Rules about Fasting the month of Ramadan
Fasting the month of Ramadan is an obligation
and a great worship. It is among the best acts of obedience and greatest deeds,
and one for which there is great reward. Imam al-Bukhariyy related the Qudsiyy
hadith that the Prophet said Allah said: which means: "The reward of every
good deed is
multiplied ten up to seven-hundred times, except that of the Fasting; it is usually done in sincerity and will be multiplied by as many times as Allah wills." One of the doors of Paradise, named ar-Rayyan, is specified for those Muslims who used to fast in this world. On the Day of Judgment, it will be opened, and those who used to fast in obedience to Allah enter through it, then it would be closed and no others will enter through it.
multiplied ten up to seven-hundred times, except that of the Fasting; it is usually done in sincerity and will be multiplied by as many times as Allah wills." One of the doors of Paradise, named ar-Rayyan, is specified for those Muslims who used to fast in this world. On the Day of Judgment, it will be opened, and those who used to fast in obedience to Allah enter through it, then it would be closed and no others will enter through it.
The month of Ramadan is the ninth month of the
lunar year. It is the best month of the year, as is the night of al-Qadr in
Ramadan the best night of the year. Fasting became an obligation on the Muslims
in the second year after the emigration. Prophet Muhammed fasted nine years of
Ramadan after which he died.
The obligation of fasting Ramadan on the
believers is known from the Qur’an and the hadith. It was explicitly stated in
Verse #183 of Surat al-Baqarah:
which means: [ O believers, Fasting is an
obligation upon you as it was obligated upon the [Muslims] before you so it
would help you to reach piety.] Fasting was an obligation on the nations before
the nation of Prophet Muhammad, however, fasting the month of Ramadan in
particular is a specification only for the nation of Prophet Muhammad.
Moreover, Prophet Muhammad named Fasting (the
month of Ramadan) as one of the five most important matters of Islam in the
famous hadith known as Hadith Jibril related by al-Bukhariyy and Muslim. Angel
Jibril came to the Prophet in the shape of a man with white clothes and asked
him to inform him about Islam. In response, the Prophet said:
which means: <<Islam is to bear witness
that no one is God except Allah and that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah,
performing Prayer, paying Zakat, performing Pilgrimage if you are able, and
Fasting the month of Ramadan. >>
Consequently, renouncing the obligation of
fasting the month of Ramadan, for the one who has learned of its obligation, is
blasphemy because it entails belying Allah and the Prophet. The one who
believes it is an obligation, however, does not perform this obligation
(without a valid excuse) does not blaspheme--rather he is an enormous sinner.
Determining The Beginning Of The Month Of
Ramadan
The obligation of fasting the month of Ramadan
becomes incumbent upon the occurrence of one of two matters: to sight the
crescent of Ramadan after the sunset of the 29th day of Sha^ban (the month
directly preceding Ramadan) or, if the crescent is not seen, then completing 30
days of Sha^ban. So, the beginning of the month of Ramadan, as well as the end
of the month is determined by sighting the crescent, and if not cited, then by
completing the month with 30 days--as is the case with determining all the
months of the lunar calendar. This is taken from the hadith of the Prophet
related by al-Bukhariyy and Muslim: which means: <<Do not fast one or two
days before Ramadan. Start the month when you see the crescent and end the
month when you see the crescent. If you are blocked from seeing it, complete
Sha^ban thirty days.>>
So, on the 29th day of Sha^ban, directly after
the sun sets, the Muslims look towards the western horizon, and if the crescent
(of the new moon) is seen, the following day will be the first day of Ramadan.
If it is not seen, because of cloud cover or another reason, then the next day
will complete 30 days of Sha^ban, and the day after that is the first day of
Ramadan. The judge confirms the beginning of Ramadan if one upright Muslim,
whose testimony is acceptable to the judge, bears witness that he saw the
crescent. The conditions which must be met in a person for his testimony to be
acceptable to the judge in this matter are several. He must be Muslim, male,
adolescent, free, clear of enormous sins, clear of having his small sins exceed
his acts of obedience, and one who abides by the ethics and manners of the
people of his class. So if a person who did not satisfy these conditions
testified to the judge that he saw the crescent, like, for example, a woman, or
a child, or an enormous sinner, or a slave, the judge would not confirm the
beginning of the month of Ramadan and announce to the general public to
commence fasting--relying solely upon their testimony. However, if just one
upright Muslim, who has the conditions listed above satisfied in him, testifies
to the judge that he saw the crescent, the judge would confirm the beginning of
Ramadan for the next day. This is for the hadith related by Abu Dawud from the
route of ^Abdullah Ibn ^Umar who told the Prophet he had sighted the crescent
and so the Prophet fasted the next day and ordered the others to fast as well.
