praying behind a
resident Imam, you have to follow him and complete the prayer even if your
status remains as it is and you are free to offer Sunnah prayers during journey
time, which means if you do it, it is ok, and if you don't, it is still ok.".
Allah Almighty knows best
Question: As-Salaamu Alaikum, I live more than 80 km
from my working place. I travel this distance everyday. Am I allowed to pray
salat assafar?
Answer: Wa Alaikum Salaam, You are allowed to practice your
salat as a traveler. You can shorten the four into two. But, try your best not
to miss Jama'a.
Question: I have read in different places that the
traveler can shorten and join his prayer up until 14 days. However, recently I
read in Islam Q&A site that this is valid only for travel of 3 days! Based on
sound proof, which one is correct? Also if one has the opportunity to pray all
the prayers on time and at appropriate length. How can he proceed? Is it
mandatory to shorten, i.e. follow the Sunnah?
Answer: In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.
All praise and thanks are due to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon His
Messenger.
There are different opinions among the jurists regarding shortening the prayers
and combining them. According to the Hanafis, combining the prayer is only valid
in Hajj; shortening prayer while traveling is allowed up to 15 days. According
to the Maliki School, if you intend to stay more than 3 days in a city, then you
should complete your Salah (after 3 days).
To shorten the Salah is a concession from Allah, it is not obligatory. If you
pray completely, it should not be a problem, but as Ibn `Umar used to say, “it
is a concession that we should not reject.”
The preferred view is that shortening Salah is allowed up to 3 days. If you were
to stay for longer period, you pray completely. Also, if you pray with the
congregation, then you should follow the imam (i.e. pray completely). Allah
Almighty knows best.
Question: During journey, concerned with the "Qasr"
Salah, three "witr" are excused or should we pray three " witr " also with two "fard"
for "`Isha’" prayer.
Answer: In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.
All praise and thanks are due to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon His
Messenger.
During the qasr period, it is your choice to offer witr or not. We know from the
Sunnah that the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) used to pray witr in
all cases, even when traveling. Allah Almighty knows best.
Question: How does an Islamic astronaut face Mecca in
orbit?
Decisions by a conference of Muslim leaders and scientists will help a Malaysian
doctor stay observant in outer space.
By Bettina Gartner | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor
from the October 10, 2007 edition
E-mail Print Letter to the Editor Republish del.icio.us digg
Answer: Allah is watching – even in outer space. And that
poses a problem for a devout Muslim astronaut who is scheduled to fly to the
International Space Station (ISS) aboard a Russian rocket this week.
Imagine trying to pray five times a day in zero gravity while having to face
an ever-shifting Mecca hundreds of miles below. How do you ritually wash
yourself without water? And, now that it's Ramadan, how do you fast from sunrise
to sunset when you see a sunrise and a sunset every 90 minutes? Sheikh Muszaphar
Shukor, a Malaysian astronaut, must decide before the Oct. 10 launch.
"I am Islamic," Sheikh Shukor told a press conference in Moscow, according to
the Associated Press, "but my main priority is more of conducting experiments."
The young orthopedic surgeon is not the first Muslim to fly into space. In 1985,
Sultan bin Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud, a Saudi Arabian prince, flew aboard the
shuttle Discovery. Last September, Iranian-American telecommunications
entrepreneur Anousheh Ansari paid the Russians an undisclosed sum (reportedly
$20 million) to visit the ISS as a "space tourist." But up to now, there have
been no guidelines for Muslim religious practice in space.
And so the Malaysian National Space Agency (MNSA) and its Department of Islamic
Development held a two-day conference in April last year. They invited 150
scholars, scientists, and astronauts to discuss "Islam and Life in Space." The
result is a recently published booklet of guidelines for the faithful Muslim
astronaut.
Five times a day (before sunrise, at midday, in late afternoon, after sunset,
and at night), earth-bound muezzins call Muslims to prayer. A spaceship
traveling 17,400 miles per hour orbits the earth 16 times in a day. Does that
mean praying 80 times in 24 hours?
