Friday, September 24, 2010

Friday Prayer: One Happy Day

It’s Friday! The weekly Friday prayer is taking place in all the mosques around the house. Living in Cairo, in Egypt, gives me the privilege of listening to the Azan and to the Khutba. So I thought why not write something about that. Friday prayer is after all quite the event even though not everyone notices I guess. I was planning for my next topic (which I have been planning for for a couple of weeks trying to get it quite right) to be about praying from the heart, but I think the Friday prayer is worth it.

I am a girl so I don’t necessarily need to go pray the Friday prayer in the mosque. Men – and boys – are required to though. So I wake up on a Friday morning. It’s the first day of the weekend which already gives this nice feeling of relaxation. It’s gonna be a good day in sha’ Allah. The entire family is home. We have breakfast together in no rush, talk about this and that. The Azan for Friday prayer starts and off goes my brother to the mosque, as my dad used to (God rest his soul). I stay at home, the weather is nice, the window is open, not so many cars on the streets but they start to pile up near the mosques. The Imam starts the Khutba and I can hear it right here in my home. At the mosque, my brother among other people starts praying. The Friday prayer consists of the khutba which is a speech about anything socio-religious; about certain situations in the life of the Prophet PBUH, about religious events, or even about how we should be polite in dealing with other people. I heard a speech about anger management once which I liked a lot. So you listen and look at the ceiling of the mosque and feel the presence of God more abundantly all around you and all inside you. There is Duaa sometimes within it (please God grant me peace). The speech is peaceful, educational, religious, spiritual, thought provoking (hopefully), and there is this feeling of spiritual energy recharged, just like a battery. Will it charge you enough for the entire week? For the day? For a couple of hours to come? Will it inspire you to do some good, or maybe learn more about your religion? Depends on you and maybe on the speech and the Imam too.

The khutba may be 15 minutes, half an hour, maybe an hour, maybe two! There was this situation I remember from the times of early Islam when the Imam (I think it was was Uthman Ibn Affan but I couldn’t find the reference right now, so please anyone correct me if I’m wrong) and he forgot the speech he was planning to say, so he ended up saying only one statement! The speech could be THAT SHORT!

After the speech, there are two raka’as. The noon prayer, which is substituted by the Friday prayer on Friday, is four raka’as not two. But the speech is in the place of the two that were removed from this prayer. This means that we are required to listen to some person who probably knows more about religion for some time on Friday. We are required to recharge our spiritual batteries even if it’s just for a couple of minutes because the act of praying itself may not be enough because maybe it’s not completely from the heart and maybe I was in a hurry because I had a meeting when I prayed, and maybe there was too much noise so I couldn’t concentrate. But here you are in a mosque, listening to the Imam talking about religious matters, thinking consciously about our faith, and then adding to it a normal prayer to make it complete.

The really beautiful thing about Friday prayer is the post prayer rituals. Not exactly rituals of course, but there are just so many people so you will end up smiling at people you don’t know, maybe helping an old man with something, seeing friends and neighbors, talking about anything or nothing. It’s a very friendly environment, and by the time you get home it’s hard not to think about spending the rest of the day with important people. So why not go visit family? Wouldn’t that be the perfect day!

To sum up, on Friday if a person gets to go to Friday prayer, they will listen to something important and nice for sometime about religion and society, get the spiritual battery recharged, continue the prayer from the heart as a result, meet people, smile at people, get smiled at by people, and consider spending the day with the people that matter in the family, because family always matters. No wonder it’s considered a feast in the heavens: One Fine Day :)


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