Fiqh of Ramadaan – 11/30
Those who are excused for breaking the fast during the day of Ramadaan
Those who are excused in Ramadaan are of the
following types:
1-
A Sick Person
First: The Meaning of Sickness (Al-Mardh)
Al-Mardh
& As-Suqm refer to sickness or ailment and is the opposite of health and
well-being (Sihhah). Al-Mardh & As-Suqm are used for both the body as well
as the religion, just as Sihhah can be used for both the body and religion. Sickness
of Heart is referred for anything that brings a person out of the state of
well-being in the religion. And the root of al-Mardh is: Al-Nuqsaan
(deficiency). When it is said: A sick body, it means the deficiency of
strength, and when it is said: A sick Heart, then it means the deficiency of
Deen. So Al-Marz in heart is negligence from the truth; and in the bodies, it
is weakness of the organs ([1]).
Also,
Al-Mardh (pl. Amraadh): is corruption of the mizaaj (nature/state of mind) and
deterioration of the well-being after its stability. And Maradh al-Mawt
(Sickness of Death) is: the cause that the Doctors attest as the cause or
ailment of death ([2]).
Thus,
based on this, Al-Mareez (Sick) is the one whose health is deteriorated, no
matter it effects only a part of his body or the whole body ([3]).
Second: A sick person should uphold patience (Sabr):
It
is important that the sick should be patient and hope for Allaah’s reward for
what he is going through. Allaah (swt) says:
{إِنَّمَا يُوَفَّى الصَّابِرُونَ أَجْرَهُم
بِغَيْرِ حِسَاب}
{Indeed, the patient
will be given their reward without account} ([4])
And
He (swt) said:
{مَا أَصَابَ مِن مُّصِيبَةٍ إِلاَّ بِإِذْنِ
الله وَمَن يُؤْمِن بِالله يَهْدِ قَلْبَهُ}
{No disaster strikes
except by permission of Allaah. And whoever believes in Allah - He will guide
his heart} ([5])
And
He (swt) said:
{وَلَنَبْلُوَنَّكُمْ بِشَيْءٍ مِّنَ
الْخَوفْ وَالْجُوعِ وَنَقْصٍ مِّنَ الأَمَوَالِ وَالأنفُسِ وَالثَّمَرَاتِ
وَبَشِّرِ الصَّابِرِين * الَّذِينَ إِذَا أَصَابَتْهُم مُّصِيبَةٌ قَالُواْ
إِنَّا لله وَإِنَّا إِلَيْهِ رَاجِعون * أُولَئِكَ عَلَيْهِمْ صَلَوَاتٌ مِّن
رَّبِّهِمْ وَرَحْمَةٌ وَأُولَئِكَ هُمُ الْمُهْتَدُون}
{And We will surely
test you with something of fear and hunger and a loss of wealth and lives and
fruits, but give good tidings to the patient, Who,
when disaster strikes them, say, "Indeed we belong to Allah, and indeed to
Him we will return." Those are the ones upon whom are blessings from their
Lord and mercy. And it is those who are the [rightly] guided} ([6])
And
the Prophet (ﷺ) said:
((عجباً لأمر المؤمن إنَّ أمره كله خير، وليس
ذلك لأحد إلا للمؤمن، إن أصابته سرّاءُ شكر فكان خيراً له، وإن أصابته ضرّاءُ صبر
فكان خيراً له))
((How wonderful is the case of a believer; there is
good for him in everything and this applies only to a believer. If prosperity
attends him, he expresses gratitude to Allah and that is good for him; and if
adversity befalls him, he endures it patiently and that is better for him)) ([7])
Abdullah
bin Mas’ood (radiallah anhu) narrates that the Prophet (ﷺ) said:
((ما من مسلم يصيبه أذىً: من مرضٍ فما سواه
إلا حَطَّ الله سيئاته كما تحطُّ الشجرة ورقها))
((No Muslim is
afflicted with harm because of sickness or some other inconvenience, but that
Allah will remove his sins for him as a tree sheds its leaves)) ([8])
Anas
(radiallah anhu) narrates that the Prophet (ﷺ) said:
((إن عِظَمَ الجزاء مع عظم البلاء وإن الله
إذا أحب قوماً ابتلاهم، فمن رضي فله الرضى، ومن سخط فله السُّخْط))
((When Allah intends
good for His slave, He punishes him in this world, but when He intends an evil
for His slave, He does not hasten to take him to task but calls him to account
on the Day of Resurrection)) ([9])
Third: Sickness is of two types:
Type
1: Treatable or Temporary Sickness:
Allaah
has allowed a person with such a sickness to break his fast, and has made it
obligatory on him to make up the days he did not fast later on, due to the
saying of Allaah:
{أَيَّامًا مَّعْدُودَاتٍ فَمَن كَانَ مِنكُم
مَّرِيضًا أَوْ عَلَى سَفَرٍ فَعِدَّةٌ مِّنْ أَيَّامٍ أُخَرَ}
{[Fasting for] a
limited number of days. So whoever among you is ill or on a journey [during
them] - then an equal number of days [are to be made up]} ([10])
And
His saying:
{فَمَن شَهِدَ مِنكُمُ الشَّهْرَ
فَلْيَصُمْهُ وَمَن كَانَ مَرِيضًا أَوْ عَلَى سَفَرٍ فَعِدَّةٌ مِّنْ أَيَّامٍ
أُخَرَ}
{So whoever sights
[the new moon of] the month, let him fast it; and whoever is ill or on a
journey - then an equal number of other days} ([11])
And
a sick person during Ramadaan can be in one of three states:
First
State: It is neither difficult for him to fast nor harmful:
Then
it is obligatory for such a person to fast, because he does not have a valid
excuse which would allow him to break his fast.
Second
State: It is difficult for him to fast but it is not harmful:
Then
it is better for such a person to break his fast, and it will be makrooh
(disliked) for him to fast with difficulty, because he is avoiding the concession
provided by Allaah, and punishing himself to fast.
The
Prophet (ﷺ) said:
((إن الله يحب أن تُؤتَى رخصُه كما يكره أن
تؤتى معصيته))
((Verily, Allaah loves
that his concessions be availed just as He dislikes that His disobedience be availed)) ([12])
Ibn
Hazm rahimahullah said:
((واتفقوا على أن المريض إذا تحامل على نفسه فصام أنه يجزِئه،
واتفقوا على أن من آذاه المرض وضَعُف عن الصوم فله أن يفطر))
((The Scholars have agreed that if the sick person forces
himself to fast (despite difficulty), it is something permissible. And they
also agreed that whoever is afflicted with a sickness and it is hard for him to
fast, then he should break the fast)) ([13])
Third
State: When fasting will harm him:
In
this case, it is obligatory on him to break his fast, and it is not permissible
for him to keep it. Due to the saying of Allaah:
{وَلاَ تَقْتُلُواْ أَنفُسَكُمْ إِنَّ الله
كَانَ بِكُمْ رَحِيمًا}
{And do not kill yourselves [or one another]. Indeed,
Allaah is to you ever Merciful} ([14])
And
His saying:
{وَلاَ تُلْقُواْ بِأَيْدِيكُمْ إِلَى
التَّهْلُكَةِ}
{And do not throw
[yourselves] with your [own] hands into destruction} ([15])
And
others from the ahadeeth, and Allaah knows best ([16]).
If
a person is afflicted with sickness during the day in Ramadaan while he is
fasting and it becomes difficult for him to complete his fast, then it is permissible
for him to break the fast due to the permissibility to do so.
And
if he recovers from the sickness during the day in Ramadaan while he had broken
his fast earlier in the day, then his fast for that day is not valid because he
had broken it during the day due to an excuse.
It
is obligatory for him to make up that day. As for whether he has to refrain
from eating and drinking for the rest of the day after gaining recovery is
subject to difference of opinion. And it is better for him to refrain from
eating and drinking to be on the safe side and to honor the month of Ramadaan
and also to avoid being resembled to the non-believers, but if he/she eats and
drinks there is no sin on him. And Allaah knows best ([17]).
And
if it is proven from a reliable and expert Muslim Doctor who is reliable with
regard to his religious commitment and trust that fasting will cause one to
acquire sickness or increase the sickness and delay the recovery, then it is
permissible for him to break the fast, in order to safeguard his health and
prevent a disease or sickness. And he must make up these days later on ([18]).
And Allaah knows best.
Type
2: Permanent or Non-Treatable sickness:
If
a person is completely unable to observe fasts due to a permanent sickness from
which there is no hope of recovering, such as: a very old person and the one
suffering from an incurable disease, and that is after the testimony of a
reliable and expert Muslim Scholar, then in that case, it is not obligatory on
such a person to fast because he is unable to do so, due to the saying of
Allaah:
{فَاتَّقُوا الله مَا اسْتَطَعْتُمْ}
{Then fear Allaah as
much as you are able} ([19])
And
His saying:
{لاَ يُكَلِّفُ الله نَفْسًا إِلاَّ
وُسْعَهَا}
{Allaah does not
burden a soul except [with that within] its capacity} ([20])
Imaam
Ibn al-Mundhir said:
((وأجمعوا على أن للشيخ الكبير والعجوز العاجِزَيْن عن الصوم أن
يفطرا))
((There is an Ijmaa (unanimous consensus) that an old man who is
unable to fast should not fast)) ([21])
However,
it is obligatory for such a person to feed the poor in place of fasting for each
day, and it will be equivalent to fasting for him.
