God hath exempted women who are in their courses from obligatory prayer and fasting. Let them, instead, after performance of their ablutions, give praise unto God, repeating ninety-five times between the noon of one day and the next "Glorified be God, the Lord of Splendour and Beauty". Thus hath it been decreed in the Book, if ye be of them that comprehend.
God hath exempted women who are in their courses from obligatory prayer and fasting.Exemption from
obligatory prayer and fasting is granted to women who are menstruating; they should, instead, perform their ablutions (see note
34)
and repeat 95 times a day between one noon
and the next, the verse
“Glorified be God, the Lord of Splendour and Beauty”. This provision has its antecedent in the Arabic Bayán, where a similar dispensation was granted.
In some earlier religious Dispensations, women in their courses were considered ritually unclean
and were forbidden to observe the duties of
prayer and fasting. The concept of ritual uncleanness has been abolished by Bahá’u’lláh (see note
106).
The Universal House of Justice has clarified that the provisions in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas granting exemptions from certain duties
and responsibilities are, as the word indicates, exemptions
and not prohibitions. Any believer is, therefore, free to avail himself or herself of an applicable exemption if he or she so wishes. However, the House of Justice counsels that, in deciding whether to do so or not, the believer should use wisdom
and realize that Bahá’u’lláh has granted these exemptions for good reason.
The prescribed exemption from
obligatory prayer, originally related to the
Obligatory Prayer consisting of nine rak’ahs, is now applicable to the three
Obligatory Prayers which superseded it.
Perform ye . . . ablutions for the Obligatory PrayerAblutions are specifically associated with certain
prayers. They must precede the offering of the three
Obligatory Prayers, the daily recitation of “Alláh-u-Abhá” ninety-five times,
and the recital of the verse prescribed as an alternative to
obligatory prayer and fasting for women in their courses (see note
20).
The prescribed ablutions consist of washing the hands
and the face in preparation for
prayer. In the case of the medium
Obligatory Prayer, this is accompanied by the recitation of certain verses (see Some Texts Revealed by Bahá’u’lláh Supplementary to the Kitáb-i-Aqdas).
That ablutions have a significance beyond washing may be seen from the fact that even should one have bathed oneself immediately before reciting the
Obligatory Prayer, it would still be necessary to perform ablutions (Q&A
18).
When no water is available for ablutions, a prescribed verse is to be repeated five times (see note
16),
and this provision is extended to those for whom the use of water would be physically harmful (Q&A
51).
The detailed provisions of the law concerning ablutions are set out in the
Synopsis and Codification, section IV.A.10.a.-g., as well as in Questions
and Answers numbers
51,
62,
66,
77 and 86.