@@commontouch1787 I think it's a bit disrespectful to ask anyone doing Ramadan, how it is going. Because it is a spiritual battle, a spiritual issue, Muslim or not.
@@swietopelkkowalskiI think not quite. It's more like how does it feel? Many think fasting is hell lot of a job, but it is really quite simple. So a person fasting for the first time in his life we can be curious to know who it feels, how is it going? Brother as you fast we hope you will be on your journey to Islam. This fasting will give you a spiritual taste we enjoy in Islam. Hope to embrace you after your shahada.
In a hadith, as narrated by Anas (R.A.) “The Messenger of Allah (peace be upon him.) used to break his fast with fresh dates before praying; if there were no (fresh dates) then with dry dates, and if there were no (dried dates) then he would take a few sips of water.
Only the 5 prayers are mandatory. Taraweeh is sunnah and not mandatory. Some people (may Allah guide them) they put more effort on Taraweeh than the mandatory 5.
@@Saber23 Allahumma ameen, and may Allah guide the people of turkiyah to pray correctly like naby sall allahu alayhi wslm. with the proper amount of raka3ah, indeed Muhammads sunnah isnt the way of confusion, but the way of guidance to all of humanity.
@@Saber23 and may Allah vanish the pride of themselves because of their nation, for indeed they have confused the sunnah of prophet Muhammad, saying "Truly our prayers are right, but every country the prayer is different and thats normal". May Allah inspire them to seek protection in him from acting foolishly.
I get what you mean about taraweeh possibly being an inovation, because the prophet ﷺ didn't want to burden his ummah. The thing is, the reason he stopped is that he didn't want Allah to make it mandatory on his ummah so he stopped, but when Omar revived the tradition, Allah wasn't going to make it mandatory anymore, because the whole qur'an was already revealed. (I did not study islam whatsoever so doing deep research would be better than listening to me, as what I'm saying might be false). Also Ramadan Moubarak!
Bidaa is something our prophet pbuh never done or acknowledge, Omar as just revived cause he felt its will better to pray in unity this sunnah and no one forced to perform it. you can pray Ishaa and then leave so that no way to be innovation.
Lol “Umar revived the tradition” who the hell gave Umar the right to do that? What can he just revive Mutah? Or prostrating in front of royalty as a sign of respect like what was permissible during the time of Yusuf (AS)? Nonsense
Thank you for this reminder , I personally stopped accepting Iftar invites and have my own separate healthy ( based on sunnah ) Iftar for years now because of these bad cultural habits . For me it is the wisdom behind fasting that I was missing, my life totally changed after doing this .
Dear brother, you should not decline an invitation as long as there's nothing haram involved in it, because accepting another brother's invitation is among the FIVE rights/obligations a Muslim has towards his Muslim brother: Abu Hurairah (May Allah be pleased with him) reported: The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said, "Every Muslim has five rights over another Muslim (ie, he has to perform five duties for another Muslim): to return the greetings, to visit the sick, to accompany funeral processions, to accept an invitation, to respond to the sneezer ie, to say: 'Yarhamuk-Allah (may Allah bestow His Mercy on you),' when the sneezer praises Allah". Al-Bukhari and Muslim. You can accept the invitation but eat as much as you like.
By saying that Prophet Muhammad (s.a.w) ate his suhur late it doesn't means That we should eat it in the last minutes before 🗣️ azan it means we shouldn't eat it too early like two or three hours early as people nowadays usually do.
12:01 Firstly Ramadan Mubarak my brother , may Allah help us to do good deeds & accept it from us. Secondly I don't think that I need to go in details about the taraweeh because it's commonly known & not hard to find the answers about it . But what I wanted to point out is, that in the issues of the deen (religion) or ahkam (rules/rulings), we don't say "what do you think about this" or "do you think it should be halal or haram or etc..". Because it's not a matter of opinion , it's a matter of what is the ruling given from Allah and or his messenger etc ... Another note : when you hear "there is a difference in opinions " it means the opinions of the scholars not the regular people . Hope the comment is helpful, and sorry because I'm not very good at English language .
Taraweeh was never prayed by the Prophet 😂 nor was it even endorsed by him or came about during the time of Umar Ibn al Khattab, and you people constantly say you fight “bidah” lol
@Saber23 don't you hear that the sheikh stated the phrophet used to lead the taraweeh 3 or 4 nights and he stopped, it because he scared, that Allah will make compulsory upon the people, so are you just ignoring that.
@@mohamedabdulgadir3844 the sheikh is fucking lying that man is Assim al Hakim (may Allah curse him) he’s a bought and paid for scholar of the government
5:20 10 minutes before Fajr we call Imsak. actually it is a tradition in some regions (very well known in Indonesia and its surroundings). Imsak time is not actually a time to stop eating and drinking, but a warning that it will be Fajr time in 10 minutes. but traditionally people understand it as a time to stop.
*"Indeed, We sent the Qur’an down during the Night of Decree. And what can make you know what is the Night of Decree? The Night of Decree is better than a thousand months. The Angels and the [Holy] Spirit descend therein by permission of their Lord for every matter. Peace it is until the emergence of dawn"..* Quran 97:1-5 💗✨
@@artifexdei3671 Holy Spirit is mentioned in Judaism, Christianity and Islam. According to Judaism, Holy Spirit refers to the divine force, quality, and influence of God over the universe or over God's creatures, in given contexts. According to Christianity, Holy Spirit is God and 2nd person of the Trinity. According to Islam, Holy Spirit is Angel Gabriel or a different creation of God who creates souls of humans by Allah's command and Allah uses holy spirit to blow souls in humans, and Allah uses holy spirit to guide people, not only holy spirit guides but angels also guides by Allah's command.
@@artifexdei3671 holy spirits are not angels but a part of spirits, like gabriel, he is a holy spirit, and christian doesnt belive in the true holy spirit they are inventing a trinity 3 gods in one wish has no sence. i hop this answer your question
@Strongfire06 Gabriel is an archangel of God. And it your book it says Angel's and the [Holy] Spirit which means there are angels and the [Holy] Spirit. This means these are two different things. So do you know what you are reading? Do you realize you are going against your own book? We understand that your prophet had things really mixed up as he was illiterate but even with that he got some things right. So what is this Holy Spirit then?
@@artifexdei3671 The Muslim interpretation of the Holy Spirit is generally consistent with other interpretations based upon the Old and the New Testaments. On the basis of narrations in certain Hadith, some Muslims identify it with the angel Gabriel. that all i can give to you, if i said something wrong in my early comment i apologize i did some research and here is.
Fard/wajib (obligatory):- which is compulsory. for example: 5 salah prayer(no excuse for salah,hold on your salah), fasting during ramadan etc. sunnah:-which is recommended,not compulsory. for example: Taraweeh,Tahajjud,fasting on the day of Arafa etc. Taraweeh is a highly recommended,confirmed sunnah. no muslims should miss it.Ramadan is the time to gain great rewards by doing good deeds as our good get multiplied in this blessed month. no good deed is too small especially during this holy month.
Prophet Muhammad PBUH said that 'Verily he among you who lives long will see great controversy, so you must keep to my Sunnah and to the Sunnah of the Khulafa ar-Rashideen (the rightly guided caliphs i.e Abu Bakar, Umar, Uthman and Ali PBUTA), those who guide to the right way. Cling to it stubbornly" From this we can see that sunnah of Umar to continue praying taraweeh is a sunnah and not an innovation. Jazakallah khair
During the time of Badr Prophet Muhammad S.A.W and his companions were fasting. However, if u are in the position of weakness and continue fasting would endanger u then break it..point here is to know your limit. To delay your suhoor can be up til imsak (about 10 mins b4 fajr). That imsak time is to prevent us from accidentally continuing eating at fajr. To quickly break your fast when maghrib. U can take a date and plain water to follow the sunnah of prophet of not delaying your iftar then perform the maghrib prayer and later on have your proper iftar after the maghrib prayer. Like that u allow your digestive system to warm up before u take a heavy meal..secondly avoiding u to feel bloated and overeating and causing u unable to focus on maghrib prayer. This we learn since childhood i hope this help answering few of your questions.
@@mohammedshakilabdulshukur6543 of course there is. There was no only one adhan for fajr at the time of the Prophète saws... Stop making claims you know nothing about.