Ibn
Abbaas (radiallah anhu) said:
(( ... الشيخ الكبير والمرأة الكبيرة لا
يستطيعان أن يصوما، فيطعمان مكان كل يوم مسكيناً))
((This was a
concession granted to old men and women who are able to fast but with
difficulty, they have the option of not fasting and feeding one poor person for
each day instead)) ([22])
Imaam
Bukhaari rahimahullah said:
((وأما الشيخ الكبير إذا لم يطق الصيام، فقد
أطعم أنس بن مالك بعدما كبر، عاماً أو عامين، كلَّ يومٍ مسكيناً: خبزاً ولحمًا،
وأفطر))
((And as for an
elderly person who is unable to fast, then indeed (it is proven that) when Anas
bin Maalik (radiallah anhu) became old, he used to feed the poor for each day
with bread and meat while he did not fast. This he did for a year or two
(before his death))) ([23])
Imaam
Nawawi rahimahullah said:
((Al-Shaafa’i and
our companions said: an old man who is able to fast but it is very difficult
for him, and a sick person who has no hope of recovery do not have to fast, and
there is no scholarly difference of opinion on this matter. Ibn al-Mundhir
narrated that there was consensus on this point. But they have to give the
fidyah (ransom, payment in lieu) according to the more sound of the two
scholarly opinions)) ([24])
An
‘Aajiz (incapable) person, who is unable to fast due to old age or a permanent
sickness, can choose between two things in the manner of feeding the poor:
First:
Distributing food to the poor individually:
Giving
half a saa’ of food for each poor person, according to what is authentic. The
Prophet (ﷺ) said to Ka’b bin ‘Ujrah (radiallah anhu):
(( ... أو أطعم ستة مساكين لكل مسكين نصف
صاع))
((… or you may feed
six poor people, giving half a saa’ of food for each)) ([25])
And
the prophetic Saa’ is equivalent to about 3 kilograms. So half a saa’ would
weigh one and a half kilograms (1.5 kg). This is what Shaykh Ibn Baaz
(rahimahullah) has favored, when he said: ((He should feed one poor
person for each day, giving half a saa’ of the local staple food, such as
dates, rice, etc, which is equivalent to approximately one and a half
kilograms)) ([26]).
And
this is what the Permanent Committee for Islamic Research (Al-Lajnah
ad-Daa’imah) has chosen, when they said: ((It is to feed half a saa’
of the local staple food for each day, and it is about one a half kilograms))
([27])
Second:
Making food and inviting the poor to come and eat:
One
may choose to make food at once and invite all the poor equaling to the amount
of days that he has due, to come and eat.
As Al-Bukhaari
said: ((As for an old man who is unable to fast, after Anas grew old, for
one or two years he fed a poor person with bread and meat and he did not fast))
([28])
Shaykh
Ibn Baaz was asked about an elderly woman who was unable to fast – what should
she do? He replied:
((She should feed
one poor person for each day, giving half a saa’ of the local staple food, such
as dates, rice, etc, which is equivalent to approximately one and a half
kilograms. This was stated by a number of the companions of the Prophet (ﷺ), such as Ibn ‘Abbaas (may Allaah be pleased with him). If she
is poor and is unable to feed a poor person, then she does not have to do
anything. This expiation may be given to one or more people at the beginning of
the month or in the middle or at the end. And Allaah is the Source of
strength)) ([29])
Shaykh
Ibn ‘Uthaymeen said:
((The sick person
who has an ongoing sickness, and elderly people, both male and female, who are
unable to fast, must feed one poor person for each day, whether that is by
giving this food to the poor or by inviting the same number of poor people as
days in the month to a meal, as Anas ibn Maalik (may Allaah be pleased with
him) used to do when he grew old. He would gather together thirty poor people
and that was instead of fasting for a month)) ([30])
2-
A Traveler
This
refers to a traveler travelling the distance at which it is permissible to
shorten the prayers. And the evidence for that will be mentioned below.
First: Meaning
of Traveling (Safr) and Traveler (Musaafir):
As-Safr means to reveal; to unveil;
to expose something by making its reality clear. And the author of Al-Qaamoos
ul-Muheet has said: “As-Safr is to reveal the outward of something and Al-Fasr
is to reveal and clarify the inward part of something (and from it is the word
Al-Tafseer)”. Hence, its meaning is to unveil, clarify and light up. It is
said: “Safaratil-Mar’atu” meaning, the woman removed the veil from her face.
As-Sufr is the plural of Saafir
& al-Musaafiroon is the plural of Musaafir, they both carry the same
meaning i.e. traveler. A traveler is called a Musaafir because he reveals his hidden characteristics i.e.
he reveals his natural disposition while travelling, and the places of other
dwellings from his residence, and the undermining characteristics of his self,
as well as the vast and open lands are revealed to him.
And Travel is called Safr because it uncovers
the veil from the faces of the travelers and their characteristics, so what was
concealed of them gets exposed ([31]).
Hence, As-Safr is to cover a distance, and it
is named so because it uncovers the Akhlaaq (characteristics) of people. And
Safr is: to go out from one’s place of residence to a distant place covering
the distance at which it is permissible to shorten the prayer ([32]).
Second: Types of Traveling:
1)
Illegal Travel (Safr Haraam): It is to travel to do something that
Allaah or His Messenger (ﷺ)
have prohibited, like: traveling to do trade of alcohol and other haram things,
and a woman traveling on her own without a mahram ([33]).
2)
Obligatory Travel (Safr Waajib): Like traveling to fulfill the obligation
of Hajj, or traveling to do the obligatory Umrah, etc.
3)
Recommended Travel (Safr Mustahabb): Like travelling to do non-obligatory
Umrah, or non-obligatory Hajj, etc.
4)
Permissible Travel (Safr Mubaah): Like: Traveling to do trade of
permissible things, and every other permissible matter.
5)
Disliked Travel (Safr Makrooh): Like: Traveling alone without a
companion, except when it is inevitable. Due to the saying of the Prophet (ﷺ): ((Were
people to know of what I know about the dangers of travelling alone, no rider
would travel alone at night)) ([34])
These are the types of Travel that the Scholars
have mentioned. It is Haraam for a Muslim to undertake a haram journey, and it
is better for him not to go on a makrooh journey. However, he may shorten his
prayers in all of these types of journeys and take advantage of the concessions
provided for a traveler such as not observing the fast and others legislated by
the Messenger of Allaah (ﷺ)
([35]).
Third: The Distance at which it
is permissible to break the fast: is the distance at which the Prayer is
shortened:
The permissibility of breaking the fast while
traveling is proven from the Qur’aan, the Sunnah and the Ijmaa’.
As for the Qur’aan, Allaah says:
{فَمَن كَانَ مِنكُم مَّرِيضًا أَوْ عَلَى
سَفَرٍ فَعِدَّةٌ مِّنْ أَيَّامٍ أُخَرَ}
{And whoever is ill or on a journey - then an equal number of
other days} ([36])
As for the Sunnah, the Prophet (ﷺ) said:
((إن الله وضع عن المسافر الصوم))
((Allaah has waived off fasting from the traveler)) ([37])
And several other ahadeeth.
As for the Ijmaa’, then there is a unanimous
consensus of the Muslim Ummah over the permissibility of breaking the fast for
the traveler in general. And this is permissible only in a journey long enough
in which it is permissible to shorten the prayers ([38]).
What is the minimum distance at which the
prayer is shortened? Imaam Bukhaari rahimahullah said:
((باب في كم يقصر الصلاة؟ وسمَّى النبي - صلى الله عليه وسلم -،
يوماً وليلةً سفراً، وكان ابن عمر وابن عباس رضي الله عنهم يقصران ويفطران في
أربعة بُرُدٍ، وهي ستة عشر فرسخاً))
((Chapter on what is the
distance of shortening the prayer? The Prophet (ﷺ) has specified a journey
of a day and a night. And Ibn Umar and Ibn Abbaas (radiallah anhum) used to
shorten the prayers and break their fasts in a journey of four burud, which is
sixteen farsakh (i.e. 48 miles))) ([39])
And the saying of the Prophet (ﷺ) that Imaam Bukhaari has pointed to is as
follows, He (ﷺ)
said:
((لا يحل لامرأة تؤمن بالله واليوم الآخر أن
تسافر مسيرة يوم وليلة ليس معها حرمة))
((It is not permissible for a woman who believes in Allaah and
the Last Day to travel for one day and night except with a Mahram)) ([40])
And it is proven from Ibn Abbaas (radiallah
anhuma) that he said:
((لا تقصر إلى عرفة، وبطن نخلة، واقصر إلى
عسفان، والطائف، وجدة، فإذا قدمت على أهلٍ أو ماشية فأتمّ))
((Do not shorten the prayer when you travel to ‘Arafah and Batn
Nakhlah, but shorten them when you travel to ‘Usfaan, Taa’if and Jaddah, so
when you reach your house or your cattle, then offer the prayer in full)) ([41])
And the distance from the Makkah to Taa’if is
88 kilometers; and from Makkah to Jaddah is 86 kilometers; and from Makkah to
‘Usfaan is 48 miles. This is the distance that the majority of the Scholars
have adopted as the minimum distance for shortening the prayers and breaking
the fast.
There are two prominent opinions on this:
First Opinion: The minimum distance of shortening the
prayers is 48 miles or approximately 80 km.
The majority of scholars are of the view that
the distance at which a traveler may join prayers and not fast is forty-eight
miles. Ibn Qudaamah said in al-Mughni:
((The view of Abu ‘Abd-Allaah [i.e., Imam Ahmad] is that it is not
permissible to shorten the prayers for a distance of less than sixteen
farsakhs, and a farsakh is three miles, so the distance is forty-eight miles.
This was the estimation of Ibn ‘Abbaas. He said: From ‘Usfaan to Makkah, or
from al-Taa’if to Makkah, or from Jeddah to Makkah))
Based on this, the distance at which it is
permissible to shorten prayers is the distance of two days’ travel aiming
directly for that destination. This is the view of Ibn ‘Abbaas and Ibn ‘Umar,
and the view of Maalik, al-Layth and al-Shaafa’i.
The equivalent in kilometers is approximately
80 km.
Shaykh Ibn Baaz said explaining what is meant
by traveling:
((The view of the majority of scholars is that this is equivalent
to approximately eighty kilometers for one who travels by car, plane or ship.
This distance is what is called traveling according to the custom of the
Muslims. So if a person travels by camel, car, plane or ship, for this distance
or more, he is regarded as a traveler)) ([42])
Second Opinion: Traveling is anything that the people’s
custom consider to be traveling whether it is 100 miles or 3 miles.
Some scholars are of the view that traveling is
not to be defined by a specific distance, rather it should be defined according
to custom: whatever people customarily regard as traveling is the traveling to
which the shar’i rulings apply, such as joining and shortening prayers, and not
fasting.
Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyyah said:
((The evidence supports those who regard shortening prayers and not
fasting as being applicable to all types of travel and do not single out one
kind of traveling to the exclusion of another. This view is the correct one)) ([43])
Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen was asked about the
distance at which a traveler may shorten his prayers and whether it is
permissible to join prayers without shortening them. He replied:
((The distance at which a traveler may shorten his prayers was
defined by some of the scholars as being approximately eighty-three kilometers,
and some defined it as being what is customarily regarded as traveling, even if
the distance is not 80 km, and that what the people say is not traveling should
not be regarded as such, even if it is as far as one hundred kilometers.
The latter view is the view favored by Shaykh al-Islam Ibn
Taymiyyah (may Allaah have mercy on him), because Allaah did not state a
specific distance for it to be permissible to shorten prayers, and neither did
the Prophet (ﷺ).
Anas ibn Maalik (may Allaah be pleased with him) said: If the Messenger
of Allaah (ﷺ) set out for a journey
of three miles or three farsakhs, he would pray two rak’ahs. Narrated by
Muslim, 691.
The view of Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah is closer to what is
correct.
There is nothing wrong, if there is a conflict between customary
views, in going by the opinion which suggests that travel should be defined in
terms of distance, because this was the view of some of the imams and scholars
and mujtahids. So there is nothing wrong with that in sha Allah. But so long as
custom gives a clear definition, then referring to what is customary is the
right thing to do))
([44])
Fourth: It is permissible for a
traveler to not observe the fast as soon as he has gone at a distance from his
resident population or his city or the camp of his people and has left them
behind, when the journey he is traveling to is the one in which prayers can be
shortened:
‘Ubayd ibn Jabr said:
((I traveled with Abu
Basrah al-Ghifaari, the companion of the Messenger of Allaah (ﷺ), in a ship from al-Fustaat in Ramadaan. He set off then lunch
was brought [according to a report narrated by Ahmad: when we sent off from
Marsana he ordered that his food be brought]. Then he said: ‘Come and eat.’ I
said, ‘Can’t we still see the houses?’ Abu Basrah said: ‘Don’t you want to
follow the Sunnah of the Messenger of Allaah (ﷺ)?!’)) ([45])
This is an indication that it is permissible to
break the fast once one has left the dwellings of his people or the city, even
if the distance at which the prayer is shortened is not covered yet, with the
condition that the distance he is going to be traveling will be equal to or
greater than the distance at which the prayer is shortened.
However, if a person is still in his hometown, and
he decides to travel, he is not regarded as being a “traveler” until he has
left the built-up area of his town. So it is not permissible for him to avail
himself of the concessions granted to travelers, such as not fasting and
shortening the prayer, when he has merely formed the intention of travelling.
Rather Allaah has permitted the one who is travelling to break the fast, and he
is not travelling until he has left his town.
Ibn Qudaamah rahimahullah said:
((Once this is established, it is not permissible for him to break
the fast until he has left the houses behind, i.e., he has gone past them and
has left the buildings behind. Al-Hasan said: He may break the fast in his
house, if he wishes, on the day that he intends to leave. Something similar was
narrated from ‘Ata’. Ibn ‘Abd al-Barr said: The view of al-Hasan is odd; no one
is allowed to break the fast when not travelling, and there is no evidence for
that, either rationally or in the reports. A different opinion was also
narrated from al-Hasan))
Then Ibn Qudaamah said: ((Because Allaah
says (interpretation of the meaning): {So whoever of you sights the month (of
Ramadan i.e. is present at his home), he must observe Sawm (fasts) that month} [al-Baqarah 2:185]
The one who is present and sights the moon is not regarded as being a traveler
until he has left the town. So long as he is still in the town, the rulings on
those who are there and not travelling still apply to him. Hence he should not
shorten his prayer)) ([46])
This is the view of Abu Haneefah, Maalik,
Shaafi’ee, Awzaa’ee, Ahmad according to one narration and the majority of other
Scholars.
Shaykh Ibn Uthaymeen rahimahullah said:
((Some of the scholars are of the view that it is permissible to
break the fast once he is ready to travel and there is nothing left to do but
get into the means of transportation. They narrated that this is what Anas (may
Allaah be pleased with him) used to do. But if you study the verse you will see
that this is not correct, because up till now he has not started to travel and
he is still a resident and non-traveler. Based on this, it is not permissible
for a person to break the fast until he has left the houses of the town behind.
The correct view is that he should not break the fast until he has
left the village. Hence it is not permissible to shorten the prayer until one
has left the town, and it is not permissible to break the fast until one has
left the town)) ([47])
Based on that, if a person decides at night
that he is going to travel, it is not permissible for him to start the day not
fasting, rather he must form the intention to fast, and then if he travels in
the morning, he may break the fast after leaving his town.
Conclusion: if a person decides at night that
he is not going to fast on the basis that he is going to travel the next day,
he has made a mistake, and he has to make up that day, even if we assume that
he did not travel, because he did not have the intention to fast from the night
before, and the Prophet (ﷺ)
said: ((Whoever does not intend to fast from
before dawn, there is no fast for him (i.e., his fast does not count).)) ([48])
([49]).
And Allaah knows best.
Fifth: Stay of a traveler at a
place during which he can break his fast and shorten the prayer:
If a traveler intends to stay at a place for
more than four days, then he must offer his prayers in full and observe the
fasting of Ramadaan, because the Prophet (ﷺ) came to Makkah on the fourth of
Dhu’l-Hijjah for the Farewell Pilgrimage, and he (ﷺ) stayed for the fourth, fifth, sixth and
seventh, and he prayed Fajr in al-Abtah on the eighth (i.e. the fifth day), and
he shortened his prayers during those days. He had formed the intention to
stay, as is well known. So everyone who travels and intends to stay for this
length of time that the Prophet (ﷺ) stayed, or less, may shorten his prayers.
Whoever intends to stay longer than that should offer the prayers in full,
because he does not come under the heading of a traveler.
Imaam Ibn Qudaamah said:
((The well-known view of Ahmad (may Allaah have mercy on him) is
that the period during which the traveler must perform his prayers in full with
the intention of staying is a period in which there are more than twenty-one
prayers. And it was narrated from him that if he intends to stay for more than
four days he must perform his prayers in full, but if he intends to stay less
than that, he may shorten them. This is also the view of Maalik and
al-Shaafi’ee))
([50])
In another place, he said: ((The one who does
not intend to stay for a period in which there are more than twenty-one prayers
(i.e. four days), then he shortens his prayer, even if he stayed for two years
(i.e. without the intention to stay))) ([51])
Similarly, Ibn al-Mundhir said:
((أجمع أهل العلم أن للمسافر أن يقصر ما لم يجمع إقامة ، وإن أتى عليه
سنون))
((The People of knowledge
have unanimously agreed upon that a traveler should shorten his prayer as long
as he does not intend to stay (for more than four days), even if then years pass
by)) ([52])
What this means is that if a person stays for
longer than four days during his trip and has not formed the intention to stay,
rather he has resolved that when he has finished his business he will go back,
like one who stays in a place to engage in jihad against the enemy, or has been
detained by the authorities or by sickness, but he has resolved that when the
jihad ends with victory or a peace treaty, or the sickness or enemy power that
is keeping him there ends, or he sells all his goods and so on, he will go
back, then he is regarded as a traveler, and he may shorten the four-rak’ah
prayers, even if that period is long.
Shaykh al-Islaam Ibn Taymiyyah said:
((If one intends to stay in a place for four days or less then he
should shorten his prayer just as the Prophet (ﷺ) did when he came to
Makkah, and he stayed there for four days, and shortened the prayers. And if he
stays for more than that then there is a dispute; what is more on the safe side
is that he should offer his prayer in full.
And if he says: ‘I will leave tomorrow or the day after’, and does
not intend to stay, then he will shorten his prayer, because it is proven that
the Prophet (ﷺ) stayed in Makkah
[during the year of the Conquest] for ten and some days [nineteen to be
precise], during which he shortened his prayers, and he stayed in Tabook for
twenty days and he shortened his prayers [because he had not resolved to stay,
rather his intention was to leave once he had finished his business] and Allaah
knows best))
([53])
Same goes with the fasting of Ramadaan. If he
intends to stay for four or less days, then he may shorten his prayer and break
the fast. And if one intends to stay for more than that, then he must complete
his prayers as well as the fasting. This is the view of Imaam Shaafi’ee, Ahmad,
Maalik and the majority of Scholars ([54]).
And from what proves that if a traveler stays
in a place uncertain about the period of his stay, that it is permissible for
him to break his fast for the period of that stay, because he did not intend to
stay for a specific period, is the hadeeth of Ibn Abbaas (radiallah anhuma):
((Allaah's Messenger (ﷺ) fought the Ghazwa (i.e. battle) of Al-Fath during Ramadan. The
Prophet (ﷺ) fasted and when he reached Al-Kadid, a place where there is
water between Kudaid and 'Usfan, he broke his fast and did not fast afterwards
till the whole month had passed away.)) ([55])
Imaam Shawkaani said: ((This hadeeth
indicates that when the traveler stays in a place uncertain of his stay, it is
permissible for him to break his fast for that period just as it is permissible
for him to shorten his prayer)) ([56])
Sixth: The one who is always
traveling throughout the year:
With regard to the traveler who is constantly
travelling, such as sailors on board ships, train drivers, taxi drivers and
pilots, they may avail themselves of the concessions for travelling whilst they
are actually travelling, but when they reach the place where they live, they
must offer their prayers in full, because the description of traveler has
ceased to apply to them. They must also offer their prayers in full when they
halt in some city and intend to stay there for four days or more.
Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah (may Allah have
mercy on him) said:
((وَيُفْطِرُ [ يعني : ويقصر الصلاة ] : مَنْ عَادَتُهُ السَّفَرُ إذَا
كَانَ لَهُ بَلَدٌ يَأْوِي إلَيْهِ ، كَالتَّاجِرِ الْجَلَّابِ الَّذِي يَجْلِبُ الطَّعَامَ
وَغَيْرَهُ مِنْ السِّلَعِ ، وَكَالْمُكَارِي الَّذِي يَكْرِي دَوَابَّهُ مِنْ الْجُلَّابِ
وَغَيْرِهِمْ ، وَكَالْبَرِيدِ الَّذِي يُسَافِرُ فِي مَصَالِحِ الْمُسْلِمِينَ وَنَحْوِهِمْ
، وَكَذَلِكَ الْمَلَّاحُ الَّذِي لَهُ مَكَانٌ فِي الْبَرِّ يَسْكُنُهُ ، فَأَمَّا
مَنْ كَانَ مَعَهُ فِي السَّفِينَةِ امْرَأَتُهُ وَجَمِيعُ مَصَالِحِهِ وَلَا يَزَالُ
مُسَافِرًا فَهَذَا لَا يَقْصُرُ وَلَا يُفْطِرُ))
((He should break the fast (and shorten the prayer) – this refers
to the one who usually travels, if he has a home that he returns to, such as a
merchant who brings food and other items, and such as the muleteer who takes
his mounts to bring merchandise (for a trader), and so on, and like the
official courier who travels in the interests of the Muslims, and others like
them. The same applies to the sailor who has a place on land where he lives. As
for the one who has his wife with him on board the ship and has everything he
needs with him and is always travelling, he should not shorten his prayers or
break the fast)) ([57])
Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may Allah have mercy on
him) said:
((قصر الصلاة متعلق بالسفر ، فما دام الإنسان مسافراً ، فإنه يشرع له
قصر الصلاة , سواء كان سفره نادراً أم دائماً , إذا كان له وطن يأوي إليه ويعرف أنه
وطنه , وعلى هذا فيجوز لسائق الشاحنة أن يترخص برخص السفر من قصر الصلاة , والمسح على
الخفين ثلاثة أيام بلياليها والفطر في رمضان وغيرها من رخص السفر))
((Shortening the prayer
is connected to travel; so long as a person is travelling, it is prescribed for
him to shorten his prayers, whether he travels rarely or all the time, if he
has a hometown to which he returns and knows that it is his hometown. Based on
that, it is permissible for a truck driver to avail himself of the concessions
of travel with regard to shortening the prayer, wiping over the khuffayn for
three days and nights, breaking the fast in Ramadan, and other concessions of
travel)) ([58])
([59])
Seventh: When one fasts for some
days of Ramadaan then travels, or He makes the intention of fasting the next
day but travels during the day:
If he makes the intention of fasting the next
day, or he fasts for a part of the day but then he starts to travel during the
rest of the day, it is permissible for him to break his fast according to the
more correct opinion, as long as he has gone out of the built-up areas of the
city or the local population. Due to the hadeeth of Ibn ‘Abbaas (radiallah
anhuma):
((أن رسول الله - صلى الله عليه وسلم - خرج
من المدينة إلى مكة فصام حتى بلغ عُسفان ثم دعا بماء فرفعه إلى يده ليراه الناس
فأفطر حتى قدم مكة وذلك في رمضان...))
((Allaah's Messenger (ﷺ) set out from Medina
to Mecca and he fasted till he reached 'Usfan, where he asked for water and
raised his hand to let the people see him, and then broke the fast, and did not
fast after that till he reached Mecca, and that happened in Ramadan)) ([60])
Imaam Bukhaari rahimahullah put this hadeeth
under the chapter heading, ((If a person observed Sawm for some days then went on a journey)).
Shaykh Ibn Baaz rahimahullah said under this
hadeeth of al-Bukhaari: ((This means that if a person fasted in the beginning of the month
then went on a journey in the latter part of the month, there is nothing wrong
if he quits fasting (i.e. for those days i.e. he does not have to be traveling
when Ramadaan first arrives in order to avail the concessions of traveling).
Similarly, if he fasts for a part of the day then sets out on a journey in the
latter part of the day, then too it is permissible for him to break his fast)) ([61])
And Allaah knows best ([62]).
Eighth: Types of Fasting during
Travel:
If you analyze closely the established ahadeeth
on the issue of fasting while traveling, you will find that they point to three
types:
First Type: General Permissibility to quit
fasting during a Journey:
Due to the hadeeth of Abdullah bin Abbaas
(radiallah anhuma):
((أن النبي - صلى الله عليه وسلم - خرج [عام
الفتح] في رمضان من المدينة [إلى مكة] ومعه عشرة آلاف، وذلك على رأس ثمان سنين
ونصف من مقدمه المدينة، فسار هو ومن معه من المسلمين إلى مكة يصومُ ويصومون حتى
بلغ الكديد - وهو ماء بين عُسفان وقُديد -[وفي رواية حتى بلغ عُسفان] [فلما استوى
على راحلته دعا بإناء من لبن أو ماء، فوضعه على راحته - أو راحلته -[وفي رواية:
فشرب نهاراً ليراه الناس] [فأفطر]، ثم نظر إلى الناس، فقال المفطرون للصُّوَّم:
أفطروا [فأفطر الناس] فلم يزل مفطراً حتى انسلخ الشهر [وفي رواية: حتى قدم مكة]
[وكان ابن عباس يقول: صام رسول الله - صلى الله عليه وسلم - في السفر وأفطر فمن
شاء صام ومن شاء أفطر]))
((The Prophet (ﷺ) set out [during the year of conquest] in Ramadaan from
Madeenah [to Makkah] and with him were 10,000 people, and that was eight and a
half years after his migration to Madeenah. He and the Muslims who were with
him proceeded on their way to Makkah. He was fasting and they were fasting, but
when he reached a place called Al-Kadeed – which was a place of water between
Usfaan and Qudayd – [in another narration: until he reached Usfaan] [when he
mounted his she-camel, he asked for a tumbler of milk or water and put on the
palm of his hand – or his she-camel] [in another narration: he drank it openly
so that the people see him] [thus he broke his fast] then the people looked at
him and those who broke their fast with him told those who were fasting to
break their fasts [and thus the people did so] and he did not fast afterwards
till the whole month had passed away [in another narration: till he entered
Makkah]. [Ibn Abbaas used to say: The Messenger of Allaah (ﷺ) fasted while traveling and he broke his fast while traveling,
so whoever wishes may fast and whoever wishes may break his fast])) ([63])
And Amr bin Umayyah (radiallah anhu) narrates:
قدمت على رسول الله - صلى الله عليه وسلم - من سفر فسلمت عليه،
فلما ذهبت لأخرج قال: ((انتظر الغداء يا أبا أمية)) فقلت: إني صائم يا نبي الله،
فقال: ((تعال أخبرك عن المسافر، إن الله تعالى وضع عنه الصيام ونصف الصلاة))
I came to the Messenger of
Allaah from a journey and greeted him with Salaam. When I was going to leave,
he said: ((Stay and have meal for breakfast, O Abu Umayyah)) I said: ((I am
fasting, O Prophet of Allaah)) He said: ((Come and I will tell about the
traveler. Allaah, most high, has waived fasting and half of the prayer for
him)) ([64])
And a similar narration is also narrated from
Anas bin Maalik (radiallah anhu) in the four sunan.
Second Type: Choosing between fasting and not
fasting during Safr:
Due to the hadeeth of Jaabir bin Abdullah
(radiallah anhu) who said:
((سافرنا مع رسول الله - صلى الله عليه وسلم
-؛فصام بعضنا وأفطر بعضنا))
((We traveled with the Messenger of Allaah (ﷺ), some of us observed fast while others did not)) ([65])
Aa’ishah (radiallah anha) narrates that Hamzah
bin Amr al-Aslami asked the Messenger of Allaah (ﷺ) about fasting in a journey, so he said:
((إن شئت فصم وإن شئت فأفطر))
((If you wish, you may fast, and if you wish you may not fast)) ([66])
And several other ahadeeth.
Third Type: Obligation to not fast:
Abu Sa’eed al-Khudri (radiallah anhu) said:
((لما بلغ النبي - صلى الله عليه وسلم - مرَّ
الظهران، فآذنَّا بلقاء العدوِّ، فأمرنا بالفطر فأفطرنا أجمعون))
((When the Prophet (ﷺ) reached Marr Zahran,
he told us that we would meet the enemy. So he ordered us to break the fast,
and we [all] broke our fast)) ([67])
Abu Bakr bin Abdur Rahmaan narrates from a
companion of the Prophet (ﷺ)
who said:
((رأيت رسول الله - صلى الله عليه وسلم - أمر
الناس في سفره - عام الفتح- بالفطر، وقال: ((تقوَّوْا لعدوّكم)) وصام رسول الله -
صلى الله عليه وسلم -، قال أبو بكر: قال الذي حدثني: لقد رأيت رسول الله - صلى
الله عليه وسلم - بالعَرْج يصُبُّ على رأسه الماء وهو صائم من العطش أو من
الحرِّ))
((I saw the Prophet (ﷺ) commanding the
people while he was travelling on the occasion of the conquest of Mecca not to
observe fast. He said: ((Be strong for your enemy)). The Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) fasted himself.
Abu Bakr said: A man who
narrated his tradition to me said: I have seen the Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) in al-Arj pouring water over his head while he was fasting,
either because of thirst or because of heat)) ([68])
Jaabir bin Abdullah (radiallah anhu) narrates
that in the course of a journey Allaah's Messenger (ﷺ)
saw a man, people were crowding around him and providing him a shade. Upon this
he (the Holy Prophet) said:
((ما له؟)) قالوا: رجل صائم، فقال رسول الله
- صلى الله عليه وسلم -: ((ليس من البر أن تصوموا في السفر))
((What is the matter with him?)) They said: “He is a person
observing fast” Whereupon the Messenger of Allaah (ﷺ) said: ((It is no righteousness that you fast on a journey)) ([69])
Ninth: Ruling on the fast of a
traveler:
The permissibility of not fasting for a
traveler is proven from the Qur’aan, the Sunnah and the Ijmaa. But if a
traveler fasts, it is permissible for him ([70]).
By analyzing the texts of Qur’aan, the Sunnah
and the Ijmaa, it becomes evident that the fast of a traveler can be in one of
three states:
First State: It is very difficult for him to
fast such that he is unable to observe it or fasting will harm him.
In this case, it is obligatory on him to break
his fast and it is Haraam for him to observe fast, due to the saying of Allaah:
{Do not kill yourselves. Indeed Allaah is to
you ever Merciful} ([71]).
And His saying: {and do not throw
[yourselves] with your [own] hands into destruction} ([72])
And other ahadeeth.
Second State: It is difficult for him to fast
with a slight difficulty which he can bear:
In this case, it is better (Mustahabb) for him
to break his fast and it is Makrooh for him to fast, due to the hadeeth of the
Prophet (ﷺ) mentioned previously where he said to a
person finding difficult to fast: ((It is no
righteousness that you fast on a journey)) ([73]).
