
One of the many observances that are related exclusively to Ramadan, particularly to it’s last ten days, is I’tikaf. The basic aim of I’tikaf is that the bondsman continued at the door of the Almighty, i.e.; in the corner of a mosque, cutting himself aloof from the world and devoting his time wholly to prayer and worship. It is the worship of the favorite worship of the bondsman of the Lord. Evidently, no time could be more appropriate for it than the month of Ramadan, especially it’s ten days since the night of power lies in it.
The powerful
urge that had seized the Prophet
before the revelation of the
Qur’an to seek solitude and spend his time mostly in prayer and
meditation, and , in consequence of which, he used to pass several
months on end in the Cave of Hira - this, so to speak was the first
I’tikaf of the Prophet
, and it was in that that his
spirituality had evolved to the stage that marked the beginning of
the revelation of the Qur’an. During the last ten days of this I’tikaf, Gabriel (as) came to him with the opening verse of the
Surah of Iqra. Beyond doubt and for certain it was the month of
Ramadan, it’s last ten days, and the night was the Night of Power.
The last ten days of Ramadan have, thus, been set apart for
I’tikaf.
The fasts of Ramadan have been prescribed for all Muslims for the development of the soul and for enabling it to subdue the carnal appetites. In other words, this much exertion and sacrifice of sensual desires has been made obligatory for every Muslim that he neither ate nor drank anything nor sought sexual satisfaction during the whole of the blessed month, in compliance with the command of Allah (SWT) and with the intention of paying divine honors to Him, and, along with it avoided all sinful acts and worthless things. It is the general, compulsory course of spiritual training and self-purification for the month of Ramadan. For higher upliftment and forging a closer affinity with the Celestial World we have I’tikaf.
In I’tikaf the
bondsman cuts himself away from everything and throws himself at the
threshold , or rather the feet oh his Lord and Creator. He remembers
Him, exalts His name and offers earnest repentance to Him, cries
over his sins and follies, entreats Him for mercy and forgiveness
and seeks His countenance and propinquity. His days and nights are
spent in that way. The holy Prophet
used to take special care
to observe I’tikaf during the Last ten days of Ramadan. Once when
he could not carry it out due to some reason, it observed it for
twenty days in the following Ramadan.
It is related on
the authority of Ayesha (RA) that "The Apostle of Allah
observed I’tikaf in the last ten days of Ramadan, till the end of
his life. After his death his wives continued with it."
[Bukhari and
Muslim]
Commentary; The
Prophet’s
wives observed I’tikaf in their apartments, and for women,
in general, the place where they celebrate the prayer-services at
home is the right place for I’tikaf. If there is no such place in
the house, arrangements should be made for it.
Anas narrates
the "The Apostle of Allah
observed I’tikaf during the last ten
days of Ramadan. One year he could not do the I’tikaf, and so in
the next year he did it for twenty days."
[Tirmidhi]
Commentary: It
is not stated in the above narrative of Anas (RA) why the
Prophet
could not observe I’tikaf in that year. But in another
tradition quoted in Nassai and Abu Dawood, on the authority of
Ubbi bin Ka’ab, it is told that once the Prophet (saw) had to
go on a journey during the last ten days of Ramadan, and therefore
he could not carry out the I’tikaf that year, but in the next year
he did it for twenty days.
It is further
mentioned in Sahih Bukhari, on the authority of Abu Hurairah
that the Prophet
had also observed I’tikaf for twenty days in
the month of Ramadan of the year in which he died. Perhaps the
Prophet
had received some indication that his hour of
departure from the world was near, and after it he naturally felt
more powerfully drawn to observances like I’tikaf.
Ayesh (RA) related to us that "The rules of Shari at for the M’otakif (i.e.: one who is in I’tikaf) are that he should neither go out to visit the sick nor attend a funeral nor have sexual intercourse nor engage in (love play) like kissing and embracing nor even step out of the Mosque for personal needs save those that are unavoidable (such as, answering the call of nature), and I’tikaf (should be observed only with fasting) - there can no I’tikaf without fasting - and it must be carried out in the jam’I masjid (bigger mosque where congregation is held regularly) and at no other place. [Abu Dawood]
Commentary: As
we have explained earlier, when a Companion says about a thing that
it is the Sunnah it denotes that it is what is prescribed in the
Sharia and the inference is that he had learned it from the sayings
or doings of the Prophet. The rules of I’tikaf delineated in the
above tradition, thus, fall within the category of the Prophet’s
commands and directives.
The term Jam’I masjid occurring in it means the "mosque of congregation", i.e., the mosque in which the five daily services are celebrated in congregation.
It is related by
Abdullah bin Abbas that the Apostle
of God said about the person who
is in I’tikaf that "(owing to I’tikaf and by reason of keeping
within the limits of the mosque) he is protected from sin and the
account of is virtues deeds goes on like that of any other virtues
bondsman and (they ) are put down in his Balance-sheet of
Deed."
[Ibn-I-Maja]
Commentary: When the bondsman confines himself in the mosque for I’tikaf, he makes a great addition to his virtuous deeds through prayer, Zikr (remembrance of God) and Tilawat (reciting Quran aloud) but, at the same time, he is prevented from performing certain acts of high moral and religious worth, as for instance, he cannot visit the sick or care for them which is a most meritorious act in the sight of God or work for the welfare of the weak, the indigent and the orphan and the widow or bathe the dead body which, is done with sincerity and there is the desire to earn the divine recompense, is a deed of much moral goodness. In the same way, he cannot go out to participate in the funeral service nor accompany the bier to the graveyard in doing which sin are forgiven at each step and good deeds are written in the Scroll of Deeds.
The above traditions, however gives, the glad tidings to the devotee observing I’tikaf that, by the command of God, all the good acts he used to perform normally but is kept away from performing owing to I’tikaf are written down in his Register of Deeds