Ata said: When Ibn Umar offered the Friday prayer in Makkah he would go forward and pray two rak'ahs, he would then go forward and pray four rak'ahs; but when he was in Madina, he offered the Friday prayer, then returned to his house and prayed two rak'ahs, not praying them in the mosque. Someone mentioned this to him and he replied that the Messenger of Allah صلی اللہ علیہ وسلم used to do it.
Read More..Abu Hurairah reported the Messenger of Allah صلی اللہ علیہ وسلم as saying (this is the version of the narrator Ibn al-Sabbah): If anyone of you prays after the Friday prayer, he should say for rak'ahs. According to the version of the narrator Ibn Yunus, the tradition goes: When you have offered the Friday prayer, pray after it four rak'ahs. He said: My father said to me: My son, if you have said two rak'ahs in the mosque, then you comes to your house, pray two rak'ahs more.
Read More..Narrated Abdullah ibn Umar: The Messenger of Allah صلی اللہ علیہ وسلم used to pray two rak'ahs in his house after the Friday prayer. Abu Dawud said: This tradition has been transmitted in a similar way by Abdullah bin Dinar from Ibn Umar.
Read More..Narrated Abdullah ibn Umar: Ibn Jurayj said: Ata told me that he saw Ibn Umar pray after the Friday prayer. He moved a little from the place where he offered the Friday prayer. Then he would pray two rak'ahs. He then walked far away from that place and would offer four rak'ahs. I asked Ata: How many times did you see Ibn Umar do that? He replied: Many times. Abu Dawud said: This has been narrated by AbdulMalik ibn Abu Sulayman, but did not narrate it completely.
Read More..Narrated Anas ibn Malik: When the Messenger of Allah صلی اللہ علیہ وسلم came to Madina, the people had two days on which they engaged in games. He asked: What are these two days (what is the significance)? They said: We used to engage ourselves on them in the pre-Islamic period. The Messenger of Allah صلی اللہ علیہ وسلم said: Allah has substituted for them something better than them, the day of sacrifice and the day of the breaking of the fast.
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