13:38 Yes, women can also pray in the mosque. But it is better for them to pray at home. Women can pray in mosques if they want but it is important to maintain their veil. And women will pray behind men.
Taraweeh was never prayed by the Prophet 😂 nor was it even endorsed by him or came about during the time of Umar Ibn al Khattab, and you people constantly say you fight “bidah” lol
@@Saber23 taraweeh is literally night prayers thats done everyday by the prophet (saw). The only thing that the prophet(saw) didnt do is specify taraweeh on ramadhan. But we so know that ramadhan is a holy month where any act of worship gets multiply in rewards. Put two and two together, thats why we do taraweeh on ramadhan.
@@elamine9094 taraweeh prayers and night prayers are different and we aren’t allowed to emphasize things that the Prophet didn’t emphasize that is pure ghulu
@@Saber23 its the same. Try to research first, before you say it isnt. The other name for it is tahajjud. How many tahajjud can you pray wvery night? As many as you want, same goes with taraweeh. Most people dont do their tahajjud, only on the month of ramadhan that they actually put their attetion to it. Its similar to having cheap sales daily and having a discount on certain month. People focus more during the discount instead of the cheap sale. In other way, people curses from time to time on a normal day. But on ramadhan, they pay extra attention not to curse. Is that bid'ah? Same as people focus more on ibadah in ramafhan, which they wouldnt on other month. You might as well say, just stop doing night prayers(worship) on ramadhan, because you probably wont do it any other month.
About the prophet(pbuh) doing itikaf with his wives.. well the prophet(pbuh) lived in place were half of it a masjed.. technically his house was a masjed.. n ofc there was separation
Hi Bobby, Regarding your questions about the Tareweeh prayers. These are voluntary prayers. The only obligatory prayers are the prescribed 5 daily prayers and the the prayer for the dead (Janaza). But with Janaza prayer the rest of Muslims who are present are absolved from the obligation if at least one of them does it among the ones attending the funeral. On the second question. Duriythe prophets time it is said their was no partition in the mosque. What happened was tha the women used to pray separately or behind the men I think. It is said that the prophet and the men used to wait for a couple of minutes after end of prayer before turning around in order to give the women time to leave before turning around to face people. Regarding praying Taraeeeh in congregation as reintroduced by caliph Umar. This is not regarded as innovation because the prophet did it in congregation for those 3-4 days then stopped and did it on his own at home. That's when he explained explained that he doesn't want to lead it / do it in congregation for fear of it being made obligatory by Allah if he continued but did not stop people from doing individually in the mosque. As the Sheikh said Umar decided to revive this Sunnah when the prophet passed away knowingly their is no more risk of it being made obligatory now the prophet is gone. Remember the prophet did not specifically say doing it in congregation is prohibited he just simply stopped leading it in congregation. So Umar is not innovating because it was something which the prophet did and did not specifically prohibit. He is just reviving the Sunnah. Non of his fellow companions regarded it as an innovation. An innovation is something which the prophet never authorized or did even once. I hope this answers your questions Inshallah.
Also to add to this beautiful explanation, there is no set number of rakaats in taraweeh/qiyaam-ul-layl/tahhajud, the minimum is 3 rakaats of witr and the maximum is as much odd number units can fit in a single night I'd guess. There is more reward in praying in congregation, around 27 times or 25 times more, according to hadiths narrated by Abu Huraira RA and Umar RA respectively in authentic ahadiths from bukhari and muslim. And taraweeh is one of the prayers other than the 5 fardh prayers that can be prayed in congregation. Allah knows best.
You’re naked after a heretic “Uthman Ibn Farooq” and also Taraweeh was never prayed by the Prophet 😂 nor was it even endorsed by him or came about during the time of Umar Ibn al Khattab, and you people constantly say you fight “bidah” lol
You’re named after a heretic “Uthman Ibn Farooq” and also Taraweeh was never prayed by the Prophet 😂 nor was it even endorsed by him or came about during the time of Umar Ibn al Khattab, and you people constantly say you fight “bidah” lol
@@Saber23 Narrated 'Urwa: That he was informed by `Aisha, "Allah's Prophet went out in the middle of the night and prayed in the mosque and some men prayed behind him. In the morning, the people spoke about it and then a large number of them gathered and prayed behind him (on the second night). In the next morning the people again talked about it and on the third night the mosque was full with a large number of people. Allah's Prophet came out and the people prayed behind him. On the fourth night the Mosque was overwhelmed with people and could not accommodate them, but the Prophet came out (only) for the morning prayer. When the morning prayer was finished he recited Tashah-hud and (addressing the people) said, "Amma ba'du, your presence was not hidden from me but I was afraid lest the night prayer (Qiyam) should be enjoined on you and you might not be able to carry it on." So, Allah's Prophet died and the situation remained like that (i.e. people prayed individually). " [Sahih Bukhari-2012; Book-Taraweeh; Chapter- Virtues of Praying Taraweeh in Ramadan;]
8:20 alsalam alaikum warahmatoho wabarakatoho Brother Bobby the sheikh didn't say they broke their fast in the battle of badr, he was referring to the next point that they weren't sleeping and being lazy during the day but were very energetic.
Taraweeh was never prayed by the Prophet 😂 nor was it even endorsed by him or came about during the time of Umar Ibn al Khattab, and you people constantly say you fight “bidah” lol
From what I remember the house of the prophet ﷺ was part of or very close to his mosque like using the same wall and his wives could have used the women's section or the part of the mosque which was also part of their house when doing the E'tikaf.. as for Suhoor yeah you should eat until the last moments cuz some people eat hours before adhan fajr
I heard from a sheikh The time of sohur starts from the midnight, so if you eat 10 mins or 20 mins before Adhan you also delayed till adhan in that sense maybe.
till the last meaning 5-6 minute before the time of the suhoor (not hours before that) and break your fast 2-3 minute after the iftar time enters as a precautions but dont delay it for hours.
Ma sha Allah. Jazakallah brother for watching these videos that are especially beneficial for us all for this Ramadan! I'm getting distracted a bit tbh with the tiredness but Alhamdulillah it's good to distract oneself in a halal way to then return stronger to hearing the Quran for longer and learn more.
Bobby : about breaking the fast during badr !! The beauty of islam is that it is a practical way of life. And breaking the fast in war is a legislative order for us Muslims in such situations. (Very short a)
About Taraweeh- Omar revised the sunnah since the people didn't pray behind one Iman as they used to, like in the time of The Prophet (saw). And if you pray it, you'd get a huge reward- “Whoever prays with the imam until he finishes, it will be reckoned as equivalent to spending the whole night in prayer.” - Prophet 'saw'.But if you don't pray it, there's no sin upon you.
Anas bin Malik said: "The Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) said: "Whoever sends salah upon me once, Allah (SWT) will send salah upon him tenfold, and will erase ten sins from him, and will raise him ten degrees in status." Sunan an-Nasa'i 1297 Abdullah b. Amr b. al-As reported Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) as saying: "When you hear the Mu'adhdhin, repeat what he says, then invoke a blessing on me, for everyone who invokes a blessing on me will receive ten blessings from Allah; then beg from Allah al-Wasila for me, which is a rank in Paradise fitting for only one of Allah's servants, and I hope that I may be that one. If anyone who asks that I be given the Wasila, he will be assured of my intercession." Sahih Muslim 384
11:44 Traweeh is not mandatory, you can do it or skip it. Also, we only call it Traweeh in Ramadan, it's actually called *Qiyam* and you can do it everyday after I'sha prayer. (but many Muslims love to do it in Ramadan, while many of them skip it after Ramadan end, because it's not mandatory as I said, and you can pray it in your home).
I stop eating or drinking water at least 20 mins b4 the time of fajar (dawn) call for a prayer , get myself ready to worship GOD .eat portion not too much then Stop eating ,get yourself ready to go to pray
@@qayimrahimi4530 then you should have learned that it was common practice at the time since there were two adhans for the fajr prayer and prophet saws stopped eating at the first one, which was the equivalent of 50 ayah (10 minutes approx.) in duration before the second adhan.
