Wuzu Ka Sahih Tareeqa Seekhain

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Wuzu Ka Sahih Tareeqa Seekhain

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23.02.2017

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Learn "Wuzu Ka Tariqa" Step by Step in Urdu which is essential thing before offering your prayer. Wuzu Ka Tareeqa has been elaborated with the help of pictures.
It gives Wudu Steps with images, so that you can know the right way of performing Wuzu.

Wuḍūʾ (Arabic: الوضوء‎ al-wuḍūʼ [wʊˈdˤuːʔ]) is the Islamic procedure for cleansing parts of the body, a type of ritual purification, or ablution. Wudu involves washing the hands, mouth, nostrils, arms, head and feet with water and is an important part of ritual purity in Islam. What activities require wuḍūʾ, what rituals constitute it and what breaks or invalidates it are governed by fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence) and specifically its rules concerning hygiene.

Wuḍūʾ in other languages is Bengali: অযু, romanized: ôju; Persian: آب‌دست or دست‌نماز‎, romanized: ābdast or dast-namāz; Urdu: وضوء‎, romanized: wuzū; Hindi: वुज़ू, romanized: wuzū; Turkish: abdest; Berber languages: لوضو, romanized: luḍu; Albanian: abdesi; Azerbaijani: Dəstəmaz; Malay: wuduk; Chechen: Ламаз эцар/Lamaz ecar; Bosnian: abdest; Kurdish: دەست نوێژ‎, romanized: destniwêj; Somali: weeso.

Wuḍūʾ is typically done in preparation for formal prayers (salat or namaz or salah or salaah or salaat) and before handling and reading the Quran (Qur'an or AlQuran or Al-Quran or Quraan or Koran or Mushaf). Impurifying activities that invalidate wudu include urination, defecation, flatulence, deep sleep, light bleeding and sexual intercourse.

Wuḍūʾ is often translated as "partial ablution", as opposed to ghusl ("full ablution"), washing the whole body, or tayammum ("dry ablution"), replacing water with sand or dust due to its scarcity, its harmful effect on the person or some other reason. Purification of the body and clothes is called taharah.

The Qur'an says "For God loves those who turn to Him constantly and He loves those who keep themselves pure and clean." In regard to Muslims being required to be clean when handling and reading the Qur'an, the Qur'an says "Which none shall touch but those who are clean." The Islamic prophet Muhammad (PBUH) said that "Cleanliness is half of faith".

Wuḍūʾ description in Hadith:
Wuḍūʾ in Hadith Abu Hurayra, in reference to the Day of Resurrection, reported that Muhammad, when asked if he would be able to recognise Muslims, said, "Yes, you would have a mark which other people will not have. You would come to me with a white blaze on your foreheads and white marks on your feet because of the traces of ablution."

Abu Hurayra said, "I have heard prophet (may peace be upon him) say. In a believer adornment would reach the places where ablution reaches."

Uthman ibn Affan stated that Muhammad, said, "He who performed ablution well, his sins would come out from his body, even coming out from under his nails."

'Umar ibn al-Khattab reported that Muhammad said, "No one among you does wuḍūʾ and does wuḍūʾ thoroughly – or adequately – and then testifies, 'There is no god but Allah Alone with no partner and I testify that Muhammad is Allah's Messenger', without the eight doors of the Garden being opened to him so that he can enter by whichever of them he wishes.


Farā'id (Faraiz) according to Sunni Muslims
According to Sunni Muslims, the Qur'anic mandate for wuḍūʾ comes in the sixth ayat of sura 5. The ayat has been translated by Muhammad Muhsin Khan, Rashad Khalifa, Abdullah Yusuf Ali, Pickthal and Maulana Muhammad Ali as follows. Note that these scholars' translation refer to washing the feet.

Farā'id according to Shia Muslims
According to Shia Muslims the Qur'anic mandate for wuḍūʾ comes in the sixth ayat of sura 5. The ayat has been translated by Muhammad Habib Shakir as follows. Note this scholars translation refers to wiping the feet.

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