| 2 Hadiths


Hadith
1887
Narrated Anas (may Allah be pleased with him):(The people of) Banoo Salamah intended to move out near the mosque of the Prophet, but he ﷺdisliked to see Madeenah vacated and said, "O the people of Banoo Salamah! Do not you think that you will be rewarded for your footsteps which you take towards the mosque?" So, they stayed at their old places.
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Commentary :
Al-Madeenah is one of the best, most honored, and purified lands on earth, and the Prophet ﷺ loved it, and keenly sought to populate and fortify it. In this hadeeth, Anas ibn Maalik (may Allah be pleased with him) related that when Banoo Salamah, from the Ansaar, wanted to move out of their houses to settle in the outskirts of Al-Madeenah near the Prophet’s Mosque, he ﷺ disliked that some parts of Al-Madeenah should be deserted. He ﷺ said to them: "O people of Banoo Salamah! Do you not think that you will be rewarded for your footsteps which you take towards the mosque?" It means, ‘Do you notaspire to the rewards earned for walking to the (distant) mosque?’ He ﷺ informed them of the abundant rewards earned by walking to a mosque at a distance away from one’s house, urging them to stay in their houses. The Prophet’s words mean, “Stay in your houses to earn greater rewards for your long-distance walking to my mosque.” He ﷺ encouraged them to stay in their houses and aspire to the rewards for each step they took to the mosque, devoting their effort sincerely to Allah, The Exalted. Upon hearing the Prophet’s words, they decided to stay in their houses as advised.
The Prophet’s intention was that Banoo Salamah should remain in their houses so that the various regions of Al-Madeenah would remain populated so that the Muslim populationin Al-Madeenah wouldincrease to instill terror in the hearts of the hypocrites and polytheists. He ﷺ did not explicitly say so to Banoo Salamah, and settled for highlighting the obvious benefit to urge them to comply and motivate them to remain in their houses.
The hadeeth also underlines the virtues of building and populating Al-Madeenah and urges Muslims to walk to the mosques..

1888
Narrated Aboo Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him): The Prophet ﷺ said, "There is a garden from the gardens of Paradise between my house (room) and my pulpit, and my pulpit is on my Lake Fount (Al-Kawthar).”
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Commentary :
Allah, Exalted is He, has favored some lands and places over others, and one such place is the Noble Rawdhah at the Prophet's mosque.
In this hadeeth, he ﷺ informed us of the virtues of this blessed place, the area between his house (room), where he ﷺ was buried, and his pulpit in the mosque. He ﷺ stated that it is one of the gardens of Paradise. The Arabic word ‘Rawdhah’ means a garden with fertile soil where plants grow,fresh water flows, and beauty manifests. The meaning is that the Noble Rawdhah at the Prophet's mosque is a blessed place where the divine mercy descends and people taste bliss by attending the gatherings of Thikr (remembrance of Allah) and performing prayer in that particular place, especially during the lifetime of the Prophet ﷺ. It could also mean that this particular place is an actual garden of Paradise, like the Black Stone, and shall be moved back to it on the Day of Resurrection. This meaning is further supported by his words at the conclusion of the hadeeth reading: “and my pulpit is on my Lake-Fount (Al-Kawthar),” meaning that his pulpit is located at the bank of his lake-fount (Al-Kawthar), with which Allah shall honor him on the Day of Resurrection, or that he will have a pulpit by Al-Kawthar to stand upon and call upon people.
The hadeeth also highlights the virtues of Al-Madeenah and urges Muslims to reside therein..

1889
`Narrated Aa’ishah (may Allah be pleased with her):When Allah's Messenger ﷺ reached al-Madeenah, Aboo Bakr and Bilaal (may Allah be pleased with them) became ill. Whenever Aboo Bakr's fever got worse, he would recite (this poetic verse): "Everybody is staying alive with his People, yet death is nearer to him than His shoelaces." Meanwhile whenever fever deserted Bilaal, he would recite: "I wish I could stay overnight in a valley wherein I would be surrounded by Ithkhir and Jaleel (kinds of goodsmelling grass). Would that one day I could drink the water of the Majanna and would that (the two mountains of) Shaamah and Tafeel would appear to me!" The Prophet ﷺ said, "O Allah! Curse Shaybah ibn Rabee`ah and `Utbah ibn Rabee`ah and Umaiyah ibn Khalaf as they turned us out of our land to the land of epidemics." Allah's Messenger ﷺ then said, "O Allah! Make us love Al-Madeenah as we love Makkah or even more than that. O Allah! Give blessings in our Saa‘ and our Mudd (measures symbolizing food) and make the climate of Al-Madeenah suitable for us and divert its fever towards Al-Juhfah." ‘Aa’ishah (may Allah be pleased with her) added: “When we reached Al-Madeenah, it was the unhealthiest of land, and the valley of Bathaan used to flow with impure colored water.”.

Commentary :
Love for one’s homeland, an emotional attachment to it, and nostalgia for it are part of the innate human nature thatis not denounced by Islam, but israther channeled in the right direction that serves the religion of Allah and raises its banner high.
In this hadeeth, the Mother of the Believers ‘Aa’ishah (may Allah be pleased with her) informed us of the situation when the Prophet ﷺ and his Companions (may Allah be pleased with them) migrated to Al-Madeenah. Aboo Bakr and Bilaal ibn Rabaah (may Allah be pleased with them) got a fever, and each of them put his emotions into words according to his certitude in Allah and knowledge of the anticipated consequences.
Aboo Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him) found solace in reciting the following poetic verse (which means): “Everybody is staying alive in the company of his people, yet death is nearer to him than his shoe laces.” Meaning that when everyone wakes up, he is greeted with ‘good morning,’ or ‘may Allah bless your morning,’ and similar greetings exchanged by people and their loved ones, while death may suddenly befall them and they may depart this worldly life in the evening, indicating the proximity of death from all human beings, whether they are sick or healthy.
On the other hand, whenever fever desertedBilaal (may Allah be pleased with him), he would raise his voice and recite some poetic verses. The Arabic expression “Yarfa‘ ‘Aqeeratah” means to raise one’s voice. It was said that a man once had his leg amputated; he raised his amputated leg, placed it over the other leg, and shouted of the top of his voice. Afterward, whenever a person shouted of the top of his voice as such, the Arabs used this expression to describe his act. He(may Allah be pleased with him) used to recite somepoetic verses, expressing longing and hopeto return to Makkah, where he relished sound health. He wished to spend one night in the valley of Makkah to quench his longing for it in the well of Majannah, a well near ‘Ukaath few miles away from Makkah in the direction of the Dhahraan area, where the Arabs had a marketplace in the pre-Islamic era. He (may Allah be pleased with him)wished he could go there to enjoy the view of the Ithkhir and Jaleel (kinds of pleasantly scented grass), which grew back in Makkah, and see Shaamah and Tafeel, two adjacent mountains southwest of Makkah, about 90 km away from it.
He (may Allah be pleased with him)would say, "Would that I could stay overnight in a valley wherein I would be surrounded by Ithkhir and Jaleel. Would that one day I could drink from the water of the Majannah, and that the two mountains Shaamah and Tafeel would appear to me!"
Afterward, Bilaal (may Allah be pleased with him) supplicated against the polytheists who drove them away from Makkah to a land afflicted with epidemics and diseases. He said: "O Allah! Curse Shaybah ibn Rabee`ah and `Utbah ibn Rabee`ah and Umaiyah ibn Khalaf as they turned us out of our land to the land of epidemics." These were the chiefs of the polytheists and their leaders in Makkah.
When the Messenger of Allah ﷺ saw what had befallen his Companions of fever and epidemic, he ﷺ feared that they might hate Al-Madeenah, because people are innately averted from what they hate. Therefore, he ﷺ supplicated Allah, Exalted is He, to instill the love of Al-Madeenah within their hearts, and make them love it even more than they loved Makkah, and to bless Al-Madeenah and its Saa‘ and Mudd.
The Saa’ equals four Mudds, and the Mudd is the measure of two open medium-sized handfuls. The Mudd approximately equals 509 grams at the lowest estimate, and 1072 grams in the highest estimate. The Saa’, on the other hand, equals tobetween 2036 and 4288 grams. In another hadeeth, cited in Saheeh Al-Bukhaaree and Saheeh Muslim, he ﷺ supplicated Allah, Exalted is He, to confer upon Al-Madeenah twice the blessings conferred upon Makkah.
He ﷺ asked Allah, Exalted is He, to relieve Al-Madeenah of the epidemic and transfer it to Juhfah, which was an abode of polytheism inhabited by non-Muslims then, so that they would be preoccupied by it and distracted from helping the disbelievers. Juhfah is located between Makkah and Al-Madeenah, at a distance of 190 km from Makkah. Allah, Exalted is He, answered the Prophet’s supplication and blessed people’s livelihoods in Al-Madeenah, and instilled its love in the hearts of the Prophet ﷺ and his Companions, and this love remained apparent until death befell them. One of the manifestations of this love was that whenever the Prophet ﷺ returned from any of his travels back to Al-Madeenah, he ﷺ urged his riding animal to move faster upon seeing the houses of Al-Madeenah, out of his deep love for it, as narrated in Saheeh Al-Bukhaaree.
The Mother of the Believers ‘Aa’ishah (may Allah be pleased with her) added that when they went to Al-Madeenah, it was the unhealthiest land, afflicted with epidemic diseases, to the extent that the valley of Bathaan, to the south of Al-Madeenah near the Prophet’s Mosque, used to flow with impure colored water that was often stagnant, causing fever and spreading epidemics.
It is deduced from the hadeeth that it is allowable for a Muslim to ask his Lord to bless him with well-being and recovery when ailments befall him, just like he asks Him for sustenance and victory, and that such supplications and desires do not imply blaming Allah or rejecting His decrees.
It is also inferred that it is permissible to supplicate Allah against the wrongdoers and the disbelievers. The hadeeth also highlights the significance of care for good health conditions, fresh air, and pure water, and warns against stagnant and colored water. It also underlines the permissibility of reciting, quoting, and listening to poetry.
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1890
Zayd ibn Aslam narrated on the authority of his father (may Allah be pleased with them):`Umar said, O Allah! Grant me martyrdom in Your cause, and let my death be in Al-Madeenah of Your Messenger.".

