Sacred months


In Islam culture, the sacred months are four months of the Arab calendar. Fighting is forbidden during these months except in response to aggression. Al-Shaafa'i and many of scholars went to the fatwa of the deceased during the sacred months. The purpose of that tradition was to enable pilgrims, merchants, and others to go to markets or places of worship and return home safely.

Before Islam

The sacred months were important in the law of Abraham, and the Arabs forbade fighting. This continued until the Arabs began to use the Nasee in their calendar, which led to the absence of sacred months in some years. This was mentioned in the Quran in the form of denial and prohibition: "The Nasee is an increase in kufr, for the disbelievers are misled by a year, and they deprive him of a year."
The Arabs in the Arabian Peninsula committed themselves to not fight during the holy months, but the tribes “the sons of Khatham" and “the sons of Ta'i" disobeyed, as they were waging war at that time.

In Islam

s magnify these months and forbid Muslims from violating them.

In the Qu'ran

These holy months are mentioned in the Quran: "The number of months in God is twelve months in the Book of God on the day of the creation of the heavens and the earth, of which four are the Sacred that value religion, do not wrong yourselves".
Of the verse, "Do not wrong yourselves", Qatada said: "The injustice in the sacred months is a greater sin and a source of injustice than in others, although injustice is a great sin anyway, but God magnifies what he wants." He said: "God chose Safaya from his creation, chose messengers from angels, messengers from people, and chose mosques from the land, and chose the months of Ramadan and the sacred months, from months, and chose Friday from the days, and chose night of power from the nights.

In the prophetic Sunnah

When Prophet Muhammad mentioned these months in his Hadith, he said: "The time has turned its form on the day Allah created the heavens and the earth, the twelve months, including four sanctuaries; three sequences: Dhul Qa'dah, Dhu al-Hijjah and Muharram, and Rajab Mudar, between Jumada and Sha'baan."