In the name of Allah, the Inspirer of truth
Fiqh of Masjid & Musalla - Easy Islam
Fiqh of Masjid &
Musalla
Answered by Shaykh Abdurrahman
ibn Yusuf
What exactly is a masjid? Is there a difference between a masjid, musalla, and jamat khana, etc? These are questions which need detailed discussion.
Nowadays, in the west, many Islamic Centers being managed include, among other things, a prayer hall, musalla, or jamat khana. Some communities rent an industrial unit, a store front, a house, or an apartment in which members of the Muslim community gather to perform congregational prayer (and in many cases social activities). Many communities actually have purchased property which they consider their masjid.
Which of the above can technically be considered a masjid, and what are the related rulings?
There is a difference between a masjid and a musalla (or jamat khana). A musalla (or jamat khana) literally means a place where prayer is performed or where congregations are held, or worded differently, any temporary place in which worshippers congregate to perform their prayers. A musalla is also a place that has not been made an endowment or not yet intended to become a permanent masjid until the Last Day. In many cases, it is a temporary place from which the community will transfer once they find a more suitable, convenient, or permanent location. Though Muslims today commonly refer to their “musalla” as their “masjid,” which the literal meaning of masjid (a place where the prostration is made) allows, a musalla cannot technically be considered a legal [shar‘i] masjid. Likewise the reward for prayer in a musalla is not the same as in a proper masjid.
The
Masjid
Masjids are the houses of Allah on the earth. They shine up to the inhabitants of the heavens just as the stars in the sky shine down to the inhabitants of the earth (Tabarani).
A true masjid, in the legal sense, is a place that has been permanently dedicated to Allah for the sake of prayer, recitation, and His remembrance. Any piece of land that has been dedicated permanently for the sake of congregational prayers will also become a proper masjid. The great Hanafi scholar of Egypt ‘Allama Tahtawi states:Know that for it [piece of land] to be considered a masjid, a building [or structure] is not necessary. Tahtawi, Kitab al-Waqf, Ahkam al-masjid and Qadi Khan 4:712).
A masjid is normally made into a waqf or endowment (sometimes difficult to establish depending on the legal connotations of endowment in some countries). However, once a masjid is erected, it will always be a masjid and the property of Allah. It cannot return to being the property of any person or community even those who may have paid for establishing it. ‘Allama Haskafi writes,If the inhabitants surrounding the masjid wither away and the masjid becomes desolate, it will still remain a masjid according to Imam Abu Hanifa and Imam Abu Yusuf until the Last Day, and the fatwa is on this opinion (Hawi al-Qudsi)” (al-Durr al-Mukhtar 3:371).
The Messenger of Allah (upon him be peace) said,All the earth will disappear on the Day of Judgment with the exception of the masjids for they will join with one another (Suyuti, Jami’ al-Shaghir).
Designation of a Masjid“It is prohibitively disliked to have sexual intercourse above the masjid. Likewise it is disliked to urinate or defecate above it because it is a masjid to the peaks of the heavens (Ibn ‘Abidin adds, “Likewise to the recesses of the earth below”) … it is disliked to enter any impurity into it.… [However] these are not disliked above a room which has been just set aside as a masjid [in a person’s home] nor in the room itself, since that is not a shar‘i masjid.… It is permitted for those in a seminally defiled state or menstruating women to enter into it [i.e. a musalla or place especially prepared for ‘Id or funeral prayer] just as is permitted into the extended yard of the masjid [i.e. the overflow area].… (al-Durr al-Mukhtar with Radd al-Muhtar 1:441-442).
Hence, no area of the actual masjid prayer area can be excluded from the masjid once designated as a masjid. However, before the plans are finalized and the area is designated a masjid, portions can be excluded from any of the floors above or below where the masjid will be, to be used for something else that is related to the masjid, for instance, a storage area, office for the imam, a basement for storing masjid amenities, a shop to bring in income for the masjid, etc. Ibn ‘Abidin writes in his Radd al-Muhtar,If they build a room above it for the imam then there is nothing wrong with that, because that is part of the welfare of the masjid. However, once the construction [designation] of the masjid is completed then they want to add a room, it will be prohibited [to change the designated masjid area and add a room for something else in it]. If the committee states that we had intended to do such, their statement will not be upheld [in court] (Radd al-Muhtar 3:371).