It is sunnah to delay suhur until it is as close to fajr as possible. To stop 10 min before is an innovation that is common in Asian countries mainly... 😊
11:46 good question is not obligated but But as mentioned in the video, people want to live the Sunnah of the Prophet Muhammad. The obligatory prayers are five, and people pray more because they want to be closer to their Lord. The more you pray, the greater your connection with the Lord of this universe
The Prophet’s favorite food was lamb shoulder, so probably he ate that during Ramadan and especially during Eid. It was in a famous dish called Tharid, which includes vegetables and meat over flatbread. Delicious!
I try my best to avoid iftar invites because I hate so much food & how people put much more importance on eating than on maghrib solat. My iftar consists of 3/4 dates and water. I eat a bit more after tarawih.
The Battle of Badr took place on the seventeenth of Ramadan in the second year of the Hijra. The conquest of Mecca was on the tenth of Ramadan in the eighth year of the Hijra. The Battle of Al-Qadisiyah took place in Ramadan in the year fifteen AH, under the leadership of Saad bin Abi Waqqas. The conquest of Andalusia took place in Ramadan in the year 92 AH, under the leadership of Tariq bin Ziyad. The Battle of Zallaqa, which is currently in southern Spain, was in the year 479 AH. The battle of Ain Jalut took place in Ramadan in the year 685 under the leadership of Sultan Qutuz and the military commander Baybars. The Battle of Hattin took place in Ramadan in the year 584 AH, under the leadership of Saladin. Then the Ramadan War of 1973 - or the October War - took place in Ramadan in the year 1393 AH, in which the Arab Muslim forces were able to defeat the usurping Zionist forces. The Arab armies crossed the Suez Canal and destroyed the myth of the invincible “Israeli army”, and they demolished, thank God, the Bar Lev Line.
@@Khaled-wm1tuWe remember the battles during the month of Ramadan, but if the October War causes you tension, consider it non-existent and forget about it.
well, I guess the 10 mins or so is for carefulness, because in todays society we live in urban areas with zero visibility of the horizon. and also with so much dust pollution that I don't know if we can observe the "Subh e Sadiq" now. We all understand that there was no concept of 5-10 mins during the time of our beloved prophet (pbuh) . So I believe, today we do if for carefulness.
@@ItsNothingAmazing well since bobby's views are really rational and Muslim lanterns dawah is also really logical it would be a very knowledgeable video
@@10dsamialimuhammad58 it will not be too different from watching Sheikh Uthman's dawah imo, which I'm sure he's watched before. He literally took his shahada with him. Also it's probably better to just speak to Muslim Lantern than just simply react. He livestreams every week.
Our Prophet Muhammad pbuh used to break his fasting with few dattes and water ... just it ... and the reason why the sheikh in the video did not mention it, it’s because that ramdhan is not about eating at all, it ’ s about whorshiping God, praying and doing good things more and more ... and you are right, excessive eating during fatoor in ramadhan is very harmful to our bodies ans souls.
@@jaegeredits1531 what do you mean “how” he’s a madkhali/Wahhabi fool, it’s not a serious claim at all its common knowledge for those who do any research that he’s a bough and paid for scholar of the Saudi government, not to mention he’s one of those “don’t talk about what happened between the Sahabah” types even though it’s important to know history and the TRUTH, may Allah guide you away from such individuals
@@jaegeredits1531 what do you mean “how” he’s a madkhali/Wahhabi fool, it’s not a serious claim at all its common knowledge for those who do any research that he’s a bough and paid for scholar of the Saudi government, not to mention he’s one of those “don’t talk about what happened between the Sahabah” types even though it’s important to know history and the TRUTH, may Allah guide you away from such individuals
taraweeh is sunnah. When Umar (ra) saw that people are praying taraweeh anyway, in the very single mosque, but some separately and some in smaller jama'ah, he ruled that, instead of so many separate jama'ah we do one single jama'ah. He didn't make it obligatory. People were praying taraweeh anyway, he just turned it into one single jama'ah. In some mosques in my country they offer two taraweeh in the very single mosque (in those multi storeyed mosques, the do the two taraweeh in different floors). One for the people who wants to pray longer taraweeh and listen to more of the quran, and another shorter jama'ah where they shorten the recitation from the quran, for people in a hurry or people who can't stay longer.
Juz a light meal whether suhoor or iftar, plain water and dates but obviously only a few can follow the prophet diet, juz keep it less in preparing the meal..😊😊😊
Ramadhaan mubaraq brother bobby. Afaik itikaaf is done in isoation and he used to tigten his belt for the lasy 10 days and stayed away from his wives. 1st time i hear his wives were with hin at the masjied for it. Regarding Taraweeh , it is the month of the quraan. I used to go to mosque to listen and derive benefit from listening to the entire quraan. These days though less are completing the quraan so i read 8-12 rakaats then go home and recite quraan to try and complete it and maybe study tafseer. One could argue the taraweeh is an innovation but i think for the purpose of deriving benefit it is a good way to spend the night in prayer reciting the quraan. Allah knows best and may he accept our efforts.
Hello Bobbay, the means of delaying Suhoor is you can eat till the last minute before Azan of Fajar or we should do our Suhoor in that way to finish it just a minute or two before azan.
Taraweeh is voluntary. The Prophet PBUH broke his fast on fresh dates and water. Muslims fought many battles throughout history (and were victorious) during Ramadan while fasted. Some of the most important ones, too, turning points in history like Hatin and Ain Jalit.
Salam brother,,Ramadan Mubarak...watch the seerah of prophet Mohammad by bilal assad for you to know more about our RASUL saw...may ALLAH bless us all.
I played competitive tennis and used to work out quite regularly. I have found over the years that while fasting I would get pretty hungry and tired in the afternoon while doing computer office. However when I've played tennis while fasting the feeling was absolutely amazingly exhilarating - I completely forgot that I was fasting and I felt a high like I was on drugs (even though I have never actually tried drugs ever). I have to stress that this is competitive tennis at the satellite level and not just recreationally batting the ball around and so there is a certain level of cardiovascular effort. I have tried weight training during fasting and yes as you pointed out it was not the same exhilarating experience at all, especially afterwards during the recovery stage.