Commentary :
The Prophet ﷺ supplicated Allah, Exalted is He, to instill the love of Al-Madeenah within his heart and the hearts of his Companions (may Allah be pleased with them). He ﷺ said: “O Allah! Make us love Al-Madeenah as we love Makkah or even more than that.” [Al-Bukhaaree and Muslim].
Allah, Exalted is He, answered his supplication and Al-Madeenah became the most beloved land to his Companions(may Allah be pleased with them). They lived therein and did not wish to die elsewhere.
In this report, Aslam, the freed slave of ‘Abdullah ibn ‘Umar ibn Al-Khattaab (may Allah be pleased with them), stated that ‘Umar used to supplicate Allah, Exalted is He, to bless him with martyrdom and to cause him to die in Al-Madeenah. Allah, Exalted is He, answered his supplication and caused him to die as a martyr. He (may Allah be pleased with him) was killed at the hands of Aboo Lu’lu’ah Al-Majoosi, may Allah punish him proportionally, while he (may Allah be pleased with him) was performing Fajr Prayer in 23 A.H. Thus, he earned the reward of martyrdom, because a disbelieving Zoroastrian killed him out of his resentment against Islam, and against ‘Umar’sdiligence and sincerity in governing the affairs of the Muslims. He (may Allah be pleased with him) was killed in the Cause of Allah, and Allah caused him to die in Al-Madeenah as he wished, and he(may Allah be pleased with him) was buried in the land that he loved the most, next to his beloved friend andProphet ﷺ and his close friend Aboo Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him). May Allah be pleased with ‘Umar and all the Companions (may Allah be pleased with them).
This hadeeth highlights the merits of ‘Umar ibn Al-Khattaab (may Allah be pleased with him)..

1892
Narrated Ibn `Umar (may Allah be pleased with him):The Prophet ﷺ observed the fast on the 10th of Muharram (‘Ashooraa’)and ordered (Muslims) to fast on that day, but when the fasting of the month of Ramadan was prescribed, the fasting of ‘Ashooraa’ was abandoned. ‘Abdullah(may Allah be pleased with him) did not observe fasting on that day unless it coincided with his routine fasting by chance..

Commentary :
The Day of ‘Aashooraa’ is the tenth day of the sacred month of Muharram and it is one of the blessed days. On that day, Allah, Exalted is He, saved His Prophet Moses (peace be upon him)s from Pharaoh and his army.  The Messenger of Allah ﷺ venerated this day, fasted on it, and commanded Muslims to fast, to express gratitude to Allah, The Exalted.
In this hadeeth, ‘Abdullah ibn ‘Umar (may Allah be pleased with him) informed us that the Prophet ﷺ fasted on the Day of ‘Aashooraa’ and commanded his Companions (may Allah be pleased with them) to fast. Other narrations have been reported regarding the reasons why the Prophet ﷺ fasted the Day of ‘Aashooraa’, one of which was narrated on the authority of Ibn ‘Abbaas (may Allah be pleased with him): “When the Prophet ﷺ came to Al-Madeenah, he found (the Jews) fasting on the Day of ‘Aashooraa’ (i.e., 10th of Muharram). They used to say: "This is a great day on which Allah, Exalted is He, saved Prophet Moosaa and drowned the people of Pharaoh. Moosaa observed the fast on this day, as a sign of gratitude to Allah." The Prophet ﷺ said, "I am closer to Moosaa than they!" So, he observed the fast (on that day) and ordered the Muslims to fast on it.” 
Another narration was reported by Ibn ‘Umar (may Allah be pleased with him) that the Prophet ﷺ said: “That was a day on which the people of pre-Islamic days used to observe fast. So, he amongst you who likes to observe fast should do so, and he who does not like it should abandon it.” [Al-Bukhaaree and Muslim].
Narrations have been reported about the virtues of fasting on that day, stating that it expiates the sins committed in the preceding year, like the hadeeth narrated on the authority of Qataadah (may Allah be pleased with him)that has been cited in Saheeh Muslim.
Moreover, Ibn ‘Umar (may Allah be pleased with him) stated that when the obligatory fasting on Ramadan was prescribed in 2 A.H., people abandoned fasting the Day of ‘Aashooraa’ as an obligatory act of worship, but some Muslims observed fasting on it voluntarily.
Naafi‘, the freed slave of Ibn ‘Umar (may Allah be pleased with him), underlined that Ibn ‘Umar did not observe fasting on that day in particular unless it happened to coincide with days when he regularly fasted. He(may Allah be pleased with him) refrained from fasting on that day in particular fearing that people might mistakenly assume that it was obligatory, or that it would be venerated in the same (unprescribed) manner it was venerated in the pre-Islamic era.
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1896
Narrated Sahl (may Allah be pleased with him):The Prophet ﷺ said, "There is a gate in Paradise called Al-Raiyyaan, and those who observe fasts will enter through it on the Day of Resurrection and none except them will enter through it. It will be said, 'Where are those who used to observe fasting?' They will get up, and none except them will enter through it. After their entry the gate will be closed and nobody will enter through it.".

Commentary :
Islam assigns great virtue to fasting and the honor of Allah conferred upon those who observe fasting is unmatched. They refrain from all intake of food, water, beverages, and from sexual activity, and in return Allah, Exalted is He, confers upon them His abundant rewards, and distinguishes them with a special divine bestowal.
In this hadeeth, Sahl ibn Sa‘d Al-Ansaaree(may Allah be pleased with him) narrated that the Prophet ﷺ stated that Allah, Exalted is He, allocated a gate in Paradise especially for those who observed obligatory fasting and often observed voluntary fasting, or those who keenly assigned a special care to fasting compared to other worshipful acts. This gate is called “Al-Rayyaan,” which is derivedfrom a root that means quenching thirst. The name conveniently suits the situation of these people because it is their reward for enduring thirst and hunger. The name referred to quenching thirst rather than satiating hunger because thirst is harder to endure compared to hunger.
Only those who observed fasting will enter Paradise through this gate, to hasten to quench their thirst. This would be a manifestation of their honor and a special bestowal for them, so that they would not have to crowd with others to enter Paradise, for such crowding may cause thirst in and of itself. It should be noted, though, that there shall be no crowding at the gates of Paradise because they shall be vast and there shall be no harm, distress, or hardship therein. This is an honor conferred by Allah, Exalted is He, on them, to elevate their status, and distinguish them from others. The angels will call upon them: “Where are those who observed fasting?” They shall stand up and enter Paradise from it, and then the gate will be closed; none will enter Paradise through it except those who observed fasting. The Prophet ﷺ repeatedly stated that no one else shall enter Paradise through that gate for the sake of emphasis (on their special honor)..

1897
Narrated Aboo Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him): Allah's Messenger ﷺ said, "Whoever gives two items of wealth in charity for Allah's Cause, will be called from the gates of Paradise and will be addressed, 'O slaves of Allah! This is good.' So, whoever was amongst the people who observed prayer, will be called from the gate of the prayer; and whoever was amongst the people who used to participate in Jihaad, will be called from the gate of Jihaad; and whoever was amongst those who used to observe fasting, will be called from the gate of Al-Rayyaan; whoever was amongst those who used to give in charity, will be called from the gate of charity." Aboo Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him) said, "Let my parents be sacrificed for you, O Allah's Messenger! No distress or need will befall the one who will be called from those gates! Will anyone be called from all these gates?" The Prophet ﷺ replied, "Yes, and I hope you will be one of them.".