The guidelines are much more reasonable: Daily prayer in space is not linked to
sunrises and sunsets, but to a 24-hour cycle based on the "home" time zone of
Baikonur, the Russian-leased launch site in Kazakhstan. Five meditations every
24 hours will suffice.
If interrupting work to pray is not possible, the astronaut may practice a
shorter version of the prayer or combine midday and afternoon prayer times, or
the evening and night ones.
The next problem: Where is Mecca?
Muslims on Earth face Mecca, in central Saudi Arabia, when they pray. The MNSA
suggests that the astronaut pray toward Mecca as much as possible, or at the
Earth in general. But if it becomes necessary, the astronaut may simply face any
direction.
The attitude while at prayer is also an issue. In zero gravity, the sequence of
the praying postures – standing, bowing, kneeling, and prostrating oneself – is
difficult at best. Malaysian Islamic authorities say the astronaut should stand,
preferably. If he can't stand, he should sit. If he can't sit, he should lie
down. And if he can't do any of those, he's allowed to symbolically indicate the
postures "with his eyelids" or to simply imagine them, according to the MNSA
booklet.
Before worship, a Muslim must perform ritual washing – cleaning face, hands,
arms, feet, and hair. The problem: Water on the ISS is so precious that even
sweat and urine are recycled. And so the Muslim astronaut is permitted "dry
ablution." In desert areas on earth, Muslims use dirt and sand to clean the
hands. The astronaut will strike his palms on a wall or mirror – though this is
not likely to raise any dust.
Then there's diet. Pork and alcohol are forbidden. Animals to be consumed for
food must be slaughtered in a particular way. All food must be halal (allowed by
Islamic law). But how can the astronaut know if the food aboard the ISS is halal?
If he has any doubts, says the MNSA booklet, he should eat just enough to ward
off hunger.
Meals raise another complication. Ramadan – the holy month during which Muslims
abstain from all earthly indulgences (including eating) during daylight hours –
doesn't end until Oct. 13.
Shukor said he hopes to be able to fast in space. The decision will be his. If
he does fast, the 16-times-every-24-hours problem will be solved in the same way
as the prayer question. And if he chooses not to fast in space? That's OK. But
he will be required to make up for Ramadan when – after 11 days in space – he's
back on Earth.
The Meaning of the Term ''Islam''
Date: 27.02.2005
Topic: Miscellany
A common misconception about "Islam" is that it is the religion that was
revealed to Prophet Muhammad only.
1:) Islam, the Qur'an tells us, is rather the name of the one religion
that Allah, the One and only God, revealed to every Prophet that He sent to
people since the time of the first man and Prophet, Adam. For instance, all the
following Prophets were Muslims who taught Islam to people: Noah, Abraham,
Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, Aaron, David, Solomon, Zachariah, John,
and Jesus.
By Dr Louay Fatoohi
Source: Jihad in the Qur'an: The Truth from the Source (Second Edition)
A common misconception about "Islam" is that it is the religion that was
revealed to Prophet Muhammad only.
2:) Islam, the Qur'an tells us, is rather the name of the one religion
that Allah, the One and only God, revealed to every Prophet that He sent to
people since the time of the first man and Prophet, Adam. For instance, all the
following Prophets were Muslims who taught Islam to people: Noah, Abraham,
Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, Aaron, David, Solomon, Zachariah, John,
and Jesus. The following verse describes Israelite Prophets as "Muslims":
Surely We revealed the Torah in which there was guidance and light; with it, the
Prophets who aslamu [became Muslims] guided the Jews (from 5.44).
The name "Muslim" was in fact coined by Allah who used it long before the
time of Prophet Muhammad and the Qur'an, as revealed in the following verse:
And jahidu (do jihad) [O you who believe!] in the way of Allah jihadihi (the
kind of jihad that is due to Him). He has chosen you and has not laid upon you a
hardship in religion; it is the faith of your father Abraham. He [Allah] has
named you al-Muslimin (the Muslims) earlier and in this [the Qur'an], so that
the Messenger be a witness over you, and you be witnesses over the people.
Therefore keep up prayer, pay the obligatory alms, and hold fast to Allah; He is
your Master; so how excellent a Master and how excellent a Supporter! (22.78).