**For your first question: eating 10 minutes before the Fajr adhan** This is a kind of bid’ah (innovation) which has no basis in the Sunnah. Rather the Sunnah is to do the opposite, because Allah says in the Qur'an “and eat and drink until the white thread (light) of dawn appears to you distinct from the black thread (darkness of night).” [al-Baqarah 2:187] And Al-Bukhari (1919) and Muslim (1092) narrated from Ibn ‘Umar and ‘Aishah that Bilal used to give the adhan at night. The Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said: “Eat and drink until Ibn Umm Maktum gives the adhan, for he does not give the adhan until dawn comes.” It is recommended to delay suhur and it is not recommended to stop eating and drinking a while before Fajr. Allah has permitted those who intend to fast to eat and drink until they are certain that dawn has come. Proof for the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) saying to delay the suhur is in Ṣaḥīḥ Ibn Ḥibbān 1770 and Musnad Aḥmad 21312 **For your second question: Did the Sahaabah (may Allah be pleased with them) fast on the day of Badr?** The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) used to instruct his companions (may Allah be pleased with them) to break their fast when they drew close to their enemy, so that they would have more strength to fight. Breaking the fast when meeting the enemy in battle is one of the means of strength. Muslim (1120) narrated that Abu Sa‘eed al-Khudri (may Allah be pleased with him) said: We travelled with the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) to Makkah when we were fasting. We made a stop, and the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “You have drawn near to your enemy, and breaking the fast will make you stronger.” This was a concession, so some of us fasted and some did not. Then we made another stop and he said: “In the morning, you are going to meet your enemy. And breaking the fast will make you stronger, so break the fast.” He emphasized it (the second time), so we broke the fast.. Al-Haafiz Ibn Rajab al-Hanbali (may Allah have mercy on him) stated that definitively and said: Ramadan was made obligatory for the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) in 2 AH, which was the first Ramadan that he fasted, and the Muslims fasted it with him. Then the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) went out in pursuit of a caravan of Quraysh that had come from Syria heading towards Madinah, on the Saturday 12th of Ramadan, and he broke his fast on his way to meet it. Ibn al-Musayyab said : ‘Umar said: We went out on two campaigns with the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) in Ramadan, the day of Badr and the conquest (of Makkah), and we broke the fast during both. End quote. Lataa’if al-Ma‘aarif (p. 177) What is more likely to be the case is that the Sahaabah (may Allah be pleased with them) broke the fast when they set out to meet the enemy on the day of Badr, because that would be of greater help to them in their jihad against their enemy. **For your third question: Is Taraweeh bid'ah? Is it waajib or sunnah?** Allow me to clarify the concept of bid'ah: Firstly, bid'ah refers to an innovation in Islam. Therefore, inventions such as cars and microphones do not fall under the category of bid'ah in the religion of Allah, despite the misconception held by some individuals. Secondly, it's essential to note that bid'ah should not have its roots or origins in Islam. And thirdly, individuals who engage in bid'ah may believe that it brings them closer to Allah. Tarawih prayer is Sunnah according to the consensus of the Muslims, as Al-Nawawi (may Allah have mercy on him) said in Al-Majmu’. Tarawih prayer was encouraged by the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him), for example when he said: “Whoever spends the nights of Ramadan in prayer out of faith and in the hope of reward, his previous sins will be forgiven.” Narrated by Al-Bukhari, 37; Muslim, 760 Taraweeh in congregation is a practice that is proven from the Sunnah. It is reported that Umm al-Mo'mineen 'Aisha (May Allaah be pleased with her) said that the Messenger of Allaah (Peace and Blessings of Allaah be upon him) had led the people in Taraweeh for three nights, and that he stopped on the fourth night saying that he stopped because he feared that this prayer may become obligatory on his people. [Al-Bukhari (1129) and Muslim (761)] Tarawih is a confirmed Sunnah not compulsory. So, if a Muslim does not pray Tarawih, there is no sin on him for that, whether he has an excuse or not. *Fourth question: segregation in masjid** The meeting together, mixing, and intermingling of men and women in one place, the crowding of them together, and the revealing and exposure of women to men are prohibited by the Shari'ah. Among the many proofs of prohibition of the meeting and mixing of men and women in the Quran and Sunnah are: Surat al-Ahzab Ayah 53 The Prophet (May peace and blessings be upon him) enforced separation of men and women even at Allah’s most revered and preferred place, the mosque. This was accomplished via the separation of the women’s rows from the men’s; men were asked to stay in the mosque after completion of the obligatory prayer so that women will have enough time to leave the mosque; and, a special door was assigned to women. Evidence of the foregoing are: Umm Salamah (May Allah be pleased with her) said that after Allah’s Messenger (May peace and blessings be upon him) said "as-Salamu ‘Alaykum wa Rahmatullah’ twice announcing the end of prayer, women would stand up and leave. He would stay for a while before leaving. Ibn Shihab said that he thought that the staying of the Prophet (May peace and blessings be upon him) was in order for the women to be able to leave before the men who wanted to depart." Narrated by al-Bukhari under No. 793. Abu Dawood under No. 876 narrates the same hadith in Kitab al-Salaat under the title "Insiraaf an-Nisaa’ Qabl al-Rijaal min al-Salaah" (Departure of Women before Men after the Prayer). Ibn ‘Umar said that Allah’s Messenger (May peace and blessings be upon him) said: "We should leave this door (of the mosque) for women." Naafi’ said: "Ibn ‘Umar never again entered through that door until he died." Narrated by Abu Dawood under No. 484 in "Kitab as-Salah" under the Chapter entitled: "at-Tashdid fi Thalik". Abu Hurayrah said that the Prophet (May peace and blessings be upon him) said: ""The best of the men’s rows is the first and the worst is the last, and the best of the women’s rows is the last and the worst in the first." Narrated by Muslim under No. 664. Women can also observe I'tikaf in the masjid as the wives of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) asked him for permission to observe i’tikaf in the mosque and he gave them permission, and they used to observe i’tikaf in the mosque after he died. And of course its segregated. **Question on what the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) broke his fast with** Abu Dawood (2356) and at-Tirmidhi (696) narrated that Anas (may Allah be pleased with him) said: The Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) used to break his fast with fresh dates before praying. If no fresh dates were available, he would break his fast with dried dates, and if none were available, he would break his fast with a few sips of water. Classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in Saheeh Abi Dawood. So inshallah break your fast with dates and if there is not any, then drink water. May Allaah keep you firm upon His religion
Assalm aleikum bobby ramadan kareem. About taraweh it is not mandatory if you pray taraweh Allah will rewards you and if you don't pray it there is nothing bad it is not a sin if you don't pray ramadan. This what i learn about in islam Allahu ya'alam ( Allah knows better)
Allah doesn’t reward you for bidah and that’s exactly what taraweeh is, Umar invented it and then it became a “sunnah” this is why I can never be a Sunni you people aren’t open to real history at all, you always distort it to affirm your own beliefs, the Prophet never prayed Taraweeh so it CANNOT be a “sunnah”
As me and my parents do as the Prophet saw also did was break our fast a few minutes after Maghrib (because it says in the Quran to break your fast when it is night and adhan of Maghrib isn’t *really* night yet) with dates and ayran/lebene. The prophet would instead drink water or milk, it’s more cultural to have a yoghurt drink as it is high in sodium and gives lots of energy after breaking the fast with the dates. After this we pray Maghrib and then have isha (dinner). It’s “well known” that the prophet would eat moderately with some bread, honey, dates, olives, milk but wouldn’t indulge like many do nowadays.
The battle of badr happened in 2nd year Hijra during the month of Ramadan The fasting of Ramadan was legislated that year Some Muslims were fasting and some weren’t, depending on their abilities for fighting and traveling
I am not a Muslim yet, but I am doing Ramadan together with my friends from work.
MashaAllah
MashALLAH TABARAKALLAH May ALLAH S.W.T (GOD ALMIGHTY) guide snd bless you and your family Ameen.
How is it going
@@commontouch1787 I think it's a bit disrespectful to ask anyone doing Ramadan, how it is going. Because it is a spiritual battle, a spiritual issue, Muslim or not.
@@swietopelkkowalskiI think not quite. It's more like how does it feel? Many think fasting is hell lot of a job, but it is really quite simple. So a person fasting for the first time in his life we can be curious to know who it feels, how is it going?
Brother as you fast we hope you will be on your journey to Islam. This fasting will give you a spiritual taste we enjoy in Islam. Hope to embrace you after your shahada.
In a hadith, as narrated by Anas (R.A.) “The Messenger of Allah (peace be upon him.) used to break his fast with fresh dates before praying; if there were no (fresh dates) then with dry dates, and if there were no (dried dates) then he would take a few sips of water.
yes, theyre called Rutab dates. basically didnt lose their moisture. though I would imagine its harder to get if not in middle east.
Only the 5 prayers are mandatory. Taraweeh is sunnah and not mandatory. Some people (may Allah guide them) they put more effort on Taraweeh than the mandatory 5.
I'm a huge fan my dear brother!❤️
From Türkiye!🇹🇷
May Allah guide the people of Turkey away from their historic racism and nationalism and back to PROPER Islam
@@Saber23 Allahumma ameen, and may Allah guide the people of turkiyah to pray correctly like naby sall allahu alayhi wslm. with the proper amount of raka3ah, indeed Muhammads sunnah isnt the way of confusion, but the way of guidance to all of humanity.
@@alibrahym indeed and to stop crossing their arms in salah
@@Saber23 and may Allah vanish the pride of themselves because of their nation, for indeed they have confused the sunnah of prophet Muhammad, saying "Truly our prayers are right, but every country the prayer is different and thats normal". May Allah inspire them to seek protection in him from acting foolishly.
I get what you mean about taraweeh possibly being an inovation, because the prophet ﷺ didn't want to burden his ummah. The thing is, the reason he stopped is that he didn't want Allah to make it mandatory on his ummah so he stopped, but when Omar revived the tradition, Allah wasn't going to make it mandatory anymore, because the whole qur'an was already revealed. (I did not study islam whatsoever so doing deep research would be better than listening to me, as what I'm saying might be false). Also Ramadan Moubarak!
You are right brother
You are right
Bidaa is something our prophet pbuh never done or acknowledge, Omar as just revived cause he felt its will better to pray in unity this sunnah and no one forced to perform it. you can pray Ishaa and then leave so that no way to be innovation.