Likewise the Egyptian jurist Ibn Nujaym writes,It states in the Mujtaba that it is not permitted for the guardian of the masjid to build shops in the masjid or in its courtyard [i.e. the courtyard in which salats are performed during summer in hot countries - also known as the external masjid] (al-Bahr al-Ra’iq 5:249).
Storage Areas and Water Reservoir Above or Below a MasjidA masjid can have a storage area above or below the actual prayer hall. The storage space below the prayer hall however must be used solely for the amenities of the masjid and must have been designated as such in the masjid’s design phase. Likewise, it would be permitted to have constructed a water reservoir underneath the masjid (as in some Muslim countries). It states in the al-Durr al-Mukhtar,
If they make a basement beneath the masjid for its welfare [however, ‘Allama Ibn ‘Abidin adds here that this should be of limited area], it would be permissible just as is in the Masjid in Jerusalem (al-Durr al-Mukhtar ma’a ‘l-Radd al-Muhtar 3:370).
A Residence or Bathrooms Above or Below a Masjid“It remains [to be ruled], whether it would be permissible if the person making the endowment designates lavatories [bayt li ’l-khala’] to be directly beneath the masjid, as is the case in Masjid Mahallat al-Shahm in Damascus. I have not seen a specific ruling on this. Yes, it states in the Chapter of Endowments [of al-Durr al-Mukhtar] ‘If they make a basement beneath the masjid for its welfare it would be permissible’ so ponder” (Radd al-Muhtar 1:441).
Ibn ‘Abidin however only mentions this analogy between a storage basement and bathrooms in passing, stating that it is an issue in need of further deliberation. It is not based on any strong analogy. Islamic Centers and Musallas TodayI do not make the masjid lawful for the menstruating women or the one experiencing post natal bleeding (Abu Dawad, Ibn Maja, Tabarani, Zayla‘i has considered it sound [hasan] 1:193-194).
Young Children in the MasjidKeep your infants and the insane away from your masjids (Sunan Ibn Maja, babu ma yukrahu fi ‘l-masjid).
Sleeping & Eating in the MasjidThe apparent purport of their [jurists] statement is that it is a communal sunna to perform it [tarawih] in congregation in the masjid, to the extent that if they performed it in congregation in their homes, and no congregation took place in the masjid, they would all be sinful (Radd al-Muhtar 1:473).
Hence, if this is the case for a confirmed sunna congregation, it would be more binding to have a congregation for every obligatory prayers in each locality. The Messenger of Allah (upon him be peace) said,There is no salat for the neighbor of the masjid except in the masjid (Daraqutni, Hakim from Kashf al-Khafa’).
Conversation in the Masjid(It is disliked to speak in the masjid) this is regarding that talk which is of [a] permissible nature, [and] not regarding other than that which would warrant much greater sin (i.e. if one were to speak of it in the masjid) (Radd al- Muhtar 5:269).
The Musalla or Temporary Place of PrayerIf the basement was designated for any other use [i.e. not for the masjid] or he [the owner] made a room above it and faced the door of the masjid to the street [meaning he made it separate], then it cannot be a masjid. Hence he may sell it… [if he wishes, since it does not become an endowment] the same as if he had made [a portion from] the middle of his home into a masjid, and permitted for the adhan to be called therein - it would not become a masjid.
‘Allama Ibn ‘Abidin comments on this by saying:The reason for the place not being a masjid is because the additional rooms are not designated for the welfare of the masjid. This is explicitly mentioned in the Is‘af, where it says, “If the basement or the floor above it is endowed for the benefit of the masjid or they were properly endowed for that then it would become a masjid (Shurunbulaliyya). It states in al-Bahr [al-Ra’iq] that the summary of this [issue] is that it is a condition for it being considered a masjid that the lower and upper floors need to [also] be a masjid, so that the rights [and ownership] of people is waived from it, as Allah says ‘And verily the masjids are for Allah…’” (Radd al-Muhtar 3:370).
Although similar laws should be observed in a musalla as in a masjid, since it is emulating a masjid, it is not legally necessary. Therefore:A useful setup for women’s prayer could be that there be two room: one connected to the back of the men’s prayer area, which could be intended as being included in the shar’i masjid; and another room behind the first room, which could be a musalla or a multi purpose room for menstruating women or women with children to stay in.