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The Rules on Prayer & Fasting

  • Prayer
    • Obligatory Prayers
    • Daily Prayers
    • The time for fajr prayer
    • The time for ẓuhr and ‘aṣr prayer
    • The Time of Maghrib/‘Ishā’ Prayer
    • Rulings regarding the Times of Prayer
    • Order among prayers
    • Mustaḥabb prayers
    • Rulings about the Qiblah
    • The Coverage of Clothes in Prayer
    • Conditions of a Place for Prayer
    • Rulings on masjids
    • Adhān and Iqāmah
    • Obligatory Acts in Prayer
      • 1. Intention
      • 2. Being in a Standing Posture
      • 3. Takbīrah Al-iḥrām
      • 4. Recitation
      • 5. Rukū‘
      • 6. Sajdah
        • Objects on which sajdah is valid
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          Objects on which sajdah is valid

           

          264. The forehead should be placed on something on which sajdah is valid.
          265. Sajdah should be performed on earth or non-edible plants which grow on earth, including stone, soil, wood, leaves of trees and the like. Sajdah is not permissible on what is edible or worn, even though it may grow on the earth, such as cotton and wheat. Also, sajdah on minerals which are not considered earth, such as metals, glass, or the like, is invalid.
          266. Sajdah on marble and other stones which are used in building or decorating them is valid. Also, sajdah on agate, turquoise, dur (i.e. a gemstone) and the like is valid, but the mustaḥabb caution is not to prostrate on the last group.
          267. Prostrating on the brick, clay, gypsum, limestone, and cement is valid.
          268. Performing sajdah on what grows on earth and is served only as fodder for animals, such as grass, hay, etc., is valid.
          269. Sajdah on the green leaf of a tea plant is not valid based on obligatory caution, but sajdah on the leaf of the coffee tree, which is not edible itself, is valid.
          270. It is valid to make sajdah on flowers which are not eaten by human beings and also on medicinal herbs used only for treatment, such as violet flowers and hollyhocks. However, this is not true for plants which are consumed for other than treatment due to their medical benefits, such as flixweed and the like.
          271. Plants that are edible in some regions or by some people, while others do not eat them, are considered edible, and sajdah is not valid on them.
          272. Sajdah on a piece of paper made of wood and plants (except for flax and cotton) is valid.
          273. If a person does not have anything on which he is allowed to perform sajdah, or he has such a thing but cannot perform sajdah on it due to severe heat or cold, he should perform sajdah on his clothes or something else made of flax or cotton. By obligatory caution, if it is possible to prostrate on clothes made of cotton or flax, a person should not prostrate on clothes which are not made of cotton or flax. If, however, he does not have these things, he may perform sajdah on the back of his hand, by obligatory caution.
          274. While offering prayer, if one loses the object on which he is performing sajdah and he does not have anything else on which sajdah is valid, he should break the prayer if there is enough time. However, if the time for prayer is short, he should act according to the previous ruling.
          275. When a person has to observe taqiyyah, he can perform sajdah on a carpet or other similar objects, and it is not necessary for him to go somewhere else to perform the prayer. In case, however, he can perform sajdah in the same place on a straw mat, stone, or the like without any difficulty, he should do so by obligatory caution.
          276. If the turbah sticks to the forehead in the first sajdah, one should remove it from the forehead before the second sajdah; otherwise, there will be a problem with the prayer.
          277. The best object to use for sajdah is soil and earth, because it is a sign of humility before God, the Almighty, and no soil approaches the great merits of the blessed soil of the grave of Imam al-Husayn (a).
          278. Certain acts are mustaḥabb in sajdah:
          1. It is mustaḥabb to say takbīr before going into sajdah while the body is still.
          2. When the body is still after the first sajdah, it is mustaḥabb to say astaghfirullāha rabbī wa atūbu ilayh.
          3. To prolong the performing of sajdah, say dhikr, supplicate for one’s requests in this world and the hereafter, and recite ṣalawāt.
          4. To repeat dhikr of sajdah so that it is said an odd number of times.
          5. After performing sajdah, it is mustaḥabb to sit on one’s left thigh, placing the instep of the right foot on the sole of the left foot.
          6. It is mustaḥabb to say the dhikr biḥawlillāhi wa quwwatihi aqūmu wa aq‘ūd (by the power of God I get up and sit) while getting up for the next rak‘ah.
          279. It is disliked to recite the Qur’an in sajdah.
          280. It is forbidden to perform sajdah for anyone other than the Almighty God. Regarding placing the forehead on the earth before the last entrance to the shrine — i.e. under the dome — of the Imams (a), if this is done with the intention of prostrating to thank God Almighty, there is no problem with it; otherwise, it is forbidden.
        • Obligatory Sajdah for the Qur’an’s Recitation
      • 7. Tashahhud
      • 8. Salām
      • 9. Sequence (tartīb)
      • 10. Succession (muwālāt)
    • Qunūt
    • Prayer’s Ta‘qīb (Mustaḥabb Supplications/Dhikr Recited after Prayers)
    • Translation of the Prayer
    • What Invalidates the Prayer
    • Doubts in Prayer
    • Sajdah of Inadvertence
    • Qaḍā’ of Forgotten Sajdah and Tashahhud
    • A Traveler's Prayer
    • Qaḍā’ Prayers
    • Hire Prayers
    • Qaḍā’ Prayers for Parents
    • Āyāt Prayer
    • Congregational Prayers
    • The Friday Prayer
  • Fasting
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