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Shiavault - a Vault of Shia Islamic Books Contemporary Legal Rulings In Shi'i Law A- 'Ibadat Ritual Purity (taharah) Q1: It often happens that I shake hands with someone while my hands are wet. I do not know whether the one with whom I shook hands is a Muslim or an unbeliever ( kafir ), who is not regarded as ritually pure ( tahir ). Is it obligatory for me to ask him in order to make sure? A: Certainly not. It is not obligatory for you to ask him.
You may say "the hand with which I touched his hand was ritually pure." (FM, pp. 398-99) Q2: A university student, businessman, tourist or some such person travels to a non-Muslim country, say, Europe, such that scarcely a day passes without direct contact with its Christian and Jewish inhabitants, with the attendant moisture exchange in the cafe, or at the barber shop, doctor's office, dry cleaner's, etc. making it difficult to count (the places). What should he do?
A: He should assume the ritual purity of their bodies as long as he does not know that their ritual impurity ( najasah ) was acquired from an external source. (FM, p. 399) Q3: If I move into a place which was inhabited before me by people who are not judged to be ritually pure, is it correct for me to consider everything ritually pure? A: Yes, consider everything ritually pure if you do not know or are unsure of its ritual impurity. (FM, p.
A: This is not permissible and it is obligatory to take them out of such places and to purify them if they have come into contact with some ritual impurity. (FM, p. 419) Q6: Some types of soap which are imported from outside contain lard in their ingredients but at the end, only 5% remains in them. In that case, is the ruling of transformation ( istihalah ) applicable (to it) and (is the soap) ruled to be ritually pure, or does it remain ritually impure? A: It remains ritually impure.
God knows best. (MMS, p. 17, Q17) Q7: What is the ruling on blood that coagulates under the fingernail, this being the result of a blow or some other cause?