Be warned of those who determine the month of
Ramadan relying upon astronomical calculations. Prophet Muhammad informed us
that such calculation is not relied upon in determining such matters. Imam
Ahmad related in his Musnad that the Prophet said:
which means: <<We are a nation which does
not depend on writings and calculations [to determine the beginning of the
month]. The month is either twenty-nine or thirty days.>> Praise be to
Allah, how easy the matter is. Any Muslim with a sound sight can observe the
crescent. He does not need to rely on complex calculations only a few people
understand.
Who Must Fast And Who Is Excused From Fasting
The first condition for one to be obligated to
fast is to be Muslim. In this world, the non-Muslim is not requested to fast,
however, in the Hereafter, he will be punished for neglecting to fast, as he
will be punished for his blasphemy. Rather, the obligation on the non-Muslim is
to embrace Islam, then afterwards, to fast Ramadan.
Secondly, it is the pubescent Muslim who is
obligated to fast. The child is not obligated to fast. Rather, it is an
obligation on the parents or the guardian of the boy or girl to order him to
fast once he is 7 (lunar) years old, with the condition that the child’s body
can withstand that fasting, and he would not be harmed by it.
As well, for one to be obligated to fast, he
must be of sound mind. Fasting is not obligatory on the insane person.
Fasting is not obligatory on a person whose
body cannot tolerate fasting, either due to old age or because of a severe
illness. Moreover, if a person would be harmed by fasting, that is, because of
his fasting his sickness would get worse, or he would die, then fasting is
prohibited for him. The one who does not fast because of old age or an illness
he is not hopeful to be cured of does not have to make up the missed days of
fasting. Instead he pays an expiation to a poor Muslim for every day he missed
of fasting. The expiation is two average-sized, cupped hands of the most common
staple food of the country, which in this country, is wheat.
Fasting is not obligatory on the menstruating
woman or the woman who is in her postpartum bleeding period. It is unlawful for
them to fast. The woman who missed days of fasting during Ramadan for these
reasons has to make up each missed day.
As well, the pregnant woman is allowed not to
fast if she fears that harm would come to her or her baby from her fasting. As
well, the breast-feeding woman is allowed not to fast if she fears harm would
come to her or her baby from her fasting. Both must make up every one of the
missed days of fasting. As well, if the reason they did not fast was solely the
fear of harming their baby, then in addition to making up the missed days of
fasting, they must pay an expiation, or two cupped, average-sized handfuls of
the most common staple food of the country, for each day they missed.
The one who is traveling a distance of two or
more walking days is allowed to not fast provided his traveling is not sinful.
Two or more walking days distance is about 80 miles. This traveler is permitted
to break his fast even though he would not encounter hardship in his trip, such
as if he crossed this distance quickly, by plane, or comfortable, in a car or a
train. The matter of traveling is not based on the hardship, rather it has to
do with the distance. This facility for the traveler was mentioned in the
Qur’an. Allah said in Surat al-Baqarah, Verse 184: which means: <<If you
are sick or traveling, then you are allowed to break your fast and make up
these days later.>>
Integrals of Fasting
The integrals of fasting are two:
1. Each night to make the intention to fast the
following day
2. To abstain from sexual intercourse,
masturbation, and inserting anything with a volume into the head or the body
cavity through an open inlet, excluding one’s pure, tahir saliva while still
inside the mouth during the time from the dawn until the sunset.
Making the intention at night to fast the
following day means to have the intention to fast in one’s heart during the
night preceding the fasting day, i.e., after the sunset and before the dawn of
the following day. Sometime during that time the person must make the intention
to fast the following day, and this must be done each night for the following
day. As related by at-Tirmidhiyy, an-Nasa’iyy, and others, the Prophet said:
which means: <<There is no fasting for the one who does not establish the
intention for fasting the night before.>>
The intention is in the heart, and does not
have to be uttered with the tongue. The one who slept at night without having
had the intention to fast and woke up after the dawn is obligated to abstain
from whatever a fasting person would abstain and then fast a make up for that
day. If the menstrual or postpartum bleeding of a woman stopped at night, then
she must intend to fast the following day. The purificatory bath is not required
to start fasting, but rather to start praying.
The intention for any obligatory fasting during
Ramadan, must take place the night before the fast. However, for the one who is
fasting an optional fast, it is not a condition that he must intend to do so the
preceding night. It is valid for him to have the intention to fast that same
day during the morning, before the sun moves from the center of the sky towards
the west, as long as he had not committed any of the invalidators of fasting
since the dawn appeared.
2. The fasting person must abstain from taking
into his body cavity any material that has a tangible volume from an open
inlet, whether this material was food or drink or other than that. If a person
intentionally takes into his body cavity any material that has a tangible
volume during the fasting day, while remembering he is fasting, and knowing
that it is unlawful to do so, and not because another threatened to kill him
(or the like) if he did not break his fast, then this invalidates his fast, and
he has to make it up. The open outlets of the body are like the mouth, nose,
anus, vagina, and other. Materials which are absorbed by the pores of the skin
do not invalidate the fast because the pores of the skin are not considered to
be an open inlet to the body cavity. For example, rubbing oil into the skin
does not invalidate the fast.
