Numbers
of rak’ahs in Taraaweeh prayer
Question
have asked
this earlier but did not get a satisfactory
answer. My question is about Taraweeh Prayer in
Ramadan. You have answered to me in a question
before that Taraweeh should not be more that 11
rakat. It has been authentically reported that
Muhammad SAAW prayed Taraweeh 3 times in Ramadan
and it consisted 11 Rakah. Also the book by Shaykh
Naasir-ud-Din Al-Albani (May Allah have mercy on
him)، Qiyam and Taraweeh states that
Taraweeh should be 11 Rakah. The sunnah is 11
Rakat. Now the question which is confusing and
often becomes a discussion among brothers is
whether the number of Rakat in Taraweeh should be
11 Rakat or 20 Rakat. Some people during Ramadan
go to masjids where the Imam does 11 Rakats and
other go to Masjids where the Imam does 20 Rakats.
In most of the Hanafi Masjids around the US the
Imam does 20 Rakat. The point to note is whether
20 Rakat or 11 Rakat the Imam completes the entire
Qurran during Ramadan. The people are very
sentitive about this issue and this issue becomes
a topic in gathering in the United States. The
people who pray 20 Rakat blame the other groug
praying 11 as being wrong and the group praying 11
Rakat blames the group praying 20 as wrong. This
is a big fitnah in the US. This leads to disunity.
People always quote that in Prophets Mosque the
Imam prays 20 Rakats and also in Masjid-ul-Haraam
in Mecca the Imam prays 20 Rakat. Also those who
during Ramadan go to Saudi Arabia for Umrah say
that the Imam prays 20 Rakat. This is a confusion.
Please answer and explain to me the following
issues:
1. The sunnah is to pray 11 Rakat then why is
Prophets mosque in Medina and also in
Masdid-ul-Haram the imam leads the people to pray
20 Rakat? Why? Why is this different from the
sunnah?
2. Why are the number of Rakat of Taraweeh in
Prophets mosque and Masjid-ul-Haraam 20 Rakat?
Please explain to us so.
:
Answer:
We
do not think that the Muslims should be so sensitive
with regard to issues that are the matter of
scholarly differences or make them the cause of
division and fitnah among the Muslims.
Shaykh
Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may Allaah have mercy on
him) said, when speaking about the matter of one who
prays ten rak’ahs with the imam, then sits down
and waits for Witr and does not complete the
Taraaweeh prayers with the imam:
It
grieves us deeply that we find in the Muslim ummah a
group which differs concerning matters in which
differences of opinion are acceptable, and they take
these differences as a means to cause division.
Differences within the ummah existed at the time of
the Sahaabah, yet they remained united. The youth in
particular and to all those who are committed to
Islam must remain united, because they have enemies
who are laying in wait.
Al-Sharh
al-Mumti’, 4/225
Two
groups have gone to extremes with regard to this
matter. The first group denounced everyone who prays
more than eleven rak’ahs and said that doing so
was bid’ah. The second group denounced those who
do only eleven rak’ahs and said that they are
going against scholarly consensus (ijmaa’).
Let
us listen to what Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may
Allaah have mercy on him) said:
Here
we say that we should not go to extremes or be
negligent. Some people go to extremes in adhering to
the number mentioned in the Sunnah, and say that it
is not permissible to do more than the number
mentioned in the Sunnah, and they aggressively
denounce those who do more than that, saying that
they are sinners.
This
is undoubtedly wrong. How can they be sinners, when
the Prophet SAWS (peace and blessings of Allaah be
upon him), upon being asked about night prayers,
said that they are to be done two by two, and he did
not specify any particular number? Of course
the one who asked him about the night prayer did not
know the number, because if he did not know how to
do it, it is even more likely that he did not know
the number. And he was not one of those who served
the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) so that
we might say that he knew what happened inside his
house. Since the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) told him
how to do it but did not say how many times, it may
be understood that the matter is broad in scope, and
that a person may pray one hundred rak’ahs then
pray Witr with one rak’ah.
With
regard to the words of the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him), “Pray
as you have seen me praying”, this does not apply
in absolute terms even for these people. Hence they
do not say that a person should pray Witr with five
rak’ahs sometimes and with seven rak’ahs
sometimes and with nine rak’ahs sometimes. If we
understand it in absolute terms, then we would have
to pray Witr with five rak’ahs sometimes and with
seven rak’ahs sometimes and with nine rak’ahs
sometimes. But what is meant by the hadeeth is pray
as you have seen me praying with regard to how to
pray not how many rak’ahs, unless there is a text
to state what the number is.
Whatever
the case, a person should not be strict with people
with regard to a matter that is broad in scope. We
have even seen some brothers who are strict on this
matter accusing the imams who pray more than eleven
rak’ahs of following bid’ah, and they leave the
mosque, thus missing out on the reward of which the
Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said:
“Whoever stands with the imam until he finishes
(the prayer), the reward of qiyaam al-layl will be
recorded for him.” (Narrated by al-Tirmidhi, 806;
classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in Saheeh al-Tirmidhi,
646). Some of them even sit down after completing
ten rak’ahs, thus breaking up the rows of
worshippers by sitting there, and sometimes they
start talking and disturb the people who are
praying.
We
have no doubt that their intentions are good and
they are doing their best to come to the right
conclusion, but that does not mean that they are
correct.
The
other group does the opposite. They sternly denounce
those who pray only eleven rak’ahs and say that
they have gone against scholarly consensus. Allaah
says (interpretation of the meaning):
“And
whoever contradicts and opposes the Messenger
(Muhammad) after the right path has been shown
clearly to him, and follows other than the
believers’ way, We shall keep him in the path he
has chosen, and burn him in Hell — what an evil
destination!”
