Etiquette and Sunnah of fasting

Some aspects are obligatory (waajib) and others are recommended
(mustahabb).

We should make sure that we eat and drink something at suhoor, and that
we delay
it until just before the adhaan of Fajr. The Prophet (peace and
blessings of Allaah
be upon him) said: “Have suhoor, for in suhoor there is blessing
(barakah).”
(Reported by al-Bukhaari, Fath, 4/139). “Suhoor is blessed food, and it
involves being
different from the people of the Book. What a good suhoor for the
believer is
dates.” (Reported by Abu Dawood, no. 2345; Saheeh al-Targheeb, 1/448).

Not delaying iftaar, because the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah
be upon
him) said: “The people will be fine so long as they do not delay
iftaar.” (Reported by
al-Bukhaari, Fath, 4/198).

Breaking one's fast in the manner described in the hadeeth narrated by
Anas (may
Allaah be pleased with him): “The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah
be upon
him) used to break his fast with fresh dates before praying; if fresh
dates were not
available, he would eat (dried) dates; if dried dates were not
available, he would
have a few sips of water.” (Reported by al-Tirmidhi, 3/79 and others. He
said it is a ghareeb
hasan hadeeth. Classed as saheeh in al-Irwa’, no. 922).

After iftaar, reciting the words reported in the hadeeth narrated by Ibn
‘Umar (may
Allaah be pleased with them both), according to which the Prophet (peace
and
blessings of Allaah be upon him), when he broke his fast, would say:
“Dhahaba
al-zama’, wa’btallat al-‘urooq, wa thabat al-ajru in sha Allaah (Thirst
is gone,
veins are flowing again, and the reward is certain, in sha Allaah).”
(Reported by Abu
Dawood, 2/765; its isnaad was classed as hasan by al-Daaraqutni, 2/185).

Keeping away from sin, because the Prophet (peace and blessings of
Allaah be
upon him) said: “When any of you is fasting, let him not commit sin…”
(Reported by
al-Bukhaari, al-Fath, no. 1904). The Prophet (peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon
him) said: “Whoever does not stop speaking falsehood and acting in
accordance
with it, Allaah has no need of him giving up his food and drink.”
(Al-Bukhaari,
al-Fath, no. 1903). The person who is fasting should avoid all kinds of
haraam
actions, such as backbiting, obscenity and lies, otherwise his reward
may all be lost.
The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “It may be
that a
fasting person gets nothing from his fast except hunger.” (Reported by
Ibn Maajah,
1/539; Saheeh al-Targheeb, 1/453).

Among the things that can destroy one’s hasanaat (good deeds) and bring
sayi’aat
(bad deeds) is allowing oneself to be distracted by quiz-shows, soap
operas, movies
and sports matches, idle gatherings, hanging about in the streets with
evil people
and time-wasters, driving around for no purpose, and crowding the
streets and
sidewalks, so that the months of tahajjud, dhikr and worship, for many
people,
becomes the month of sleeping in the day so as to avoid feeling hungry,
thus
missing their prayers and the opportunity to pray them in congregation,
then
spending their nights in entertainment and indulging their desires. Some
people even
greet the month with feelings of annoyance, thinking only of the
pleasures they will
miss out on. In Ramadaan, some people travel to kaafir lands to enjoy a
holiday!
Even the mosques are not free from such evils as the appearance of women

wearing makeup and perfume, and even the Sacred House of Allaah is not
free of
these ills. Some people make the month a season for begging, even though
they are
not in need. Some of them entertain themselves with dangerous fireworks
and the
like, and some of them waste their time in the markets, wandering around
the
shops, or sewing and following fashions. Some of them put new products
and new
styles in their stores during the last ten days of the month, to keep
people away
from earning rewards and hasanaat.

Not allowing oneself to be provoked, because the Prophet (peace and
blessings of
Allaah be upon him) said: “If someone fights him or insults him, he
should say, ‘I
am fasting, I am fasting.’” (Reported by al-Bukhaari and others.
Al-Fath, no. 1894) One
reason for this is to remind himself, and another reason is to remind
his adversary.
But anyone who looks at the conduct of many of those who fast will see
something
quite different. It is essential to exercise self-control and be calm,
but we see the
opposite among crazy drivers who speed up when they hear the adhaan for
Maghrib.

(*) Not eating too much, because the Prophet (peace and blessings of
Allaah be
upon him) said: “The son of Adam fills no worse vessel than his
stomach.”
(Reported by al-Tirmidhi, no. 2380; he said, this is a hasan saheeh
hadeeth). The wise person
wants to eat to live, not live to eat. The best type of food is that
which is there to
be used, not that which is there to be served. But people indulge in
making all kinds
of food (during Ramadaan) and treating food preparation as a virtual art
form, so
that housewives and servants spend all their time on making food, and
this keeps
them away from worship, and people spend far more on food during
Ramadaan
than they do ordinarily. Thus the month becomes the month of
indigestion, fatness
and gastric illness, where people eat like gluttons and drink like
thirsty camels, and
when they get up to pray Taraaweeh, they do so reluctantly, and some of
them
leave after the first two rak’ahs.

(*) Being generous by sharing knowledge, giving money, using one’s
position of
authority or physical strength to help others, and having a good
attitude.
Al-Bukhaari and Muslim reported that Ibn ‘Abbaas (may Allaah be pleased
with
him) said: “The Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be
upon him)
was the most generous of people [in doing good], and he was most
generous of all
in Ramadaan when Jibreel met with him, and he used to meet him every
night in
Ramadaan and teach him the Qur’aan. The Messenger of Allaah (peace and
blessings of Allaah be upon him) was more generous in doing good than a
blowing
wind.” (Reported by al-Bukhaari, al-Fath, no. 6). How can people
exchange generosity
for stinginess and action for laziness, to the extent that they do not
do their work
properly and do not treat one another properly, and they use fasting as
an excuse
for all this.

Combining fasting with feeding the poor is one of the means of reaching
Paradise,
as the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “In
Paradise there
are rooms whose outside can be seen from the inside and the inside can
be seen
from the outside. Allaah has prepared them for those who feed the poor,
who are
gentle in speech, who fast regularly and who pray at night when people
are asleep.”
(Reported by Ahmad 5/343; Ibn Khuzaymah, no. 2137. Al-Albaani said in
his footnote, its isnaad is
hasan because of other corroborating reports). The Prophet (peace and
blessings of Allaah
be upon him) said: “Whoever gives food to a fasting person with which to
break his
fast, will have a reward equal to his, without it detracting in the
slightest from the
reward of the fasting person.” (Reported by al-Tirmidhi, 3/171; Saheeh
al-Targheeb, 1/451).
Shaykh al-Islam [Ibn Taymiyah] (may Allaah have mercy on him) said:
“What is
meant is that he should feed him until he is satisfied.”
(Al-Ikhtiyaaraat al-Fiqhiyyah, p.
109).

A number of the Salaf (may Allaah have mercy on them) preferred the poor
over
themselves when feeding them at the time of iftaar. Among these were
‘Abd-Allaah
ibn ‘Umar, Maalik ibn Deenaar, Ahmad ibn Hanbal and others. ‘Abd-Allaah
ibn
‘Umar would not break his fast unless there were orphans and poor people
with
him.

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