And in another narration, he said:
((عليكم برخصة الله التي رخّص لكم))
((Take advantage of the concession that Allaah has granted to
you)) ([74])
Third State: It is not difficult for him to
fast at all:
Fasting and not fasting are equal to him, then
in this case, it is permissible for him to fast and it is permissible for him
not to fast, due to the hadeeth of the Prophet (ﷺ): ((Fast
if you wish, and break your fast if you wish)) ([75])
However the Scholars have differed as to what
is better and greater in reward: Fasting or not Fasting? There are two opinions
([76]):
First is that Fasting is better, and the other is that not fasting is better.
What seems to be more virtuous and better, and Allaah knows best, is to observe
the fast. This is the view of Imaam Abu Haneefah, Imaam Maalik, Imaam Shaafi’ee
and the majority of Scholars, and this is what Shaykh Ibn Uthaymeen (rahimahullah)
has preferred ([77]).
This is because of the following evidence:
(a)It was narrated that Abu’l-Darda’ (may
Allaah be pleased with him) said: ((We went
out with the Messenger of Allaah (ﷺ) [on a journey] during the month of Ramadaan when it was
intensely hot, until one of us would put his hand on his head because of the
intense heat, and no one among us was fasting apart from the Messenger of
Allaah (ﷺ) and ‘Abd-Allaah ibn
Rawaahah)) ([78]).
(b)
Fasting whilst traveling means that one fulfils
one's duty more quickly, because making it up later means delaying it, but
fasting in Ramadaan means doing it sooner.
(c) It
is usually easier for the one who has this duty, because fasting and breaking
the fast with the people is easier than starting to fast all over again.
(d)
It makes the most of a blessed time, namely
Ramadaan, for Ramadaan is better than other times, because it is the time when
fasting is obligatory.
Based on this evidence, the view that fasting
is better in the case of one for whom fasting and not fasting are the same, is
most likely to be correct ([79]).
3-
A Woman in Menstrual and Postpartum period
If a woman starts menstruating or goes through
the period of Nifaas ([80]):
she must stop fasting and it is not valid for her to fast.
The Scholars have unanimously agreed upon that
it is not permissible for the women who are menstruating or are going through
post-childbirth bleeding to fast, and that they must break their fasts and make
them up later on.
Aa’ishah (radiallah anha) said:
((كنا نحيض على عهد رسول الله - صلى الله
عليه وسلم - فنؤمر بقضاء الصوم ولا نؤمر بقضاء الصلاة))
((We used to menstruate during the time of Allaah’s Messenger (ﷺ), and we were commanded to make up the fasts later, but we were
not commanded to make up the prayers)) ([81])
Abu Sa’eed al-Khudri (radiallah anhu) narrates
that the Prophet (ﷺ)
said:
((أليس إذا حاضت لم تصلِ ولم تصم))
((Isn’t it true that when a woman menstruates, she does not pray
and does not fast))
([82])
A menstruating woman and a woman in Nifaas are
equal, because the bleeding of Nifaas is the menstrual bleeding, and its ruling
is the same as the menstrual bleeding.
So when a woman finds out that she is
menstruating or is in nifaas during the middle of the day, then the fast of
that day becomes invalid, no matter she finds out in the beginning of the day
after fajr or at the end of the day before sunset. And if she still continues
to fast in the state of menstruation or nifaas despite her knowledge that it is
haram, then she is sinning and it will not permissible for her ([83]).
And if she becomes pure from menstruation or
nifaas during the day of Ramadaan, her fast for the remainder of the day is not
valid, due to the presence of what negates the permissibility of fasting for
her in the beginning of the day. She may eat and drink but it is better for her
to abstain from it for the rest of the day according to the more correct of the
two Scholarly opinions ([84]).
And if she becomes pure from menstruation or
nifaas during the evening in Ramadaan, even if it is just before the Fajr, then
it is obligatory for her to observe fast the following morning. And her fast
will be valid, even if she does not take the bath until after Fajr, just like a
junub person who observes fast but does not take bath until after fajr. Due to
the saying of Aa’ishah and Umm Salamah (radiallah anhuma):
((كان رسول الله - صلى الله عليه وسلم -
يدركه الفجر في رمضان وهو جنب من أهله، ثم يغتسل ويصوم))
((The Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) would wake up at
fajr time in the state of Janaabah during the Ramadan from (relations with) his
wives, and he would wash himself and observe fast)) ([85])
([86])
4-
A Pregnant & a Breastfeeding Woman
Due to the hadeeth of Anas bin Maalik
(radiallah anhu) that the Prophet (ﷺ) said:
((إن الله - عز وجل - وضع عن المسافر شطر
الصلاة، وعن المسافر والحامل والمرضع الصوم أو الصيام))
((Allaah has relieved the traveler of half of the prayer, and He
has relieved the traveler, the pregnant, and the nursing mothers of the duty to
fast)) ([87])
Imaam Bukhaari said:
((وقال الحسن وإبراهيم في المرضع والحامل: إذا خافتا على أنفسهما
أو ولد هما تفطران ثم تقضيان))
((Al-Hasan (al-Basri) and
Ibraaheem (Nakha’ee) have said about the pregnant and the breastfeeding women
that: if they fear harm upon themselves or their child, then they should break
the fast and make it up later)) ([88])
The pregnant and breastfeeding women can be in
one of three conditions:
First Condition: When they fear harm on
themselves only:
Then their ruling is the same as that of a sick
person such that:
·
If it is not difficult on them to fast at all,
then it is haram for them to not fast.
·
If it is difficult for them to fast but it is
bearable, then it is makrooh to fast.
·
If it is difficult to fast and it is unbearable
or it will be a cause of harm, then it is not permissible for them to fast.
And they have to make up these days later on.
There is not dispute among the Scholars with regard to this condition.
Second Condition: When they fear harm on their
child:
Then they should not fast, in order to protect
the innocent child. And they only need to make up the days they did not fast
later on without the need to feed the poor, according to the more correct of
the two opinions.
Third Condition: When they fear harm on
themselves and their child:
They should not fast, and make up the days they
missed later on, without the need to feed the poor, according to the more
correct of the two opinions. This is what Shaykh Ibn Baaz also said ([89]).
So the ruling of a pregnant and a breastfeeding
woman is like the rulings of a sick person in all of the conditions, according
to the more correct of the opinions of Scholars.
And Allaah knows best ([90]).
5-
The one who is forced to break his fast
The one who is forced to break his fast by
someone forcing him to consume anything from the invalidators of Sawm, and he does
that in order to repel harm or from being killed, or he is attacked by an enemy
and he threatens to kill him if he does not break his fast, or he threatens him
to severe one of his limbs or harm his child or property, then it is
permissible for him to break his fast (for the period that he is faced with
compulsion), and there is no sin on him.
The view of the Shaafi’ees and Hanbalis is that
in the case of one who is forced to break the fast by having intercourse,
eating or drinking, if the one who is forced does that, it does not break the
fast and he does not have to make it up, unless the compulsion to break the
fast was by means of zina, according to the Shaafi’ees ([91])
([92]).
Ibn ‘Abbaas (radiallah anhu) said that the
Prophet (ﷺ) said:
((إن الله وضع عن أمتي الخطأ والنسيان وما
استكرهوا عليه))
((Allaah has pardoned my ummah for mistakes, what they forget,
and what they are forced to do)) ([93]).
And because in the case of compulsion there is
no choice, and it is worse than forgetting, and the one who forgets does not
break his fast according to the correct view, then being forced to break the
fast is less serious than being forced to utter words of kufr, and the one who
utters words of kufr under compulsion does not become a kaafir.
Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may Allah have mercy on
him) said: ((If a person is forced to do anything that breaks the fast and
does it, there is no sin on him and his fast is still valid, because Allaah,
may He be exalted, says (interpretation of the meaning): {And there is no sin on you if you make a mistake
therein, except in regard to what your hearts deliberately intend. And Allah is
Ever Oft Forgiving, Most Merciful} [al-Ahzaab 33:5]. And because Allah has ruled that no one is a
kaafir who is forced into kufr, so with regard to that which is less serious
than kufr, it is more apt that there should be no sin on them. And because the
Prophet (ﷺ) said: “My ummah has been pardoned
for mistakes, what they forget what they are forced to do”)) ([94])
And it is included in compulsion that a fasting
person inhales dust or smoke involuntarily, or something enters his stomach
unwillingly such as if he sniffs water in his nose or rinses his mouth during
wudoo and some water enter his stomach involuntarily, then his fast is valid
and he does not have to make it up ([95]).
And Allaah knows best.
6-
The one who has to break the fast in order to save a life
This can include saving an innocent person or
child from drowning, burning, crushing or anything that threatens their life,
and if it cannot be done until the fasting person breaks his fast, then he
should do so. That is because saving an innocent person from destruction is
obligatory, and anything without which an obligatory act cannot be completed is
also obligatory.
However, he has to make up the day in which he
broke his fast later on, and it is not sufficient for him to feed the poor,
according to the more correct of the two Scholars opinions ([96]).
