Wudu order: the correct sequence of washing
Every prayer a Muslim performs begins with the same quiet act of preparation: washing. But wudu is not just rinsing your hands and face in whatever order feels
READ MOREEvery prayer a Muslim performs begins with the same quiet act of preparation: washing. But wudu is not just rinsing your hands and face in whatever order feels
READ MOREEating does not break wudu. That is the clear, well-established position in Islamic jurisprudence, and it applies to the vast majority of foods and drinks. There is, however,
READ MOREEvery prayer begins before the prayer mat. Wudu, the ritual ablution that prepares a Muslim for salah, is not simply a hygiene routine, it is an act of
READ MOREMany Muslims find themselves in situations where they want to read or study the Quran but cannot perform wudu straight away, at work, during travel, or during menstruation.
READ MOREYou’re mid-prayer and your stomach turns. Or you’ve just been sick and you’re not sure whether to make wudu again before your next salat. It’s a genuinely confusing
READ MOREIt is one of those questions that many Muslims quietly worry about but rarely feel comfortable asking out loud. You are mid-prayer, you feel something, and suddenly your
READ MOREMany Muslims worry about this, you feel a laugh coming on mid-prayer, or you crack up with family before heading to the mosque, and suddenly you’re not sure
READ MOREMany Muslim women carry a quiet, low-level anxiety about this. Discharge happens throughout the day, sometimes frequently, and the uncertainty about whether it has just cancelled ablution can
READ MORESmoking does not break wudu. Despite being widely regarded as haram (forbidden) in Islam, smoking is not among the acts that invalidate ritual purification. This is the consistent
READ MORETL;DR: The Key Points You are getting ready for prayer. A moment of frustration slips out, a curse word, a sharp insult, something you immediately regret. Your first
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