Yes, urinating (or defecating, passing gas, etc.) breaks your Wudu (ritual ablution) because it's considered an exit of impure substances from the body, requiring you to perform Wudu again before praying. However, for those with medical conditions like incontinence, special rules apply, allowing purification by washing the affected area and performing Wudu once per prayer time.
You have to do wudu' after urinating or defecating or passing wind. [This clarifies what excreta which make wudu' necessary: urine from the front orifice and faeces from the rear orifice and passing wind, which designates wind which emerges from the anus, whether or not with a sound.
Any discharge from the private parts, whether it is urine, feces, exiting fluids, or the passing of gas, will break wudu. This is based on the following Quranic verse: "O you who believe, when you get up for prayer, wash your faces and your hands up to your elbows. Wipe your heads and wash your feet up to your ankles.
Activities that invalidate wudu include urination, defecation, flatulence, deep sleep, light bleeding (depending on madhhab), menstruation, postpartum status, and sexual intercourse. Wudu is often translated as "partial ablution", as opposed to ghusl, which translates to "full ablution", where the whole body is washed.
Yes. Pee is impure and presence of impurities on your skin, clothing and surrounding areas can make salah invalid. So you need to wash your genital along with changing or removing the stained underwear before ablution and salah. As a woman, I wear reusable daily pads since natural vaginal discharge is also impure.
The "21-second pee rule" comes from a scientific discovery that most mammals over about 3 kg (like dogs, cows, elephants) empty their bladders in roughly 21 seconds, regardless of their size, due to physics involving urethra length and gravity. For humans, this serves as a loose benchmark: urinating significantly faster (e.g., under 10 seconds) or slower (over 30 seconds) might signal holding it too long or an overactive bladder, though it's not an exact diagnosis.
Summary of answer
It is not permissible for a person to start praying when he is resisting the urge to urinate or defecate because Prophet Muhammad said: “You should not pray when food is ready or when resisting the urge to urinate or defecate.”
This encompasses urine, feces, and the passing of gas. Upon experiencing these discharges, renewing your Wudu becomes essential before recommencing acts of worship. Reason: These are seen as impurities that can act as barriers during one's prayer.
Some said that it does not invalidate wudu at all, and this is the correct view. This means that if a man kisses his wife, or touches her hand or hugs her , but he does not emit anything, then his wudu is not invalidated and it remains as it is.
Summary of answer. The most correct opinion is that touching a woman does not invalidate Wudu at all whether it is with desire or without desire.
If there is no impurity (najas) on her private part, kissing and foreplay stuff will not be something haram. However, if there is discharge, and chances for the husband to take the discharge in his mouth, then this would be haram.
**Perform Wudu (Ablution):** This fluid breaks your wudu, so before praying, make sure to perform wudu again to maintain purity and readiness for prayer. Following these steps aligns with Sunnah and helps you stay clean and spiritually prepared.
Summary of answer
It is not permissible for you to sleep with no clothes on that would cover your `Awrah, whether you are sleeping with or without your wife. Rather it is permissible for you to uncover your `Awrah only at times of necessity.
Answer. All perfect praise be to Allah, the Lord of the worlds. I testify that there is none worthy of worship except Allah and that Muhammad, sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam, is His slave and Messenger. Ablution is not broken by merely entering the bathroom or the toilet.
Hence, if you sneeze and believe with certainty that drops of urine came out, then you have to repeat the Wudhoo'. If these drops came out during prayer, then your prayer has been invalidated and you should repeat the Wudhoo' and prayer. Allaah Knows best.
said in Al-Majmoo': 'There are two opinions about swallowing sperm. However, the most correct opinion is that it is forbidden because it is filthy. Allaah says (which means): {And forbids them what is khabaa'ith (evil things, evil deeds, evil beliefs, evil persons and filthy food).}[ Qur'an 7:157].
Even if he sucks on her nipples, this comes under the heading of the intimacy that is permissible, and it cannot be said that the milk has any effect on him , because if an adult breastfeeds, it does not have any effect of making him a mahram.
Invoking a curse or swearing does not break ones ablution as there is no evidence about this. Therefore, a Muslim should avoid cursing and swearing to protect his religion and control his tongue. To know what invalidates ablution, you can refer to Fatwa No: 84093.
Tears alone do not break Wudu.
Wudu is not affected by tears or a runny nose. Silent tears or light sobs do not invalidate the prayer. Audible sounds that do not form words (e.g., sniffles, brief sobs, involuntary gasps) are excused and do not nullify Salah.
QUESTION: Does falling asleep for a couple of minutes, like 5 or 10 minutes, break wudu? ANSWER: It depends on – If you fell asleep laying down, it breaks it. If you had a small nap, while sitting tight and being still cautious of your surroundings and you did not pass wind, it does not break it.
Whoever watches forbidden things such as obscene images and other content is sinful, but it does not invalidate his purity as long as he does not emit Madhiy or the like. We advise the dear questioner to occupy himself with acts of obedience and good deeds, as well as not to follow in the footsteps of Satan.
The "777 Rule in Islam" primarily refers to a parenting philosophy based on dividing a child's upbringing into three seven-year stages: 0-7 years (play, love, bonding); 7-14 years (teaching, discipline, character building); and 14-21 years (mentorship, guidance, treating them as friends/companions). This framework, rooted in prophetic guidance, emphasizes intentional connection and age-appropriate engagement to raise balanced, resilient Muslim children, contrasting with a simpler "7-minute rule" for daily connection.
As for the Islamic ruling on the prayer of a person who suffers from urinary or gas incontinence, he should perform ablution for each prayer and wash his private parts thoroughly. Moreover, you may use a cloth to prevent your clothes from being stained by the urine, and then pray even if discharges occur.
Most scholars, from the successors and those afterwards, allowed urinating in any bath place if water was going to run over it and there was a place for it to go, like a drain, so that the urine would not stagnate in one spot and create a stench.