Commentary :
Allah, Exalted is He, urged His servants to hasten to perform good deeds, and promised them abundant rewards in this worldly life and the Hereafter. In this hadeeth, Aboo Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him) informed us that the Prophet ﷺ stated that whoever spends in charity two items of wealth, e.g., two cows, two Dirhams, two loaves of bread, or two garments, will earn such reward. It may also mean whoever spends them in charity on two consecutive occasions. His saying “in Allah’s Cause” means, ‘while aspiring to His reward,’ and this is more general than Jihaad and other worshipful acts. Whoever does so, the angels will call upon him on the Day of Resurrection from the gates of Paradise, welcoming him to enter it. They will say: “Oh servant of Allah, this is good,” meaning, ‘the good deed that you have done is more virtuous than all worldly pleasures.’ The Arabic word ‘khayr’ (lit. good) used in the hadeeth means in this context ‘virtuous’ rather the comparative adjective ‘better’, even if the wording may imply otherwise, and the wisdom is to urge the listener to seek entering Paradise through that gate. It could also mean that this gate through which you are asked to enter Paradise is good, meaning that therein lies all that is good, and the statement denotes honoring them.
Allah, Exalted is He, allocated a special gate in Paradise for each worshipful act. So, those who devote themselves to performing voluntary prayers after performing the obligatory ones shall be called upon to enter Paradise through the gate of prayer, and they will enter it, and the same goes for all other acts of worship, such as Jihaad and charity. Likewise, the angels shall receive those who devotedly observed fasting frequently at the gate of Al-Rayyaan, calling upon them to enter through it. This gate is called “Al-Rayyaan,” which is derivedfrom a root that means quenching thirst because whoever enters Paradise through it will never experience thirst again. The name conveniently suits the situation of these people because it is their reward for enduring thirst and hunger. The name refers to quenching thirst rather than satiating hunger because thirst is harder to endure compared to hunger.
His saying: “Whoever was amongst those who used to give in charity will be called from the gate of charity,” is not a repetition of the same meaning denoted by his saying: “Whoever spends two items of wealth” at the beginning of the hadeeth, because spending even an insignificant item of wealth in charity is better than the great worldly pleasures, and this applies to all the gates of Paradise, but it is stated here in particular for further emphasis.
Aboo Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him) said: “Let my parents be sacrificed for you, O Allah's Messenger! No distress or need will befall the one who will be called from those gates!” This is because such a person shall taste bliss in Paradise. It could also mean that whoever shall be called upon to enter Paradise through some of these gates will not need to be called upon to enter it through other ones; it is adequate to be called upon to enter Paradise through one gate!
Afterwards, Aboo Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him) asked: “Will anyone be called from all of these gates?” The Prophet ﷺ replied, "Yes, and I hope you will be one of them." He ﷺ replied that some believers will be called upon to enter from all those gates as they will have performed numerous and various worshipful acts. He ﷺ added: “I hope you will be one of them.” He (may Allah be pleased with him) had devotedly performed all worshipful acts for which Allah, Exalted is He, allocated gates in Paradise. It was narrated on the authority of Aboo Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him) that the Prophet ﷺ asked once: ‘Who among you is fasting today?’ Aboo Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him) replied, ‘I am.’ He ﷺ asked, ‘Who among you followed a funeral today?’ Aboo Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him) said, ‘I did.’ He ﷺ further asked, ‘Who among you presented food to a needy person today?’ Again, Aboo Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him) said, ‘I did.’ He ﷺ asked, ‘Who among you visited a patient (to inquire about his health and check on them) today?’ Aboo Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him) replied, ‘I did.’ Upon this, the Messenger of Allah ﷺ remarked: ‘Those (good deeds) never meet in a person but that he would be admitted to Paradise.’” [Muslim].

It is deduced from the hadeeth that the angels love the devout people and rejoice at meeting them.
It is also inferred that a Muslim is urged to spend more in charity; the more the merrier, and that it is required of Muslims to wish for good in this worldly life and the Hereafter. The hadeeth also underlines the virtues of Aboo Bakr (may Allah be pleased with him), and the merits of those who combine the qualities of goodness. It is also deduced from the hadeeth that it is permissible to praise someone to his face as long as it is not feared that it would not usher him into conceit and similar diseases of the heart..

1899
Narrated Aboo Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him): Allah's Messenger ﷺ said, "When the month of Ramadan starts, the gates of heaven are opened and the gates of Hellfire are closed and the devils are chained.".

Commentary :
The month of Ramadan is the month of forgiveness and deliverance from Hellfire, during which Allah, Exalted is He,has made easy the material and moral means to attain forgiveness, and the performance of good deeds, including: fasting, night prayer, Zakaah, and the like.
In this hadeeth, the Prophet ﷺ informed us that when the month of Ramadan comes, the gates of heaven are actually opened to celebrate this holy month, to welcome it in the exalted assembly [of angels], to note its abundant virtues and honor, and to inform the angels of its arrival. It could also mean that the gates of Paradise are opened as suggested by the mention of the closing of Hellfire’s gates afterward. Some versions of the hadeeth cited in Saheeh Al-Bukhaaree and Saheeh Muslim have been reported to that effect. As it starts, the gates of Hellfire are closed before those who observe fasting; this means that should anyone, who observes fasting, die while fulfilling the due rights (of the sacred month) and observing his religious duties, will be saved from Hellfire in that month of Ramadan. The devils are also chained, and this means that they are tied up with chains and prevented from corrupting Muslims in the same way they do at other times. All these virtues are due to the special honor conferred by Allah, Exalted is He, on this month during which He bestows His divine mercy and forgiveness on His servants.
The reference to the ‘devils’ here means the rebellious devils among the Jinn, the most hostile and aggressive ones, as stated in some versions of the hadeeth narrated by Al-Tirmithee and Al-Nasaa’i, and not all the devils. This explains why some evil deeds and sins are still committed by some people during the month of Ramadan. Based on the opinion suggesting that all the devils are chained during the month of Ramadan, it could mean that they are chained and prevented from harming those who observe fasting, complying with its conditions and etiquettes. However, the devils are not chained and prevented from harming those who fail to observe such conditions and etiquettes. Moreover, the chained devils may still harm people, in proportion to the perfection of their fasting, but their harm is lesser and weaker compared to at other times. Whoever perfects his fasting will be shielded from the devils in a way that would not apply to those who fail to perfect their fasting. It is noteworthy that the chaining of all the devils does not necessarily mean that no evil deeds would be committed during the sacred month of Ramadan, because there are other causes for sins, such as the evil-enjoining self and the devils among human beings.
The hadeeth also underlines the virtues of Ramadan, and it serves as supportive evidence on the existence of Paradise and Hellfire and that they have gates that are opened and closed. It also proves the existence of devils, and that they have physical bodies that can be tied up with chains. It also highlights the greatness of Allah's Kindness towards His servants and His Generosity.
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1900
Narrated Ibn `Umar (may Allah be pleased with him):I heard Allah's Messenger ﷺ saying, "When you see the crescent (of the month of Ramadan), start fasting, and when you see the crescent (of the month of Shawwaal), stop fasting; and if the sky is overcast (and you cannot see it) then regard the month of Ramadan as of 30 days.".