And Allaah knows best
7-
The one who is overpowered by extreme hunger or thirst
that he fears destruction for himself
If someone is overpowered by extreme hunger or
thirst that he fears his life, or the loss of sanity, or the loss of eyesight,
or the ability to hear, or any of the other senses, then it is permissible for
him to break his fast with what will suffice to keep him alive, and after that,
he should complete his fast and also make it up later on. Due to the saying of
Allaah:
{وَلاَ تُلْقُواْ بِأَيْدِيكُمْ إِلَى
التَّهْلُكَةِ}
{And do not throw
[yourselves] with your [own] hands into destruction} ([97])
And He said:
{وَمَا جَعَلَ عَلَيْكُمْ فِي الدِّينِ مِنْ
حَرَجٍ}
{And He has not placed upon you in the religion any difficulty} ([98])
And He (swt) said:
{وَلاَ تَقْتُلُواْ أَنفُسَكُمْ إِنَّ الله
كَانَ بِكُمْ رَحِيمًا}
{And do not kill yourselves [or one another]. Indeed,
Allaah is to you ever Merciful} ([99])
And He (swt) said:
{يُرِيدُ الله بِكُمُ الْيُسْرَ وَلاَ
يُرِيدُ بِكُمُ الْعُسْرَ}
{Allaah intends for you ease and does not intend for you
hardship} ([100])
And the Messenger of Allaah (ﷺ) passed a judgement saying:
((لا ضرر ولا ضرار))
((There should be neither harming nor reciprocating harm)) ([101])
And this person is similar in position to the
one who does not find any food or drink, then he finds a dead meat, then it is
permissible for him to eat only as much of it as it will suffice him to keep
alive, and then abstain from it. Allaah the most High said:
{فَمَن ِاضْطُرَّ فِي مَخْمَصَةٍ غَيْرَ
مُتَجَانِفٍ لِّإِثْمٍ فَإِنَّ الله غَفُورٌ رَّحِيم}
{But whoever is forced by severe hunger with no inclination to
sin - then indeed, Allah is Forgiving and Merciful} ([102])
And His saying:
{فَمَنِ اضْطُرَّ غَيْرَ بَاغٍ وَلاَ عَادٍ
فَإِنَّ رَبَّكَ غَفُورٌ رَّحِيم}
{But whoever is forced [by necessity], neither desiring [it] nor
transgressing [its limit], then indeed, your Lord is Forgiving and Merciful} ([103])
And other evidences ([104]).
8-
The one who is in need to break the fast in order to gain
strength against the enemy in the battle field
That is if it is in the way of Allaah, then it
is permissible for him to break his fast and make up the number of days he
missed later on, no matter the fighting is at the distance of Safr or in his
city itself. So if he is going to encounter the enemy and it is not possible
for him to gather the strength except by breaking his fast then he should do
so; because in that lies the defense of Muslims.
Due to the saying of the Prophet (ﷺ) during the Ghazwah of Fath Makkah:
((إنكم مصبِّحو عدوكم والفطر أقوى لكم
فأفطروا))
((You are going to encounter the enemy in the morning and
breaking of the fast would give you strength, so break the fast.)) ([105])
In another narration, he said: ((Gain strength to face your enemy)) ([106])
Abu al-Waleed al-Baaji rahimahullah said:
((The words “Gain strength to face your enemy” indicate that this
was the reason for breaking the fast. If the reason was travelling then he
would not have explained it as being in order to gain strength to face the
enemy, rather he would have said it was because of travelling)) ([107])
Imaam Ibn al-Qayyim rahimahullah said:
((The Prophet (ﷺ) commanded them to break
their fast when they got close to their enemy so that they would have the
strength to fight them. If such a situation happened when they were not
travelling, and breaking their fast would make them stronger to face their
enemy, would they be allowed to break their fast? There are two opinions on
this matter, the one which is based on the soundest evidence is that they are
allowed to do that. This is the view favored by Ibn Taymiyyah, and this is the
view stated in the fatwa he issued to the Muslim troops when they met the enemy
on the outskirts of Dimashq. Undoubtedly breaking the fast for that reason is
more necessary than breaking it for travelling alone, rather the fact that the
traveler is allowed not to fast alerts us to the fact that it is allowed in
this situation (i.e., jihad), for it is more apt that it be allowed in this
case because physical strength in that case only benefits the traveler himself,
whereas in this case it benefits the soldier and the Muslims, and because the
hardship of battle is greater than the hardship of travel, and because the
interest served by the soldier not fasting is greater than the interest served
by the traveler not fasting. And Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning):
“And make ready against
them all you can of power”
[al-Anfaal 8:60]
Breaking one’s fast when meeting the enemy is one of the greatest
means of strength and power… and the Prophet (ﷺ) said, when they drew
close to their enemy: “You are approaching your enemy
and breaking the fast will make you stronger.” This was a concession, and some
of us fasted and some of us broke our fast. Then we stopped to camp again, and
he said, “You are going to meet your enemy in the morning, and breaking the
fast will make you stronger, so break your fast.” So we had no choice but to
break our fast.
So he gave the reason that they were approaching the enemy and they
needed their physical strength to meet the enemy. This is a reason other than
travel. Travel is a separate reason in and of itself, and he did not mention it
or refer to it here. So in conclusion the principles and wisdom of the Lawgiver
dictate that breaking one's fast for the purpose of battle is more necessary
than doing so simply because of traveling. So how about if the reason is explained
and stated clearly in the text? The Prophet (ﷺ) insisted that they
should break their fast for that reason, and this is indicated by the report
narrated by ‘Eesa ibn Yoonus from Shu’bah from ‘Amr ibn Dinar who said: I heard
Ibn ‘Umar say: The Messenger of Allaah (ﷺ) said to his companions
on the day of the Conquest of Makkah: “This is a day of fighting,
so break your fast.” He named fighting as the reason, and used the word “fa” (= so)
when issuing the command to fight. From this wording each of them understood
that breaking the fast was for the purpose of fighting.)) ([108])
The battle mentioned by Ibn al-Qayyim (may
Allaah have mercy on him) took place between the Muslims and the Tatars in 702
AH, and the Muslims were the victors.
Ibn Katheer (may Allaah have mercy on him)
said:
((He – meaning Ibn Taymiyyah (may Allaah have mercy on him) –
issued a fatwa telling the people to break their fast for the duration of the
fighting, and he himself also broke his fast. He used to go around among the
soldiers and commanders, eating some food that he had in his hand, to show them
that it was better for them to break their fast so that they would have more
strength to fight. Then the people ate)) ([109])
So these are the nine types of people who are
excused for not fasting during the month of Ramadaan. Some of the Scholars have
tried to express this in the form of a couplet as follows:
وعوارض
الصوم التي قد يُغتفر ... للمرء فيها تسع تستطر
حَبَلٌ،
وإرضاعٌ، وإكراهٌ، سَفَر ... مرضٌ، جهاد، جوعة، عطش، كِبَر
The hindrances of Sawm which are
forgiven….. For a man are nine to be marked or written
Pregnant, Breastfeeding, Forced and
Traveler….. Sick, Battle, Hunger, Thirst and Elder ([110]).
[1] - [See,
Lisaan ul-Arab by Ibn Manzoor (7/231-232), Al-Qaamoos ul-Muheet by
Al-Fayrozaabaadee (P. 843), Al-Mu’jam ul-Waseet (2/863), Mukhtaar us-Sihaah (P.
259)]
[2] - [See,
Mu’jam Lughat ul-Fuqaha by Muhammad Ru’waas (P. 391)]
[3] - [See:
Ash-Sharh al-Mumti’ by Ibn Uthaymeen (4/459)]
[4] - [Az-Zumar
(39:10)]
[5] - [Al-Taghaabun
(64:11)]
[6] - [Al-Baqarah
(2:155-157)]
[7] - [Muslim (2999)]
[8] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (5647, 5648), Muslim (2571)]
[9] - [Tirmidhi
(2396), Ibn Maajah (4031)
Classed Hasan by al-Albaani]
[10] - [Al-Baqarah
(2:184)]
[11] - [Al-Baqarah
(2:185)]
[12] - [Ahmad
(2/108), Ibn Hibbaan (2742), Ibn Khuzaymah (950), from Ibn Umar. Classed Saheeh
by al-Albaani in his footnotes of Saheeh Ibn Khuzaymah, and in Irwaa al-Ghaleel
(564)]
[13] - [Maraatib
ul-Ijmaa by Ibn Hazm (P. 40)]
[14] - [An-Nisaa
(4:29)]
[15] - [Al-Baqarah
(2:195)]
[16] - [See:
Majmoo Fataawa Ibn Baaz (15/210), Ash-Sharh al-Mumti by Ibn Uthaymeen
(6/352-353), Majaalis Shahr Ramadaan by Ibn Uthaymeen (P. 86)]
[17] - [The
Scholars have differed whether such a person has to refrain from eating and
drinking for the rest of the day, after he is recovered from sickness.
First Opinion: According to one opinion, he should observe abstinence
for the rest of the day and make it up later on. This is the opinion of Abu
Haneefah, Ath-Thawree, Al-Awzaa’ee, Al-Hasan bin Saalih, Al-‘Anbari, and is
also the madhab of Ahmad according to one narration. This view is also favored
by Shaykh ul-Islaam Ibn Taymiyyah and Shaykh Ibn Baaz. See: Al-Mughni
(3/145-146), Sharh al-Umdah by Ibn Taymiyyah (1/57-59), Al-Furoo’ by Ibn Muflih
(4/431), Majmoo Fataawa Ibn Baaz (15/193), Fataawa al-Lajnah ad-Daa’imah
(10/210). Similar opinion is also narrated from Al-Hasan al-Basri, Ibraaheem
Nakha’ee, Abdullah bin Numayr, and Sha’bee and they said this as a karahiyah
(discouragement) due to being likened with the mushrikeen.
Second Opinion: According to another opinion, it is not necessary for
him to abstain from eating and drinking for the rest of the day and he has to
make it up later, because there is no point in refraining from eating or
drinking, since fasting is only valid if done from Fajr. And it was permissible
for these people not to fast at the beginning of the day, even though they knew
that it is Ramadaan. And Allaah has commanded travelers and menstruating women
to make up the fast from other days. If we expect him to refrain from eating
and drinking then we would be demanding more of him than Allaah has enjoined.
because in that case we would be asking him to refrain from eating and drinking
on that day as well as being required to make it up, so we would be expecting
him to do two things even though only one of them is required, which is making
up the number of days missed.
This
is the opinion of Maalik, Shaafi’ee, Ahmad based on one narrations from him.
Moreover, this is also narrated from Ibn Mas’ood (radiallah anhu), Jaabir bin
Yazeed (Taabi’ee), and Ataa bin Abi Rabaah. And this is also the opinion
favored by Shaykh Ibn Uthaymeen. See Musannaf Ibn Abi Shaybah (2/309-310),
Al-Mughni (3/146), Fataawa as-Siyaam by Ibn Uthaymeen (P. 102), Al-Majmoo by
Nawawi (6/174), Islamqa.info, Fatwa # 49008.
The second opinion
seems closer to the truth. Wallaahu A’lam.]
