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7_Sorrows
Guest
That is funny!
No, it would invalidate one’s fast. However, if someone has a serious condition, then they should consult a medical expert to check if it would be safe for them to fast.Can someone take water with medicine?
Yes, but it’s considered makruh (disliked) due to toothpaste.Can you brush your teeth?
I live in the UK, and I haven’t seen anyone faint yet.What is it like to not drink even water all day? I can’t imagine that. Also many Islamic countries are pretty hot. Do people faint?
LOL, that’s not a real ruling.I don’t know if it’s mainstream, but my Muslim friends forbid me from wearing perfume when they’re fasting because they believe that smelling perfume breaks their fast.
We know that the Prophet was familiar with Christianity, but fasting is common to almost all religions and cultures, so its not like Islam necessarily copied this tradition from Christian tradition.It’s 100% obvious that your prophet was familiar with Christians and how they fasted during Lent.
The Bristish travel writer, William Dalrymple, once expounded on several things Islam adopted from Syriac, Maronite, and Nestorian Christian traditions. From the Syriacs, prostrations, from Nestorians, calling Mary mother of Jesus instead of mother of God, from the Maronites, domes and slender church towers which became the staples of the Muslim mosque. The qibla (the niche facing Mecca) was adapted from the Syriac Christian practice of having an apse and bowing before it in prayer. Islam has also adopted many Christian saints such as Saint George, who became known to the Arabs under the title Jirjis al Khodor ( George the Green). The Muslims ask Saint George for babies. The back pews of Saint George’s church where I live are nearly always occupied by Muslims. They watch us celebrate Mass then proceed to light candles to the saint after we’re done.its not like Islam necessarily copied this tradition from Christian tradition.
It is indeed so! They put us to shame with our pitiful fasting practices. Even in the East, where the fast is stricter than in the Latin Church, the Muslims still outstrip us in the severity of their fasting. That’s why I’ve adopted it, but I’m worse off, since I start my fast from midnight and extend it nearly all day. A Muslim, on the other hand, would wake up in the night for souhour- the meal eaten before the fast starts.Ramadan seriously it can be vary challenging. Much more so than Lent, IMO.
This is wrong in Islam. And in Catholicism as well.that makes a rather loud and big deal out of the fact that she is fasting
She must have broken her fast the year before, and now she’s fasting extra in penance- it’s not something she should be proud of!She even announced that she was practice fasting two weeks before Ramadan
There are some superagatory fasts outside of the obligatory fasts of Ramadan, such as mid Shaban (two weeks before Ramadan).She must have broken her fast the year before, and now she’s fasting extra in penance- it’s not something she should be proud of!