One’s own pure saliva, while still inside the
mouth, if swallowed, does not invalidate the fast. If some saliva was spit
outside the mouth, and separated from the tongue, even to the lips, then was
taken back in and swallowed, it would invalidate the fast. However, if the
saliva is mixed with something else, even something pure, then swallowed, it
invalidates the fast.
In what is too hard to protect oneself from
swallowing, like the dust of the street or the dust of the flour and the like,
one’s fast is not broken. Although smoking a cigarette breaks the fast of the
smoker himself, it does not break the fast of the person next to him who
breathes in some of that smoke. Neither does it break the fast for one to
breathe in what is other than a physical entity, like the odor of incense or
other fragrances.
Also among the conditions for the validity of
fasting is for one to abstain from sexual intercourse during the day of fasting.
If the person did not know that one must abstain from sexual intercourse during
the fasting day, or he forgot that he was fasting and he performed this act,
then it does not invalidate his fast. However the man or woman who performs
sexual intercourse during the day of fasting while knowing this is unlawful and
remembering he is fasting, would invalidate his/her fast by that.
The expiation due for invalidating one’s
fasting by sexual intercourse is in the following order:
1. To set a Muslim slave free;
2. If he was unable, then to fast two
consecutive months, other than making up the day which was invalidated by his
sexual intercourse;
3. If unable, then to feed each one of 60 poor
people two cupped, average-sized handfuls of the most common staple food of the
country.
Masturbation or making the semen come out of
one by using the hand or the like invalidates one’s fasting, whether one used
his own hand, or the hand of his wife, or because of a kiss, or because of
other physical contact. If, however, one experienced a wet dream or semen
exited from him because of certain thoughts, one’s fast is not invalidated.
For one to force himself to vomit, either by
inserting his finger or other than that into his mouth invalidates the fasting.
In the case when the person forces himself to vomit, whether or not he swallows
some of his vomit, his fast is invalidated and he has to make it up. However,
the one who vomited not because he purposely forced himself to do so does not
break his fast as long as he does not swallow any of the vomit or saliva mixed
with the najas-filth.
There are different sayings regarding the
phlegm or congestion that drips from the head into the throat. According to
Imam ash-Shafi^iyy if the phlegm reached to the part of the throat above where
the exit of the letter ha’ is, and the person swallowed it, this would
invalidate his fasting. However, according to Imam Abu Hanifah, even if the
phlegm reached to the tongue and the person swallowed it, his fasting is not
invalidated, as long as he does not swallow it after separating from his mouth.
.
Conditions For The Validity Of The Fast
Among the conditions for the validity of one’s
fasting is that the person does not become insane, not even for a moment during
the fasting day. If a person loses his sanity during the day or during part of
the day, even for a moment, then his fasting would be invalidated. As well, it
is conditional for the validity of one’s fasting that he does not lose
consciousness during the entire fasting day, that is, from the dawn until sunset.
If he lost consciousness for part of the day only, this does not invalidate the
fast. On the other hand, sleeping does not invalidate the fast, even if one
slept all day long.
Days On Which Fasting Is Unlawful
It is invalid to fast the day of the Feast of
Fitr (^Id-ul-Fitr), the day of the Feast of Adha (^Id-ul-’Adha) and the three
days after the day of Adha (Tashriq). It is also invalid to fast the last half
of Sha^ban , and the day of doubt except if one joins the fasting of these with
those before them or if one is fasting for an expiation (kaffarah), make up
(qada’), vow (nadhr), or habitual consistent practice (wird), like the one who
usually fasts Mondays and Thursdays.
Note:
It is unlawful (haram) to fast the two days of
^Idul-Fitr and ^Idul-Ad-ha, and the three days after ^Idul Ad-ha, known as the
days of Tashriq.
Supplication:
اللَّهُمَّ لَكَ صُمْتُ وَعَلَى رِزْقِكَ أَفْطَرْتُ
Allahumma laka sumtu wa^ala rizqika aftart.
Which means: O Allah, I fasted seeking your
reward, and by your sustenance I break my fast.
Also, when he broke his fast the Prophet,
sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam, used to say:
ذَهَبَ الظَّمَأُ وَابْتَلَّتِ الْعُرُوقُ وَثَبَتَ الأَجْرُ إِنْ شَاءَ
الله
Dhahabadh-dhama’u
wabtallatil-^uruqu wathabatal-ajru insha’ Allah.
Which means: “The thirst is gone. My veins are
dampened and the reward has been earned, by Allah's will.” (Related by
Abu Dawud.)
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