[18] - [Al-Mughni
(4/403, 4/404), Ash-Sharh al-Kabeer ma’ al-Muqni wal Insaaf (7/369), Majmoo
Fataawa Ibn Baaz (15/214)]
[19] - [Al-Taghaabun
(64:16)]
[20] - [Al-Baqarah
(2:286)]
[21] - [Al-Ijmaa
by Ibn al-Mundhir (P. 60)]
[22] - [Al-Bukhaari
(4505), Abu Dawood (2318)]
[23] - [Al-Bukhaari
(before H. 4505)]
[24] - [al-Majmoo’
(6/262)]
[25] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (1816),
Muslim (1201)]
[26] - [Majmoo
Fataawa Ibn Baaz (15/203)]
[27] - [Majmoo’
Fataawa al-Lajnah ad-Daa’imah (10/178)]
[28] - [Al-Bukhaari
(Before H. 4505)]
[29] - [Majmoo’
Fataawa Ibn Baaz (15/203)]
[30] - [Fataawa
al-Siyaam (p. 111)]
[31] - [Lisaan
al-‘Arab by Ibn Manzoor (4/368)]
[32] - [Mu’jam
Lughat ul-Fuqaha (P. 219)]
[33] - [See:
Al-Mughni (3/115), Ash-Sharh al-Mumti’ by Ibn Uthaymeen (4/492)]
[34] - [Al-Bukhaari
(2998)]
[35] - [The
Scholars have differed over what type of traveling permits taking advantage of
the concessions of Safr such as: Not observing the fast, Shortening the
Prayers, Wiping over the Khuffaayn and Turbans (for
three days and night), leaving out the Sunan Rawaatib, and others. There are
four opinions:
First Opinion: The
concessions of travel are only for a journey of obligatory, recommended, and
permissible type. As for a Haraam and Makrooh journey, then these concessions
are not permitted in them.
Second Opinion: These
concessions are not except for the obligatory journeys like Hajj and Umrah,
because an obligatory act cannot be abandoned except by another obligatory act.
Third Opinion: The
concessions of Safr are not allowed except in the journeys of obedience,
because the Prophet (ﷺ) only shortened the prayers in an obligatory or recommended
(mandoob) journey.
Fourth Opinion: This
is the opinion of Imaam Abu Haneefah, Shaykh ul-Islaam Ibn Taymiyyah and a
group of other Scholars, who said that shortening of prayers and breaking the fast
and all other concessions of safr are allowed in all types of journeys, even in
fact in a haram journey. Shaykh al-Islaam Ibn Taymiyyah said: ((The evidence is
with those who say that shortening of prayers and permissibility to not fast
are legislated for the travelling itself, and a specific type of journey was
not specified at the extent of others. And this is the more correct opinion,
because verily the Book and the Sunnah have generalized the traveling)). Majmoo
al-Fataawa (24/109), and see: al-Mughni (3/115-117), Ash-Sharh al-Mumti’ by Ibn
Uthaymeen (4/493), and Majmoo Fataawa Ibn Uthaymeen (15/260).
However, if a person travels in order to
avoid fasting then it is Haraam for him to break his fast. Shaykh Ibn Uthaymeen
said: “If a person travels in order to avoid fasting, then travelling is haraam
for him, and breaking the fast is also haraam for him. He has to repent to
Allaah, may He be exalted, and change his travel plans and fast. If he persists
with his travel plans then he must fast even if he is travelling. To sum up, it
is not permissible to use tricks in order to avoid fasting in Ramadaan, because
the use of a trick to avoid a duty does not mean that the duty is waived, just
as using tricks to do something haraam does not make it permissible” Majmoo
Fataawa Ibn Uthaymeen (19/133)]
[36] - [Al-Baqarah
(2:185)]
[37] - [At-Tirmidhi
(715), Abu Dawood (2408), Ibn Maajah (1667), Nasaa’ee (2273)]
[38] - [Al-Mughni
by Ibn Qudaamah (3/157)]
[39] - [Al-Bukhaari
(1086). The athar of Ibn Abbaas and Ibn Umar is narrated in Muwatta Maalik
(12), Musannaf Abdur Razzaaq (4293), Sunan al-Kubra by al-Bayhaqi (5392-5397)
and others. Classed Saheeh by al-Albaani in Irwaa al-Ghaleel (3/17)]
[40] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (1088), Muslim (1338)]
[41] - [Musannaf
Ibn Abi Shaybah (8140), Sunan al-Kubra lil Bayhaqi (3/137), Classed Saheeh by
al-Albaani in Irwaa al-Ghaleel (3/14)]
[42] - [Majmoo’
al-Fataawa (12/267)]
[43] - [Majmoo’ al-Fataawa
(24/106)]
[44] - [Fataawa
Arkaan al-Islaam (P. 381)]
[45] - [Ahmad
(26690) and Abu Dawood (2412), Classed Saheeh by al-Albaani]
[46] - [Al-Mughni
(4/347), Ash-Sharh al-Kabeer ma’ al-Muqni wal-Insaaf (7/380)]
[47] - [Ash-Sharh
al-Mumti’ (6/218)]
[48] - [Narrated
by Abu Dawood, 2454’ al-Tirmidhi, 730; classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in
Saheeh Abi Dawood]
[49] - [Also
see: Islamqa.info Fatwa # 66086]
[50] - [Al-Mughni
(2/65)]
[51] - [Al-Mughni
(2/215)]
[52] - [Al-Mughni
(2/215)]
[53] - [Majmoo’
Fataawa Ibn Taymiyyah (24/17)]
[54] - [See:
Majmoo Fataawa Ibn Baaz (12/276, 15/239-244), Majmoo Fataawa al-Lajnah
ad-Daa’imah (8/99, 10/205-212), Fataawa Ibn Uthaymeen (19/141)]
[55] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (1944, 2953), Muslim (1113)]
[56] - [Nayl
al-Awtaar by ash-Shawkaani (4/272)]
[57] - [Majmoo’
al-Fataawa (25/213)]
[58] - [Majmoo’
Fataawa Ibn Uthaymeen (15/26)]
[59] - [Islamqa.info,
Fatwa # 192168]
[60] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (1944, 1948), Muslim (1113)]
[61] - [As-Siyaam
fil-Islaam by al-Qahtaani (P. 139)]
[62] - [Imaam
Ibn Qudaamah mentioned that: A traveler can only be in one of three conditions:
First Condition: Ramadaan begins while he is traveling; we do not know
of any difference of opinion among the Scholars in this case in the
permissibility for him to quit fasting.
Second Condition: He starts traveling during the month at night; it is
permissible for him to not observe the fast of the following morning and those
that come after it during the journey. This is the opinion of the majority of
Scholars, with the exception of Ubaydah as-Salmaani, Abu Mijlaz, and Suwayd bin
Ghaflah who said: “It is not permissible to quit fasting for the one who
started his journey after the month started” because of the saying of Allaah:
{So whoever among you sights the month, let him fast it} and this person is the
one who sighted the month while not in a journey. (Imaam Ibn al-Qayyim said in
Tahdheeb as-Sunan (7/54): “Indeed this opinion is odd”).
And Ibn Qudaamah said:
“For us (as evidence) is the saying of Allaah: {So whoever of you is ill or on
a journey, then an equal number of other days (to be made up)}, and the Prophet
(ﷺ) fasted in
the battle of Al-Fath and he did not observe fast during his journey.”
Third Condition: He starts to travel during the day of Ramadaan (i.e.
he fasted for the part of the day), then his ruling is the same as that of the
one who starts traveling during the night.
And
with regard to the permissibility of breaking the fast during the day in which
he started traveling, there are two narrations from Ahmad:
One
of them is that it is permissible for him to break his fast (while having
observed it for a part of the day) due to the hadeeth of Anas (radiallah anhu)
that he broke his fast during the day in which he traveled and he said: “This
is Sunnah” Narrated at-Tirmidhi (799); and also due to the hadeeth of Abu
Basrah who broke his fast during the day in which he traveled, and he also
said: “Don’t you want to follow the Sunnah of the Messenger of Allaah (ﷺ)” Narrated
Ahmad (6/398) and Abu Dawood (2414).
And
the other narration from Ahmad is that it is not permissible to break the fast
of that day. And this is also the opinion of Makhool, Zuhri, Maalik, Shaafi’ee,
and the Ashaab ur-Raye.
Ibn
Qudaamah then said that the more correct opinion is that of the permissibility
to break the fast.
See: Al-Mughni
(4/345-347), Ash-Sharh al-Kabeer ma’ Al-Muqni wal-Isnaaf (7/379), Ash-Sharh
al-Mumti (6/357), Nayl al-Awtaar by Shawkaani (3/165-166)]
[63] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (1944, 1948, 2953, 4275, 4276, 4277, 4278,
4279), Muslim (1113)]
[64] - [Nasaa’ee
(2266-2270), Classed Saheeh by al-Albaani]
[65] - [Nasaa’ee
(2310), Classed Saheeh by al-Albaani]
[66] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (1942, 1923), Muslim (1121)]
[67] - [At-Tirmidhi
(1684), Classed Saheeh by al-Albaani]
[68] - [Abu
Dawood (2356), Classed Saheeh by al-Albaani]
[69] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (1946), Muslim (1115)]
[70] - [Al-Mughni
(4/406)]
[71] - [An-Nisaa
(4:29)]
[72] - [Al-Baqarah
(2:195)]
[73] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (1946), Muslim (1115)]
[74] - [Saheeh
Muslim (1115), Sunan Nasaa’ee (2257)]
[75] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (1923, 1942), Muslim (1121)]
[76] - [The
Scholars have differed over what is better in journey when fasting and not
fasting are equal. There are two opinions:
First Opinion: The Madhab of Imaam Ahmad and his companions is that
not fasting is better. Ibn Qudaamah said: “According to our Imaam, not fasting
is better in a journey”. And this is also the Madhab of Awzaa’ee and Ishaaq bin
Raahuwayh. See: Al-Mughni (4/407). And this is what Shaykh al-Islaam Ibn
Taymiyyah and Shaykh Ibn Baaz have preferred. They took evidence from the
saying of the Prophet (ﷺ): ((It is no righteousness that
you fast on a journey)) and His saying: ((Indeed Allaah loves that his
concessions be availed just as he dislikes his disobedience be availed))
Narrated Ahmad (2/108), Ibn Hibbaan (2742), & Ibn Khuzaymah (950), from Ibn
Umar. Classed Saheeh by al-Albaani in his footnotes of Saheeh Ibn Khuzaymah,
and in Irwaa al-Ghaleel (564) Shaykh Ibn Baaz said: “However, if he knows that
his not fasting in the journey will make it hard for him to make up those days
later on, and he fears that it will be difficult for him to make them up, then
he should fast.” Majmoo Fataawa Ibn Baaz (15/234-244)
Second Opinion: The madhab of Abu Haneefah, Maalik, & Shaafi’ee is
that it is better to fast for the one who is capable to do it. Their evidence is
explained above.]
