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2. Purification (Ṭahārah)

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  • Ruling 113

    The sweat of a camel that habitually eats human impurity is impure, as is the sweat of other animals that do the same, based on obligatory precaution.

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  • Ruling 114

    The sweat of a person who becomes junub15 by unlawful means is pure, and prayers performed with that sweat are valid.15 Junub is the term used to refer to a person who is in the state of ritual …

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  • Ruling 115

    There are three ways to establish the impurity of an object:One is certain, or is confident by rational means, that the object is impure. If one only supposes (i.e. has a ẓann) that an object is impure, it …

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  • Ruling 116

    If on account of not knowing the Islamic ruling one does not know whether an object is impure or pure – for example, he does not know whether the droppings of a mouse are pure or not – …

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  • Ruling 117

    An impure object about which one doubts whether it has become pure or not is impure; and a pure object about which one doubts whether it has become impure or not is pure. And even if one is …

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  • Ruling 118

    If someone knows that one of two utensils or one of two items of clothing that he uses has become impure but he does not know which one, he must avoid both of them [i.e. they are ruled …

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  • Ruling 119

    If a pure object touches an impure object and both or one of them is wet – such that the wetness of one transfers onto the other – the pure object also becomes impure; however, it does not …

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  • Ruling 120

    If a pure object touches an impure object and one doubts whether or not both or one of them was wet, the pure object does not become impure.

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  • Ruling 121

    If there are two objects and a person does not know which one is pure and which one is impure, and afterwards a pure object that is wet touches one of them, it is not necessary to avoid …

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  • Ruling 122

    If the ground, some cloth, or a similar thing is wet, only that part of it that an impurity touches becomes impure and its other parts remain pure. The same applies to a cucumber, melon, etc.

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