The Rain prayer (; , "rain request prayer") is a sunnah salah (Islamic prayer) for requesting and seeking rain water from God.
Presentation
According to Muslim prophetic tradition, during a prolonged drought a man came to
Muhammad as he was delivering the
Khutba (sermon) of the
Friday prayer in the Al-Masjid an-Nabawi mosque, to pray and implore for the rain to fall, for the men and the cattle and the orchards suffered from the lack of water, and in response, Muhammad raised his hands in Dua and prayed to God for a downpour.
After his supplication was answered with torrential rain for days, Muhammad again prayed to God for the excessive rain to stop.
On another occasion Muhammad is said to have walked out of the mosque in broad daylight into an esplanade with the congregation of priors, and prayed for rain, then performed a prayer consisting of two Rakat as a group while reading Al-Fatiha aloud, as he did in Friday prayer.
Ritual
In Muslim agricultural societies, in times of calamity such as drought, the
Imam is asked to provide spiritual help to the community in the hope of inducing God to fall rain.
Practice
On the day fixed to perform this prayer, the imam of the mosque leads Muslims in a collective ritual to ask God to give them enough rain for agricultural and human drinking needs, and personal hygiene.
This prayer ritual takes place in the same open space outside the mosque where the two Eid prayers are held annually.
Prayers in different countries
Different countries across the world observed many times this prayer.
-
Thousands of worshippers across the UAE came together on 7 December 2024, Saturday to observe rain prayers, ( Salat Al Istisqa) following a call by President His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan.
The prayers were performed at 11am in mosques and prayer halls nationwide, as the country sought divine blessings for rainfall.
-
In Saudi Arabia also offered this prayer many times in different years.
King Salman called on Muslims in Saudi Arabia on 27 November to pray on Thursday for rain, the Saudi Press Agency reported. "Everyone who is able should be keen to perform the prayer, in accordance with the tradition of Prophet Muhammad," the Royal Court said.