Asr (prayer)
Third prayer of the day in Islam
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Asr (Arabic: ØµÙØ§Ø© Ø§ÙØ¹ØµØ±) is one of the five daily mandatory Islamic prayers (salah).
The Asr prayer consists of four obligatory cycles, rak'a.[1] As with Dhuhr, if it is performed in congregation, the imam is silent except when announcing the takbir,[2] i'tidal,[3] and taslim.[4]
The period of Asr begins approximately when the sun is halfway down from noon to sunset (various schools of thought of Islam differ on the starting point; some say that it begins when the shadow of an object equals its actual length plus its shadow during noon, others say that the actual length must be doubled).[citation needed] Asr ends at sunset.
The middle prayer mentioned in the Quran 2:238, is interpreted by Islamic scholars as being either the Asr prayer or the Fajr prayer.[citation needed] Muslims are commanded to protect the middle prayer, meaning that it should be performed at all costs.[5]
Al-Asr is also the title of the 103rd sura of the QurâÄn.[6]
Name variations
| Region/country | Language | Main |
|---|---|---|
| Arab World | Arabic | ØµÙØ§Ø© Ø§ÙØ¹ØµØ± (á¹¢alÄt al-Ê¿Aá¹£r) |
| Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Kashmir | Persian, Kashmiri | Ù٠از دÛÚ¯Ø±Ø Ù٠از عصر |
| Afghanistan, Pakistan | Pashto | ٠ازدÛګر, |
| Pakistan, India | Urdu, Hindi | ÙÙ
از عصر,
ठसà¥à¤° नमाà¤à¤¼ (Asar namaaz) |
| Pakistan | Punjabi | دÛگر Ø¯Û Ù٠از (diigar di namaz) |
| Turkey | Turkish | İkindi namazı |
| Sous (Morocco) | Tashelhit | âµâ´°âµ¥â´°âµâµâµâµ âµ âµâµâ´½âµ£âµâµ (Taáºallit n tukzin) |
| Rif (Morocco) | Tarifit | ÅÉaá¹£aa |
| Azerbaijan | Azeri | Æsr namazı |
| Albania, Kosovo | Albanian | Namazi i pasditës |
| Balkans | Bosnian | Ikindija-namaz |
| Bangladesh, India | Bengali | à¦à¦¸à¦°, à¦à¦à¦° (Asor) |
| Greater Somalia | Somali | Salaada Casir |
| Malay World | Indonesian, Malaysian, Basa Sunda | Salat asar, Solat asar |
| Maldives | Dhivehi | ÞÞ¦ÞÞªÞÞª ÞÞ¦ÞÞ§ÞÞª (Asuru namÄdhu) |
| Uzbekistan | Uzbek | Asr namozi |
| Kazakhstan | Kazakh | ÐкÑнÑÑ Ð½Ð°Ð¼Ð°Ð·Ñ (Ekinti namazy) |
| Tatarstan
(Russia) |
Tatar | Ðкенде намазÑ
(İkende namazı) |
Format
Ja'fari and Zaydi schools of thought
According to the Ja'fari and Zaydi schools of thought the time period within which the Asr prayer must be recited is the following:
- Time begins: once the Dhuhr prayer (mid-day daily prayer) has been recited.[8]
- Time ends: at the beginning of the setting of the Sun.
However, it is very important to recite the prayer as soon as the time begins. Letter 52 of Nahj al-Balagha contains instruction of Ali to his governors on the timings of salat, "The Asr prayers can be performed till the sun is still bright and enough time of the day is left for a person to cover a distance of six miles."
Hanafi, Hanbali, Shafiâi, and Maliki schools of thought
The time period within which the Asr prayer must be recited is the following:
- Time begins: The Sunni schools differ on when the time begins. The Maliki, Shafi`i, and Hanbali schools say it is at the time when the length of any object's shadow equals the length of the object itself plus the length of that object's shadow at noon. The dominant opinion in the Hanafi school says it begins when the length of any object's shadow is twice the length of the object plus the length of that object's shadow at noon.[9]
- Time ends: Once the sun has completely set below the horizon. However, it is frowned upon (and sinful in the Maliki school) to delay the prayer without a legitimate excuse to the point of the day in which the sun turns a pale red or orange color as it begins to set, though it would still be considered to have been prayed on time.
The Islamic prophet Muhammad said, "He who observes Al-Bardayn (i.e., Fajr and âAsr prayers) will enter Jannah."[10]
In another hadith: Muhammad said 'He who misses his Asr Salat (i.e. performs it after its specified time) is as if he had lost his wife, children and all his wealth.â (Sahih Muslim)
See also
- Dhikr
- Tasbih
- Mincha
- Other salah:
- Fajr prayer (Morning)
- Zuhr prayer (Mid-noon)
- Maghrib prayer (Sunset)
- Isha prayer (Night)