The verse clearly states that Allah has named the followers of His religion
"Muslims" not only in the Qur'an but also in Books that He had revealed to
previous Prophets, such as the Torah of Moses and the Injil of Jesus. Note also
the following verse which states that Prophet Noah, who lived long before
Prophet Abraham, told his people that Allah ordered him to be "one of the
Muslims":
But if you [O people!] turn away [from my call], I have not asked you for any
reward; my reward is only with Allah, and I have been commanded to be one of al-Muslimin
(the Muslims) (10.72).
In other words, previous divine Books and Prophets would have used terms
equivalent to "Islam" and "Muslim" in their respective languages. The Arabic
verb "yuslim" means "surrenders" or "submits." It is used in a special way in
the Qur'an as in "surrenders one's self to Allah," "surrenders to Allah," or
such variations. The derived Qur'anic noun "Islam," therefore, means "submission
to Allah." To be a Muslim is to believe in Allah as the One Lord, submit to His
will, and carry out His commandments. So, Islam is in fact a universal term that
describes the one religion that Allah instructed, through His various
Messengers, all people to embrace. Let's read some of the relevant Qur'anic
verses, starting with these about Prophets Abraham and his sons and grandsons:
And who has a better religion than he who aslama [has become a Muslim] (has
surrendered himself) to Allah, is a doer of good, and has followed the faith of
Abraham, worshipping one God. And Allah took Abraham as a close friend (4.125).
And who turns away from the religion of Abraham but he who makes himself a fool;
and surely We chose him [Abraham] in this world, and in the hereafter he is
surely among the righteous (2.130). When his Lord said to him; "Aslim (Be a
Muslim; submit)," he said: "Aslamtu (I have become a Muslim; I have submitted)
to the Lord of the people" (2.131). And Abraham enjoined the same on his sons,
and so did Jacob [Abraham's grandson]: "O my sons! Surely Allah has chosen for
you the [true] religion, therefore die not except as Muslimun (Muslims)"
(2.132). Or were you [O People of the Book!] witnesses when death visited Jacob,
when he said to his sons: "What will you worship after me?" They said: "We shall
worship your God and the God of your fathers, Abraham, Ishmael, and Isaac, one
God, and to Him we are Muslimun (Muslims)" (2.133).
The following verses which refer to the Jews and Christians, or the "People of
the Book," emphasize and instruct the Prophet to stress that "Islam" or
"submission to Allah" is the true religion of the Lord:
And they [the Jews and Christians] say: "None shall enter paradise except he who
is a Jew or a Christian." These are [nothing more than] their desires. Say [O
Muhammad!]: "Bring your proof if you are truthful" (2.111). Verily, whoever
aslama (becomes a Muslim; surrenders himself) to Allah and is a doer of good,
his reward is with his Lord, and there is no fear for them nor shall they grieve
(2.112).
Surely the [true] religion in the sight of Allah is al-Islam (Islam), and those
to whom the Book had been given differed only after knowledge had come to them,
out of transgression among themselves. And whoever denies the verses of Allah,
then surely Allah is quick in reckoning (3.19). But if they argue with you [O
Muhammad!], say: "Aslamtu (I have become a Muslim; I have surrendered myself) to
Allah and so everyone who follows me." And say to those who have been given the
Book and to the unlearned people: "A'aslamtum (Would you become Muslims; would
you submit)?" So if Aslamu (they become Muslims; they submit) then they have
found the right way, but if they turn away, then your responsibility is only the
deliverance of the Message; and Allah sees the servants (3.20).
This verse is about Prophet Solomon and the Queen of Sheba who came to visit him
in his palace:
It was said to her [Queen of Sheba]: "Enter the hall." But when she saw it she
deemed it to be a lake of water and bared her legs. He [Solomon] said: "It is a
hall made smooth with glass." She said [praying to Allah]: "My Lord! Surely I
have wronged myself, and aslamtu (I have become a Muslim; I submit) with Solomon
to Allah, the Lord of the people" (27.44).