Commentary :
Allah, Exalted is He, decreed that the sighting of the new moon (crescent) should be used to determine the timings of the lunar months. The sighting of the crescent marks the end of a lunar month and the beginning of another. Based on that sighting, many religious obligations are determined, such as fasting and Hajj.
In this hadeeth, the Prophet ﷺ underlined that Muslims must not observe fasting in the month of Ramadan except after sighting the new moon after the sunset of the twenty-ninth day of Sha‘baan, and also must not end their fasting (at the end of the month) except after sighting the crescent of the month of Shawwaal after sunset on the twenty-ninth day of Ramadan. If the sighting of the new moon is not possible because of clouds, or for any given reason, the month will be considered thirty days, because the maximum length of a lunar month is thirty days, and thus it is proved with certainty that the month has begun or ended.
It is also deduced from the hadeeth that it is not allowable to rely on meansother than the sighting of the new moon to determine the beginning and end of lunar months, such as the astronomical calculation.
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1903
Narrated Aboo Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him): The Prophet ﷺ said, "Whoever does not give up forged speech and evil actions, Allah is not in need of his leaving his food and drink (i.e., Allah will not accept his fasting.)"
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Commentary :
Among the wisdoms behind fasting and its great aims are to attain Taqwa (mindfulness of Allah), tame sexual urges, and discipline the ‘self’ (i.e., practice self-restraint). The ultimate purpose of fasting is notto abstain from eating and drinking only, but rather to discipline, refine, and reform the ‘self’. 
In this hadeeth, the Prophet ﷺ warned those who perceive fasting as mere refrainment from eating and drinking, and do not abstain from lying, deviation from the truth, and following falsehood and doubtful matters, that Allah, Exalted is He, does not accept their refrainment from eating and drinking. However, this does not mean commanding those who observe fasting and fall into sin to give up fasting, but rather it serves as a warning against false speech and acting upon it, and it also emphasizes the gravity of committing these sins while fasting, as it causes the decrease in the rewards of one of the best (and most rewardable) worshipful acts. How should someone abstain from eating, drinking, and sexual activity, and yet let his rewards diminish because of false speech and acting upon it! It is narrated that the Prophet ﷺ said: “There are people who fast and get nothing from their fast except hunger.” [Sunan Ibn Maajah].
This hadeeth urges the fasting person to give up evil deeds and forbidden acts.
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1904
Narrated Aboo Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him): Allah's Messengerﷺsaid, "Allah said, 'All the deeds of Adam's sons (people) are for them, except fasting which is for Me, and I will give the reward for it.' Fasting is a shield or protection from Hellfire and from committing sins. If one of you is fasting, he should avoid sexual relation with his wife and quarreling, and if somebody should fight or quarrel with him, he should say, 'I am fasting.' By Him in Whose Hands my soul is, the unpleasant smell coming out from the mouth of a fasting person is better in the sight of Allah than the smell of musk. There are two pleasures for the fasting person: one at the time of breaking his fast, and the other at the time when he will meet his Lord; then he will be pleased because of his fasting."
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Commentary :
Islam assigns great virtues to fasting and the honor conferred by Allah upon those who observe fasting is unmatched. They refrain from all intake of food, water, beverages, and from sexual activity, and in return Allah, Exalted is He, confers upon them His abundant rewards, and distinguishes them with a special divine bestowal.
In this hadeeth, the Messenger of Allah ﷺ informed us that Allah, Exalted is He, said: “All the deeds of Adam's sons (people) are for them,” meaning that the doer aspires to some worldly gains when performing them,“except for fasting; it is exclusively devoted to Me, and none knows its reward except Me. I shall give the doer its allocated reward and only I knows the amount of such reward and its multiplication.” As for other worshipful acts, their designated rewards and their multiplication are known by people; their rewards may be multiplied until seven hundred times, except for fasting. Allah, Exalted is He, multiplies the reward of fasting as He sees fit, with no maximum limit. 
Another version of this hadeeth reads: “Every (good) deed of the son of Adam would be multiplied, a good deed receiving a tenfold to seven hundredfold reward. Allah, Exalted is He, has said: ‘With the exception of fasting, for it is done for Me and I will give a reward for it.’” [Muslim].
Since the reward of fasting is only known to Allah, Exalted is He, He did not entrust it to His angels, but rather grants it Himself, and this indicates its greatness and significance.
Then, the Prophet ﷺ stated that fasting is a protection and shield against sins and misdeeds in the worldly life and against Hellfire in the Hereafter.
He ﷺalso forbade the fasting person from engaging in obscene speech and using foul language, and also forbade him from shouting and quarreling.
Should anyone should fight or quarrel with him, he should say, 'I am fasting,’ to urge his opponent to stop or to evoke this meaning within his heart to restrain his anger.  The prohibition in this hadeeth is meant as an emphasis on the prohibition in this regard during fasting; the one who is not fasting is also enjoined to do the same.
Then, the Prophet ﷺ swore by saying: “By Him in Whose Hand is the soul of Muhammad,” because to Allah, Exalted is He,belongs our souls. The Prophet ﷺ often swore by Allah, Exalted is He, with this wording. In this hadeeth, he ﷺ swore to the fact that the unpleasant smell coming out from the mouth of a fasting person, which is generally due to an empty stomach, is better and nicer in the sight of Allah on the Day of Resurrection than the smell of musk, which is the best fragrance. The superiority of fasting compared to other worshipful acts is indicated because it is attributed directly to Allah, Exalted is He, (“With the exception of fasting, for it is done for Me and I will give a reward for it.”),qualifying it to have one of the most refined statuses.
The smell of the mouth is declared better than musk in the sight of Allah because fasting is a secret between a servant and his Lord, and only He knows if it is accepted or rejected. Therefore, Allah, Exalted is He, rendered the smell of the fasting person’s mouth a manifest indication on the Day of Resurrection, to highlight his honor and refined praiseworthy status.
 Afterwards, the Prophet ﷺ informed us that the fasting person who fulfills the due rights of fasting, by carrying out its obligations and recommended acts, will taste two great joys: one in this worldly life, and the other in the Hereafter. As for the first, he rejoices when he breaks the fast, because he quenches his thirst and satisfies his hunger whenever it is deemed allowable, and this joy is normal in this context. It could also mean that he would rejoice at the completion of his fasting and the conclusion of his worshipful act. People’s joy varies according to their different statuses in this regard. As for the second joy, he tastes it upon meeting his Lord (on the Day of Judgment); he would rejoice at his fasting, meaning that he would rejoice at receiving its reward, or meeting his Lord, or having his fasting accepted and earning its abundant reward.
Perfecting fasting entails guarding one’s tongue against committing sins such as: lying and obscene and false speech, guarding one’s stomach by abstaining from eating and drinking, and guarding his private parts by refraining from sexual activity. This means that a fasting person should not utter what may undermine his fasting and should only confine himself to good and useful speech, and the same goes for his actions. This is the prescribed fasting, which is not limited to the refrainment from eating and drinking. It has been narrated on the authority of Aboo Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him) that the Prophet ﷺ said: “Whoever does not give up false speech and evil actions and does not abandon foolishness, Allah is not in need of his leaving food and drink (i.e., Allah will not accept his fasting).” [Al-Bukhaaree]. He ﷺ also said: “There are people who fast and get nothing from their fast except hunger.” [Sunan Ibn Maajah].
Correct fasting requires guarding oneself against sins along with the refrainment from eating and drinking. The consumption of food or beverages invalidates the fasting, and similarly committing sins undermines the rewards and outcomes of fasting, as if the person has not observed fasting to begin with.
The hadeeth urges the fasting person to give up evil deeds and prohibitions.
Also deduced from it the affirmation of the Hand ofAllah, Exalted is He, as befits His majesty.
It is also serves as evidence on the affirmation of the Speech of Allah, Exalted is He, and that He speaks wherever He wills to whomever He wills with whatever He wills, and that His words are not limited to the Holy Quran.
It is also inferred from the hadeeth that acts of worship differ in terms of reward.
It may also be deduced from the hadeeth that it is permissible to swear an oath to confirm one’s statement, even if the listener does not deny it.
Finally, it underlines that whoever worships Allah, Exalted is He, and seeks His pleasure in this worldly life, yet his actions result in unpleasant outcomes in this worldly life, they are loved by Allah, Exalted is He, and regarded as ‘good’ in His sight, being the outcome of obedience to Him and seeking after His pleasure.
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1907
Narrated `Abdullah ibn `Umar (may Allah be pleased with them):Allah's Messenger ﷺ said, "The (lunar) month is 29 nights (i.e., days), and you should not fast till you see the moon, and if the sky is overcast, then complete Sha‘baan as thirty days.".

Commentary :
Allah, Exalted is He, decreed that the sighting of the new moon (crescent) should be usedto determine the timings of the lunar month. The sighting of the crescent marks the end of one lunar month and the beginning of another. Based on this sighting, many religious obligations are determined, such as fasting and Hajj.
In this hadeeth, ‘AbdullahIbn ‘Umar (may Allah be pleased with him)related that the Messenger of Allah ﷺ told them that the month may be twenty-nine or thirty days, and that both scenarios arepossible and valid, but determining the timings to observe or break fasting requires the sighting of the moon, and this is the meaning of his saying: “Do not fast until you see the moon,” meaning, ‘do not fast until you see the crescent after sunset of the twenty-ninth day of Sha‘baan.’ He ﷺ added: “If the sky is overcast, then complete Sha‘baan as thirty days.” If the crescent is not seen for some reason - such as clouds and the like - then the month of Sha‘baan is thirty days.
It is inferred from the hadeeth that it is not allowable to rely on means other than the sighting of the new moon to determine the beginning and end of lunar months, such as astronomical calculation.