Taraweeh is 1000% an innovation and you idiots keep calling it a “sunnah” when it was Umar who invented it
Lol “Umar revived the tradition” who the hell gave Umar the right to do that? What can he just revive Mutah? Or prostrating in front of royalty as a sign of respect like what was permissible during the time of Yusuf (AS)? Nonsense
Thank you for this reminder , I personally stopped accepting Iftar invites and have my own separate healthy ( based on sunnah ) Iftar for years now because of these bad cultural habits .
For me it is the wisdom behind fasting that I was missing, my life totally changed after doing this .
Dear brother, you should not decline an invitation as long as there's nothing haram involved in it, because accepting another brother's invitation is among the FIVE rights/obligations a Muslim has towards his Muslim brother: Abu Hurairah (May Allah be pleased with him) reported: The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said, "Every Muslim has five rights over another Muslim (ie, he has to perform five duties for another Muslim): to return the greetings, to visit the sick, to accompany funeral processions, to accept an invitation, to respond to the sneezer ie, to say: 'Yarhamuk-Allah (may Allah bestow His Mercy on you),' when the sneezer praises Allah". Al-Bukhari and Muslim.
You can accept the invitation but eat as much as you like.
You don’t have the sunnah 😂 no nasabi such as yourself has the sunnah
@@aaliguy9986 man you people are revolting
By saying that Prophet Muhammad (s.a.w) ate his suhur late it doesn't means That we should eat it in the last minutes before 🗣️ azan it means we shouldn't eat it too early like two or three hours early as people nowadays usually do.
Ramadhan Kareem 😊
12:01
Firstly Ramadan Mubarak my brother , may Allah help us to do good deeds & accept it from us.
Secondly I don't think that I need to go in details about the taraweeh because it's commonly known & not hard to find the answers about it .
But what I wanted to point out is, that in the issues of the deen (religion) or ahkam (rules/rulings), we don't say "what do you think about this" or "do you think it should be halal or haram or etc..". Because it's not a matter of opinion , it's a matter of what is the ruling given from Allah and or his messenger etc ...
Another note : when you hear "there is a difference in opinions " it means the opinions of the scholars not the regular people .
Hope the comment is helpful, and sorry because I'm not very good at English language .
Taraweeh was never prayed by the Prophet 😂 nor was it even endorsed by him or came about during the time of Umar Ibn al Khattab, and you people constantly say you fight “bidah” lol
No you always use opinions stop lying through your teeth bro
Liar
@Saber23 don't you hear that the sheikh stated the phrophet used to lead the taraweeh 3 or 4 nights and he stopped, it because he scared, that Allah will make compulsory upon the people,
so are you just ignoring that.
@@mohamedabdulgadir3844 the sheikh is fucking lying that man is Assim al Hakim (may Allah curse him) he’s a bought and paid for scholar of the government
5:20 10 minutes before Fajr we call Imsak. actually it is a tradition in some regions (very well known in Indonesia and its surroundings). Imsak time is not actually a time to stop eating and drinking, but a warning that it will be Fajr time in 10 minutes. but traditionally people understand it as a time to stop.
*"Indeed, We sent the Qur’an down during the Night of Decree. And what can make you know what is the Night of Decree? The Night of Decree is better than a thousand months. The Angels and the [Holy] Spirit descend therein by permission of their Lord for every matter. Peace it is until the emergence of dawn"..*
Quran 97:1-5 💗✨
So the Holy Spirit descends? But that's a Christian concept of Holy Trinity. So what's this Spirit in Islam?
@@artifexdei3671 Holy Spirit is mentioned in Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
According to Judaism, Holy Spirit refers to the divine force, quality, and influence of God over the universe or over God's creatures, in given contexts.
According to Christianity, Holy Spirit is God and 2nd person of the Trinity.
According to Islam, Holy Spirit is Angel Gabriel or a different creation of God who creates souls of humans by Allah's command and Allah uses holy spirit to blow souls in humans, and Allah uses holy spirit to guide people, not only holy spirit guides but angels also guides by Allah's command.
@@artifexdei3671 holy spirits are not angels but a part of spirits, like gabriel, he is a holy spirit, and christian doesnt belive in the true holy spirit they are inventing a trinity 3 gods in one wish has no sence. i hop this answer your question
@Strongfire06 Gabriel is an archangel of God. And it your book it says Angel's and the [Holy] Spirit which means there are angels and the [Holy] Spirit. This means these are two different things. So do you know what you are reading? Do you realize you are going against your own book? We understand that your prophet had things really mixed up as he was illiterate but even with that he got some things right. So what is this Holy Spirit then?
@@artifexdei3671 The Muslim interpretation of the Holy Spirit is generally consistent with other interpretations based upon the Old and the New Testaments. On the basis of narrations in certain Hadith, some Muslims identify it with the angel Gabriel. that all i can give to you, if i said something wrong in my early comment i apologize i did some research and here is.
Fard/wajib (obligatory):- which is compulsory. for example: 5 salah prayer(no excuse for salah,hold on your salah), fasting during ramadan etc.
sunnah:-which is recommended,not compulsory. for example: Taraweeh,Tahajjud,fasting on the day of Arafa etc.
Taraweeh is a highly recommended,confirmed sunnah. no muslims should miss it.Ramadan is the time to gain great rewards by doing good deeds as our good get multiplied in this blessed month. no good deed is too small especially during this holy month.
Prophet Muhammad PBUH said that 'Verily he among you who lives long will see great controversy, so you must keep to my Sunnah and to the Sunnah of the Khulafa ar-Rashideen (the rightly guided caliphs i.e Abu Bakar, Umar, Uthman and Ali PBUTA), those who guide to the right way. Cling to it stubbornly"
From this we can see that sunnah of Umar to continue praying taraweeh is a sunnah and not an innovation.
Jazakallah khair
During the time of Badr Prophet Muhammad S.A.W and his companions were fasting. However, if u are in the position of weakness and continue fasting would endanger u then break it..point here is to know your limit.
To delay your suhoor can be up til imsak (about 10 mins b4 fajr). That imsak time is to prevent us from accidentally continuing eating at fajr. To quickly break your fast when maghrib. U can take a date and plain water to follow the sunnah of prophet of not delaying your iftar then perform the maghrib prayer and later on have your proper iftar after the maghrib prayer. Like that u allow your digestive system to warm up before u take a heavy meal..secondly avoiding u to feel bloated and overeating and causing u unable to focus on maghrib prayer. This we learn since childhood i hope this help answering few of your questions.
There is no concept of imsak. Eat till you hear adhan. Period.
@@mohammedshakilabdulshukur6543 of course there is. There was no only one adhan for fajr at the time of the Prophète saws... Stop making claims you know nothing about.
13:38 Yes, women can also pray in the mosque. But it is better for them to pray at home. Women can pray in mosques if they want but it is important to maintain their veil. And women will pray behind men.
BUT IN SEGREGATED AREAS.. make that clear.
Taraweeh was never prayed by the Prophet 😂 nor was it even endorsed by him or came about during the time of Umar Ibn al Khattab, and you people constantly say you fight “bidah” lol
@@Saber23 taraweeh is literally night prayers thats done everyday by the prophet (saw). The only thing that the prophet(saw) didnt do is specify taraweeh on ramadhan.
But we so know that ramadhan is a holy month where any act of worship gets multiply in rewards. Put two and two together, thats why we do taraweeh on ramadhan.
@@elamine9094 taraweeh prayers and night prayers are different and we aren’t allowed to emphasize things that the Prophet didn’t emphasize that is pure ghulu
@@Saber23 its the same. Try to research first, before you say it isnt. The other name for it is tahajjud. How many tahajjud can you pray wvery night? As many as you want, same goes with taraweeh.
Most people dont do their tahajjud, only on the month of ramadhan that they actually put their attetion to it.
Its similar to having cheap sales daily and having a discount on certain month. People focus more during the discount instead of the cheap sale.
In other way, people curses from time to time on a normal day. But on ramadhan, they pay extra attention not to curse. Is that bid'ah?
Same as people focus more on ibadah in ramafhan, which they wouldnt on other month.
You might as well say, just stop doing night prayers(worship) on ramadhan, because you probably wont do it any other month.