Prophet Muhammad is the last Prophet of Islam, and the Qur'an is the last Book
from Allah:
[O people!] Muhammad is not the father of any of your men, but he is the
Messenger of Allah and the last of the Prophets; and Allah is aware of
everything (33.40).
The Qur'an stresses that, contrary to the claims of the disbelieving Arabs,
making a human being a Messenger, as happened to Prophet Muhammad, was not an
unprecedented event. In fact, this is exactly how Allah communicated with
people: through Messengers that carried His Message to people:
Say [O Muhammad!]: "I am not the first of the Messengers, and I do not know what
will be done with me or with you. I only follow that which is revealed to me,
and I am but a manifest warner" (46.9).
In addition to the belief in the oneness of Allah, the hereafter, and the
angels, the Qur'an requires the Muslim to believe in all previous Messengers and
the Books and Messages that Allah revealed to them. This is consistent with the
Qur'an's affirmation that all Messengers delivered the same religion and were
sent by the same God. The Muslim is commanded to hold all Prophets in equally
high esteem and reverence. The failure to believe in any Prophet is a failure to
believe in all Prophets, and a failure to be a Muslim:
Say [O you who believe!]: "We believe in Allah, in that which has been revealed
to us; in that which was revealed to Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, and the
Descendents (Jacob's sons); in that which was given to Moses and Jesus; and in
that which was given to the Prophets from their Lord; we do not make any
distinction between any of them, and to Him we are Muslimun (Muslims)" (2.136).
The Messenger [Muhammad] believes in that which has been revealed to him from
his Lord, and so do the believers; they all believe in Allah, His angels, His
Books, and His Messengers; [they say] we make no distinction between any of His
Messengers; and they say: "We hear and obey [Allah's commandments]; grant us
Your forgiveness, our Lord. And to You is the eventual course" (2.285).
Question: Could you please tell me more about the four imams, means on the Four Schools of Jurisprudence ?
Name of Counselor: Ahmad Sa'd
Answer:
Thanks a lot for this question that requires really lengthy answer, as in fact telling the story of the four main Imams needs volumes indeed.
However, let's make the best use of this opportunity in reminding you and our honorable readers on some important facts that explain our juristic heritage and above all, our religion.
The Prophet and Divine Guidance
Let's start from the beginning from the time of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) when guidance regarding daily situations and solutions for any problems was simply derived directly from the Quran and the actual example of the Prophet himself.
From that time till today, the Quran and the Sunnah of the Prophet which includes his sayings, actions and agreements constitute the main sources for practice for every Muslim.
Scholars normally go directly to the Quran and the Sunnah to get solutions for people's problems and answers for their queries. With this understanding, we can say that whatever shows up in the life of a Muslim should be addressed in light of the Quran and the Sunnah and that should be the main madhhab (school of thought) everyone bears in his mind.
The Companions and Practicing Ijtihad
After the Prophet's death, some of the Companions took the responsibility of finding answers to the juristic questions of people by looking into the Quran, the Prophet's Sunnah and, in case the issue is totally new and has not been addressed before, they may try to draw an analogy between it and a similar issue that happened during the Prophet's life.
Sometimes there would be no similar incident in the Prophet's life that could be used as a reference and in that situation, the Companions used to find a new verdict based on the general guidelines of the Quran and the Sunnah and this simply paved the way to the term 'ijtihad' to come into formulation.
Yet, not all the Companions were taking care of this important task, it was only some of them who were known of their deep knowledge of Islamic law and Prophet's judgments. Amongst these were the Four Rightly-Guided Caliphs as well as Abdullah ibn Masud, Abu Musa Al-Ashari, Ubay ibn Kab, Zayd ibn Thabit and Muadh ibn Jabal.
In their process of ijtihad, the Companions were always in the habit of deducting the ruling from the apparent literal meaning of a text or from the reason or the wisdom behind a ruling stated in the text, and this latter one paved the way to the establishment of what was later called 'analogical deduction' or 'qiyas'.
The Era of the Successors
During the time of the Successors, the same methodology, with a bit of expansion and focus on ijtihad, continued and new names appeared including Salim ibn Abdillah ibn Umar, Nafi the freed-slave of Abdullah ibn Umar, Ibn Shihab Az-Zuhri, Alqamah ibn Qays from Iraq, Ata ibn Abi Rabah of Makkah, and Umar ibn Abd Al-Aziz in the Levant.
