hissa
Senior Member
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In my Islam course that I'm taking in university, a group of students did a presentation on the rights of women in islam. Their presentation was fairly good, until they started to state how women in islam were even giving equal rights to lead prayer (a mixed gender prayer), and they used Umm Waraqa as "evidence" to prove their point. So the whole time I was like.. wha?? :-\
Ok, Islam does not allow women as imans in mixed congregational prayer, so can someone explain this to me:
Umm Waraqa bint Abdallah, an Ansari woman who was well versed in the Qurân, was instructed by Prophet Muhammad to lead ahl dariha (ahl dariha means the people of her home where 'dar' means home and can refer to one’s residence, neighborhood, or village), which consisted of both men and women, in prayer. The "people of Umm Waraqa’s home" were so numerous that Prophet Muhammad appointed a muezzin for her. Umm Waraqa was one of the few to hand down the Qurân before it was written.