Folding over corner of the prayer mat

MubarekMuslimah

Junior Member
Assalaamu alaikum wa rahmatullahi wa baraktahu

Seeing as this website has so many knowledgable brothers and sister alhamdullillah I thought I would ask a question that has been bugging me for a while.

Why do some people fold over the corner of the prayer mat when they have finished salat or when it is not being used?

I have been told its so that jinn don't pray on it but I don't understand that cos some jinn are muslim too, and if they want to pray, we shouldn't stop them should we? Plus I can find no basis or reference for this anywhere. Is it a cultural practice or from Islam?

I am hoping someone can help me insha'allah

Salaams
 

proud2bemuslim

ALLAH HU AKBAR
:salam2:

i agree its a practice common that i think comes from culture not Islam. i used to do it too until i watched a show that said "if the brother (jinn) wants to pray then let him pray" lol so now i dont do it.
 

Mabsoot

Amir
Staff member
Wa alaykum Salam,

The Prophet :saw: would pray on a reed mat.

He would also pray outside with his shoes on and even in the Mosque with the shoes on,

the whole earth is a masalla (place where we can pray to Allah), with the exception of any dirty places or churches/temples.

So praying on mats is not necessary, you can pray on your carpet. But, if you do pray on a mat nothing wrong with that. There is nothing to say you should fold it a particular way. If someone says there is, then they innovating. If they insist that you have to pray on mat, they are doing something and saying something that the Prophet :saw: and his companions never said or did.

This stuff about Jinn I have never heard before, they must bring evidence for it from the Quran and the Sahih Hadith. Otherwise it is just an ignorant statement. Kind of like those weird people who say that Shaytan urinates on your head if men dont wear a hat. Astaghfirullah. People must follow Islam exactly as Allah revealed and the Prophet :saw: taught. Otherwise, they making great mistakes and sinning

When I do use a mat, I fold my mat in particular way only to stop any dust on it, i fold it side ways and put it away. I know some people who have special cases for their prayer mats and they place nice smelling soap in it. I dont always pray on mat, mostly on the carpet in my home, because it is nice new and clean, why use a mat?

There is nothing wrong with using a mat or folding it in any way, as long as you dont make it part of Islam.

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This from Islamqa

Praise be to Allaah. Praying on rugs is permissible in principle. Al-Bukhaari (379) and Muslim (513) narrated that Maymoonah (may Allaah be pleased with her) said: The Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) used to pray on a khumrah.
A khumrah is a small mat made of palm leaves that is big enough for the face, on which a worshipper may prostrate to protect himself from the heat or coldness of the ground.
Al-Khattaabi favoured the view that the khumrah may be bigger than that, and he quoted as evidence the report narrated by Abu Dawood (5247) from Ibn ‘Abbaas, who said: A mouse came and started dragging the wick of the lamp and threw it in front of the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him), on the khumrah on which he was sitting, and it burned an area the size of a dirham… This hadeeth was classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in Saheeh Abi Dawood, 4369.
It says in ‘Awn al-Ma’bood: This clearly shows that the word khumrah may apply to a large mat. This was also stated in al-Nihaayah.
See Fath al-Baari, 333.
Al-Shawkaani said:
This hadeeth indicates that there is nothing wrong with praying on a mat, regardless of whether it is made of rags, palm leaves or anything else, whether it is small or big, like a mat or carpet, because it is proven that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) prayed on mats, carpets and animal pelts.
But there may be some reasons why it is not permissible to pray on carpets and similar things.
For example:
1- If the carpet contains images of animate beings; in which case it is haraam to keep them and the images must be blotted out.


2- If the carpet has decorations and patterns that attract the attention of the worshipper and distract him from his prayer; praying on such carpets is makrooh.
The Standing Committee said:
With regard to pictures of inanimate objects such as mountains, rivers, lakes, plants, trees, houses and so on, so long as there are no images of living beings in or around them, these are permissible, but praying on them is makrooh because they distract the worshipper and detract from his proper focus and humility (khushoo’) in prayer, but his prayer is still valid.
Fataawa al-Lajnah al-Daa’imah, 6/180
They also said:
The mosques are the houses of Allaah, built for the establishment of prayer and the glorification of Allaah and the fear of Allaah.
Patterns and decorations in the furnishings and on the walls of the mosques are things that distract the heart from the remembrance of Allaah and take away much of the worshippers’ proper focus and humility. Hence they were regarded as makrooh by many of the salaf. So the Muslims should avoid that in their mosques and strive to make their worship perfect by keeping distractions away from the places in which they seek to draw close to Allaah the Lord of the Worlds, hoping to increase their reward. But with regard to praying (on carpets decorated with such patterns), it is valid.
3- If praying on the rug is done in order to avoid praying on the ground.
Al-Bukhaari (2036) narrated that Abu Sa’eed al-Khudri (may Allaah be pleased with him) said: We observed i’tikaaf with the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) during the middle ten days of Ramadaan, and we came out on the morning of the twentieth. The Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) addressed us on the morning of the twentieth and said: “I was shown Laylat al-Qadr but then I was made to forget it, so seek it in the last ten nights, on the odd-numbered nights. I saw that I was prostrating in water and mud. Whoever was observing i’tikaaf with the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him), let him go back.” So the people went back to the mosque, and we did not see any trace of a cloud in the sky. Then a cloud came and it rained, and the iqaamah for prayer was given, and the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) prostrated in mud and water until we saw the marks of mud on the tip of his nose and his face.
According to a report narrated by Muslim (1167): “And his forehead was covered with mud and water.”
This hadeeth points to the humility of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him), as he prostrated on water and mud, and he did not order that something be brought for him to prostrate on.
4- If praying on the rug is done to avoid praying on the carpets that are spread for all the people in the mosque, or if a person does that to be on the safe side because there may be some impurity (najaasah) in the ground.
Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah said:
With regard to those who suffer from extreme waswasah (whispers from the Shaytaan), they do not pray on the ground or on the carpets spread out for everyone on the ground, rather they pray on a rug or something similar…
Majmoo’ al-Fataawa, 22/177
5- If a man seeks to pray on the rug because he thinks that it is essential to have a rug just for prayer and that he has to pray on something whether he is at home or in the mosque. Many people only ever pray on the rug even if the house is carpeted.
Shaykh al-Islam (may Allaah have mercy on him) said:
Praying on rugs, in the sense that the worshipper insists on that – this was not the way of the salaf, the Muhaajireen and Ansaar and those who followed them in truth at the time of the Messenger of Allaah. Rather they used to pray on the ground in his mosque, and none of them had a rug that was used just for prayer. It was narrated that when ‘Abd al-Rahmaan ibn Mahdi came to Madeenah he spread out a rug, and Maalik ordered that it be taken away. It was said to him, “He is ‘Abd al-Rahmaan ibn Mahdi.” Maalik said, “Do you not know that spreading a rug in our mosque is bid’ah (an innovation)?”
Majmoo’ al-Fataawa, 22/163
6- The same applies to the practice in many mosques of having a rug that is just for the imam, which is set out for him to pray on, even though the mosque is carpeted. Why is he distinguished from the other worshippers??
This is not appropriate because there is no need for it, and because that may make him feel somewhat superior to the people.
The point is that putting down rugs in a carpeted mosque is a bid’ah unless there is a reason for that, such as it being very cold, or the floor being rough or the first carpet being naajis (impure) or filthy, and so on.
And Allaah knows best.



wasalam.
 
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