Question: I
have read that the Islamic Shari‘ah does not legislate holding two
Friday prayers in one locality. Yet, not only do I know of many places
that do hold two Friday prayers but also I haven’t found any basis for
this opinion. Do you know any justification for this ruling?
Answer: To
answer your question, I’ll first elaborate upon a few points:
According to the Sunnah set
by the Prophet (sws), the Friday sermon should be delivered by the head
of state and his administrators in their appropriate units, and only they
should lead the Friday prayers. However, in case of any legitimate plea
on their part, other persons can address and lead the Friday prayers as
their authorized representatives.
The implications of this Sunnah
are very clear: In Islam, mosques are meant to be the fountainhead
of authority. Also, there is a complete negation of theocracy. A person
whom the Muslims choose as their leader shall also lead them in worship,
eliminating once and for all the division between state and religion. After
the Prophet (sws), his Companions solemnly adhered to this Sunnah
in the Caliphate they established. However, in later times, when due to
their own ill-ways the Muslim rulers could not stand face to face with
the public, they themselves handed over the mosques to the ulema. This
was one of the most tragic incidents of our history. The result was that
religion lost its grace and the state its grandeur.
Now with this background, I come to
your question:
Since only state representatives were
authorized to deliver the Friday address and lead the Friday prayers, other
mosques in the same locality were not given this permission because of
the fact that there was no other state representative that was made available
to those mosques; this was not by default but by planning. The whole territory
was divided such that each locality was assigned an administrator or state
representative; he would go the Jami‘ Masjid (Central Mosque) of
his unit and people of other mosques would also gather in that mosque.
Other mosques of the same locality, as a consequence, remained closed for
Friday prayers.
Today, however, when we are not praying
the Friday prayer in its real form, this condition obviously does not apply.
Unless a Muslim state itself realizes this responsibility and deputes its
representatives to the mosque, there is nothing wrong in holding Friday
prayers in various mosques of the same locality or neighbourhood.
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