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1215325/11/2016

Buying a share (in an animal) for the udhiyah, sharing with one who wants to offer a wedding feast, and the minimum amount that is required for the wedding feast

Question: 255557

We have some relatives who are going to slaughter a cow on the second day of Eid for a wedding feast (waleemah). Is it permissible for us to share that with them, with the intention of following the Sunnah of offering a sacrifice (udhiyah)? Will we attain the full reward by doing that?

Summary of answer

Based on that: There is nothing wrong with you sharing the purchase of the cow with your relatives, so that you will have one seventh of the cow, which you will intend as an udhiyah – but less than one seventh will not be acceptable as a sacrifice on your part – and they will dispose of the rest of it in whatever manner they like, whether for a wedding feast or otherwise. But we should point out that the minimum age of a cow for it to be acceptable as a sacrifice is two years; anything younger than that will not be acceptable, even if it has a lot of meat. Please see question no. 41899. And Allah knows best.

Praise be to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon the Messenger of Allah and his family.

Firstly:

The wedding
feast (waleemah) may be done by offering any kind of food to those who
attend, even if it is made of barley.

In al-Mawsoo‘ah
al-Fiqhiyyah (45/250) it says:

The Hanafi,
Maaliki, Shaafa‘i and Hanbali fuqaha’ are of the view that there is no
minimum requirement for the wedding feast, and the sunnah (of offering a
wedding feast) may be fulfilled by offering any kind of food, even if it is
two mudds of barley, because of the saheeh hadith: The Prophet (blessings
and peace of Allah be upon him) gave a wedding feast of two mudds of barley
when he married one of his wives.

‘Iyaad stated
that there was scholarly consensus on the fact that there is no minimum
requirement for the wedding feast, and that whatever food is offered, the
sunnah is fulfilled.

The Shaafa‘is
said: The minimum requirement for the wedding feast, in the case of one who
can afford it, is a sheep; for others it is whatever they can afford. That
is because of the report which says that the Prophet (blessings and peace of
Allah be upon him) said to ‘Abd ar-Rahmaan ibn ‘Awf when he got married:
“Give a wedding feast, even if it is with a sheep.”

An-Nashaa’i
said: What is meant is that the minimum for one who wants to offer a proper
feast is a sheep, because it is says in at-Tanbeeh: Whatever food is
offered as a wedding feast, it is acceptable. That includes food and drinks
that are made at the time of doing the marriage contract, such as sweets and
other kinds of food, even if the man is well off.

A number of
Hanbalis stated that it is recommended (mustahabb) that the wedding feast be
no less than a sheep.

Az-Zarkashi
said: The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said, “… even
if it is with a sheep”, and the mention of a sheep here – and Allah knows
best – refers to a small amount; in other words, even with something small,
like a sheep.

Al-Mirdaawi
said: From this it may be understood that it is permissible to offer a
wedding feast with less than a sheep, and from the first hadith it may be
understood that one may offer more than a sheep, because he regarded that as
being little. End quote.

Secondly:

With regard to
the udhiyah, one-seventh of a camel or one-seventh of a cow is acceptable,
as has been explained previously in the answer to question no.
45757.

Thirdly:

It is
permissible to buy a share in a cow or camel, even if some of the
participants do not intend to offer an udhiyah; rather they want the meat
for a wedding feast, or to eat it, or sell it, and so on.

An-Nawawi (may
Allah have mercy on him) said in al-Majmoo‘ (8/372): It is
permissible for seven people to share a camel or cow for the udhiyah,
whether all the participants are members of one household or otherwise, or
some of them simply want the meat; that is acceptable on the part of one who
wants to offer a sacrifice, and this applies whether it is a sacrifice in
fulfilment of a vow, or a voluntary sacrifice. This is our view, and it was
the view of Ahmad and the majority of scholars. End quote.

Ibn Qudaamah
(may Allah have mercy on him) said in al-Mughni (13/363): A camel is
acceptable on behalf of seven people, as is a cow. This is the view of most
of the scholars. Then he quoted some hadiths which support that view, then
said:

As this is
proven, then it makes no difference whether the participants are members of
one family or otherwise, or whether the sacrifice is obligatory or
voluntary, or whether some of them intend to offer a sacrifice and others
simply want the meat, because each of them is only accountable for his
share, and the intention of others has no impact on that. End quote.

Source

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