Fasting Sawm

Section Seven: Rulings of Making Up For Missed Fast (qada) and Kaffarah

  1. Due to a journey made for an important religious mission, I became liable to qada of 18 days of Ramadan. What is my duty? Is it obligatory for me to perform qada of the missed fasting?

A: You must perform qada of the Ramadan fasting days missed due to traveling.

  1. A person was hired to perform qada fasts of the month of Ramadan for somebody else, and he breaks the fast in the afternoon. Does he have to pay the kaffarah?

A: No kaffarah is required.

  1. Those who could not fast due to their journey for religious mission during the month of Ramadan, and now want to make up after years of delay, do they have to pay any kaffarah?

A: If delaying the qada of fasting of Ramadan until the next Ramadan was due to a continuing legitimate excuse, then they should perform only qada of the missed fasting days and no redemption money [fiidyah] is required, although precaution lies in giving fediyah as well. But, if the delay was for no legitimate reason and a result of negligence, then they are liable both to their qada as well as redemption money [fediyah].

  1. A person did not perform prayers or fast for about 10 years due to ignorance. Now he has repented, turning to God, the Exalted, and decided to compensate for his past. But he cannot perform qada of all the days he did not fast, nor has the means to pay for the kaffarah. Is it enough for him to ask for forgiveness [istighfar] alone?

A: He is not relieved from the duty of performing qada of the missed fasting by any means. As to the kaffarah for each day that he did not fast, if he is not able to fast for 60 days and also unable to feed 60 needy persons, he must give as much as he can to the poor and if he could not do that, as well, he would ask Allah for forgiveness.

  1. What is the duty of a person who did not know that performing qada of missed fasting is required before the next Ramadan, and so did not do it?

A: Ignorance of the obligation to perform qada before next Ramadan does not relieve one of the redemption money [fediyah] for the delay.

  1. A person did not fast for 120 days. What must he do? Does he have to fast for 60 days for every day missed, and does he have to pay kaffarah?

A: He has to perform qada for the Ramadan fasting days he missed. If he broke the fast intentionally and not for some legitimate reason, then he has, in addition to performing their qada, to pay the kaffarah, which is fasting for sixty days or feeding 60 needy persons, or giving one mudd (750 grams) of food to each of the sixty.

  1. I fasted almost for one month with the intention of carrying out the qada of any fast that I might have missed, or to be counted as a means of nearness to God. Does this month of fasting count as qada for the fasting that I missed?

A: If you fasted with the intention of carrying out whatever counts as your present duty, an obligatory or a recommended fast, it would be counted as the qada of the fasts missed if you were liable to any.

  1. If a person, not knowing the number of fasts missed, performs fasts with the intention of performing a recommended fast believing that he is not liable to any qada, does this fasting count as qada for missed fasting days if he is liable to qada of some fasts?

A: The fasting days kept with the intention of recommended fasting do not count as qada for fasts whose qada one is liable to perform.

  1. If due to ignorance of the rules a person intentionally breaks his fast due to hunger or thirst, does he only have to perform qada of the fast or should he pay the kaffarah as well?

A: If his ignorance was due to negligence, then as per precaution he should pay kaffarah in addition to performing its qada as well.

  1. A person at the outset of the age of legal maturity [taklif] was not able to fast due to physical weakness and inability. Is it enough for him to perform the qada of the fast, or is he required to offer the kaffarah as well?

A: If fasting did not cuase unbearable hardship for him and he did not fast intentionally, then he has to offer qada as well as paying kaffarah. 11. A person does not know the exact number of days he has failed to fast in the past nor the prayers he missed. What should he do? And what rule applies if he does not know whether be missed the fast intentionally or due to a legitimate excuse?

A: It is permissible for him to confine to performing the qada of the prayers and fasting he is sure of having missed. When there is doubt as to whether the fast was broken intentionally or not, kaffarah is not required.

  1. A person fasting during Ramadan did not wake up one day to eat the meal taken before the dawn. Therefore, he could not continue fasting until sunset. During the day there happened an event that caused him to break his fast. Does he have to give the single or the twofold kaffarah? A: If he kept the fast until the time he broke it when it was harmful for him to continue, due to severe hunger and thirst or some other reason, he has only to perform qada of the fast and no kaffarah is required.

  2. If one is not sure whether one has done qada of all the missed fasting settled in his debt, what is one''s duty?

A: If one is sure of having missed some fasting days in the past, then it is obligatory to ascertain that has done qada for those days. 14. A person did not fast on reaching maturity [bulugh]. He had fasted for 11 days then broke the fast one day at noon and did not fast for the remaining 18 days. Also, he did not know that kaffarah was obligatory for the days not fasted. What is the ruling concerning him?

A: If he intentionally and voluntarily failed to fast in the month of Ramadan, he has to perform qada and pay kaffarah as well, regardless of whether he knew he had to give a kaffarah or not.

  1. The physician told a patient that fasting is harmful for his health. However, after a few years, he realized that fasting was not harmful for him and the physician was wrong in excusing him from fasting. Does he have to pay kaffarah in addition to performing qada?