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1908
Narrated Ibn `Umar (may Allah be pleased with them): The Prophet ﷺ said, "The month is like this and this," (at the same time he showed the fingers of both his hands thrice) and left out one thumb on the third time.
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Commentary :
Allah, Exalted is He, decreed that the sighting of the new moon (crescent) should be usedto determine the timings of the lunar months. The sighting of the crescent marks the end of one lunar month and the beginning of another. Based on this sighting, many religious obligations are determined, such as fasting and Hajj.
In this hadeeth, ‘AbdullahIbn ‘Umar (may Allah be pleased with him) related that the Messenger of Allah ﷺ told them that the lunar months generally alternate between 29 and 30 days. He ﷺ said: “The (lunar) month (may be) thus and thus,” holding up his hands with all their fingers twice, but at the third time withdrawing or folding his left thumb (indicating that the month might consist of twenty-nine days). The use of sign language is the best way to explain the correct meaning, because it is more tangible and leaves no possibility of incorrect assumptions.
To sum up, determining the end of the current lunar month and the beginning of the following month requires the sighting of the crescent; if the crescent is sighted on the eve of the twenty-ninth day, then the month will have ended, and that night will be the first night of the new month, and if the crescent is not sighted for some reason - such as clouds and the like - then the month is thirty days.
It is deduced from the hadeeth that it is allowable to use sign language to explain an intended meaning.
It is also inferred that it is not allowable to rely on means other than the sighting of the new moon to determine the beginning and end of lunar months, such as astronomical calculation.


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1909
Narrated Aboo Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him): The Prophet ﷺ said, "Start fasting on seeing the crescent (of Ramadan), and give up fasting on seeing the crescent (of Shawwaal), and if the sky is overcast (and you cannot see it), complete thirty days of Sha‘baan."
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Commentary :
Allah, Exalted is He, decreed that the sighting of the new moon (crescent) should be usedto determine the timing of the lunar months. The sighting of the crescent marks the end of one lunar month and the beginning of another. Based on that sighting, many religious obligations are determined such as fasting and Hajj.
In this hadeeth, the Prophet ﷺ commanded us to fast Ramadan upon sighting the new moon after sunset on the twenty-ninth day of Sha’baan, and break the fast when the crescent moon is sighted after sunset on the twenty-ninth day of Ramadan. This means that the lunar month may be twenty-nine or thirty days, and both scenarios are possible and valid. However, determining the times of fasting and breaking the fast depends on the sighting of the new moon. If the crescent moon of Ramadan is not sighted for any given reason, such as clouds and the like, we are commanded to complete thirty days of Sha’baan; likewise, if the crescent moon of Shawwaal is not sighted, we should complete thirty days of fasting in Ramadan..

1912
Narrated Aboo Bakrah (may Allah be pleased with him):The Prophet ﷺ said, “The two months of ‘Eid i.e., Ramadan and Thoo al-Hijjah, do not decrease (in terms of reward).”.

Commentary :
If a person complies with the divine commands, and diligently strives to abide by the divine will of Allah, and to earn His pleasure to the best of his ability, Allah, Exalted is He, will not deprive him of the full reward and will even grant him more rewards, out of His grace and generosity.
In this hadeeth, Aboo Bakrah Naafi‘ ibn Al-Haarith (may Allah be pleased with him) related that the Prophet ﷺ informed us that the reward of two months will not be diminished, even if the number of their days decreases. These months are Ramadan and Thoo al-Hijjah. The Prophet ﷺ mentioned them in particular because the obligatory fasting and pilgrimage are performed on these two months.
The month of Ramadan is described as a month of ‘Eid, because it is followed by ‘Eid Al-Fitr. This hadeeth eliminates any doubts that may find their way into the hearts of those who fasted twenty-nine days (because they know that their rewards shall not be diminished).
The hadeeth also highlights the virtues of the month of Ramadan and Thoo al-Hijjah..

934
Abu Mālik al-Ash‘ari reported that the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: Four in my Ummah are among the affairs of the pre-Islamic era of ignorance that have not been abandoned: boasting of noble ancestries, defaming lineages, seeking rain from the stars, and wailing. And he said: If the wailing woman does not repent before her death, she will be made to stand on the Day of Judgment wearing a garment of pitch and a chemise of mange..

Commentary : The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) was keen on bringing his Ummah out from Jāhiliyyah (pre-Islamic era of ignorance) with all its evils, sins, and polytheism to Islam and its laws with all its goodness and monotheism.
In this Hadīth, the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) depicts matters that were and are still practiced by some people, and such matters belong to the people of Jāhiliyyah. So, he warned us against them and pointed out that whoever adopts any of such matters is, in fact, adopting one of the pre-Islamic traits and must abandon it and adhere instead to what has been legislated by Islam concerning such a trait and its likes. The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) reports that four characteristics exist in the Ummah of Islam that are from the affairs and usual attributes of the people of Jāhiliyyah. He said that such traits would last in the Ummah and would not be abandoned as other pre-Islamic practices have been abandoned, for if they are abandoned by one party, others will come and adhere to them.
The first thing of such matters: It is "boasting of noble ancestries," which is taking pride in, bragging about, and exalting the characteristics, virtues, and bounties that are either in him or his family. "Hasab" (noble ancestry) refers to the personal traits one enumerates, such as bravery, eloquence, etc. "Boasting of noble ancestries" means acting arrogantly and loftily by enumerating one's virtues and his forefathers' remarkable feats, which entails deeming oneself better than others and looking down upon them. In the version of Abu Dāwūd, the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "Allah has removed from you the pride of Jāhiliyyah and its boastfulness about the ancestors. It is either a pious believer or a miserable sinner. People are the children of Adam, and Adam is from dust."
The second repugnant matter: "Defaming lineages," which means finding fault with people's lineages like discrediting the lineage or negating one's attribution to his father, is a malicious claim because it results in dividing Muslims and causing turmoils and evils, besides slandering people.
The third matter is: It is "seeking rain from the stars," which refers to supplicating and seeking water through rainfall by believing that the stars are the cause of such rain, as they used to say in the pre-Islamic era of ignorance: we have been given rain because of such-and-such star; whereas, having a belief that it is actually the cause for rainfall is disbelief. Rain is part of Allah's mercy towards His slaves and falls according to His decree. It is one of the things that Allah Almighty spoke about, saying: {Indeed, Allah has the knowledge of the Hour. He sends down the rain and knows what is in the wombs. No soul knows what it will do tomorrow, nor does any soul know in which land it will die. Indeed, Allah is All-Knowing, All-Aware.} [Surat Luqmān: 34]
Fourth matter: "Wailing" means weeping over the dead by shouting, screaming, expressing impatience, and enumerating the deceased person's traits and virtues by saying, for instance: Alas for the brave one! Alas, for the lion! Alas, for the mountain!
Then, the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) , warned the wailing women if they did not repent for wailing before their death, saying, "If the wailing woman does not repent before" the time of "her death, she will be made to stand on the Day of Judgment," the wailing woman, who did not repent, will be made to stand and will be gathered among the standing people to be exposed on the Day of Judgment, as a recompense for her wailing, while wearing a garment of pitch, which is molten copper or paint used for painting. It is also said: that it is grease with which the scabby camel is rubbed to burn the mange, and its heat could reach the inside. "And a chemise of mange," "dir‘" (chemise) is a kind of women's shirts, i.e., she will be wearing another chemise of mange. This means that all her skin will be scabious and will act like a chemise covering her skin and sticking to her the way a chemise covers and sticks to her. He restricted repentance to the time before death to make it known that one of the conditions of repentance is for the repentant to repent while having hopes that he will still live and might commit the act for which he is repenting. This is supported by what is mentioned in the Book of Allah: {However, repentance is not for those who commit evil deeds until death approaches one of them; he then says, “Now I repent.”} [Surat an-Nisā’: 18]
Such a punishment is for wailing and enumerating the dead person's merits because both acts involve objection to Allah's decree. As for crying out of sadness and mercy for the deceased person, there is nothing wrong with that, as the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "This is mercy that Allah has placed in the hearts of His slaves. Verily, Allah shows mercy to those of His slaves who are merciful." [Narrated by Al-Bukhāri and Muslim]
The Hadīth includes one of the signs of the Prophet's prophethood.
It warns against boasting of noble ancestries and against slandering lineages.
It calls for preserving people's honor and refraining from slander.
It clarifies the fact that one's value depends on his personality and deeds, not on his forefathers' feats.
It warns against wailing over the dead.
It emphasizes that rain comes from Allah Almighty, and the stars have nothing to do with it. So, water should be sought from none but the Creator and the Omnipotent, who can make the rainfall..

943
Jābir ibn ‘Abdullāh reported: The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) made a speech one day and mentioned a man from among his Companions who died and was shrouded in a shroud of bad quality and was buried at night. The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) rebuked that a man should be buried at night until prayer was offered over him, except when one is forced to do that. And the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "When one of you shrouds his brother, he should make his shrouding good.".

