Tayammum
Tayammum is the Islamic act of dry ritual purification using purified sand, stone or earth, which may be performed in place of ritual washing if no clean water is readily available or if one is suffering from moisture-induced skin inflammation or scaling, illness, or hardship.
Etymology
Tayammum is an Arabic word that means an aim or purpose. Tayammum is derived from "amma," meaning 'to repair.'In Islamic law, Tayammum means to wipe the face and hands of a person with the purpose of purification for prayer by using soil, purified sand, or dust.
In the Quran
Circumstances
In the following eight circumstances, one has to make Tayammum rather than Wudu or ghusl :- When access to water is restricted or impractical.
- When one's responsibility is to use the limited supply of water to remove impurity from a Mosque.
- When sufficient amounts of water for ritual washing are not available.
- When using the available water for wudu or ghusl will leave insufficient water for drinking and will put you and your dependents at risk of dying of thirst or illness.
- When obtaining water is hazardous or prohibitively expensive.
- When using water poses a health risk that does not come under the subject of wiping over a jabirah, especially when there is a risk of worsening the injury if the dressing is removed.
- When the water available is impure.
- When performing Wudu or Ghusl will take all or part of the time of prayer.
In the Quran
The verse of tayammum was revealed while Muhammad was on an expedition with the Muslim army and accompanied alongside his wife Aisha. Aisha had borrowed a necklace from Asma, her sister, and had noticed that her necklace was missing. She informed Muhammad about this and he stopped the entire army so that they could look for it. Eventually one of the men found the necklace, however, it was time to pray and no water was to be found for them to perform the wudu. It was at this point that the verse of Tayammum was revealed.
Performance
Tayammum is practiced as follows:- Finding a piece of ground which is free of najaasah. This may be any kind of ground surface that naturally collects dust like rock or sand
- Intending tayammum
- Reciting the bismillah
- Placing one's hands on the surface of the ground. If using a small stone the Hanafi and Maliki madhabs also permit turning it over
- Dusting off the hands
- Rubbing the hands with one another
- Rubbing the face with both hands
The same conditions that invalidate wudu also invalidate tayammum. In addition, a person's tayammum is invalidated as and when water becomes available. Scholars differ regarding whether the hands or face should be wiped first. However those who maintain that order is not fardh say that you can wipe the hands first and then the face or you can wipe the face first then the hands. But they say that the order that is in the Qu'ran is better to follow. Those who maintain that order is fardh say that if tayyammum is being done in place of wudu then order is fardh as well as continuity. But if it is done in place of ghusl, then neither order or continuity are fardh.
Tayammum is permitted on clean earth piece, but the ideas about what is inside of this definition or not is depending per maddhabs. Some maddhabs accepts baked earthen pots, clay, limestone, the tayammum stone, taahir earth, and walls of mud, stone or brick. Tayammum is not permitted on things that are not earthen, such as things that burn and turn into ashes or things that can be melted by heat.
Anything that nullifies wudu, such as urine, passing wind, stool, blood or pus that flows from its wound, vomiting a mouthfull, falling asleep whilst leaning against something, and fainting, will also nullify tayammum, since it is a substitute for wudu. Also, upon the presence of water, tayammum will be annulled, since tayammum is a process used at the absence of presence. Once the conditions are gone, one becomes impure and must redo the purification process through wudu.