Love your videos Bobby❤❤❤
Ramadan Kareem
About the prophet(pbuh) doing itikaf with his wives.. well the prophet(pbuh) lived in place were half of it a masjed.. technically his house was a masjed.. n ofc there was separation
Hi Bobby, Regarding your questions about the Tareweeh prayers. These are voluntary prayers. The only obligatory prayers are the prescribed 5 daily prayers and the the prayer for the dead (Janaza). But with Janaza prayer the rest of Muslims who are present are absolved from the obligation if at least one of them does it among the ones attending the funeral.
On the second question. Duriythe prophets time it is said their was no partition in the mosque. What happened was tha the women used to pray separately or behind the men I think. It is said that the prophet and the men used to wait for a couple of minutes after end of prayer before turning around in order to give the women time to leave before turning around to face people.
Regarding praying Taraeeeh in congregation as reintroduced by caliph Umar. This is not regarded as innovation because the prophet did it in congregation for those 3-4 days then stopped and did it on his own at home. That's when he explained explained that he doesn't want to lead it / do it in congregation for fear of it being made obligatory by Allah if he continued but did not stop people from doing individually in the mosque.
As the Sheikh said Umar decided to revive this Sunnah when the prophet passed away knowingly their is no more risk of it being made obligatory now the prophet is gone. Remember the prophet did not specifically say doing it in congregation is prohibited he just simply stopped leading it in congregation. So Umar is not innovating because it was something which the prophet did and did not specifically prohibit. He is just reviving the Sunnah. Non of his fellow companions regarded it as an innovation. An innovation is something which the prophet never authorized or did even once.
I hope this answers your questions Inshallah.
Also to add to this beautiful explanation, there is no set number of rakaats in taraweeh/qiyaam-ul-layl/tahhajud, the minimum is 3 rakaats of witr and the maximum is as much odd number units can fit in a single night I'd guess. There is more reward in praying in congregation, around 27 times or 25 times more, according to hadiths narrated by Abu Huraira RA and Umar RA respectively in authentic ahadiths from bukhari and muslim. And taraweeh is one of the prayers other than the 5 fardh prayers that can be prayed in congregation.
Allah knows best.
Break your fast early and delay Sehar(early morning) at the last moment of fajr prayer Azan. If you are holding something to eat or drink finish it.
You’re naked after a heretic “Uthman Ibn Farooq” and also Taraweeh was never prayed by the Prophet 😂 nor was it even endorsed by him or came about during the time of Umar Ibn al Khattab, and you people constantly say you fight “bidah” lol
You’re named after a heretic “Uthman Ibn Farooq” and also Taraweeh was never prayed by the Prophet 😂 nor was it even endorsed by him or came about during the time of Umar Ibn al Khattab, and you people constantly say you fight “bidah” lol
@@Saber23 Narrated 'Urwa: That he was informed by `Aisha, "Allah's Prophet went out in the middle of the night and prayed in the mosque and some men prayed behind him. In the morning, the people spoke about it and then a large number of them gathered and prayed behind him (on the second night). In the next morning the people again talked about it and on the third night the mosque was full with a large number of people. Allah's Prophet came out and the people prayed behind him. On the fourth night the Mosque was overwhelmed with people and could not accommodate them, but the Prophet came out (only) for the morning prayer. When the morning prayer was finished he recited Tashah-hud and (addressing the people) said, "Amma ba'du, your presence was not hidden from me but I was afraid lest the night prayer (Qiyam) should be enjoined on you and you might not be able to carry it on." So, Allah's Prophet died and the situation remained like that (i.e. people prayed individually). "
[Sahih Bukhari-2012; Book-Taraweeh; Chapter- Virtues of Praying Taraweeh in Ramadan;]
Are we supposed eat till the last minute of Fajr prayer or Fajr Azan?
@@chiluarts. Some mosques do Azan five minutes earlier than the time, so we have to be careful.
Ramadan Mubarak Brother🌙
Ramadan Mubarak!
Love your work brother and commentary 👌
Sunnis are lying to him
8:20
alsalam alaikum warahmatoho wabarakatoho
Brother Bobby the sheikh didn't say they broke their fast in the battle of badr, he was referring to the next point that they weren't sleeping and being lazy during the day but were very energetic.
Sunnis are just being exposed for the liars they are
Sunnis are showing themselves as the liars they are
Taraweeh was never prayed by the Prophet 😂 nor was it even endorsed by him or came about during the time of Umar Ibn al Khattab, and you people constantly say you fight “bidah” lol
@@Saber23yes he did
@@libanali8562 no he did not bud
From what I remember the house of the prophet ﷺ was part of or very close to his mosque like using the same wall and his wives could have used the women's section or the part of the mosque which was also part of their house when doing the E'tikaf.. as for Suhoor yeah you should eat until the last moments cuz some people eat hours before adhan fajr
I heard from a sheikh The time of sohur starts from the midnight, so if you eat 10 mins or 20 mins before Adhan you also delayed till adhan in that sense maybe.
Bobby your face is glowing👍👋
till the last meaning 5-6 minute before the time of the suhoor (not hours before that) and break your fast 2-3 minute after the iftar time enters as a precautions but dont delay it for hours.
May Allah bless you too brother Omer AbuBobby ❤❤
Ma sha Allah.
Jazakallah brother for watching these videos that are especially beneficial for us all for this Ramadan!
I'm getting distracted a bit tbh with the tiredness but Alhamdulillah it's good to distract oneself in a halal way to then return stronger to hearing the Quran for longer and learn more.
Always love these types of videos
Me too❤
Ramadan kareem !
Ramadan mubark !
Alhamdulillah ramadhan telah tiba menjumpai kita untuk lebih dekat dengan Allah...
I'll be breaking my fast watching this, May AL-HAQQ reward you Brother Bobby, you really have a place in my heart, my muslim brother❤
JazakAllah'u khairan
Alhamdolellah ❤
Bobby : about breaking the fast during badr !!
The beauty of islam is that it is a practical way of life. And breaking the fast in war is a legislative order for us Muslims in such situations. (Very short a)
Salam alikum my brother Ramadan kreem
All scholars said taraweeh is not obligatory. None of companions said it is, including Omar.
About Taraweeh- Omar revised the sunnah since the people didn't pray behind one Iman as they used to, like in the time of The Prophet (saw). And if you pray it, you'd get a huge reward- “Whoever prays with the imam until he finishes, it will be reckoned as equivalent to spending the whole night in prayer.” - Prophet 'saw'.But if you don't pray it, there's no sin upon you.
Anas bin Malik said:
"The Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) said: "Whoever sends salah upon me once, Allah (SWT) will send salah upon him tenfold, and will erase ten sins from him, and will raise him ten degrees in status."
Sunan an-Nasa'i 1297
Abdullah b. Amr b. al-As reported Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) as saying:
"When you hear the Mu'adhdhin, repeat what he says, then invoke a blessing on me, for everyone who invokes a blessing on me will receive ten blessings from Allah; then beg from Allah al-Wasila for me, which is a rank in Paradise fitting for only one of Allah's servants, and I hope that I may be that one. If anyone who asks that I be given the Wasila, he will be assured of my intercession."
Sahih Muslim 384
Alhamdulillah 🇲🇾
11:44
Traweeh is not mandatory, you can do it or skip it.
Also, we only call it Traweeh in Ramadan, it's actually called *Qiyam* and you can do it everyday after I'sha prayer. (but many Muslims love to do it in Ramadan, while many of them skip it after Ramadan end, because it's not mandatory as I said, and you can pray it in your home).
I recommend watching Ammar Nakshawani’s latest series about Shia and Sunni, great insight on the differences between the two.
Praise be to allah. Welcome to islam. Masha allah.
From india kerala. 👍👍👍
I stop eating or drinking water at least 20 mins b4 the time of fajar (dawn) call for a prayer , get myself ready to worship GOD .eat portion not too much then Stop eating ,get yourself ready to go to pray
The finishing ten minutes before is an innovation
no it's not, please learn more before making such claims...
@@mouradqqch1767 yes it is I did learn that’s why I mentioned it mate
@@qayimrahimi4530 then you should have learned that it was common practice at the time since there were two adhans for the fajr prayer and prophet saws stopped eating at the first one, which was the equivalent of 50 ayah (10 minutes approx.) in duration before the second adhan.
May Allah keep you and us steadfast on the Deen until we die. Love you my brother
the hymn at the end is so nice
Delay sahur till Adhan of Fajr means we can eat till last moment, but not after adhan.