Commentary : The burial of a Muslim is part of the honor granted to him by Allah Almighty. The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) taught his Ummah how to take care of the dead Muslims, including washing, shrouding, burying, and following the funeral procession, as well as other duties and Sunnah acts.
In this Hadīth, Jābir ibn ‘Abdullāh (may Allah be pleased with him) relates that the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) delivered a sermon to his Companions one day and admonished them. In his sermon, he mentioned a man from among his companions who died and was shrouded in a shroud that was unbelievably bad or not completely concealing; moreover, he was buried and put into his grave at night. So, the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) rebuked, prohibited, and banned his Companions from repeating an act like this with their dead brother, given his rights upon them. This includes burial at night. Indeed, a dead person should be buried during the daytime so that a lot of people can offer prayer for him, more than the people who would pray for him at night, or so that the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) could offer the prayer for him, which is another reason for those who died during his lifetime. This also means that the burial of a dead person should be delayed until the morning, if it is hoped that those who will bless him will join the prayer.
And he clarified to them that burial at night should only occur in the case of necessity, like fearing that the body may decay. Then, the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "When one of you shrouds his brother, he should make his shrouding good." This is intended to direct, teach, and enjoin excellence in shrouding the dead. Excellence, however, does not mean extravagance or immoderation in choosing the shroud or that it should be expensive. Rather, the intended meaning is that it should be clean, pure, thick, concealing, and of the same type of clothing he mostly wore in his life, neither finer nor lower in quality.
In the Hadīth: We are enjoined to use a good shroud, without extravagance or stinginess.
And in it: Demonstrating the Prophet's care about the conditions of his Companions (may Allah be pleased with them) whether they were alive or dead.

947
‘Ā’ishah reported that the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "No group of Muslims numbering a hundred offer the funeral prayer over a dead person, and all of them intercede for him, except that their intercession for him will be accepted.".

Commentary : The religion of Islam is a religion of bounty and abundant giving from Allah, as He made the Muslims intercessors for one another. The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) urged that a Muslim should attend the funeral of his fellow Muslim and made that one of the rights due to the Muslims among themselves.
In this Hadīth, the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) says that if a Muslim dies and a group of Muslims numbering a hundred offer the funeral prayer for him, "and all of them intercede for him," i.e., they ask Allah Almighty to pardon his sins and crimes and they supplicate for him, in such a case, people's intercession for him will be accepted and their supplication for him will be answered. But two conditions should be met here: First: Those who intercede for him should be sincere in their supplication and should ask Allah to forgive him. Second: They should be Muslims and numbering a hundred persons, and they should include no one who associates anything with Allah.
Other Hadīths are reported with lesser than this number, such as forty or three rows. It was said: Informing that the intercession of forty people is accepted does not necessarily mean that the intercession of a lesser number is not accepted, and the same holds true for the number of forty people along with three rows. Hence, all Hadīths are applicable, and the intercession is valid with the lesser of two numbers, the three rows or forty persons.
In the Hadīth: Urging the increase of a group offering the funeral prayer, and they are required to reach this number, which is one of the requirements for salvation
And in it: Those offering the funeral prayer for a dead person are intercessors for him.
And in it: Stressing the significance of sincerity in supplicating for the dead..

948
Kurayb, the freed slave of Ibn ‘Abbās, related from ‘Abdullāh ibn ‘Abbās that a son of his died in Qudayd - or in ‘Usfān - and he said: "O Kurayb, look and see how many people gathered for him." He said: I went out and found that people had gathered for him. I informed him about that, and he said: "Do you think they are forty?" He said: 'Yes.' He said: "Bring him out, for indeed I heard the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) say: 'No Muslim man dies, and forty men, who associate nothing with Allah, attend his funeral except that Allah will accept their intercession for him.'".

Commentary : The bounty and giving of Allah Almighty is great. He made the Muslims intercessors for one another, and the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) urged that a Muslim should attend the funeral of his fellow Muslims and rendered it one of the rights of Muslims upon one another.
In this Hadīth, Kurayb, the freed slave of ‘Abdullāh ibn ‘Abbās, relates that a son of ‘Abdullāh ibn ‘Abbās (may Allah be pleased with him) died, and he was present with him, "in Qudayd", a place of water between Makkah and Madīnah, which is located 150km away from Makkah and lies to its northeast, "or in ‘Usfān", a town located 80km to the northwest of Makkah. These are two places close to Makkah. ‘Abdullāh (may Allah be pleased with him) ordered Kurayb to go out and tell him about the number of people who had gathered to attend his funeral procession and prayer. Kurayb went to see the people and then informed them about their gathering and number. Thereupon, Ibn ‘Abbās (may Allah be pleased with him) said to him: "Do you think?" i.e., do you estimate their number to be forty men? Kurayb replied: 'Yes.' In the version by Ibn Mājah, Ibn ‘Abbās said: "How many do you see? Forty?" I said: "No, they are more than that." So, Ibn ‘Abbās (may Allah be pleased with him) asked those with him to bring the funeral of his son to the people gathered in the mosque to offer prayer for him and bury him. Then, he said: "For indeed I heard the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) say: 'No Muslim man dies and forty men... attend his funeral'", praying and supplicating for him, and they believe in Allah and associate none with Him in worship. In the version by Ibn Mājah: "No forty believers intercede for a believer." intercession here means request. Those attending the funeral prayer ask Allah Almighty to pardon the sins of the deceased, "except that Allah will accept their intercession for him", i.e., He will accept their intercession for that dead Muslim, out of His grace and bounty, and forgive him.
It is required to increase the number of those who attend the funeral prayer as much as possible, and they are required to reach this number that entails success. This is conditional upon two things: First: They should be intercessors for him, i.e., sincere in supplicating and asking Allah's forgiveness. Second: They should be Muslims and include none who associates anything with Allah.
Other reported Hadīths mention a different number, like one hundred or three rows. So, it is said that intercession by a hundred people will be accepted, but it does not necessarily mean that intercession by a lesser number will not be accepted. The same holds true for the forty men and the three rows. Hence, all the relevant Hadīths are applicable. Intercession is valid by the lesser of the two: by three rows or forty persons; this is because when Allah Almighty promises forgiveness two times in one sense, and one of them is easier than the other, it is His unchanging way that He does not decrease the promised bounty after that. Instead, He gives more out of his bounty and favor from Him toward His servants. It is also probable that the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) was informed about the acceptance of intercession by a hundred persons. He was informed about it, and then he was informed about the acceptance of intercession by forty persons and then by three rows, even if their number is lesser, yet he was informed about that.
The Hadīth mentions that those who attend the prayer for a dead person are intercessors for him.
It urges Muslims to attend the prayer for the deceased and increase the number of those who attend..

957
‘Abdur-Rahmān ibn Abi Layla reported: Zayd used to make four Takbirs upon our funerals, and he once made five Takbirs. So, I asked him (about that) and he said: "The Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) used to make Takbirs like that.".

Commentary : The funeral prayer is one of the due rights to one another among the Muslims. It is mercy towards the dead person, as it was prescribed for supplication for him. A Muslim who offers prayer for a dead person should earnestly supplicate for him to be forgiven and shown mercy.
In this Hadīth, the Tābi‘i ‘Abdur-Rahmān ibn Abi Layla relates that the Companion Zayd ibn Arqam (may Allah be pleased with him) would mostly make four Takbīrs upon "the funerals," a term that refers to the dead person in the bier. This was the approach of most of the scholars among the Companions. Then, he (may Allah be pleased with him) one day made five Takbīrs at a funeral. So, ‘Abdur-Rahmān ibn Abi Layla asked him about the reason behind the fifth Takbīr, and Zayd (may Allah be pleased with him) informed him that the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) would make five Takbīrs in some funeral prayers.
The objective of the prayer for a dead person is to supplicate and ask forgiveness for him. Supplication for the dead person occurs after the third Takbīr. A person should supplicate inaudibly with the best things he can recall, and he should be sincere in supplicating for the dead one..

962
Wāqid ibn ‘Amr ibn Sa‘d ibn Mu‘ādh reported: Nāfi' ibn Jubayr saw me standing as we were attending a funeral. He was sitting and waiting for the funeral to be held. He said to me: "What makes you stand?" I said: "I am waiting for the funeral to be held, as per a Hadīth reported by Abu Sa‘īd al-Khudri." Thereupon, Nāfi 'said: "Verily, Mas‘ūd ibn al-Hakam related to me that 'Ali ibn Abi Tālib reported: The Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) stood up and then sat down.".

