Articles

The traveler, traveling and its conditions


source: silsilat ul-hudā wa nnūr ~ the series of guidance and light ~ tape no.


247


Question #2: “Why did you complete (your prayer)?” [The


shaykh was led in prayer during his journey, then the imām


shortened (the prayer) but the shaykh did not shorten, so he


was asked about that] Shaykh al-Albānī answers:


“The matter )of being considered a traveler(, in my


understanding, does not depend on crossing a fixed distance


as much as it depends on two things, the foundation of which


is the intention, and the other is leaving the city/country. So if


there is the intention to travel, and he leaves the city/country,


the rulings of traveling are applicable (to him); and after that,


the distance that he crosses is not regarded, whether long or


short. As for (if) the fundamental principle is not present, which


is the intention, then this (person) who left (the city/country) is


not a traveler even if he crossed a long distance or less or


more, because traveling is one of the rulings that are linked


with this hadīth, about which some of the scholars of Islām


have said that it is a third of Islām: ‘Actions are only by (their)


intentions and every person will have only that which he


intended.’[1] And the truth is that this is a very sensitive issue


about which the views of the scholars have differed and they


did not agree on something completely clear such that it would


be possible for someone to say: ‘This is the truth, it is quite


obvious, so leave the side issues off of me.’ No one can say


this, but all that he can say is: ‘I chose such and such.’


So I chose – what I understood from the treatise of Ibn


Taimiyah (rahimahullaah) regarding this matter. He has a


special treatise about the rulings of traveling. Indeed he struck


a very wonderful example, from which the researcher and


student of knowledge understand that traveling has nothing to


do with crossing a long distance over a short distance. As for


(saying) that it has nothing to do with crossing a short


distance, then I think this is not an area of debate, because it


is established from the Messenger (of Allāh) ( (صلى الله عليه وسلم


that he used to leave from Madīnah to al-Baqīʽ (graveyard);


then he would greet them (the dead) with the salām, then


return. He used to go out to the martyrs, to Uhud; he would


greet them with the salām, then return. He did not consider


himself a traveler although he left the city. And the opposite of


that as well – if he crossed a long distance, that does not


mean that he became a traveler merely because of crossing


this distance.


The example that (Ibn Taimiyah) struck is as the following. He


was from Damascus like me, and there are well-known towns


around Damascus, so he struck an example with a city known


up to this time as Duma. He said, if a man seeking game[2]


left from Damascus to Duma (which is) 15 kilometers (away) –


there is no doubt that (crossing) this distance is (considered)


travelling according to our custom if the fundamental condition


exists, which is the intention to travel – (Ibn Taimiyah) says


that this man is not considered a traveler because he had left


for hunting then for returning. But what happened was that he


did not find the game that he was looking for, so he continued


on the journey, and continued and continued, and kept going


on until he reached where? – Aleppo; and there are


approximately 400 kilometers between Aleppo and Damascus


today by car. (Ibn Taimiyah) says this (man) is not a traveler –


although he had crossed (many) distances of the traveler, not


just one distance – because the first condition, which is the


intention to travel, was not there in this person. Thus, we can


say that a car driver leaves early in the morning from ʽAmmān


for instance to reach Maʽān (then) to al-ʽAqabah,[3] returning


by evening; this (person) is not a traveler because he, due to


his work, does not intend to travel; rather he intends to carry


out this work to make a living.


Therefore, regarding the subject of traveling, we must take


into consideration the fundamental condition, which is the


intention. And by us taking into consideration this intention, the


ruling differs for two persons who cross one and the same


distance, but one of them is a traveler and the other is not


considered a traveler because of the difference in their


intentions. And in this manner, there also occur rulings related


to the ruling of residency, i.e. residency that is planned for a


specific time. (For example), two men left a city, both as


travelers; they landed in another city. The staying of one of


them is that of a traveler (but) the other one is a resident.


Why? Because (this second man) has another wife there, so


he (goes) from one wife to another wife. Thus, because of


there being a wife for him who causes him to be chaste, gives


him a home and arranges his accommodations for him, he


takes a ruling other than that of his companion because the


situation differed in some ways.


Therefore, we learn of a very important conclusion, which is


that the exact rulings of traveling differ from one person to


another. So, we don’t assign to a person the ruling of another


(person), and also the opposite likewise.”


~ asaheeha translations ~


[1] Sahīh al-Bukhārī #1


[2] animals hunted for food


[3] these are all cities in Jordan


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