The same way of dealing with religious issues continued later on but it started to take the form of established discipline of knowledge as the Islamic state expanded immensely and the whole age was called the age of recording or writing down various branches of knowledge.
The Evolution of Madhhabs (Schools of Jurisprudence)
With the collections of Hadith being introduced and the new challenges facing a civilized society, there appeared a need for established discipline bearing in mind that not everyone can find a solution for his problem and someone who can find such a solution has himself to be qualified.
The disagreement over the areas that can be covered by qiyas, the apparent and the non-apparent meanings of texts, what constitutes 'consensus of the Companions', we could find ourselves in an age of the appearance of great Imams who laid the foundation for Islamic schools of thought.
Imam Abu Hanifah An-Numan
Imam Abu Hanifah happened to be the first as he was born in 80 AH and died 150 AH. Born in Kufa, a big city in Iraq which was in close touch with the former Persian Empire, the Imam found that many issues have not been witnessed before in Arabia because of the simple life the Arabs had compared to the more advanced one he had at his time.
It was because of this that Abu Hanfih's approach was more to look into the objectives, the wisdom more than the literal understanding of the texts. That is why we read in books speaking about this era that Abu Hanfiah belonged to the school of opinion.
This means that he was searching for the wisdom behind texts in order to be able to provide solutions to the brand new issued in the light of the objective rather than the letter of text that sometimes leads to restrictions which do not suit the main objective of Shariah, that is, to remove hardship and difficulty.
Imam Malik ibn Anas
The second Imam was Malik ibn Anas who was born in Madinah in 93 AH and due to his upbringing and the nature of environment and his close contact with the Companions of the Prophet, he was able to access many hadiths.
Imam Malik gets the credit of classifying hadiths in a juristic way as he wrote the well-known volume Al-Muwatta where he implemented that way. The simple life in Madinah did not require much ijtihad as the challenges were of another kind.
Imam Ash-Shafi
The third Imam Ash-Shafi was born in 150 AH in Gaza although his lineage ends to the tribe of Quraish. Ash-Shafi traveled to Madinah and heard from Imam Malik and traveled to Iraq where he established his school of thought taking into consideration the environment and the challenges.
By the lapse of time, Imam Ash-Shafi himself moved to Egypt and there he revisited some of his own views and amended them according to the new environment. This is an indication to everyone at all times that although the views of scholars are respectful and based on their understanding of the text, still they are not holy or untouchable.
They are also subject to scrutiny within the realm of Shariah by qualified scholars who have got the knowledge and the ability to do so. Such a scrutiny and redressing should happen when new situation occurs.
Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal
The fourth Imam was Ahmad ibn Hanbal who was born in 164 AH and studied under great scholars of Hadith including Sufyan ibn Uyaynah and became a leading scholar of hadith at his time.
Due to Ahmad ibn Hanbal's nature of learning, his school of thought recourse to ijtihad in very limited cases and was giving priority to the Quranic text, Hadith. In case of no clear indication in the Quran and Hadith, they would try the practice of the Companions of the Prophet.
If there are two versions of a text or two texts apparently giving two different opinions, they would accept both and will not try to do much towards giving one of them priority if both are authentic.
In fact, there were many more scholars who had their schools of thought but these four were the ones that gained prominence and spreading. Through this, we can understand that only qualified scholars can evaluate the views of scholars and study their evidence.
Therefore, it is not for a layman to claim that he himself follows a certain madhhab, nor is it necessary for him to do so; rather, he can simply follow the fatwa (opinion) of his Imam or local scholars without having to interfere in what is beyond this because he does not have the specialization to do so.
Co-existence
Although these great scholars held different view regarding certain things, this did not prevent them from respecting each other and appreciating the scholarship of each other.
