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Fasting

What is Fasting?

Fasting, or Sawm, is the act of denying yourself food, drink and (for those of us who are married) sexual intercourse. Each day of fasting lasts from fajr (dawn) to maghrib (sunset). Although this may seem like an ordeal, it has many benefits:

When Can You Fast?

As you probably know, it is obligatory to fast during Ramadan. However, it is also good practice to fast on two particular days in the Hijri (Islamic) calender:

Fasting on these two occasions carry great rewards for those who can manage it. It is also good practice to fast on Mondays and Thursdays, the 13th, 14th and 15th day of each lunar month, the first 9 days of Dhul-Hijjah, the 15th day of the month of Shaaban, any six days of the month of Shawwal, fasting every other day like prophet Da'ud (peace be upon him).

Fasting any day of the year without a specific day is also encouraged, especially during the Hurum (holy) months which are Rajab, Dhul-Qi'dah, Dhul-Hijjah, & Muharram.

If you are unsure as to when these dates occur, you can either refer to the Islamic Calendar section of this site, or you can use the Hijri Date Converter. To use this, you simply enter the hijri date and press the appropriate button to give its Gregorian equivalent, or vice versa.

By far the most convenient method is to download Hijri Cal from DivineIslam.com. This is a small desktop program that displays the Hijri and Gregorian dates side-by-side in the form of a calendar, and which also allows the user to view any date directly. It is also very accurate, as it uses moon-phase data rather than an algorithm to calculate dates.

When CAN'T You Fast?

It is haram (forbidden) to fast:

Ramadan

It is obligatory for all Muslims to fast during the holy month of Ramadan, except for:

Those who are genuinely unable to fast for any part of Ramadan should either fast at a later date for each day missed (as explained in the ayat quoted below), or feed a poor person twice for each day, or pay them an amount equal to that.

Those who break the fast deliberately for no good reason should do the above, but multiplied by sixty (i.e. fast for sixty days, or feed sixty people, or pay an equal amount to that). This is known as qaffara (atonement).

What Breaks Your Fast?

Obviously, eating, drinking and sexual intercourse all break one's fast. However, there are a few grey areas that need clarification:

Hints for Fasting & Ramadan

  1. (fasting during Ramadan): The Holy Qur'an, 2:185 - The month of Ramadan is the one in which the Qur'an was sent down as a guidance for mankind, with clear signs containing guidance and discrimination. Any of you who are resident for the month should fast it. But any of you who are ill or on a journey should fast a number of other days. Allah desires ease for you, He does not desire difficulty for you. You should complete the number of days and proclaim Allah's greatness for the guidance He has given you so that hopefully you will be thankful. (return to 'Ramadan' reference)