Shrouding the body of the deceased, even it be with just
one piece of cloth, is a collective obligation (fard kifayah)
of the Muslims. Bukhari narrated from Khabbab that he said:
"We migrated with Allah's Messenger, peace be upon him,
seeking Allah's pleasure, and we hope He will reward us for
that. In the meanwhile some of us died and received no reward
in this life. One of them was Musa'ab ibn 'Umayr, who was
killed in the Battle of Uhud. We did not find anything to
shroud him in except a piece of cloth. When we covered his
head, his feet would show, and if we covered his feet, his
head would show. Allah ' s Messenger, peace be upon him,
ordered us to use the cloth to cover his head with it and
cover his feet with some grass." 66
In shrouding, the following practices are recommended and
should be observed while preparing a body for burial.
-1- The shroud should be nice, clean, and large enough to
cover the entire body. This is based on a narration of Ibn
Majah and Tirmizhi, who regard it a sound hadith from Abu
Qatadah that the Prophet, peace be upon him, said: "If
one of you is a guardian to his deceased brother, he should
give him the best shroud he can."
-2- A shroud should be white, as it is recorded by Ahmad,
Abu Daw'ud, and Tirmizhi on the authority of Ibn 'Abbas that
the Prophet, peace be upon him, said: "Wear white
clothes, for these are your best clothes, and enshroud your
dead in them." Tirmizhi considers it a sound hadith.
-3- The shroud should be scented and perfumed. The hadith
is cited by Ahmad and by Al-Hakim, who regards it as sound, in
accordance with Jabir's narration that the Prophet, peace be
upon him, said: "If you perfume a dead body, do it three
times." Abu Sa'id, Ibn 'Umar, and Ibn 'Abbas directed
their heirs in their wills to perfume their shrouds with
aloes-wood.
-4- The shroud should be three wraps for a man and five
wraps for a woman, in light of what is narrated by the group
from 'Aishah who said: "The Messenger of Allah, peace be
upon him, was wrapped in three pieces of new white sheets of
cloth from Yemen, without a shirt or a turban."
Tirmizhi said: "The majority of the scholars among the
Companions of the Prophet (may Allah be pleased with them) and
others hold this view." Sufyan Al-Thawri said: "A
(deceased) male should be shrouded in three pieces of cloth,
or a shirt and two loose pieces of cloth, or (if necessary)
three wraps of cloth.
One wrap may suffice if nothing else is available. Two
wraps will also suffice, but three wraps are preferable for
those who can afford it. This is the opinion of Ash-Shafi'i,
Ahmad, and Ishaq. They hold that a deceased female should be
enshrouded in five sheets.
It is reported from Umm 'Atiyyah that the Prophet, peace be
upon him, gave her a loincloth, a shirt, a scarf, and two
pieces of cloth (to be used as a shroud for him). Ibn Al-Munzhir
said: "Most of the scholars, our teachers, are of the
opinion that a woman should be shrouded in five sheets of
cloth.
If a pilgrim dies, he is to be washed the same way any
non-pilgrim is washed. He should be shrouded in his ihram (two
pieces of seamless cloth which the pilgrims don during umrah
or hajj. His head should not be covered, nor should any
perfume be applied to his body, because the restrictions of
ihram still apply to him. This is based on what the group
reported from Ibn 'Abbas, who said: "During the last
hajj, a man, mounted on a horse, was close to Allah's Prophet,
peace be upon him, and was trying to learn more from him, when
he suddenly fell off his mount. The horse kicked him and
killed him. When the Prophet, peace be upon him, was told
about him, he said: 'Wash him with water and lotus (leaves),
then wrap him in his two sheets, and do not perfume his body
nor cover his head, for Allah, the Exalted, will raise him on
the Day of Resurrection with talbiyah (The prayer uttered
during hajj by the pilgrims) on his lips'."
The Hanafi and Maliki schools hold that when a pilgrim
dies, then his state of ihram is terminated, so that
thereafter he may be shrouded like any nonpilgrim. His shroud
may be sewn, his head may be covered, and he may be perfumed.
In their opinion the case of the man who died while with the
Prophet, peace be upon him, during the Hajj season is of a
special case and does not set a precedent for other cases.
Nevertheless the reason given (for not covering his head or
perfuming his body . . ) applies generally. The statement that
he will be raised on the Day of Judgement with talbiyah on his
tongue clearly applies to all who die in the state of ihram,
because it is a well established juristic principle that a
ruling true for one case is also true and applicable to other
similar cases, unless there is something indicating that the
case is specific in nature and limited in scope.
A shroud should be nice, but not so extravagantly expensive
that it would unduly burden a person.
Ash-Shafi'i remarked, "Ali said: 'Do not be
extravagant in shrouding me. I have heard Allah's Messenger,
peace be upon him, say: "Do not be extravagant in
preparing your shroud for it will soon be taken away."'
This is narrated by Abu Daw'ud, in whose chain of narrators is
a man called Abu Malik, who is of somewhat dubious character.
It is narrated that Huzhaifah said, "Do not be
extravagant in preparing the shroud. Buy for my shroud two
clean white sheets of cloth."
Abu Bakr said: "Wash this garment of mine, and add
another two sheets of cloth, and shroud me in them." At
this 'Aishah said, "This garment that you are wearing is
old and worn out." He said, "The living are more
deserving of the new garments than the dead. This shroud is
only to absorb the secretions of the body."
It is not permissible for a man to be buried in a silk
shroud, but it is permissible for a woman. This is based on
the following saying of Allah's Messenger, peace be upon him,
concerning silk and gold: "Both of these things, i.e.
gold and silk, are forbidden for the males of my ummah, but
they are permissible for the females."
Many scholars, however, disapprove of a woman using a silk
shroud, because this is extravagant and a waste of money and
therefore forbidden. These scholars differentiate between the
permissibility for a woman to wear ornaments during her
lifetime and the practice of beautifying the shroud after her
death.
Ahmad said: "I do not like a woman to be shrouded in
silk." Likewise Al-Hasan, Ibn al-Mubarak, and Ishaq
expressed their disapproval. Ibn AlMunzhir said, "I know
of no other scholars with a different view on this
subject."
A person who dies and leaves some money behind should have
his shroud purchased with his money. If the deceased did not
leave any money, then, whoever is responsible for taking care
of his living expenses should provide his shroud. In case the
deceased leaves no money and there is no one to take care of
him, then his shroud should be purchased by the Public
Treasury of the Muslims. Otherwise individual Muslims should
take care of it. The same applies in case of both the males
and the females.
Ibn Hazm said: "The cost of a woman 's shroud and the
digging of her grave should be met out of her own money. Her
husband is not obliged to pay for it, for the properties of
Muslims are forbidden to be used except by the authority of
the Qur'an or sunnah.
The Prophet, peace be upon him, said, "Verily, your
blood and property are sacred and are forbidden to each
other." Allah, the Exalted, imposed on a husband the
responsibility of providing his wife with food, clothing, and
housing. The shroud is not synonymous with clothing, according
to the language in which Allah chose to address us, nor is the
grave equivalent to housing.
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