Praise be to Allaah. Â
Abu Dawood (3237), al-Tirmidhi (738) and Ibn Naajah (1651) narrated from Abu Hurayrah (may Allaah be pleased with him) that the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: âWhen Shaâbaan is half over, do not fast.â Classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in Saheeh al-Tirmidhi, 590.Â
This hadeeth indicates that it is not allowed to fast after halfway through Shaâbaan, i.e., starting from the sixteenth day of the month.Â
But there are reports that indicate that it is permissible to fast at this time. For example:Â
Al-Bukhaari (1914) and Muslim (1082) narrated that Abu Hurayrah (may Allaah be pleased with him) said: The Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: âDo not anticipate Ramadaan by fasting one or two days before it begins, but if a man habitually fasts, then let him fast.âÂ
This indicates that fasting after halfway through Shaâbaan is permissible for someone who has the habit of fasting, such as a man who regularly fasts on Mondays and Thursdays, or who fasts alternate days, and the like.Â
Al-Bukhaari (1970) and Muslim (1156) narrated that âAaâishah (may Allaah be pleased with her) said: âThe Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) used to fast all of Shaâbaan, he used to fast Shaâbaan except a few days.â This version was narrated by Muslim.Â
Al-Nawawi said: In the words, âHe used to fast all of Shaâbaan, he used to fast Shaâbaan except a few daysâ the second phrase explains the first, and indicates that the word âallâ means âmost ofâ.Â
This hadeeth indicates that it is permissible to fast after halfway through Shaâbaan, but only for those who are continuing after fasting before halfway through the month. The Shaafaâis followed all of these ahaadeeth and said:Â
It is not permissible to fast after halfway through Shaâbaan except for those who have a habitual pattern of fasting, or who are continuing after fasting before halfway through the month.Â
According to most of the scholars, the prohibition here means that it is haraam.Â
See al-Majmooâ, 6/399-400; Fath al-Baari, 4/129Â
Some, such as al-Ruyaani, suggested that the prohibition here is to be understood as meaning that it is makrooh, not haraam.Â
Al-Nawawi (may Allaah have mercy on him) said in Riyaadh al-Saaliheen (p. 412):Â
âChapter on the prohibition on anticipating Ramadaan by fasting after halfway through Shaâbaan, except for one who is continuing after fasting before halfway through the month or who has a regular pattern of fasting such as fasting on Mondays and Thursdaysâ.Â
The majority of scholars are of the view that the hadeeth which forbids fasting after halfway through Shaâbaan is daâeef (weak), and based on that they said that it is not makrooh to fast after halfway through Shaâbaan.Â
Al-Haafiz said: The majority of scholars said that it is permissible to observe voluntary fasts after halfway through Shaâbaan and they regarded the hadeeth concerning that as daâeef. Ahmad and Ibn Maâeen said that it is munkar. (From Fath al-Baari). Among those who classed it as daâeef were al-Bayhaqi and al-Tahhaawi.Â
Ibn Qudaamah said in al-Mughni that Imam Ahmad said concerning this hadeeth:Â
It is not sound. We asked âAbd al-Rahmaan ibn Mahdi about it and he did not class it as saheeh, and he did not narrate it to me. He used to avoid talking about this hadeeth. Ahmad said: al-âAlaâ is thiqah and none of his ahaadeeth are regarded as munkar apart from this one.Â
The al-âAlaâ referred to here is al-âAlaâ ibn âAbd al-Rahmaan who narrated this hadeeth from his father from Abu Hurayrah (may Allaah be pleased with him).Â
Ibn al-Qayyim (may Allaah have mercy on him) responded in Tahdheeb al-Sunan to those who classed this hadeeth as daâeef and said that this hadeeth is saheeh according to the conditions of Muslim. Even though al-âAlaâ is the only one who narrated this hadeeth, that is not regarded as detrimental to the hadeeth, because al-âAlaâ is thiqah; in his Saheeh, Muslim narrated a number of ahaadeeth from him, from his father from Abu Hurayrah (may Allaah be pleased with him). Many Sunnahs are narrated from the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) only through one person who is thiqah, but they have been accepted and followed by the ummah.Â
Then he said:Â
With regard to those who think that there is a contradiction between this hadeeth and the ahaadeeth which speak of fasting in Shaâbaan, there is no contradiction. Those ahaadeeth speak of fasting half of it along with the previous half, and of habitual fasting during the second half of the month, whereas the hadeeth of al-âAlaâ speaks of the prohibition on fasting deliberately only after the month is halfway over, not about fasts that a person observes regularly or that are a continuation after fasting during the first part of the month.Â
Shaykh Ibn Baaz (may Allaah have mercy on him) was asked about the hadeeth which says that fasting after halfway through Shaâbaan is not allowed. He said:Â
This is a saheeh hadeeth as Shaykh Naasir al-Deen al-Albaani said. What is meant is that it is not allowed to start fasting after halfway through the month. But if a person fasts most or all of the month, then he is following the Sunnah.Â
Majmooâ Fataawa al-Shaykh Ibn Baaz, 15/385).Â
Shaykh Ibn âUthaymeen said in his commentary on Riyaadh al-Saaliheen (3/394):Â
Even if the hadeeth is saheeh, the prohibition in it does not mean that this is haraam, rather it is simply makrooh, as some of the scholars have understood it to mean. But whoever has the habit of fasting regularly should fast, even if it is after halfway through Shaâbaan.Â
In conclusion:Â
It is not allowed to fast during the second half of Shaâbaan, and that is either makrooh or haraam, except for the one who has the habit of fasting regularly or who is continuing after fasting during the first half of Shaâbaan. And Allaah knows best.Â
The reason for this prohibition is that continually fasting may make a person too weak to fast in Ramadaan.Â
If it is said that if he fasts from the beginning of the month he will become even weaker, the response is that whoever fasts from the beginning of Shaâbaan will have gotten used to fasting so it will be less difficult for him to fast.Â
Al-Qaari said: The prohibition here means that it is disliked, as a mercy to this ummah lest they become too weak to fulfil their duty of fasting during Ramadaan in an energetic fashion. But those who fast all of Shaâbaan will become used to fasting so it will not be difficult for them.Â
And Allaah knows best.
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