Shawwal is the 10th month in the Islamic Calendar, a month after the Ramadan and the 1st Shawwal is the Day of EID al-Fitr for Muslims.
- 1 Shawwal: Eid al-Fitr
- 7 Shawwal: Battle of Uhud.
- 8 Shawwal: Destruction of Jannat ul Baqi and Jannatul Mualla by Saudi Government in 1926.
- 13 Shawwal: Birth of Imam Bukhari.
- 25 Shawwal: Matrydom of Imam Jafar as-Sadiq (RA).
Fasting in Shawwal
The primary day of Shawwāl is Eid al-Fitr. A few Muslims watch six days of fasting amid Shawwāl starting the day after Eid-ul-Fitr since fasting is restricted on this day. These six days of fasting together with the Ramadan fasts are equal to fasting lasting through the year. The thinking behind this custom is that a decent deed in Islam is compensated 10 times, thus fasting 30 days amid Ramadan and 6 days amid Shawwāl is proportional to fasting the entire year as far as the reward.
The Shia researchers don’t put any accentuation on the six days being continuous while among the Sunnis the larger part of Shafi`i researchers think of it as prescribed to quick nowadays sequentially. They construct this in light of a hadith related by Tabarani and others wherein Muhammad is accounted for to have stated, “Fasting six back to back days after Eid al-Fitr resembles fasting the whole year.” Other conventional academic sources among the Hanafiyya and Hanbaliyya don’t put an accentuation on sequential days, while the most grounded conclusion of the Malikiyya favors any six days of the year, successively or something else.
lessings of Shawwal
The primary day of Shawwal is Eid-Ul-Fitr, the day of celebration and when all transgressions are pardoned as a reward for fasting and supplications in the time of Ramadan.
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