[al-Nisa’
4:115]
All
the generations who came before you only knew the
number as twenty-three rak’ahs, and they denounce
anyone who says anything different.
Al-Sharh
al-Mumti’, 4/73-75
With
regard to the evidence quoted by those who say that
it is not permissible to do more than eight
rak’ahs in Taraaweeh, they quote the hadeeth of
Abu Salamah ibn ‘Abd al-Rahmaan, who asked
‘Aa’ishah (may Allaah be pleased with her),
“How did the Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) pray
during Ramadaan?” She said: “He did not pray
more than eleven rak’ahs in Ramadaan or at other
times. He would pray four, and do not ask how
beautiful and long they were, then he would pray
four, and do not ask how beautiful and long they
were, then he would pray three. I said, ‘O
Messenger of Allaah, will you sleep before you pray
Witr?’ He said, ‘O ‘Aa’ishah, my eyes sleep
but my heart does not.’”
Narrated
by al-Bukhaari, 1909; Muslim, 738
They
said: This hadeeth indicates that the Messenger of
Allaah was consistent in his prayers at night in
Ramadaan and at other times.
The
scholars refuted this use of the hadeeth as evidence
by saying that this is what the Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) did, but
the fact that he did something does not imply that
it is obligatory.
The
evidence that there is no set number for prayers at
night – which include Taraaweeh – is the hadeeth
of Ibn ‘Umar according to which a man asked the
Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) about
prayer at night. The Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said:
“Prayers at night are to be offered two by two
(two rak’ahs at a time). If any of you fears that
the time of dawn is approaching then let him pray
one rak’ah as Witr.”
(Narrated
by al-Bukhaari, 846; Muslim, 749)
If
we look at what the scholars of the prominent
schools of thought said, you will clearly see that
this matter is broad in scope and that there is
nothing wrong with doing more than eleven rak’ahs.
Al-Sarkhasi,
who is one of the imams of the Hanafi school, said:
It
is twenty rak’ahs, apart from Witr, in our view.
Al-Mabsoot,
2/145
Ibn
Qudaamah said:
The
favoured view according to Abu ‘Abd-Allaah (i.e.,
Imam Ahmad, may Allaah have mercy on him), is that
it is twenty rak’ahs. This was the view of al-Thawri,
Abu Hanfeefah and al-Shaafa’i. Maalik said it is
thirty-six.
Al-Mughni,
1/457
Al-Nawawi
said:
Taraaweeh
prayer is Sunnah according to scholarly consensus.
Our view is that it is twenty rak’ahs with ten
tasleems, and it is permissible to pray it
individually or in congregation.
Al-Majmoo’,
4/31
These
are the views of the four imams concerning the
number of rak’ahs of Taraaweeh prayer. All of them
said something more than eleven rak’ahs. Perhaps
the reasons why they said something more than eleven
rak’ahs include the following:
1-
They
thought that the hadeeth of ‘Aa’ishah did not
mean that this was the specific number.
2-
A
greater number was narrated from many of the salaf.
See
al-Mughni, 2/604; al-Majmoo’, 4/32
3-
The
Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) used to
pray eleven rak’ahs and make them very lengthy, so
much so that it used to take him most of the night.
Indeed, one night in which the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) led his
companions in praying Taraaweeh, he did not end his
prayer until just before dawn, and the Sahaabah
feared that they would miss suhoor. The Sahaabah
(may Allaah be pleased with them) loved to pray
behind the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) and they
did not feel that it was too long. The scholars
thought that if the imam made the prayer so long,
this would be too difficult for the members of the
congregation and that might put them off. So they
thought that the imam should make the recitation
shorter and increase the number of rak’ahs.
The
point is that the one who prays eleven rak’ahs in
the manner narrated from the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) is doing
well and is following the Sunnah. Whoever makes the
recitation shorter and increases the number of
rak’ahs is also doing well. A person who does
either of these two things is not to be denounced.
Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah said:
If
a person prays Taraaweeh according to the madhhabs
of Abu Haneefah, al-Shaafa’i and Ahmad, with
twenty rak’ahs, or according to the madhhab of
Maalik, with thirty-six rak’ahs, or with thirteen
or eleven rak’ahs, he has done well, as Imam Ahmad
said, because there is nothing to specify the
number. So the greater or lesser number of rak’ahs
depends on how long or short the qiyaam (standing in
the prayer) is.
Al-Ikhtiyaaraat,
p. 64
Al-Suyooti
said:
What
is narrated in the saheeh and hasan ahaadeeth is the
command to observe night prayers during Ramadaan,
which is encouraged without specifying a particular
number. It is not proven that the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) prayed
twenty rak’ahs of Taraaweeh, rather that he prayed
at night, with an unspecified number of rak’ahs.
Then he delayed it on the fourth night lest it
become obligatory for them and they might not be
able to do it. Ibn Hajar al-Haythami said: There is
no saheeh report that the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) prayed
twenty rak’ahs of Taraaweeh. The narration which
suggests that he “used to pray twenty rak’ahs”
is extremely weak (da’eef).
Al-Mawsoo’ah
al-Fiqhiyyah, 27/142-145
So
you should not be surprised that people pray
Taraaweeh as twenty rak’ahs. There have been
generation after generation of those imams (who used
to pray twenty rak’ahs), and all of them are good.
And
Allaah knows best.
End
quote, from Fataawa al-Lajnah al-Daa’imah,
10/102.
Taken
from http://63.175.194.25/index.php?ln=eng&ds=qa&lv=browse&QR=9036&dgn=4
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