Commentary : With its tolerant Shariah, Islam affirms the value of the human soul, from its birth to its death, and holds it in high status, as revealed by these rulings enjoined with regard to it, even after its departure from life. This clearly manifests that Islam devotes attention to the funerals and burial of the dead and taking them to the graves and Barzakh (the period between death and resurrection), where they wait for the Day of Judgment.
In this Hadīth, the Tābi‘i Wāqid ibn ‘Amr ibn Sa‘d ibn Mu‘ādh informs that the Tābi‘i Nāfi‘ ibn Jubayr saw him while he was at a funeral - a term that refers to a deceased in a bier - and was standing for the funeral. Meanwhile, Nāfi‘ ibn Jubayr "was sitting and waiting for the funeral to be placed" in the grave. Nāfi‘ ibn Jubayr asked him why he was standing - a disapproving questioning. Wāqid ibn ‘Amr answered him: that he was waiting for the funeral to take place, in accordance with the Hadīth in which Abu Sa‘īd al-Khudri (may Allah be pleased with him) reported that the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "When you follow a funeral, do not sit down until it takes place." Narrated by Al-Bukhāri and Muslim. Explaining why he was sitting, Nāfi‘ responded to him with the Hadīth narrated by Mas‘ūd ibn al-Hakam from ‘Ali ibn Abi Tālib (may Allah be pleased with both of them), who reported that the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) would initially stand up for funerals but later abandoned standing and would sit down. ‘Ali's words "and then sat down" may also mean that he would sit down after the funeral passed him by and went away from him.
The Hadīths reported on the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) standing and sitting for funerals, indicating that his sitting abrogated his standing. It is also said that this is not abrogation; instead, it points out that standing is unnecessary..

963
‘Awf ibn Mālik reported: The Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) offered the funeral prayer, and I memorized his supplication as he said: "O Allah, forgive him and have mercy on him. Make him safe and pardon him. Make his Nuzul (welcome treat or gift) an honorable one, broaden his entry, and wash him with water, snow, and hail, and cleanse him of sins as a white garment is cleansed of dirt. Give him in exchange a home better than his home, a family better than his family, and a spouse better than his spouse. Admit him into Paradise and protect him from the punishment of the grave, or from the punishment of Hellfire." He said: Until I wished I had been that deceased person..

Commentary : The objective of prayer for a deceased person is to supplicate for him and ask Allah's forgiveness for him. Many supplications are reported from the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him), to be said in the funeral prayer. It is preferred that the praying person use these supplications that are reported from the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him). But there is nothing wrong if one says other supplications. Supplication for the deceased person is made after the third Takbīr; one should supplicate secretly with the best of what he can recall, yet he should be sincere in supplicating for the dead person.
In this Hadīth, ‘Awf ibn Mālik al-Ashja‘i (may Allah be pleased with him) informs that he attended a funeral prayer with the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him), and part of his supplication which ‘Awf (may Allah be pleased with him) memorized is: "O Allah, forgive him" by blotting out the sins and misdeeds. "and have mercy on him" by accepting the acts of piety. "Make him safe," i.e., avert unpleasant things from him and make him safe from the punishment. "and pardon him," i.e., pardon the sins he committed and his shortcomings in the acts of worship. "Make his Nuzul (welcome treat or gift) an honorable one." The word Nuzul originally means the food prepared for the guest. It here refers to what Allah gives to His servant when he meets Him and honors him therewith. "broaden his entry," i.e., broaden the place of his entry in which he enters - that is his grave - lest it may become narrow for him. This is part of the bliss of the believer in the grave. The grave is either broadened for the one buried in it or made narrow for him. "and wash him with water, snow, and hail." Hail is pellets of ice descending from the clouds of the sky, which means: Purify him from the sins and misdeeds thereby, just as these things are means of purification from uncleanness and dirt. He combined them for emphasis. In other words, purify him from sins by the various kinds of forgiveness. He mentioned snow and hail because they are cold, and he mentioned water because it cleans, whereas the punishment for sins is hot. So, it was appropriate to mention snow along with water. Thus, water will do the cleaning, and snow and hail will do the cooling. "and cleanse him of sins." This is a supplication for cleansing in the sense of purification from sins, as a white garment is cleansed of dirt. Thus, what is conceived is compared to what is perceived. This affirms what is mentioned before and is meant to emphasize purification from sins and misdeeds. "Give him in exchange a home better than his home," i.e., compensate him and give him palaces or a vast grave that is better than his house in this transient world. And give him in exchange "a family better than his family," those who are his relatives in the world, such as his mother, maternal aunt, daughters, father, son, and the like. The wife is excluded from this, as he singled her out after that. It was also said: Family here refers to servants. "and a spouse better than his spouse," i.e., give him a wife from the houris (Hūr al-‘Īn) or from the women of the world in Paradise. It was also said: The exchange of family and wife means the exchange of traits, not people. "Admit him into Paradise." This is a supplication for him to enter Paradise directly, without prior punishment. "and protect him from the punishment of the grave" after he enters it. Or he said: "Protect him from the punishment of Hellfire" in the Hereafter.
‘Awf ibn Mālik (may Allah be pleased with him) added that after hearing this supplication from the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him), he wished he had been that deceased person, given the great reward and forgiveness entailed by this supplication for him, and so as to reap benefit of the Prophet's supplication, for the Prophet's prayer and supplication are more likely to be accepted and materialized than others.
In the Hadīth: Supplication in the funeral prayer, which is the most important part of its objective
And in it: Establishing the existence of the punishment of the grave.

965
Jābir ibn Samurah reported: The Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) offered the funeral prayer for Ibn ad-Dahdāh. Then, an unsaddled horse was brought to him, and a man hobbled it and rode it. It kept bounding with him on its back, and we followed it and ran after it. He said: A man among the people said that the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "Many are the hanging - or drooping - bunches in Paradise for Ibn ad-Dahdāh." [And in a version]: For Abu ad-Dahdāh..

Commentary : This Hadīth describes one of the Prophet's conditions and guidance regarding funerals: following the funeral on foot or riding. It also includes a lot of ethics. Jābir ibn Samurah (may Allah be pleased with him) relates that the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) offered the funeral prayer for the Companion Ibn ad-Dahdāh (may Allah be pleased with him). In the version by An-Nasā’i: "The Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) went out for the funeral of Abu ad-Dahdāh." He is Thābit ibn ad-Dahdāh an ally of the Ansār, nicknamed Abu ad-Dahdāh. It is also said: Abu ad-Dahdāha. The Prophet's prayer brings Allah's mercy to the dead person. Then, "an unsaddled horse" was brought to the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him). In another version by Muslim: "An unsaddled horse was brought to the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him), which he rode after leaving the funeral of Ibn ad-Dahdāh." So, it indicates that he rode the horse after finishing the burial. "and a man hobbled it," i.e., he held it and prevented it from moving until the prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) rode it. The horse kept bounding and moving, i.e., jumping and taking short steps. The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) was moving at the front, and the people were walking behind him.
Then, Simāk ibn Harb informed that one of those sitting with Jābir (may Allah be pleased with him), as narrated in Musnad Ahmad, related: A man who was sitting with us in the gathering of Jābir ibn Samurah reported that the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said about Abu ad-Dahdāh: "Many are the hanging - or drooping - bunches in Paradise for Ibn ad-Dahdāh." This is a glad tiding by the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) regarding Abu ad-Dahdāh. In Arabic, ‘Adhq means palm tree, and ‘idhq means a branch in a palm tree. The intended meaning here is the branch, for he said: hanging or drooping.
The reason behind the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) making this statement is found in a Hadīth narrated by Ahmad in his Musnad Collection, in which Anas ibn Mālik (may Allah be pleased with him) reported: When this verse: {Who is it that will lend to Allah a goodly loan.} [Surat al-Baqarah: 245] was revealed, Abu ad-Dahdāh gave in charity a garden comprising six hundred palm trees, and his wife was in the garden. He came and said: O ’Umm ad-Dahdāh, go out, for I have lent it to my Almighty Lord. Thereupon, the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "Many are the heavy bunches in Paradise for Abu ad-Dahdāh." Heavy here indicates that the bunches have abundant fruits. It is as if he (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) repeated this statement upon the death of this man.
The Hadīth shows the merit and virtue of Abu ad-Dahdāh (may Allah be pleased with him).
A group may walk along with their leader while he is riding.
There is nothing wrong if a follower serves his leader, with his consent..

966
‘Āmir ibn Sa‘d ibn Abi Waqqās reported: Sa‘d ibn Abi Waqqās said during his illness in which he died: "Make a Lahd (a niche in the side of the grave) for me and set up mud bricks over me as was done with the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him).".

Commentary : The Companions (may Allah be pleased with them) used to seek out the Prophet's guidance and try to emulate him in all his conditions, both in his lifetime and death. In this Hadīth, Sa‘d ibn Abi Waqqās (may Allah be pleased with him) set a clear example in following the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him). ‘Āmir ibn Sa‘d ibn Abi Waqqās relates that his father Sa‘d (may Allah be pleased with him) said during his illness in which he died: "Make a Lahd for me," i.e., dig a niche for me where I will be buried. Lahd is the crevice dug in the side of the grave to place the dead person therein. Then, he said: "and set up mud bricks over me," i.e., place over me the bricks made of mud. The bricks should be lined and arranged above one another without any adhesive in between. The version by Abu Nu‘aym in Al-Mustakhraj has this addition: "And throw dust upon me." Then, clarifying the reason for his choosing that, for he wanted what was done to the grave of the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) to be done to his grave too.
In the Hadīth: The dead person is buried in the Lahd and the stones are set up over him..

