Generally, visiting graves is
mustahab (recommended) for men and permissible for women. Visiting the graves
of saintly people, parents and close relatives is considered mandoob
(desirable). It is permissible and possible for women to visit graves as long
as they do not cry out, wail, behave hysterically and respect graves too much,
which can cause mischief.
The Prophet prohibited visiting graves during a period of time when belief
in fate was not yet settled and traditions of the era of ignorance were still
being practiced. However, later he permitted it. The following is stated in a
hadith:According to the sound view of Hanafis, it is permissible for women to visit graves as long as they do not display extreme behaviors such as wailing and behaving hysterically. This is because the permission mentioned in hadiths applies to women too.
It has been observed in the stream of history that graves were also visited to ask for help from the dead and even to worship them.
As a matter of fact, there are benefits in visiting graves both for the living and the dead. When the Messenger of Allah was on the expedition to Makkah, he visited his mother Amina’s grave and cried, and made the people around him cry too, and he permitted Muslims to visit graves.
Benefits of Visiting Graves
a) It reminds one of death and afterlife, and makes him draw a lesson from it for his afterlife.
b) It directs one to asceticism and taqwa (God-Consciousness). It prevents over-ambitiousness for worldly life and committing harams. It directs one to commit good deeds.
c) Visiting graves of saintly people - especially that of our Prophet’s - refreshes one’s soul and helps to evoke supreme feelings in them. It is mandoob to travel to the graves of our Prophet and Allah’s saintly slaves in order to visit them. The Prophet states in a hadith: “Whoever visits me after I die, it is as if he visited me whene str I was alive.”
d) Visiting graves helps thengthening of one’s relations with his past, religious culture and history.
Benefits of Visiting Graves for the Dead
a) Graves of parents, other
relatives and friends are visited especially in order to pray for the peace of
their souls and for their salvation. The fact that thawabs gained from good
deeds that are performed on behalf of the dead will reach to them is stated in
hadiths and determined by the consensus of Islamic scholars. When visiting the
dead, one prays for the peace of their souls, reads the Quran and thawabs
gained from those good deeds are donated to them. It is thawab to plant a tree
at one’s grave. There are hadiths stating that a tree planted at a grave will
be a reason to ease the dead person’s agony. It is makrooh (abominable) to put
a wreath on graves as Christians do.
b) The dead hear the living
ones: It is stated in the hadiths that those in graves hear the ones who speak
while visiting them and respond to their salutations. As narrated by Abdullah
b. Umar, the Prophet addressed the corpses of Quraish people lying on the
ground after the battle of Badr: “Have you comprehended that the punishment the
Lord promised to you was true?” Upon this, Hazrat Umar said to him: “O
Messenger of Allah, are you addressing those emotionless corpses?” And the
Messenger of Allah said: “You do not hear more than those do. But they cannot
answer.”
Appropriate Manners for
Visiting Graves
When a visitor arrives in a
graveyard, he turns his face towards graves and, as our Prophet said, he
salutes them: “O inhabitants of the land of believers and Muslims! May peace be
upon you. Insha’allah we are going to join you. I ask Allah for the salvation
of both you and us.”
Although the meaning of the
narration by Hazrat Aisha is the same, its expression is a little bit
different. According to the narrations by Tirmidhi and Ibn Abbas, the Messenger
of Allah visited Madinah graveyard once and turning to graves, he said:
“O the inhabitants of the
graveyard, peace be upon you! May Allah forgive us and you. You went before us
and we are going to come after you.”. If one salutes
a dead person he knows while passing by his grave, the dead person responds to
his salutation and recognizes him. If one salutes a dead person he does not
know while passing by his grave, the dead person responds to his salutation.
During visit to graves, one
cannot perform prayers (salat). Graveyards can never be used as masjids. It is
makrooh to perform prayers facing a grave. It is not permissible to put candles
and light them up on graves.
The Prophet prohibited lighting
candles on graves because money is wasted for them and they are lit on graves
for revering. It is makrooh to sit on and step on graves.
One
must avoid uttering nasty
and nonsense words which are unrelated to grave visits, walking in an
arrogant
manner and one must be in a modest state. One must avoid relieving
nature in graveyards. . It is makrooh to cut down trees and plants in
graveyards. It is makrooh to make sacrifice near a grave, even though it
is
performed for the sake of Allah. And it is definitely haram to make
sacrifice in
order to make the dead content and get help from them.
TOMBS:
A tomb is a grave that is
visited. It is a building with domes, built over the graves of eminent
scholars, saintly people, dervishes, rulers, wives and children of rulers,
emirs, viziers and commanders in Islam. The buildings built over non-Muslims’
graves are also called tombs. Graves of eminent Islamic scholars, over which a
building is not built, are also called tombs as a respect for them.
She preferred to call the
Honored Grave “Grave of Ahmad” in her speech. As a matter of fact, as an
indication of respect to the Prophet, the Grave of Bliss (the Prophet’s grave)
is not called “tomb” but “Rawda al-Mutahhara” and “Qubbatu’l-Khadra”.
The Prophet, in some of his
hadiths, prohibited building buildings and masjids over graves. The majority of Islamic scholars said: Building houses, tombs,
domes, madrasas or masjids or arbors is makrooh, though it is not haram, on
condition that they are not built to show arrogance or wealth. If they are
built to show arrogance and wealth, it is haram. It is unlawful to build a tomb
in a public graveyard. If the grave belonged to the property of the dead
person, it is makrooh to build tomb over it. Nevertheless, some Islamic
scholars said it was permissible to build tombs over the graves of sheikhs,
scholars, rulers and wives and children of rulers. There have been scholars who
found it permissible to build tombs and domes if there are many buildings and
domes like that in places where tombs are built and if those tombs and domes
will not result in any kind of prestige such as respect and revering to them,
apart from making the dead people recognized and their names known.
It has been agreed by all except
Wahhabis that it is necessary to put a gravestone so that the dead person’s
name and where he lies will be known.
Except for gravestones which are
necessary not to forget the dead person’s name and where he lied, unnecessary
ornamentations and constructions must be avoided. The living people need the
money spent on graves more than the dead. None of them will be of use to the
dead except planting trees.