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The Glory of Ninth and Eleventh days of Muharram

It is preferable to perform fasting on ninth and eleventh days of Muharram as like as in the day of Ashura. Imam Bukhari (May Allah Mercy upon him) reported that the Messenger (Peace and Blessing of Allah be upon him) ordered his Companions to perform fasting on the ninth day of Muharram to differ from Jews who used to do fasting on its tenth day only. Imam Ahmad (May Allah Mercy upon him) has also reported that the Prophet (PBH) suggested the fasting on the ninth and eleventh days of Muharram (Irshad: 75, I’anath: 2/266). The secret behind the fasting on the ninth day of Muharram is to show our non co-operation with the Jews. Hence it is also desirable to do so on the eleventh day too (Fathhul Mu’een: 203, Qalyubi : 2/173, Thuhfa & Sharwani :3/436).
The scholars all confess that the Ashura fasting does have different stages. The first stage among them is to perform the fasting on the three days i.e. 9,10,11 of Muharram. The second is to perform only on the ninth and tenth days of Muharram and the third one is to perform only on tenth day of it. (Fiqhussunnah: 1/518). The fasting on the eleventh day along with the tenth day of it, is preferable either he takes fasting or not in the ninth day of it (Thuhfa & Sharwani :3/456, Nihaya : 3/201, Fathhul Mueen: 203, Sharah Ba Fadhl : 2/199).
 
To take fasting on the ninth day with its tenth day is more preferable to him who wants only to perform either ninth or eleventh of Muharram. Because the ninth day has been bestowed with the peculiarity of being one among the first ten days of Muharram those are more virtuous as well as that day joins with the tenth day to differ from the Jewish performance. But the eleventh day of Muharram does not have this peculiarity (Thuhfa & Sharwani : 3/455- 456, Fathhul Mueen : 203- 204, Sharah Bafadhl &Kurdhi : 2/199).
It is not a hatred deed that to perform fasting only on the Ashurah other than ninth and eleventh days of Muharram (Sharwani: 3/455, Nihaya : 3/202, Fathhul Mueen : 203, Sharah Bafadhle : 2/199).
It is mentioned in Qalyubi 2/73 that to perform the fasting from the first to ten days of Muharram is generally preferable. Due to the possibility of mistakes or faults in confirming the Moon sighting or assuring the days, it is specially virtuous to do the fasting on the eighth day of Muharram too, in order to show extreme caution and exactness in our deeds.

The mourning is prohibited
Imam Husain (May Allah please with him) (1) was martyred in ‘Karbala’ on tenth day of Muharram. In the wake of this event, it can be seen in some places, a number of wicked deeds done by Rafidiyya (Shiites). They consider bleeding the body by beating with shackles and crying boisterously by hitting on their own chests as virtuous deed in Ashura. But Islam does not allow these all. Imam Suyuthi (May Allah Mercy upon him) says: Islam commends only to keep peace and calmness and to conceal the matter when the believers entangle in the miseries. Islam does not allow any one to do anything as part of mourning over one’s death. In fact Islam prohibited even to shout or cry loudly over the dear’s death. It can be seen in ‘Al- Lathaifa’ that Imam Ibn Rajab (May Allah Mercy upon him) criticizes the Rafidiyya more seriously who conduct the mourning on the day of Ashura in which Imam Husain ((May Allah please with him) was martyred. How one can mourn over his martyrdom unless the Almighty or the Messenger Allow even to mourn over the Prophets (Al- Havee Lil Fathawa: 1/298). Imam Ibn Hajer (May Allah Mercy upon him) says: “ It is the spoiled argument of Rafidiyya that to conduct mourning on the Ashura in the name of Imam Hussain (May Allah please with him). They are the gang cursed by the Almighty”(Al Ajviba 50- 51). He added in ‘Ithhaf Ahlil Islam 287’ that Allah the Most High reveals in Surat Al-Kahf, (The Cave, Chapter 18, Verse 104) the state of a community who consider many things as good one, though they are so malicious deeds. (“Those whose efforts have been wasted in this life while they thought that they were acquiring good by their deeds” 18:104) Hence, the attempt of Rafidiyya to mourn over Hussain (May Allah please with him) is also one among the above mentioned deeds.

(1) Imam Husain, second son of Ali ibn Abi Talib and Fatima (May Allah please with them), and grandson of the Prophet, Muhammad (Peace and Blessing of Allah be upon him). His fame rests chiefly on his pre-eminence as the Prophet's last surviving grandson. and his rebellion against the Umayyad caliph Yazid, which ended in martyrdom.
Husain was born in Madina in AD 626, a few years before Muhammad's death (632). He and his older brother Hasan were the Prophet's only grandsons. Husain's tragic story began after the death of Hasan, whose claim to the caliphate had been challenged by Muawiya, the founding father of the Umayyad dynasty. When Hasan abdicated and submitted to Muawiya's caliphate in 661, Husain too, as the younger brother, had to acknowledge Muawiya. After Hasan's death, Husain continued to submit to Muawiya but refused to recognize the designation of Muawiya's son, Yazid. On Muawiya's death Husain fled Madina and its Umayyad governor to avoid giving allegiance to Yazid. Having found temporary refuge among the population of Makkah, Husain soon received the letters from many of the inhabitants of Al Kufah (in Iraq) who invited him to rebel with them against Yazid. Having set off through the desert for Kûfah with a small party of men, women, and children, Husain never completed the journey. All of his male companions, with the sole exception of one of his sons, Ali Zain al-Abidin, were massacred by Umayyad soldiers at Karbala’ in ad 680. Husain's corpse was beheaded: his body was buried on the spot but his head was taken to the Umayyad court.
While the massacre at Karbala’ is deplored by Muslims in general, it is ritually re-enacted and mourned by Imami Shiites in particular, on Ashura: an annual festival that falls on the traditional date of Husain's martyrdom, the 10th of the Islamic month of Muharram. Ashura is the most important of the many festivities commiserating martyrdom among Shiites and known generically as Ta’ziya. It is during the festival of Ashura, however, that Imami Shiites are most demonstrative in expressing grief: many may flagellate themselves or even cut their foreheads with razors to emulate Husain's bloody wounds (Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia).

 
  Read more  
     
bullet A Glance into the Hijri calendar and New Year  
   
bullet Muharram: Holy month of Allah the Most High  
   
bullet The astonishing events on the tenth day of Muharram  
   
bullet The special deeds in Ashura’  
     
bullet The notable solutions for some doubts