When Imam Ash-Shafi prayed Fajr near the grave of Abu Hanifah, he did not perform qunut in Fajr which is against his own (i.e. Shafi) opinion and when asked about that, he said that he wanted to show respect to Abu Hanifah who held the view of not performing qunut at that time. (Yusuf Al-Qaradawi, As-Sahwa Al-Islamiya bayan Al-Ikhtilaf Al-Mashru` wat-Tafarruq Al-Madhmum, Dar Al-Wafa Egypt, p. 87)
This shows how dedicated and respectful these people were and that is why Allah gave them prominence. May Allah bless all of them.
50 Questions And Answers On Islamic Monotheism
Bismillah Rahman Raheem
IN THE NAME OF ALLAH MOST GRACIOUS MOST MERCIFUL
{Collected From: The Sunnah Islamic Page
P.O.Box: 28774 Safat - State Of Kuwait}
Q1 Who is your Rubb? (the Lord,the Creator etc).
A. My Rubb is Allah Who has created me and all that exists. He nourishes me and all creatures by His Bounties.
Q.2. What is your religion?
A. My religion is Islam, which is submission and obedience to the Order oF Allah and His Messenger with love, hope and fear.
Q.3. How did you know Allah?
I know Him by His signs and creation like the day and night; the sun and the moon; the heaven and the earth, and all that is there in and between them.
Q.4. Where is Allah?
A. Allah is above the heavens raised over the Throne and separated from His creatures.
Q.5. Is Allah with us (in person)?
A. Allah is settled over His Mighty Throne, but He is with us by His Knowledge, hearing ,seeing and other attributes. As He said: "Fear not verily! I am with you both hearing and seeing (V,20. :46)
Q.6. Who are the friends of Allah?
A. Those people are the friends of Allah who are pious and righteous, fear Him much abstain from all kinds of sins and perform all kinds of goods, and holdfast to the Qur`an and Sunnah.
Q. 7. How do you worship Allah?
A. I worship Allah in a manner in which all my ibadah is dedicated to Him Alone. I do not ascribe anyone with Him in worship.
Q-8. Why did Allah send Messengers?
A. Allah has sent Messengers so that they call the people to worship Him Alone, not ascribing any partner with Him, and in order that mankind should have no plea against Allah.
Q.9. What is the meaning of Islam ?
A. Islam means i.e. submission to Allah with Tawhid .
Q.10. What are the pillars of Istam?
A. 1. Testimony of Faith (There is no true God except Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah )
2. To establish Salat (prayers).
3. To pay Zakat.
4. To observe Saum (fasting) in Ramadan.
5. Hajj (pilgrimage to the Sacred House) if one can afford the journey.
Q.11. What is Iman?
A. Iman (Faith) means to believe in the heart, to confess by the tongue and to act with the parts of the body.
Q.12. Can there be any variation in Iman?
A. By some words and deeds it may increase and by some words and deeds it may decrease.
Q.13. What do you mean by increase and decrease in Iman?
A- Iman (Faith) increases by obedience to Allah and good deeds while it decreases by sins and evil acts.
Q.14. What are the pillars of Iman (Faith)
A. The pillars of Iman are six i.e. to believe in:
1. Allah.
2. His Angels.
3. His Messengers.
4. His Books.
5. The Last Day.
6. Divine Preordainments good or bad.
Q.15. What is Belief in Allah?
A. The Belief in Allahi is that you should believe that Allah is the Sole Creator Sustainer Provider and the One in Whose Hand is the disposal of all affairs. Everything stands in need of Him, but He stands in need of none. He is the Only One Who is worthy of being worshipped. He has the Best Names and Perfect Attributes.
Q.16. Who are the angels?
A. The angels are creatures of light. They are Allah's obedient slaves, they do that which they are commanded and are incapable of disobedience.
Q.17. What do you mean by Belief in the Book and the Messengers?
A. It means that Allah sent the Messengers like Moses, Jesus,Abraham. Noah etc. and sent down the books like the Torah, Injeel, Zaboor (Psalms) etc. to call the people to worship Allah Alone, associating nothing with Him. He sealed (finalized) the Messengers with Prophet Muhammed and abrogated all previous books with the Qur'an. Therefore the worship should be done according to the Qur'an and the Sunnah of the Prophet .
Q.I8. What is meant by Belief in the Last Day?