Assalamualikkum brother ❤Ramadan kareem..
love you brother May Allah bless you❤
MashAllah brother May Allah bless you and your family❤
It is sunnah to delay suhur until it is as close to fajr as possible. To stop 10 min before is an innovation that is common in Asian countries mainly... 😊
Ramadan Kareem my Brother in Islam ❤
Ramadan Mubarak bro
11:46 good question is not obligated but But as mentioned in the video, people want to live the Sunnah of the Prophet Muhammad. The obligatory prayers are five, and people pray more because they want to be closer to their Lord. The more you pray, the greater your connection with the Lord of this universe
I would highly recommend itikhaf (seclusion) in the last 10 days of Ramadan. Its an awesome experience for the soul.
5:23 We usually finish suhoor, as you said, about ten minutes before the adhaan. We call this time Imsaak
By delaying he means not eating 2 or 3 hours to fajr. That's the ketosis that makes u feel so good when u fast.
Thanks ,this is a good video !
Alhamdou lillah !
❤❤❤ bobby is love❤❤❤❤
The Prophet’s favorite food was lamb shoulder, so probably he ate that during Ramadan and especially during Eid. It was in a famous dish called Tharid, which includes vegetables and meat over flatbread. Delicious!
Sadly I'm not fasting today coz I'm sick
Its okay may allah forgive all of us
I try my best to avoid iftar invites because I hate so much food & how people put much more importance on eating than on maghrib solat. My iftar consists of 3/4 dates and water. I eat a bit more after tarawih.
لا اله الا الله محمد رسول الله
The Battle of Badr took place on the seventeenth of Ramadan in the second year of the Hijra. The conquest of Mecca was on the tenth of Ramadan in the eighth year of the Hijra. The Battle of Al-Qadisiyah took place in Ramadan in the year fifteen AH, under the leadership of Saad bin Abi Waqqas. The conquest of Andalusia took place in Ramadan in the year 92 AH, under the leadership of Tariq bin Ziyad. The Battle of Zallaqa, which is currently in southern Spain, was in the year 479 AH. The battle of Ain Jalut took place in Ramadan in the year 685 under the leadership of Sultan Qutuz and the military commander Baybars. The Battle of Hattin took place in Ramadan in the year 584 AH, under the leadership of Saladin. Then the Ramadan War of 1973 - or the October War - took place in Ramadan in the year 1393 AH, in which the Arab Muslim forces were able to defeat the usurping Zionist forces. The Arab armies crossed the Suez Canal and destroyed the myth of the invincible “Israeli army”, and they demolished, thank God, the Bar Lev Line.
you better stopped at the battle of hattin because the war of october mix with alot of lies
@@Khaled-wm1tuWe remember the battles during the month of Ramadan, but if the October War causes you tension, consider it non-existent and forget about it.
Brother Bobby please make videos on the companies of our beloved prophet Muhammad pbuh.
I believe the sheikh didn't mean it literally until the last moment but probably until a few minutes before the dawn.
In my opinion, taraweeh is something that you can do,. It's big in Cape Town South Africa though... Being a Non-Muslim country..
well, I guess the 10 mins or so is for carefulness, because in todays society we live in urban areas with zero visibility of the horizon. and also with so much dust pollution that I don't know if we can observe the "Subh e Sadiq" now. We all understand that there was no concept of 5-10 mins during the time of our beloved prophet (pbuh) . So I believe, today we do if for carefulness.
React to Muslim lantern
What's there to react to? His dawah?
@@ItsNothingAmazing well since bobby's views are really rational and Muslim lanterns dawah is also really logical it would be a very knowledgeable video
@@10dsamialimuhammad58 it will not be too different from watching Sheikh Uthman's dawah imo, which I'm sure he's watched before. He literally took his shahada with him. Also it's probably better to just speak to Muslim Lantern than just simply react. He livestreams every week.
Our prophet's way is compatible with circadian rythm as well. Right before sunrise and right when the sun sets. SubhanAllah ❤
There are many things our prophet do during Ramadan just like giving charity ( double) visiting patient
Our Prophet Muhammad pbuh used to break his fasting with few dattes and water ... just it ... and the reason why the sheikh in the video did not mention it, it’s because that ramdhan is not about eating at all, it ’ s about whorshiping God, praying and doing good things more and more ... and you are right, excessive eating during fatoor in ramadhan is very harmful to our bodies ans souls.
This is my favourite sheikh
Why? He’s a liar
@@Saber23how?? That's a serious claim
@@jaegeredits1531 what do you mean “how” he’s a madkhali/Wahhabi fool, it’s not a serious claim at all its common knowledge for those who do any research that he’s a bough and paid for scholar of the Saudi government, not to mention he’s one of those “don’t talk about what happened between the Sahabah” types even though it’s important to know history and the TRUTH, may Allah guide you away from such individuals
@@jaegeredits1531 what do you mean “how” he’s a madkhali/Wahhabi fool, it’s not a serious claim at all its common knowledge for those who do any research that he’s a bough and paid for scholar of the Saudi government, not to mention he’s one of those “don’t talk about what happened between the Sahabah” types even though it’s important to know history and the TRUTH, may Allah guide you away from such individuals
@@jaegeredits1531 this saber guy is a shia commenting on people making fake claims.
@Bobby's Perspective study Omar and Abubakir atleast of the sahaba. they're extremely important (ofcourse if you are done with the Sirah)
Alhamdulillah ❤️
My brothers I need learn English my English is not good
Ramsan Mubarak brother bobby
Ramadan Mubarak bro
SUBHANALLAH ❤
Taraweeh is recommended. Not mandatory
taraweeh is sunnah. When Umar (ra) saw that people are praying taraweeh anyway, in the very single mosque, but some separately and some in smaller jama'ah, he ruled that, instead of so many separate jama'ah we do one single jama'ah. He didn't make it obligatory. People were praying taraweeh anyway, he just turned it into one single jama'ah.
In some mosques in my country they offer two taraweeh in the very single mosque (in those multi storeyed mosques, the do the two taraweeh in different floors). One for the people who wants to pray longer taraweeh and listen to more of the quran, and another shorter jama'ah where they shorten the recitation from the quran, for people in a hurry or people who can't stay longer.
Juz a light meal whether suhoor or iftar, plain water and dates but obviously only a few can follow the prophet diet, juz keep it less in preparing the meal..😊😊😊
Because Bilal use to do Azan for night prayer. And other fellow do to fajar Azan then he use to stop eat.
I recently heard at a Khutba at my local mosque that we should stop eating something like 10-20 minutes before the Dawn prayer
Ramadhaan mubaraq brother bobby.
Afaik itikaaf is done in isoation and he used to tigten his belt for the lasy 10 days and stayed away from his wives. 1st time i hear his wives were with hin at the masjied for it.
Regarding Taraweeh , it is the month of the quraan. I used to go to mosque to listen and derive benefit from listening to the entire quraan.
These days though less are completing the quraan so i read 8-12 rakaats then go home and recite quraan to try and complete it and maybe study tafseer.
One could argue the taraweeh is an innovation but i think for the purpose of deriving benefit it is a good way to spend the night in prayer reciting the quraan. Allah knows best and may he accept our efforts.
“But what did he eat” fr tho subhanAllah🤣🤣
Hello Bobbay, the means of delaying Suhoor is you can eat till the last minute before Azan of Fajar or we should do our Suhoor in that way to finish it just a minute or two before azan.
Alhamdulillah
"Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarrright guys"
Taraweeh is voluntary.
The Prophet PBUH broke his fast on fresh dates and water.
Muslims fought many battles throughout history (and were victorious) during Ramadan while fasted. Some of the most important ones, too, turning points in history like Hatin and Ain Jalit.
Read about where and how simply wives of رسول الله محمد صل الله عليه و سلم lived and you will understand.
Salam brother,,Ramadan Mubarak...watch the seerah of prophet Mohammad by bilal assad for you to know more about our RASUL saw...may ALLAH bless us all.
I played competitive tennis and used to work out quite regularly. I have found over the years that while fasting I would get pretty hungry and tired in the afternoon while doing computer office. However when I've played tennis while fasting the feeling was absolutely amazingly exhilarating - I completely forgot that I was fasting and I felt a high like I was on drugs (even though I have never actually tried drugs ever). I have to stress that this is competitive tennis at the satellite level and not just recreationally batting the ball around and so there is a certain level of cardiovascular effort. I have tried weight training during fasting and yes as you pointed out it was not the same exhilarating experience at all, especially afterwards during the recovery stage.
