|
He Was Told That Having An Injection Breaks The Fast So He Broke His Fast And Made It Up Later On. What Should He Do?
EsinIslam
Ramadan
The Awqaf -
Living Shariah
Fate dictated that I should get pulmonary
tuberculosis, and the treatment involved having a
needle very day for a year, as well as other
medications three times each day. The treatment
coincided with the beginning of Ramadaan, but despite
that I began to fast the holy month. After 15 days of
fasting, I went to take the injection as usual at the
health centre, and there the nurse asked me if I was
fasting, and I said yes. His response what that I
should stop fasting from that day onwards, so
following his instructions I stopped fasting for the
rest of Ramadan, and after that I made up the days
that I did not fast. After I found out that injections
do not invalidate the fast, I regretted it and felt
that I had committed a great sin, even though my
intention was clearly to fast the whole month despite
my sickness. I blame that nurse who told me not to
fast for the rest of the month. I hope that you can
advise me about the Islamic ruling concerning this.
Praise be to Allaah.
Firstly:
Injections that are given to sick people are of two
types:
1- Those which contain nourishment. These cause the
fast to be invalidated if one uses them deliberately.
2- Those which do not contain nourishment. These do
not affect the fast, whether they are given via a vein
(intravenous) or a muscle (intramuscular), according
to the more correct of the two scholarly opinions,
because they are neither food not drink, nor do they
take the place of food or drink.
See question no. 49706 and 65632. in which we quote
some of the fatwas of the scholars concerning this
issue.
Perhaps this nurse was following the view of those who
say that injections break the fast if they reach the
stomach.
Whatever the case, the fact that you broke the fast
based on his instructions, then made up the fasts that
you missed, means that you have done what was required
of you, and you do not have to do anything else.
Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may Allaah have mercy on him)
was asked about a woman who dyed her hair then her
sister told her that that invalidates the fast, so she
broke her fast then made it up. He replied: The answer
to this question involves two things, the first of
which is this woman who issued a fatwa without
knowledge, because if a woman who is fasting dyes her
hair, it does not invalidate the fast. The second
issue has to do with this woman who received
information that was not based on proper knowledge and
broke her fast then made it up based on that fatwa.
She does not have to do anything now, because she has
done what was required of her. End quote from Majmoo’
Fataawa al-Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (19/226).
Secondly:
In your question you say: “Fate dictated that…” This
is a common mistake, because fate has no will. The
correct thing to say is: Allaah willed, or Allaah
decreed.
Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (may Allaah have mercy on him)
was asked about saying “Circumstances dictated that
such and such should happen” or “fate willed that such
and such should happen.”
He replied: Saying “fate decreed” or “circumstances
decreed” is wrong, because circumstances refers to
time, and time has no will. Similarly fate has no will
either. Rather the One Who decrees is Allaah, may He
be glorified and exalted. If a person says “The will
of Allaah dictated that such and such should happen,”
there is nothing wrong with that, because will cannot
be attributed to fate. End quote from Majmoo’ Fataawa
Ibn ‘Uthaymeen (3/113).
We ask Allaah to heal you and give you good health,
and to increase you in understanding and knowledge.
And Allaah knows best.
Ramadan Team
©
EsinIslam.Com
Add
Comments |