A. The Belief in the Last Day means to believe that Allah has ordained a fixed term for everything, and a term for this world. He will assuredly raise the dead from their graves and will account for everyone their deeds in this world. On that Day of Resurrection, rewards and punishments will be assigned. Every one will be justly rewarded or punished.
Q.19. What is meant by Belief Preordainment (Qadar)?
A. The Belief in Preordainment (Qadar) means to believe that everything — good or bad — happens or takes place according to what Allah has ordained for it. He has created everything in due proportion.
Q.20. What is the cleaning of "There is no God but Allah"?
A. It means there is no true deity except Allah Alone, Negating all false gods and affirming that Allah is the only true God.
Q.21. What is the meaning of ^Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah"?
A. It means total submission to him in whatever he ordered, and avoiding what he forbade and believing in all those matters he informed us about.
Q.22. What are the conditions of the testimony of Faith?
A. There are seven conditions of the testimony of Faith:
1- Knowledge whick negates ignorance.
2- Certainty which negates doubt.
3- Sincerity and purity of intent which negates Shirk.
4- Truthfulness which negates hypocrisy.
5- Love and devotion which negates disdain of Allah`s religion.
6- Submission which negates disobedince.
7- Acceptance which negates rejection or denial.
Q.23. What is the greatest thing that Allah has enjoined?
A. The greatest thing Allah has enjoined is Tauhid (Monotheism).
Q.24. What is Tauhid (Islamic Monotheism)?
A. Tauhid means declaring Allah to be the only God who deserves to be worshipped in truth and confirming all attributes with which He has qualified Himself or that are attributed to Him by His Messenger .
Q.25. What are the aspects of Tauhid?
A. There are three aspects of Tauhid:
1- Tauhid-ar-Rububiyah.
2- Tauhid-al-Uluhiyah.
3-Tauhid-al-Asma was-Sifat.
Q.26. What isTauhid-ar-Rububiyah?
A. It is declaring Allah to be One and Unique in His work, Iike creation, sustenance, bringing to life and causing death etc.
Q.27. What is Tauhid-al-Uluhiyah?
A. It is declaring Allah as the Only God to whom all acts worship must be dedicated such salat (prayers), Zakat, Sawm(fasting), supplications vowing etc.
Q.28. What isTauhid-al-Asma was-Sifat?
A. It is an affirmation of all the Divien Names and Attributes of Allah in a manner that
suits His Majesty, as mentioned in the Qur'an and the Sunnah.
Q.29. How would you describe Ibadah?
A. It is a comprehensive word comprising deeds and words that Allah loves and is pleased with whether manifested or hidden,
Q.30. What are the conditions of Ibadah?
A. There are two conditions of Ibadah:
1. Sincerity to Allah.
2. Submission to Allah's Messenger i.e. to act according to his Sunnah.
Q.31. Write some types of Ibadah.
A. Some types of Ibadah are the prayers, the obligatory charity,
fasting, the pilgrimage, fear of Allah, hope in His Mercy, Seeking His aid. and other acts of worship which Allah has commanded and enjoined.
Q.32. What is the greatest thing Allah has forbidden?
A. The greatest thing Allah has forbidden is Shirk (polytheism).
Q.33. What is polytheism?
A. It means to believe that there is one who shares Allah in His acts i.e. ascribing partners or setting up rivals to Allah in His rights.
Q.34. What are the types of polytheism?
A. There are three types of polytheism:
1. The greater polytheism (Shirk Akbar).
2. The lesser polytheism (Shirk Asghar).
3. The inconspicuous polytheism (Shirk Khafi).
Q-35 What is greater polytheism?
A. The greater polytheism is to devote any form of worship to other than Allah Allah will never forgive one who dies upon Shirk,nor accept his good deeds, and he would be cast out from the folds of Islam.
Q.36. What are the types of greater polytheism?
A. There are four types of greater polytheism:
1- The polytheism in invocation i.e. involving supplications to other than Allah.
2. The polytheism in intentions i.e. purpose and intentions not for the sake of Allah but directed towards other deities.
3, The polytheism in obedience i.e. rendering obedience to any authority against the Order of Allah.
