Taking An Animal As A Sutra?

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Taking An Animal As A Sutra?
MuSLiMa
11/23/00 at 14:59:06
I never thought an animal could be taken as a sutra until i read the following hadith:

[i]Bukhari 1:422[/i]
[Narrated Nafi']: "I saw Ibn 'Umar [radiyallahu 3anhu] offering Salat [prayer] while taking his camel [as a Sutra] in front of him and he said, "I saw the Prophet [sallallahu 3alayhi wa sallam] doing the same."

My understanding is that you cannot take a donkey or a woman or a black dog as a sutra, and Allah knows best.
NS
Re: Taking An Animal As A Sutra?
bhaloo
11/23/00 at 18:47:24
slm

Good to see you posting again sister Suha.  I came across this from Sheikh Munajidd, insha'Allah this helps answer your concern.

Praise be to Allaah.

With regard to the idea that a person’s prayer is invalidated if a woman, donkey or black dog passes in front of him, this is correct.

It was reported from ‘Abd-Allaah ibn al-Saamit that Abu Dharr said: “The Messenger of Allaah  (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: ‘If any one of you stands up to pray, then he has a sutrah [an item placed in front of a praying person as a “screen”] if he has something the height of the back of a saddle in front of him. If he does not have something the height of the back of a saddle in front of him, then his prayer is invalidated if a donkey or a woman or a black dog passes in front of him.’” I [‘Abd-Allaah] asked, “O Abu Dharr, what is the difference between a black dog and a red or yellow dog?” He said, “O son of my brother, I asked the Messenger of Allaah  (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) the same question, and he said, ‘The black dog is a shaytaan (devil).’” (Narrated by Muslim, 510).

The height of the back of a saddle is one cubit or 2/3 of a cubit.

But this ruling applies only when one of these three pass in front of the imaam or a person who is praying on his own, not when they pass between the rows of a congregation praying behind the imaam during prayer in jamaa’ah, as the sister who asked the question thinks.

The evidence for that is the report in which ‘Abd-Allaah ibn ‘Abbaas said: “I came along riding on a female donkey one day when I had just reached the age of puberty. The Messenger of Allaah  (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) was leading the people in prayer in Mina, without any kind of wall in front of him. I passed in front of part of the row, then I got down and sent the donkey to graze, and joined the row, and no one rebuked me for that.” (Narrated by al-Bukhaari, 472; Muslim, 504)

Imaam al-Bukhaari gave this hadeeth the heading of “Sutrat al-Imaam sutrat man khalfahu (the sutrah of the imaam is the sutrah of those behind him).” This hadeeth clearly proves our point, which is that the person who is praying behind the imaam does not have to have a sutrah, and it does not matter what passes in front of him, especially since Ibn ‘Abbaas passed in front of them with his donkey, which is one of the things which invalidates prayer if it passes in front of the imaam or a person who is praying on his own.

Ibn ‘Abd al-Barr said:

This hadeeth – i.e., the hadeeth narrated by al-Bukhaari (487) and Muslim (505) from Abu Sa’eed al-Khudri which says “If any one of you is praying, he should not let anyone pass in front of him. Let him push him away as much as he can, and if he insists then let him fight him, for he is nothing but a shaytaan (devil)” – indicates that it is makrooh to pass in front of a person who is praying if he is praying on his own and without a sutrah. The same ruling applies to the imaam if he is praying without a sutrah. But with regard to the person who is praying behind the imaam, it does not matter what passes in front of him, just as it does not matter what passes in front of the imaam or person praying alone if it passes behind the sutrah. The sutrah of the imaam is also the sutrah of those who are praying behind him.

We say this concerning the imaam and the person who prays alone, because the Prophet  (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said, “If any one of you is praying…” According to the scholars, this means praying on his own, because of the hadeeth of Ibn ‘Abbaas. Hence we say that the person who is praying behind the imaam does not have to push away the person who passes in front of him, because Ibn ‘Abbaas said:  “I came along riding on a female donkey one day when I had just reached the age of puberty. The Messenger of Allaah  (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) was leading the people in prayer in Mina, without any kind of wall in front of him. I passed in front of part of the row, then I got down and sent the donkey to graze, and joined the row, and no one rebuked me for that.”

(al-Tamheed, 4/187)

On this basis, the sister who asked this question, and other people, do not have to push away anyone who passes in front of them if they are praying behind the imaam, and there is no sin on the person who passes in front of the row if this is done  for a reason. Pushing a person away and preventing them from passing in front is to be done by the imaam or the person who is praying alone, if a person wants to pass between him and his sutrah. And Allaah knows best.
NS


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