Lailatul-Qadr

Lailatul Qadr History
Laylatul-Qadr (Arabic:
لیلة القدر),
The Night of Power, is the holiest night in the Islamic calendar.
Muslims believe that on this night, the Quran was sent down from the
heaven to the Earth. The exact date of this night is unknown, but occurs
on one of the last ten odd nights of Ramadan (21st, 23rd, 25th, 27th,
or 29th). According to Islamic tradition, Muslims who stay up on this
holy night worshipping God will have all their sins forgiven.
Furthermore, they will be granted as many good deeds as though they had
worshipped continuously for one thousand months (83.3 years).
Lailatul Qadr Facts
- An entire chapter of the Quran, called "Al-Qadr" is devoted to explaining the merits of worshipping on Lailatul Qadr.
- According
to Islamic tradition, the following are signs of The Night of Power
every year: A peaceful night with moderate temperatures, no shooting
stars, and a moon that shines without rays. The sun, when it rises, will
appear as a disk with no beams of light coming out of it.
- Some
Muslims believe that the entire Quran was revealed to Angel Gabriel on
this night, who conveyed it to Muhammad verse by verse over a period of
twenty-three years, when ordered to do so by God.
- Muslims
who can afford to take time off work spend every single one of the last
ten nights in prayer, hoping to find Laylatul Qadr, trying to emulate
the traditions of the Prophet Muhammad. They fast during the day and
study the Quran and pray during the night. The Prophet Muhammad used to
do the same. In fact, according to his wife, he would tighten his belt
and pray all night, and encouraged his family members to pray all night
as well. (Bukhari, Sahih Bukhari, Volume 3, Book 32, Number 241)
Lailatul Qadr Top Events and Things to Do
- There are several Islamic recommended acts for Muslims to do on this night: Study the Quran, give charity,
strive for forgiveness, pray, make duma (a more personal prayer during
which Muslims ask God for things that they need), and remember the power
of God.
- For Lailatul Qasr Muslims congregate in mosques to pray
and worship all night together. Imams often give sermons that teach
listeners about the best prayers they can make that night.
- On
this night, many Muslims give money away in charity, after more than 20
days of fasting. The rewards of charity are multiplied on
Laylatul-Qadr. This can be evidenced by the Prophet Muhammad's
teachings:
Whoever draws near to Allah during it (Ramadan) with a
single characteristic from the characteristics of (voluntary) goodness,
he is like whoever performs an obligatory act in other times. And
whoever performs an obligatory act during it, he is like whoever
performed seventy obligatory acts in other times.
- Ibn Khuzaymah, Sahih Ibn Khuzaymah, no. 1887.

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Lailatul-Qadr-2020
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