A: If he had refrained from fasting due to fear for his health on the basis of an experienced and reliable physician''s diagnosis or some other reasonable basis, he has to only perform qada of the missed fasting.

  1. While going on a trip someone who is fasting breaks his fast before crossing the allowance border [hadd al-tarakhkhus] with the notion that he is a traveler, without knowing that he may break his fast before noon only when he has gone beyond the hadd al-tarakhkhus. What is the rule concerning his fast? Does he have to perform its qada or is he liable to something else as well?

A: The rule that applies to him is same as that for one who intentionally breaks the fast.

The Atonement for Fasting and it''s amount

  1. Is it sufficient to give a needy person the money to buy the one mudd (750 grams) of food instead of giving him the food itself?

A: If one is sure that the needy person receiving the money will buy the food on one''s behalf and then take it as kaffarah, there is no problem in it.

  1. A person was appointed as a representative [wakil] to take charge of feeding a group of needy persons. Can he take his wages for the work and cooking he does from the kaffarah money he was entrusted with?

A: He can demand the wages for his work and for the cooking. But he cannot count it as part of the kaffarah or obtain it from the money that must be given to the needy persons as a kaffarah.

  1. A woman could not fast due to pregnancy and the approaching delivery. She knew that after delivery she must perform qada for the days she did not fast before the next Ramadan, If she did not fast after delivery, intentionally or otherwise, for several years, does she have to pay only the kaffarah for that year or for all the years she delayed the fasting?

A: The redemption money [fediyah] for delaying the qada, even if it is for several years, is required only once. It is one mudd (750 grams) of food for each day, and is required only if the qada was delayed until another Ramadan without any legitimate excuse. If one had an excuse for the delay preventing one from performing valid fasts, no redemption money [fediyah] is required.

  1. A women could not fast due to illness. Also, she could not perform their qada until the next Ramadan. Does she or her husband have to pay the kaffarah?

A: In this case, the redemption money [fediyah], one mudd (750 grams) of food for each day, has to be given by her, not her husband. 21. A person was liable to perform qada of ten Ramadan fasting days and he started them on 20th of Sha''ban. Can he break the fast intentionally before or after the noon? And, if he does, what is the kaffarah for breaking it before or after the noon?

A: It is not permissible for him to break his fast intentionally in this case. However, if he does break his fast intentionally before noon, he does not have to pay any kaffarah. But if he breaks it intentionally in the afternoon, his kaffarah is to feed ten needy persons. If he cannot afford to do so, he shall fast for three days.

  1. A woman was pregnant during two consecutive Ramadans and could not fast during those two years. Now. When she is able to fast what is her duty. Does she only have to perform the qada for the two months, or does she have to carry out the twofold kaffarah as well? What is the rule concerning her delaying the fasting?

A: If she did not fast during the month of Ramadan due to a legitimate reason, then she is only liable for their qada. However, if she did not fast because she feared it might harm the fetus or the baby, she has to give the redemption money [fiidyah], one mudd (750 grams) of food for each day, in addition to making their qada and if she delays the qada beyond the next Ramadan without a legitimate excuse, then she shall also give its redemption money [fiidyah], one mudd (750 grams) of food for each day.

  1. If someone has to perform qada and give kaffarah for the days that he did not fast, must he observe their sequence?

A: It is not obligatory.

24- If a saim on the same day had repeatedly took something which would break the fast, would this entail the repeating of kaffarah?

A: This would not entail the repeating of kaffarah. However, if he broke fasting by masturbation or sexual intercourse, it would be an obligatory precaution to repeat the kaffarah.

25- In doing qada of the month of Ramadan, what is the kaffarah of breaking the fast after zawal?

A: Its kaffarah is to feed ten needy persons (1 mudd for each) and if he could not afford it, he should fast for 3 days.

26- If an individual bound by religious obligations [mukallaf] was to fast for a certain nadhr and he breaks the fast intentionally, what is the kaffarah then?

A: The kaffarah here is equal to that of breaking the fast of the sawm of Ramadan intentionally.

27- Is it obligatory to hasten to pay the kaffarah or is the time is open?

A: Hastening is not obligatory unless one is afraid of the passing of time.

28- If a man had sexual intercourse with his wife during the day of Ramadan while both were saims, what is the ruling regarding the kaffarah?

A: If she agreed, the kaffarah of intentionally breaking the fast would rest upon her as well as the husband, in addition both would submit to tazir.

29- One has a kaffarah and he did not pay it until 2 years had lapsed, would it be repeated?

A: It would not be repeated by the passage of time.

30- If a man was not fasting [muftir], for a travel or a disease, is he allowed to force his wife to have sexual intercourse?

A: He is not allowed to do so and if he did so, he would have to pay the kaffarah on her behalf according to obligatory precaution.

31- Is it sufficient to feed 1-2 needy persons with the share of 60?

A: If one is able to feed 60 needy persons, feeding one, two, or more with the share of 60 would then be invalid.

32- Is it permissible to volunteer to pay the kaffarah on behalf of the dead?

A: Yes, it is permissible and it would be valid.