| Arabic | يَوْم النَّحْر |
|---|---|
| Pronunciation | YAWM an-NAHR |
| Etymology | Nahr (نحر) from the root ن-ح-ر means 'to slaughter' specifically by cutting at the throat area. Yawm al-Nahr literally means 'the Day of Slaughter/Sacrifice,' named for the primary act of animal sacrifice performed on this day. |
Yawm al-Nahr(يَوْم النَّحْر) Yawm al-Nahr is the 10th of Dzulhijjah, known as the Day of Sacrifice. It is the most action-packed day of Haji, featuring stoning, sacrifice, shaving, and Tawaf al-Ifadah, and coincides with Eid al-Adha.
يَوْم النَّحْر
After spending the night at Muzdalifah, jamaah haji return to Mina on Yawm al-Nahr to perform several critical rites. The preferred sequence according to the Sunnah is: first, stoning the Jamrat al-Aqabah (the largest pillar) with seven pebbles; second, offering the Hady sacrifice (wajib for Tamattu and Qiran jamaah haji); third, shaving the head (Halq) or trimming the hair (Taqsir); and fourth, performing Tawaf al-Ifadah (also called Tawaf al-Haji) at the Kabah, followed by sa'i for those who haven't performed it. After completing the stoning and shaving, the jamaah haji achieves the first Tahallul (partial release from Ihram), which lifts all Ihram restrictions except sexual relations. After completing Tawaf al-Ifadah, the second Tahallul is achieved, and all restrictions are lifted. Nabi stated that there is no harm in changing the order of these rites on this day. It is also the first day of Eid al-Adha, celebrated by Muslims worldwide.
Nahr (نحر) from the root ن-ح-ر means 'to slaughter' specifically by cutting at the throat area. Yawm al-Nahr literally means 'the Day of Slaughter/Sacrifice,' named for the primary act of animal sacrifice performed on this day.
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