[77] - [Majmoo
Fataawa Ibn Uthaymeen (19/134-140), & Ash-Sharh al-Mumti’ (6/354-357,
6/338-340), & Majaalis Shahr Ramadaan (P. 82)]
[78] - [Narrated
by al-Bukhaari, 1945; Muslim, no. 1122]
[79] - [Al-Mawsoo’ah
al-Fiqhiyyah (28/73) from Islamqa.info, Fatwa # 20165]
[80] - [Nifaas
literally means "childbed, childbirth, parturition or postpartum." In
the Islamic legal terminology, it means "the blood which is discharged
from a woman's womb during or after the childbirth." In the present
context the word nifaas is usually translated as "post‑natal bleeding or
post-childbirth bleeding." The woman who has nifaas is known as nafsa'.
The blood which is
discharged from a woman's womb after a miscarriage is also nifaas.]
[81] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (321), Muslim (335)]
[82] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (304), Muslim (132)]
[83] - [Al-Mughni
(4/397)]
[84] - [See
Footnote # 237]
[85] - [Agreed
Upon: Al-Bukhaari (1925, 1926), Muslim (1109)]
[86] - [See:
Al-Mughni by Ibn Qudaamah (4/393),
Majmoo Fataawa Ibn Uthaymeen (19/105-106)]
[87] - [Ahmad
(19027, 20326), Ibn Maajah (1667), Nasaa’ee (2274), Abu Dawood (2408), Classed
Saheeh by al-Albaani]
[88] - [Al-Bukhaari
(Before H. 4505). And the athar of Al-Hasan and Ibraaheem is narrated by Abd
bin Humayd from various routes (Fath ul-Baari: 8/179-180)]
[89] - [As-Siyaam
fil-Islaam by al-Qahtaani (P. 158)]
[90] - [The
Scholars have differed about the ruling of a pregnant and breastfeeding woman
in the following opinions:
First Opinion: Their ruling is the same as that of a sick person in
all conditions, no matter their fear of harm is about themselves, their child,
or both. So they should not fast due to fear of harm and make up these days
later without the need to feed the poor, due to the saying of Allaah: {So
whoever of you is ill or on a journey, then an equal number of other days} and
the hadeeth of the Prophet (ﷺ): ((Allaah has relieved the
traveler of half of the prayer and He has relieved the traveler, the pregnant
and the breastfeeding woman of the duty to fast)) [Ahmad (31/392) and the Four Sunan.
This
is the madhab of Al-Hasan al-Basri, Ibraaheem Nakha’ee, Al-Awzaa’ee,
Ath-Thawree, Ataa, Zuhri, Sa’eed bin Jubayr. And this is what was adopted by
Abu Haneefah and his companions. And this is what’s preferred by
al-Mubaarakpoori, Ibn Baaz and Ibn Uthaymeen. See: Tuhfat al-Ahwadhi (H. 711),
Majmoo Fataawa Ibn Baaz (15/223-228), Ash-Sharh al-Mumti by Ibn Uthaymeen
(6/362), Majmoo Fataawa Ibn Uthaymeen (19/160) and Shaykh Ibn Uthaymeen said:
“This is the most correct opinion according to me, because these women are, at
most, like a sick person and a traveler, they are required to make up the fasts
only without the need to feed the poor”
Second Opinion: If they fear harm on themselves, then they should
break the fast and make it up later. This is something there is no dispute in,
because they are like the sick person who fears harm on himself.
And if they fear harm
on themselves and their child, then too, they should break their fast and make
it up later.
But if they fear harm
on their child alone, then they should break their fast and make it up later,
and should also feed the poor for each day. This is the opinion of Mujaahid,
Imaam Ahmad, Shaafi’ee, and one of the narrations from Imaam Maalik.
As
for the other narration from Imaam Maalik, then in it, he has differentiated
between the pregnant and the breastfeeding women. He said: A pregnant woman
should make up the days later but does not have to feed the poor because she is
like a sick person, but as for the breastfeeding woman, then she has to make up
the days as well as feed the poor, because a breastfeeding woman can also ask
another woman to feed her child as compared to a pregnant woman, because the
fetus is attached with her, and her fear for her fetus is like her fear of any
other part of the body. This is also the madhab of Al-Layth bin
Sa’d.
They took evidence
from what Abu Dawood and others narrated from the saying of Ibn Abbaas
(radiallah anhu) who said explaining the verse: {For those who can do it (with
hard-ship) is a ransom, the feeding of one, that is indigent} He said: ((This
was a concession granted to the aged man and woman who were able to keep fast;
they were allowed to leave the fast and instead feed an indigent person for
each fast; (and a concession) to pregnant and suckling woman when they apprehended
harm)) Abu Dawood added: ((meaning: when the apprehend harm on their child:
they break the fast and feed the poor)) Narrated Abu Dawood (2318). However,
this was weakened by Al-Albaani in Da’eef Abi Dawood (P. 181) and he said: “It
is Shaadh”.
Third Opinion: The
pregnant and breastfeeding women, when they fear harm on themselves or their
child, they just have to feed the poor without the need to make up the days
later. This is the opinion of Ibn Umar and Ibn Abbaas, as narrated by Ash-Shaafi’ee
in al-Musnad (1/278), Al-Bayhaqi (2/230), Abdur Razzaaq in his Musannaf
(4/218), Abu Ubayd in al-Naasikh wal-Mansookh (P. 65), Tabari in his Tafseer
(3/427) and others, classed Saheeh by al-Albaani.
However, this
opinion is declared weak by a number of Scholars even if it is proven from Ibn
Umar and Ibn Abbaas. Due to the hadeeth of the Prophet (ﷺ): ((Allaah has relieved the traveler, the pregnant and the
breastfeeding from the duty to fast)) Narrated Ahmad and others as passed
above. This hadeeth indicates that a pregnant and a breastfeeding woman is like
the traveler in the ruling of Sawm i.e. they break the fast and make it up
later.
Shaykh Ibn Baaz
said: ((This opinion is Weak and non-preferred i.e. Marjooh)) and he said:
((What is narrated from Ibn Abbaas and Ibn Umar that a pregnant and a
breastfeeding woman only has to feed the poor without the need to make up the
days, is marjooh and goes against the evidences of Sharee’ah)) Majmoo Fataawa
Ibn Baaz (15/224, 225, 227)
For
details see: Al-Mughni (4/393), Ash-Sharh al-Kabeer ma’ al-Muqni wal-Isnaaf
(7/381), Al-Furoo by Ibn Muflih (4/446), Ar-Rawd al-Murabbi’ (4/292), Nayl
al-Awtaar by Shawkaani (3/170), Sharh al-Umdah by Ibn Taymiyyah (1/244-253),
Awn al-Ma’bood Sharh Sunan Abi Dawood (7/46), Tuhfat al-Ahwadhi Sharh Sunan
at-Tirmidhi (3/401-404), Fath ul-Baari by Ibn Hajar (8/179), Majmoo Fataawa Ibn
Baaz (15/223-228), Majmoo Fataawa Ibn Uthaymeen (19/157-166), Majaalis Shahr
Ramadaan by him (P. 193), Ash-Sharh al-Mumti’ (6/357-364) by him also, &
Zaad al-Ma’aad by Ibn al-Qayyim (2/30-31)]
[91] - [al-Mawsoo‘ah
al-Fiqhiyyah, 28/58]
[92] - [The
Scholars have differed if the compulsion is with regard to having an
intercourse, whether that necessitates having to make it up later or not. Some
Scholars have said that this person has to make up the fast but does not have
to feed the poor. And others said that he/she does not have to make it up nor
does he have to feed the poor. And this second opinion is what seems more
closer to the truth and the evidences, and Allaah knows best. See: Al-Mughni
(4/376-378), Fataawa Ibn Baaz (15/307), Majaalis Shahr Ramadaan by Ibn
Uthaymeen (P. 173), Fataawa al-Lajnah ad-Daa’imah (10/301-326)]
[93] - [Narrated
by Ibn Maajah (2045); classed as saheeh by al-Albaani]
[94] - [Majmoo‘
Fataawa al-Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (19/207)]
[95] - [Majaalis
Shahr Ramadaan by Ibn Uthaymeen (P. 173)]
[96] - [See:
Al-Insaaf by al-Mardaawi published with al-Muqni wa ash-Sharh al-Kabeer (7/385),
Al-Furoo’ by Ibn Muflih (4/448), Tasheeh al-Furoo by al-Mardaawi (4/448-450),
Ash-Sharh al-Mumti’ by Ibn Uthaymeen (6/362)]
[97] - [Al-Baqarah
(2:195)]
[98] - [Al-Hajj
(22:78)]
[99] - [An-Nisaa
(4:29)]
[100] - [Al-Baqarah
(2:185)]
[101] - [Muwatta
Maalik (1435), Musnad Ahmad (1/313), Sunan Ibn Maajah (2340, 2341), Classed
Saheeh by al-Albaani]
[102] - [Al-Maa’idah
(5:3)]
[103] - [Al-An’aam
(6:145)]
[104] - [See:
As-Siyaam by Duktoor Abdullah at-Tayyaar (P. 95)]
[105] - [Saheeh
Muslim (1120)]
[106] - [Abu
Dawood (2365)]
[107] - [Al-Muntawa
Sharh al-Muwatta by al-Baaji (2/49)]
[108] - [Zaad
al-Ma’aad (2/53) from Islamqa.info, Fatwa # 12641]
[109] - [See
al-Bidaayah wa’l-Nihaayah (14/31) from Islamqa.info, Fatwa # 12641]
[110] - [See:
Tahqeeq al-I’laam Bifawaid Umdat al-Ahkaam by Ibn al-Mulaqqin (5/268) under the
footnotes of its researcher]
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.