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How Tos
of Fasting
The Obligation
Fasting is one of the five
pillars of Islam. It is an act of obedience and submission to Allah's commands
through the highest degree of commitment, sincerity and faithfulness to seek
Allah's mercy, to atone for sins, errors, and mistakes and to avoid condemnation
to Hell.
It is done out of deep love
for God, with a genuine virtue of devotion, honest dedication and closeness
to Allah, for Fasting is for Allah and Him alone.
The fasting during Ramadan
is obligatory on every adult, sane, and able Muslim.
Denial of the obligatory
nature of fasting in the month of Ramadan amounts to disbelief.
One who avoids fasting without
genuine reasons is a sinner and transgressor according to Islamic Shariah (Law).
Time: When to fast
Fasting in Islam involves
abstinence from three primal physical needs of human beings- food, drink, and
sexual intercourse from dawn (approximately one and a half hours before sunrise)
to sunset during the entire month of Ramadan.
Who is exempted from
fasting
1. Children under the age
of puberty and discretion;
2. The insane people who
are unaccountable for their deeds. People of these two categories are exempted
from the duty of fasting and no compensation or any other substitute is enjoined
on them;
3. Men and women who are
too old and feeble to undertake the obligation of fasting and bear its hardships.
Such people are exempted from this duty, but they must offer at least one needy
poor Muslim an average full meal or its value per person day.
4. Sick people whose health
is likely to be severely affected by fasting. They may postpone the fast, as
long as they are sick, to a later date and makeup for it, a day for a day;
5. People expecting hardship.
Such people may break the fast temporarily during their travel only and make
up for it in later days, a day for a day. But it is better for them, the Quran
says, to keep the fast if they can without causing extraordinary hardships;
6. Expectant women and women
nursing their children may also break the fast, if its observance is likely
to endanger their own health or that of their infants. But they must make up
for the fast at a delayed time, a day for a day;
7. Women in periods of menstruation
(of a maximum of ten days). They must postpone the fast till recovery and then
make up for it, a day for day.
The How Tos of
Fasting
Niyyah or Intention of
Fast
To observe the fast, the
intention of fasting is essential (Wajib). The intention should be made daily,
preferably before dawn of each day of fasting (in Ramadan).
Provision is made if someone
has forgotten to express his intention before dawn. In such a case one is allowed
to express intention of fasting before noon to avoid the invalidation of the
fast.
The wording of Niyyah may
be as follows:
"I intend to observe
fast for today."
Suhoor
Suhoor is a light, predawn
meal, recommended before actually fasting. It is a blessing and hence recommended
but not essential.
Any consumption of food
or drink should cease at least five to ten minutes before the onset of dawn.
Iftar
Iftar is an Arabic term
meaning breaking the fast immediately after the sunset. Iftar is a light
snack consisting of dates or desserts, along with liquids, such as water, juice
or milk.
This is eaten after making
the following Dua (supplication) for breaking the fast:
"Oh Allah! I
fasted for your sake and I am breaking my fast from the sustenance You blessed
me with, accept it from me."
What breaks the fast
1. Intentional consumption
of food, drink, medicine, or smoking during the fasting.
2. Any injection which has
some nutritional value.
3. Beginning of menstruation
or post natal birth bleeding (even in the last moment of sunset).
The conditions mentioned
above invalidate fasting and require "Qada" (making up only the missed
day or days). However, intentional intercourse during the hours of fasting
invalidates fasting and not only requires "Qada" but also additional
penalty (Kaffara-see the explanation of this below).
What does not break the
fast
1. Eating or drinking by
mistake, unmindful of the fast.
2. Unintentional vomiting.
3. Swallowing things which
are not possible to avoid, such as one's own saliva, street dust, smoke, etc.
4. Brushing the teeth.
5. Bathing: if water is
swallowed unintentionally, it does not invalidate the fast. However, while
fasting gargling should be avoided.
6. Injection or I/V (Intravenous)
which is solely medicinal and not nutritional.
7. In some special circumstances
if the food or drink is just tasted and immediately removed out of the mouth
without allowing it to enter into the throat.
Kaffara
During the fasting period,
if one deliberately breaks his or her fast, s/he must free one slave, or fast
for sixty continuous days, or feed sixty needy persons, or spend in charity
an amount equal to feeding sixty persons.
If one chooses to fast sixty
days and the continuity is interrupted for any reason, except menstruation,
one has to start the sixty day cycle all over again.
Breaking of the fast
under exceptional conditions
Muslims are permitted to
break their fast of Ramadan when there is a danger to their health.
In this situation a Muslim
should make up his/her fast later. The missed fast(s) can be made up at
any other time of the year, either continuously or intermittently, except on
the day of Eid-ul-Fitr and the day of Eid-ul-Adha
Tarawih
These are special Sunnah
prayers in the month of Ramadan. They follow the Isha prayers. A
minimum of eight and a maximum of twenty Rakat are offered in pairs of two.
Lailat al-Qadr
Amongst the nights of Ramadan,
there is one special night of Power (Qadr) which is highlighted in Surah al-Qadr
(Surah 97 in the Quran).
It has the significance
of being better than a thousand months (Quran 97:3).
This was the night when
Quran was revealed to mankind. Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be
upon him) recommended Muslims search for this night of Power (Qadr) in the odd
nights of the last ten nights in Ramadan.
Muslims spend the night
in Ibadah (worship), asking forgiveness of their sins and reciting the Quran.
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/18/2002 8:06:52 AM
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