![]() ![]() A sacrifice does not count if the animal is younger than a thaniyyah except in the case of sheep, or if it is sheep that is younger than a jadha’ah…. The second condition is that it should have reached the age of sacrifice, by being a thaniyyah or older in the case of camels, cows and goats, and jadha’ah or older in the case of sheep. It says in al-Mawsoo’ah al-Fiqhiyyah (5/83) concerning the conditions of udhiyah: It was classed as saheeh by al-Albaani in Saheeh al-Nasaa’i. al-Haafiz said: Its isnaad is qawiy (strong). Then he quoted some of the ahaadeeth which indicate that it is permissible to offer a jadha’ah of sheep as a sacrifice, such as the hadeeth of ‘Uqbah ibn ‘Aamir (may Allaah be pleased with him) who said: “We slaughtered a jadha’ah of sheep with the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him).” Narrated by al-Nasaa’i, 4382. ![]() This interpretation is the one which is correct. So it is mustahabb not to slaughter anything but a musinnah. Scholarly consensus says something different, so this hadeeth should be understood as referring to what is better. The apparent meaning of the hadeeth suggests that a jadha’ah of sheep is not permissible except if one cannot find a musinnah. This clearly indicates that it is not permissible to slaughter a jadha’ah of any animal in any circumstances, except sheep. This hadeeth also clearly states that only a musinnah can be slaughtered, except in the case of sheep, where a jadha’ah may be offered.Ī musinnah is a thaniyyah of anything, camel, cow or sheep, or anything over that age. Muslim (1963) narrated that Jaabir (may Allaah be pleased with him) said: The Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “Do not slaughter anything but a musinnah, unless it is too hard for you, in which case you should slaughter a young sheep (jadha’ah min al-da’n). The phrase “It will not count for anyone after you” is a definitive statement that it would not count for anyone after him. We will explain below what jadha’ah means. This hadeeth indicates that a jadha’ah of goats (young goat) is not sufficient as a sacrifice. Whoever slaughters an animal that is younger than that, it does not count as a sacrifice.įor example, al-Bukhaari (5556) and Muslim (1961) narrated that al-Bara’ ibn ‘Aazib (may Allaah have mercy on him) said: A maternal uncle of mine whose name was Abu Burdah slaughtered his sacrifice before the prayer, and the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said to him: “Your sheep is a sheep for meat (i.e., not a sacrifice).” He said: “O Messenger of Allaah, I have a young goat (according to another report: I have a young she-goat) (according to a report by al-Bukhaari (5563): I have a jadha’ah which is better than two musinnahs – shall I sacrifice it?)” The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “Sacrifice it, but that will not be valid for anyone but you.” According to another report: “It will not count for anyone after you.” Then he said: “Whoever slaughters (the animal) before the prayer has slaughtered it for himself, and whoever slaughters it after the prayer has offered the sacrifice and followed the way of the Muslims.” Kids will have a blast playing with cows, pigs, skunks, chicken, dogs, sheep or farmer figures and putting them on the barn door and pushing others into the barn.The scholars (may Allaah have mercy on them) are agreed that Islam has prescribed the age for sacrificial animals and it is not permissible to slaughter animals that are younger than that. Hooray, it’s UNO MOO!®, a preschool version of the beloved UNO® game!įarm animals come out of their barn to play, and younger players round them up by matching their colors or types. When a player is down to one figure, they shout “UNO Mooooooo!” The first one to get all of their figures back into the barn wins! Includes 1 play-and-store barn, 28 animal and farmer figures and 4 haystack partitions. If the figure they draw matches the color or animal on the barn door, or is a farmer, they may immediately play it. If a player does not have a matching figure or a farmer that can be played, they must draw one figure from the barn. The figure played will be the figure the next player tries to match. When a child plays a figure, they push the figure already on the barn door into the barn and then replace it with their own. Players draw five figures from among the cows, pigs, skunks, chickens, dogs, sheep or farmers. Each player then hides their figures behind a haystack and out of view of the other players. To start, place all of the figures in the barn and mix them up. In UNO MOO!®, farm animals come out of their barn to play with you! Akin to the classic UNO® game, younger players round up the animals by matching their colors or types.
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