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Essential elements of fasting, those who are permitted to break
the fast, but who must pay a "ransom" for not fasting
Elderly men and women are permitted to break their fasts, as are
the chronically ill, and those who have to perform difficult
jobs under harsh circumstances and who could not find any other
way to support themselves. All of these people are allowed to
break their fast, because such a practice would place too much
hardship on them during any part of the year. They are obliged
to feed one poor person [miskin] a day (for every day of fasting
that they do not perform). The scholars differ over how much
food is to be supplied, for example, a sa', half a sa', or a
madd.
There is nothing in the sunnah that mentions exactly how much is
to be given.
Ibn 'Abbas said: "An elderly man is permitted to break his fast,
but he must feed a poor person daily. If he does this, he does
not have to make up the days that he did not fast. This is
related by ad-Daraqutni and by al-Hakim, who said it is sahih.
Al-Bukhari recorded that 'Ata heard Ibn
'Abbas recite the 'ayah:
"And for those who can fast [but do not], there is a "ransom':
the feeding of a person in need" [al-Baqarah 185].
Then Ibn 'Abbas continued: "It has not been abrogated. [Its
ruling applies] to elderly men and women who are not able to
fast. Instead, they must feed one poor person on a daily basis."
The same is true for one who is chronically ill and as such
cannot fast, and for one who is forced to work under harsh
circumstances and as such cannot endure the additional burden of
fasting. Both groups must also feed one poor person daily.
Commenting on al-Baqarah's 'ayah, Sheikh Muhammad 'Abduh says:
"What is meant by those who can fast' [(but do not) in the
Qur'anic verse] is the weak elderly people, the chronically ill,
and so on, and similarly, those workers who are working under
severe conditions, such as coal miners. The same applies to
criminals who are sentenced to life imprisonment with hard
labor. They have to pay the 'ransom' if they have the means to
do so."
Pregnant and breast-feeding women, if they fear for themselves
or for the baby, can break the fast and pay the "ransom." They
do not have to make up the days missed. Abu Dawud related from
'Ikrimah
that Ibn 'Abbas said concerning the 'ayah "And for those who can
fast [but do not],": "This is a concession for the elderly, as
they can fast. They are to break the fast and feed one poor
person a day. Pregnant or breast-feeding women, if they fear for
the child, can do likewise." This is related by al-Bazzar. At
the end of the report, there is the addition: "Ibn 'Abbas used
to say to his wives who were pregnant: 'You are in the same
situation as those who can fast [but do not]. You are to pay the
"ransom" and do not have to make up the days later.' "Of its
chain, ad-Daraqutni says it is sahih.
Nafi' reported that Ibn 'Umar was asked about a pregnant woman
who feared for her unborn baby. He replied: "She is to break the
fast and to feed one poor person a day one madd of barley."
There is also a hadith that states: "Allah has relieved the
travelers of fasting and half of the prayer, and the pregnant
and the breast-feeding women of the fast."According to the
anafiyyah, Abu Ubaid, and Abu Thaur, such women are only to make
up the missed days of fasting, and they are not supposed to feed
one poor person a day. According to Ahmad and ash-Shaf'i, if
such women fear only for the baby, they must pay the "ransom"
and make up the days later. If they fear only for themselves or
for themselves and the baby, then they are only to make up the
missed days at a later date.
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