4. The potytheism in love i.e showing love to others which is due to Allah Alone.
Q.37. What is lesser polytheism?
A. The lesser polytheism is Ar-Riya, that means the acts of worship done to gain praise or fame rather than to please Allah, this type of polytheism, however, does not cast the person committing it out of the fold of Islam.
Q.38. What is inconspicuous polytheism?
A. The inconspicuous polytheism implies being dissatisfied with the conditions ordained by Allah.
Q.39 .What is the proof of the inconspicuous polytheism?
A.The proof of the above Shirk is the saying of the Prophet "The inconspicuous polytheism is more hidden among this nation than the track of a black ant over a black stone on a dark night" (Musnad Ahmad)
Q.40. What are the types of Kufr (disbelief)?
A. There are two types of Kufr :
1. The majorKufr which cast its people out of Islam,
2. The lessor cr minor Kufr which does not cast the one who commits it out of Islam. It is Kufr of ungratefulness.
Q.41. What are the types of major Kufr?
A. There are five types of major Kufr :
1. The Kufr of denial.
2. The Kufr of arrogance associated with recognition of the truth.
3. The Kufr of doubt.
4-. The Kufr of disregard,
5. The Kufr of hypocrisy.
Q.42. What are the categories of hypocrisy ?
A. There are two categories of hypocrisy:
1. Hypocrisy in Belief.
2. Hypocrisy in deeds and actions.
Q.43. What is the hypocrisy in Belief?
A. Hypocrisy in Belief is of six types:
1. Denial of the Messenger .
2. Denial of the thing with which the Messenger is sent.
3. Hating the Messenger
4.Hating the thing with which the Messenger is sent.
5. Rejoicing at the disgrace of Islam.
6. Disliking the prevalence of Islam.
Q.44. What is the hypocrisy in deeds and actions?
A. The hypocrisy in deeds and actions is of five types:
1- When he speaks, he lies.
2- When he promises., he breaks it.
3. When he is entrusted, he betrays.
4. When he disputes, he acts immorally.
5. When he makes a pact, he makes acts treacherously.
Q.45. Are good deeds accepted (by Allah) with the polytheism?
A. Never! None of the deeds are accepted when mixed with polytheism.
Allah says: " If they had joined in worship others with Allah all that they used to do would have been of no benefit to them" (V.6: 88)
"Verily! Allah forgives not setting up partners in worship with Him, but He forgives whom He pleases sins other than that" '(V.4:116)
Q.46 .What are the nullifiers of Islam?
A. The nullifiers of Islam are ten:
1. Polytheism of worship.
2. He who does not believe that the polytheists are disbelievers, or doubts their infidelity or holds their belief to be valid.
3. He who sets up intermediaries between one's self and Allah, supplicating them, trusting them and asking them to intercede on his behalf.
4. He who believes that the guidance of others is more perfect than the Prophet .
5. He who hates anything that the Prophet was sent with.
6. He who denies the religion of the Prophet or ridicules its reward or punishment.
7. Sorcery.
8. Supporting the polytheists against the Muslims.
9. He who believes that some people are exempted from abiding by the Shari`ah as Khidr was exempted by the laws of Musa.
10. Turning away from the religion of Allah by neither learning nor applying it.
Q.47. What are the three fundamentals that every Muslim must learn?
A. The three fundamentals are:
I, Knowing Your Rubb (the Lord, the Creator, the Sustainer, and the One in Whose Hand is the disposal of all affairs).
2. Knowing your religion (Islam).
3. Knowing your Prophet Muhammad
Q.48. What is Taghut?
A. Everything that is worshipped. or followed or obeyed other than Allah is Taghut.
Q.49. How many Taghut are there and who are their leaders?
A. They are many but their leaders are Five:
Q. 50. Who are the leaders of Taghut ?
A. They are:
1. Satan, may Allah curse him
2. Anyone who is worshipped with his consent
3. A person who calls the people to be worshipped instead of Allah
4. A person who claims the knowledge of Ghaib (unseen, hidden, invisible, absent etc)
5.The ruler who rules by laws other than the law sent down by Allah