maxoverton
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Hello, I am a new member and non-Muslim, but I am researching your very interesting religion. I know that you pray at regular times - pre-dawn, noon, late afternoon, sunset and evening before retiring - but when I read some accounts of Hajj, it said that in the old days the caravans would sometimes travel at night and sleep during the day to escape the heat.
What I wondered was... are the prayer times the same during a reversal of day/night, or are they adjusted to meet the new circumstances? I imagine the same might apply for someone on shift work. If you came home after working all night, do you say Fajr at dawn as normal or do you consider that to be Maghrib because it is at the end of your day? You say 'Isha just before retiring - but if you go to bed at 9am, do you still say 'Isha? What about noon prayers? Are you expected to interrupt your sleep for these prayers? Yes, I know prayer is better than sleep, but is it a choice or mandatory?
I seriously want to know. I write novels and I have a Muslim in one of them, travelling at night. I want to know what he does because I do not want to misrepresent him or his religion. Can anybody help me please?
Cheers,
Max
What I wondered was... are the prayer times the same during a reversal of day/night, or are they adjusted to meet the new circumstances? I imagine the same might apply for someone on shift work. If you came home after working all night, do you say Fajr at dawn as normal or do you consider that to be Maghrib because it is at the end of your day? You say 'Isha just before retiring - but if you go to bed at 9am, do you still say 'Isha? What about noon prayers? Are you expected to interrupt your sleep for these prayers? Yes, I know prayer is better than sleep, but is it a choice or mandatory?
I seriously want to know. I write novels and I have a Muslim in one of them, travelling at night. I want to know what he does because I do not want to misrepresent him or his religion. Can anybody help me please?
Cheers,
Max