967
Ibn ‘Abbās reported: A red velvet cloak was put in the grave of the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him)..

Commentary : The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) was highly revered during his lifetime and after his death, and he is favored in the sight of Allah and was held in high esteem among his Companions. He passed away and was buried in the place where he died, and that was the room of the Mother of the Believers' Ā’ishah (may Allah be pleased with her).
In this Hadīth, ‘Abdullāh ibn ‘Abbās (may Allah be pleased with him) informs that when the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) died, a red velvet cloak was put in his grave. The cloak is a garment with edges, which are strings remaining at its two sides, apart from its reinforced border. This cloak was thrown by Shokrān, the freed slave of the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him), according to the version by At-Tirmidhi. It is said: He disliked that it should be worn by anyone after him (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him), as the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) used to wear it and sit over it. So, Shokrān did not like that it be used by anyone after the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him)..

968
Thumāmah ibn Shufayy reported: We were with Fadālah ibn ‘Ubayd in the land of the Romans, at Rūdis. A companion of ours died. So, Fadālah ibn ‘Ubayd commanded that his grave be leveled. Then, he said: "I heard the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) command that it be leveled.".

Commentary : Burial is one of the things by which a dead person is honored. A Muslim should follow the Prophet's guidance in all matters. One of these is the manner of burying the dead and the shape and condition of the grave after burial. The Companions (may Allah be pleased with them) were extremely keen to follow this Prophetic guidance.
In this Hadīth, the Tābi‘i Thumāmah ibn Shufayy relates that he was with the Companion Fadālah ibn ‘Ubayd (may Allah be pleased with him) on an expedition "in the land of the Romans, at Rūdis" is a Greek island situated east of the Mediterranean Sea and located midway between the main Greek islands and Cyprus. Rūdis was conquered in 53 A.H., during the reign of Mu‘āwiyah ibn Abi Sufyān (may Allah be pleased with him). A Muslim man from their companions passed away. So, Fadālah ibn ‘Ubayd (may Allah be pleased with him) commanded that this man be buried. After the dust was thrown over him, he commanded that his grave be leveled and blotted out and that it should not be raised or prominent. Then, Fadālah said: "I heard the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) commanding that it be leveled" i.e., the grave should be leveled to the ground and not be raised a lot; rather, it should be raised as high as a hand span, and it should be flattened or embossed, which is more appropriate so that it can be recognized as a grave and thus be protected from being sat on or trodden.
The Hadīth contains the command that the graves should be leveled and not be raised above the ground.
It indicates that those killed in wars should be buried, and their corpses should not be left without concealment..

969
Abu al-Hayyāj Al-Asadi reported: ‘Ali ibn Abi Tālib said to me: "Shall I not send you with the same instructions as the Messenger of Allah (may Allah’s peace and blessings be upon him) sent me with? Do not leave any statue without blotting it out or any raised grave without leveling it." [In a version]: And he said: and any image without blotting it out..

Commentary : The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) was keen to remove anything that pointed to the traces of Jāhiliyyah, which included their keenness on extolling images, the dead, and the graves.
In this Hadīth, the Tābi‘i Abu al-Hayyāj al-Asadi relates that ‘Ali ibn Abi Tālib (may Allah be pleased with him) said to him: Shall I not send you for something the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) sent me for, and appoint you as a leader in charge of that, as the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) appointed me as a leader in charge of it? The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) ordered ‘Ali not to leave any 'statue', i.e., an image of a living being, without eliminating and abolishing it, by cutting off its head, changing its face, and so on; and not to leave any raised grave without leveling it and making it like the surrounding area. Taswiyah (leveling) may also mean making it sound and compliant with the Shariah. Or it means: flattening, that it should not be raised a lot above the ground, but only as high as a hand span. It is more appropriate to make it flat or a saddle high. What is intended here is the grave upon which a structure is built, and it becomes raised, not the grave upon which sand, pebbles, or stones are placed for identification, so that no one should trample or sit on it, and there is no use in building over it; hence, it was prohibited.
In the Hadīth: The command to remove statues and idols
And in it: The command to level raised graves
And in it: Removing what is wrong with one's hand in case a person has authority or ability to do so.

970
Jābir reported: The Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) forbade plastering a grave, sitting on it, and building over it..

Commentary : The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) was the keenest among people on eliminating the traces of Jāhiliyyah, like building over the graves and raising them, for this involves a waste of money and boastfulness, as well as other things that do not befit the Hereafter and the state of death and decay. He was also keen on directing the Muslims to what shows honor for one another both in this life and after death.
In this Hadīth, Jābir ibn ‘Abdullāh (may Allah be pleased with him) informs that the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) forbade "plastering the grave." In a version by Muslim: "It was forbidden to plaster the graves with gypsum," i.e., to build them with gypsum and paint them, for this involves veneration and immoderation. And he (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) forbade "sitting on it," as this denotes disregard for the right of his fellow Muslim. In a Hadīth by Muslim, Abu Hurayrah (may Allah be pleased with him) reported: The Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "It is better for one of you to sit on a live coal, which will burn his clothes and get to his skin than to sit on a grave!" This is a stern warning and emphatic prohibition against sitting on a grave. And he forbade "building over it." This probably means building over the very grave to raise it, or building around it, like constructing a tent, a mosque, or the like around the grave. Both are prohibited, for this belongs to the practices of the people of Jāhiliyyah and it involves a waste of money.
So, the prohibition mentioned in the Hadīth comprises two types: going to excess as well as neglect regarding the graves. The dead people should not be insulted by trampling and sitting on their graves, nor should people show them immoderate reverence by constructing a building there and extolling them in a way that leads to certain forbidden things and evils..

971
Abu Hurayrah reported: The Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "It is better for one of you to sit on a live coal and it burns his clothes and gets to his skin than to sit on a grave.".

Commentary : The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) was keen to direct the Muslims to what demonstrates honor among themselves, both in life and after death. So, in this Hadīth, he prohibited sitting on the graves and was vehement in this prohibition. He (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) informed and warned that if a person sits on a piece of inflaming fire and this live coal burns his clothes and reaches his skin, which involves tremendous harm and severe pain, this burning of his clothing and skin is better and easier for him than sitting on a grave. This is a stern warning and emphatic prohibition from sitting on graves. He forbade sitting on graves because this constitutes belittlement of the rights of fellow Muslims, even if they are dead.
The usual practice regarding the graves is only to visit them and supplicate there while standing, as the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) used to do when he headed to the Baqī' cemetery. He would say: "Assalāmu ‘alaykum ahl ad-diyār min al-mu’minīn wa al-muslimīn, wa inna in shā’ Allah la lāhiqūn; as’al Allah lana wa lakam al-‘āfiyah" (Peace be upon the dwellers of this place among the believers and Muslims. Indeed, we will join you, Allah Willing. I ask Allah for safety for you and us). Narrated by Muslim..

972
Abu Marthad al-Ghanawi reported: The Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "Do not sit on the graves and do not pray towards them.".

Commentary : The Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) was keen to direct the Muslims to what demonstrates honor among themselves, both in life and after death. So, he prohibited sitting on the graves, and he was vehement in this prohibition.
In this Hadīth, the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) says: "Do not sit on the graves," for this shows disregard for the rights of fellow Muslims. In another Hadīth narrated by Muslim, the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) stated that sitting on lively embers is better than sitting on the graves. The usual practice regarding the graves is to only visit them and supplicate there while standing, as the Messenger of Allah (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) used to do when he headed to the Baqī‘ cemetery. He would say: "Peace be upon the dwellers of this place among the believers and Muslims. Indeed, we will join you, Allah Willing. I ask Allah for safety for us and you." [Narrated by Muslim] Then, the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him) said: "and do not pray towards them," i.e., do not pray, facing the graves. This is to differ from the Jews and the Christians who used to take the graves of their prophets and righteous ones as places of worship, in exaltation of them. And they would probably do there things that are only due to the Creator, the Almighty Lord. This applies to praying upon the grave, towards it, or between two graves, for this leads to the exaltation of the graves and to worshiping them as was the practice during Jāhiliyyah. Excluded from this prohibition is the funeral prayer at the graves, as authentically reported from the Prophet (may Allah's peace and blessings be upon him).
In the Hadīth: It is prohibited to sit on the graves.
And in it: It is prohibited to pray at the graves, between them, or towards them..