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The Rules on Prayer & Fasting

  • Prayer
    • Obligatory Prayers
    • Daily Prayers
    • The time for fajr prayer
    • The time for ẓuhr and ‘aṣr prayer
    • The Time of Maghrib/‘Ishā’ Prayer
    • Rulings regarding the Times of Prayer
    • Order among prayers
    • Mustaḥabb prayers
    • Rulings about the Qiblah
    • The Coverage of Clothes in Prayer
    • Conditions of a Place for Prayer
    • Rulings on masjids
    • Adhān and Iqāmah
    • Obligatory Acts in Prayer
      • 1. Intention
      • 2. Being in a Standing Posture
      • 3. Takbīrah Al-iḥrām
      • 4. Recitation
      • 5. Rukū‘
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        5. Rukū‘

         

        213. In every rak‘ah after the recitation, the praying person should make a rukū‘, i.e. to bow to an extent that he is able to place his palms on his knees, and it is sufficient if only the fingertips can reach the knees.
        214. By obligatory caution, one must place his palms on his knees in rukū‘.
        215. Rukū‘ is a foundational element and repeating/neglecting it — whether unintentional or on purpose — makes the prayer void. Therefore, if a person, after being in rukū‘ state and his body has become still, stands up again and bows again with the intention of rukū‘, his prayer is void. The same rule is applied if he forgets rukū‘ and finds it out in the second sajdah or later.
        216. To add one rukū‘ in order to follow the imam (with the conditions to be discussed in congregational prayers' section) does not invalidate the prayer. Also, if you add it accidentally in the mustaḥabb prayer, the prayer is valid.
        217. Bending should be with the intention of rukū‘. Therefore, if a person bows with another intention such as killing an animal or picking up something, he cannot count it as rukū‘; rather, he is to stand up and bow once again for rukū‘, and by doing so, a foundational element (rukn) is not repeated nor is the prayer invalidated.
        218. A person who cannot bow to make rukū‘, if he can make rukū‘ by leaning on something, he should do so, and if he cannot make rukū‘ by leaning, he should bow as much as he can, and in both cases, he should not make his rukū‘ while sitting although he can bend as much as in normal rukū‘. However, if he cannot bend at all in standing position, he must make rukū‘ sitting and by caution say another prayer in which he makes rukū‘ by head gesture while standing. If one cannot make rukū‘ even in sitting position, he must make rukū‘ by head gesture while standing. If he cannot, he must close his eyes as a sing of rukū‘ and then open his eyes as raising from rukū‘.
        219. A person who performs rukū‘ in a sitting posture should bend such that his face reaches against his knees and there is no need to put his hands on his knees.
        220. Deliberately or unintentionally increasing or decreasing the rukū‘ performed while sitting or by gesture, invalidates the prayer.
        221. The obligatory dhikr in rukū‘ is to say subḥāna rabbīyal ‘aẓīmi wa biḥamdih once or subḥānallāh three times, and it is sufficient if a person says another dhikr such as alḥamdu lillāh, Allāhu akbar or another dhikr to the same amount.
        222. In shortage of time, in case of compulsion or having no other choice, it suffices to say subḥānallāh once.
        223. The body should be still while reciting the obligatory dhikr in rukū‘. Moreover, based on obligatory caution, the body should be still while reciting mustaḥabb dhikr with the intention of counting it a part of rukū‘, such as the repetition of subḥāna rabbīyal ‘aẓīmi wa biḥamdih.
        224. It is obligatory that when a person is reciting the obligatory and mustaḥabb dhikr in the prayer, his body should be still, and when a person in prayer wants to go a little backward or forward or to move his body a little towards the right side or the left side, he should stop the dhikr he is reciting. However, there is no problem in reciting dhikr with the intention of mere dhikr [not as prescribed dhikr in prayer] when moving.
        225. There is no problem with slight movement of the body or fingers and the like while saying the dhikr of rukū‘.
        226. If the body moves involuntarily while reciting the obligatory dhikr of rukū‘, in such a way that one loses his obligatory state of being still, then the obligatory dhikr must be repeated after the body calms down.
        227. If a person, who knows that, while uttering the obligatory dhikr of rukū‘, it is necessary to be still, recites the dhikr of rukū‘ before he is in a state of rukū‘ and before his body becomes still, his prayer is void if he intentionally does so.
        228. If a person unintentionally recites the dhikr of rukū‘ before he is in state of rukū‘ or before his body becomes still, he should repeat the obligatory dhikr after his body becomes still.
        229. If a person, who knows that, while uttering the obligatory dhikr of rukū‘, it is necessary to be still, intentionally raises his head from rukū‘ before the completion of the obligatory dhikr, his prayer is void. If he does so by mistake but before he leaves the state of rukū‘ he recollects that he has not completed the dhikr of rukū‘, he should make himself still and utter the dhikr. And if he recollects it after he has left the state of rukū‘, his prayer is correct.
        230. If a person, owing to a disease or other excuses, is not able to remain in the rukū‘ posture for enough time to say subḥānallāh three times, it is sufficient that he says subḥānallāh once, and if he can only stay in the state of rukū‘ for a moment, the obligatory caution is that he begins saying the dhikr at that moment and finishes it while rising from rukū‘.
        231. It is obligatory to stand straight after the completion of rukū‘, and after the body has become still, one should go to sajdah. Thus, if a person intentionally goes to sajdah before standing straight or before his body becomes still, his prayer will be void.
        232. If a person forgets to perform rukū‘, and before he performs the first sajdah, he recollects it, he should stand up and then go to rukū‘ (and it is not sufficient if he returns to rukū‘ from a bowing posture and if he does not make another rukū‘, his prayer is void).
        233. If he remembers that he has missed rukū‘ before the second sajdah (either in the first sajdah or after it, before he goes to the second sajdah), he has to stand up and then go to rukū‘, and then perform the two sajdah and finish the prayer. After the prayer, by mustaḥabb caution, he performs two sahw sajdah for the extra sajdah he performed in the prayer.
        234. It is mustaḥabb, in standing position, before bowing to rukū‘, to say takbīr. If the praying person is male, it is mustaḥabb that he pushes knees back in rukū‘, does not keep his head down; rather, keeps it in line with his back, supports his hands by putting them on the knees, looks at the place between his feet, says ṣalawāt before and after the dhikr of rukū‘, repeats the dhikr of rukū‘ in an odd number and after lifting head from rukū‘ and standing up, says, when the body is still:
        Sami‘allāhu liman ḥamidah.
        235. It is mustaḥabb for women to put their hands above their knees during rukū‘ and not to push their knees back.
      • 6. Sajdah
      • 7. Tashahhud
      • 8. Salām
      • 9. Sequence (tartīb)
      • 10. Succession (muwālāt)
    • Qunūt
    • Prayer’s Ta‘qīb (Mustaḥabb Supplications/Dhikr Recited after Prayers)
    • Translation of the Prayer
    • What Invalidates the Prayer
    • Doubts in Prayer
    • Sajdah of Inadvertence
    • Qaḍā’ of Forgotten Sajdah and Tashahhud
    • A Traveler's Prayer
    • Qaḍā’ Prayers
    • Hire Prayers
    • Qaḍā’ Prayers for Parents
    • Āyāt Prayer
    • Congregational Prayers
    • The Friday Prayer
  • Fasting
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