**For your first question: eating 10 minutes before the Fajr adhan**
This is a kind of bid’ah (innovation) which has no basis in the Sunnah. Rather the Sunnah is to do the opposite, because Allah says in the Qur'an
“and eat and drink until the white thread (light) of dawn appears to you distinct from the black thread (darkness of night).” [al-Baqarah 2:187]
And Al-Bukhari (1919) and Muslim (1092) narrated from Ibn ‘Umar and ‘Aishah that Bilal used to give the adhan at night. The Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said: “Eat and drink until Ibn Umm Maktum gives the adhan, for he does not give the adhan until dawn comes.”
It is recommended to delay suhur and it is not recommended to stop eating and drinking a while before Fajr. Allah has permitted those who intend to fast to eat and drink until they are certain that dawn has come. Proof for the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) saying to delay the suhur is in Ṣaḥīḥ Ibn Ḥibbān 1770 and Musnad Aḥmad 21312
**For your second question: Did the Sahaabah (may Allah be pleased with them) fast on the day of Badr?**
The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) used to instruct his companions (may Allah be pleased with them) to break their fast when they drew close to their enemy, so that they would have more strength to fight. Breaking the fast when meeting the enemy in battle is one of the means of strength.
Muslim (1120) narrated that Abu Sa‘eed al-Khudri (may Allah be pleased with him) said: We travelled with the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) to Makkah when we were fasting. We made a stop, and the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “You have drawn near to your enemy, and breaking the fast will make you stronger.” This was a concession, so some of us fasted and some did not. Then we made another stop and he said: “In the morning, you are going to meet your enemy. And breaking the fast will make you stronger, so break the fast.” He emphasized it (the second time), so we broke the fast..
Al-Haafiz Ibn Rajab al-Hanbali (may Allah have mercy on him) stated that definitively and said: Ramadan was made obligatory for the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) in 2 AH, which was the first Ramadan that he fasted, and the Muslims fasted it with him. Then the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) went out in pursuit of a caravan of Quraysh that had come from Syria heading towards Madinah, on the Saturday 12th of Ramadan, and he broke his fast on his way to meet it. Ibn al-Musayyab said : ‘Umar said: We went out on two campaigns with the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) in Ramadan, the day of Badr and the conquest (of Makkah), and we broke the fast during both. End quote.
Lataa’if al-Ma‘aarif (p. 177)
What is more likely to be the case is that the Sahaabah (may Allah be pleased with them) broke the fast when they set out to meet the enemy on the day of Badr, because that would be of greater help to them in their jihad against their enemy.
**For your third question: Is Taraweeh bid'ah? Is it waajib or sunnah?**
Allow me to clarify the concept of bid'ah: Firstly, bid'ah refers to an innovation in Islam. Therefore, inventions such as cars and microphones do not fall under the category of bid'ah in the religion of Allah, despite the misconception held by some individuals. Secondly, it's essential to note that bid'ah should not have its roots or origins in Islam. And thirdly, individuals who engage in bid'ah may believe that it brings them closer to Allah.
Tarawih prayer is Sunnah according to the consensus of the Muslims, as Al-Nawawi (may Allah have mercy on him) said in Al-Majmu’.
Tarawih prayer was encouraged by the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him), for example when he said: “Whoever spends the nights of Ramadan in prayer out of faith and in the hope of reward, his previous sins will be forgiven.” Narrated by Al-Bukhari, 37; Muslim, 760
Taraweeh in congregation is a practice that is proven from the Sunnah. It is reported that Umm al-Mo'mineen 'Aisha (May Allaah be pleased with her) said that the Messenger of Allaah (Peace and Blessings of Allaah be upon him) had led the people in Taraweeh for three nights, and that he stopped on the fourth night saying that he stopped because he feared that this prayer may become obligatory on his people. [Al-Bukhari (1129) and Muslim (761)]
Tarawih is a confirmed Sunnah not compulsory. So, if a Muslim does not pray Tarawih, there is no sin on him for that, whether he has an excuse or not.
*Fourth question: segregation in masjid**
The meeting together, mixing, and intermingling of men and women in one place, the crowding of them together, and the revealing and exposure of women to men are prohibited by the Shari'ah. Among the many proofs of prohibition of the meeting and mixing of men and women in the Quran and Sunnah are: Surat al-Ahzab Ayah 53
The Prophet (May peace and blessings be upon him) enforced separation of men and women even at Allah’s most revered and preferred place, the mosque. This was accomplished via the separation of the women’s rows from the men’s; men were asked to stay in the mosque after completion of the obligatory prayer so that women will have enough time to leave the mosque; and, a special door was assigned to women. Evidence of the foregoing are:
Umm Salamah (May Allah be pleased with her) said that after Allah’s Messenger (May peace and blessings be upon him) said "as-Salamu ‘Alaykum wa Rahmatullah’ twice announcing the end of prayer, women would stand up and leave. He would stay for a while before leaving. Ibn Shihab said that he thought that the staying of the Prophet (May peace and blessings be upon him) was in order for the women to be able to leave before the men who wanted to depart." Narrated by al-Bukhari under No. 793.
Abu Dawood under No. 876 narrates the same hadith in Kitab al-Salaat under the title "Insiraaf an-Nisaa’ Qabl al-Rijaal min al-Salaah" (Departure of Women before Men after the Prayer). Ibn ‘Umar said that Allah’s Messenger (May peace and blessings be upon him) said: "We should leave this door (of the mosque) for women." Naafi’ said: "Ibn ‘Umar never again entered through that door until he died." Narrated by Abu Dawood under No. 484 in "Kitab as-Salah" under the Chapter entitled: "at-Tashdid fi Thalik".
Abu Hurayrah said that the Prophet (May peace and blessings be upon him) said: ""The best of the men’s rows is the first and the worst is the last, and the best of the women’s rows is the last and the worst in the first." Narrated by Muslim under No. 664.
Women can also observe I'tikaf in the masjid as the wives of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) asked him for permission to observe i’tikaf in the mosque and he gave them permission, and they used to observe i’tikaf in the mosque after he died. And of course its segregated.
**Question on what the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) broke his fast with**
Abu Dawood (2356) and at-Tirmidhi (696) narrated that Anas (may Allah be pleased with him) said: The Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) used to break his fast with fresh dates before praying. If no fresh dates were available, he would break his fast with dried dates, and if none were available, he would break his fast with a few sips of water.
Classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in Saheeh Abi Dawood.
So inshallah break your fast with dates and if there is not any, then drink water.
May Allaah keep you firm upon His religion
Assalm aleikum bobby ramadan kareem. About taraweh it is not mandatory if you pray taraweh Allah will rewards you and if you don't pray it there is nothing bad it is not a sin if you don't pray ramadan. This what i learn about in islam Allahu ya'alam ( Allah knows better)
Allah doesn’t reward you for bidah and that’s exactly what taraweeh is, Umar invented it and then it became a “sunnah” this is why I can never be a Sunni you people aren’t open to real history at all, you always distort it to affirm your own beliefs, the Prophet never prayed Taraweeh so it CANNOT be a “sunnah”
For me no problem do hard work and fast. Only mental need strong. We have enough energy.
As me and my parents do as the Prophet saw also did was break our fast a few minutes after Maghrib (because it says in the Quran to break your fast when it is night and adhan of Maghrib isn’t *really* night yet) with dates and ayran/lebene. The prophet would instead drink water or milk, it’s more cultural to have a yoghurt drink as it is high in sodium and gives lots of energy after breaking the fast with the dates. After this we pray Maghrib and then have isha (dinner).
It’s “well known” that the prophet would eat moderately with some bread, honey, dates, olives, milk but wouldn’t indulge like many do nowadays.
Yes, the battle of Bader was during Ramadan, and the Muslims were fasting during it.
Taraweeh is not Mandatory, but it is highly recommended.
The battle of badr happened in 2nd year Hijra during the month of Ramadan
The fasting of Ramadan was legislated that year
Some Muslims were fasting and some weren’t, depending on their abilities for fighting and traveling
Tarawih its not mandatory is just sunnah people do it to add on their good deeds