Sujud
| Subclass of | posture in worship |
|---|---|
| Part of | salah, Raka'at |
| Territory overlaps | Ruku' |
| Part of the series | elements of Salat |
| Dey follow | Takbir |
| Commemorates | God in Islam, Rububiyah, al-Ala |
| Physically dey interact plus | soil, prayer rug, Sutrah |
| Unicode character | ۩ |
Sujud (Arabic: سُجُود, romanized: sujūd, pronounced [sʊˈdʒuːd]), or sajdah (سَجْدَة, [ˈsadʒ.da]), dem sanso know as sijda, sejda anaa shejda, insyd Islam be de act of low bowing anaa prostration to God facing de qiblah (direction of de Kaaba at Mecca). Dem usually dey do am insyd standardized prayers (salah). De position dey involve kneeling den bowing till one touch de ground plus seven bones (points): tde forehead den nose, two hands, two knees den two sets of toes.[1] In accordance plus de Sunnah (de Way) of Muhammad, one ein elbows for be far from one ein body,[2] unless e dey cause discomfort to oda worshippers, buh no dey rest on de ground. Sam scholars dey hold de position dat dis dey apply to men per, den dat women be encouraged to tuck dema elbows insyd out of modesty.[3]
Oda types of sujud
[edit | edit source]
Sajdah of thankfulness
[edit | edit source]Sajdah of recitation / Tilawah
[edit | edit source]During recitation (tilawa) of de Qur'an, wey dey include individual den congregation prayers, der be fifteen places wer Muslims dey believe, wen Muhammad recite a certain verse (ayah), he prostrate to God. De verses be:
Sajdah of forgetfulness
[edit | edit source]Sujud Sahwi anaa Sajdah of forgetfulness dey occur during de ritual salat prayer. Out of forgetfulness a person fi either omit obligatory parts of salat (Qabli) anaa add to de salat (Ba'adi). Insyd either cases de person correct dema salat by doing de Sujud Sahwi.
Direction of prostration
[edit | edit source]Dem dey make sujud to God per. Insyd prayer, Muslims dey face de Kaaba insyd Mecca, Saudi Arabia.
References
[edit | edit source]- ↑ "Sahih Bukhari, Hadith No. 812". Sunnah.com.
- ↑ "Sahih Muslim, Hadith No. 497a". Sunnah.com.
- ↑ "The Way In Which Women Pray (Salafi)". islamqa.info.
- ↑ "Surah Ar-Ra'd - 15-25". Quran.com.
- ↑ "Surah Al-Hajj - 18-28". Quran.com.