Can
Women Lead People in Friday Prayer?
Question: Recently,
we heard about some Muslim women in the United States claiming that it is
permissible for them to lead a public, mixed-gender Friday Prayer. What is
Islam’s stance on this? As far as I know, a Muslim woman can’t lead people in
Friday Prayer and she is not also allowed to deliver the Friday sermon. Please
clarify this issue as there is uproar here among the Muslims.
Name of Mufti Sheikh Muhammed
Nur Abdullah
Answer: In the Name of
Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.
All praise and thanks are due to
Allah, and peace and blessings be upon His Messenger.
Dear questioner, thank you for
your question, which shows the confidence you place in us. May Allah reward you
abundantly for your interest in knowing the teachings of Islam.
There is a consensus among Muslim
jurists that a woman is not allowed to lead men in a Mosque or congregation.
Also, she is not allowed to lead people in a Friday Prayer or to deliver the
Friday khutbah. She is, however, allowed to lead a
congregation consisting only of women.
Responding to the question, Sheikh Muhammad Nur Abdullah,
President of the Islamic Society of North American (ISNA) and member of the Fiqh Council of
1. Islamic teachings are based on
two things: belief and submission. When it comes to `ibadat
(acts of worship), the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) taught us to
follow his example and not someone else’s. Salah (ritual Prayer) is unanimously
agreed to be an act of `ibadah, and the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) is
reported to have said “Pray as you see me praying.” So the example of the
Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) and the Companions and the
generations that came after them have to be followed.
2. The rules of salah should be known from scholars because they know how
to interpret the sayings of the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him).
Among those great scholars are `A’ishah (may Allah be
pleased with her). Among the rules of salah are the
requirements and prerequisites for how to perform it, who can lead the people
in salah, and so on.
3. Scholars have put certain
conditions for someone to be qualified to lead the people in Prayer. The imam
must be a Muslim, sane, adolescent, male, and pure, i.e., have
wudu’ (ablution). Women leading men in Prayer is
wrong, whether in fard (obligatory) or nafl (supererogatory) Prayers. But if the followers are
only women, it is allowed for a woman to lead the Prayer. According to Shafi`is and Hanbalis, a woman
can lead other women in Prayer while standing in the middle of the line.
According to Malikis, women cannot lead other women
in Prayer at all, while the Hanafis say it is makruh or blameworthy.
4. According to the hadith of Umm Waraqah reported in the Sunan of
Abu Dawud, the Prophet (peace and blessings be upon
him) appointed a muezzin for her, and ordered her to lead her family members in
Prayer.
5. The majority of Muslim jurists
say that there is no single incident where a woman led a mixed Prayer outside
her family members.
Having said that, we cannot find
one single proof that women can lead men outside their family members in salah, and going with the hadith “pray as you see me
praying”, we cannot innovate a way of performing salah.
Allah Almighty knows best.