Taraweeh, Eid prayers in Saudi Arabia to be performed at home as coronavirus precaution

Taraweeh and Eid prayers in the Kingdom will be performed at home if the coronavirus pandemic continues. (Shutterstock)
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Updated 18 April 2020
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Taraweeh, Eid prayers in Saudi Arabia to be performed at home as coronavirus precaution

  • People will have to perform “Taraweeh at home to obtain the virtue of praying during the blessed nights of Ramadan” said Saudi Arabia’s grand mufti

JEDDAH: People will have to perform Taraweeh and Eid prayers at home to prevent spreading coronavirus, Saudi Arabia’s grand mufti said Friday.

Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah Al Al-Sheikh was responding to people’s queries ahead of Ramadan, which starts next week.

“As it will not be possible to hold Taraweeh prayers at mosques this year due to the preventive measures taken by authorities to fight the novel coronavirus, people will have to perform them at home to obtain the virtue of praying during the blessed nights of Ramadan,” said Al Al-Sheikh. “It has been established that Prophet Mohammed performed these prayers at home, and it is known that Taraweeh is Sunnah and not obligatory. If the status quo persists, making it impossible to hold Eid prayer at mosques, people will have to pray at home and no sermon will follow the Eid prayer.”

He said that the Permanent Committee for Scholarly Research and Ifta had issued a fatwa that it was desirable for whoever missed congregational Eid prayers to perform it without a sermon following it. “If making up the prayer for those who missed it with the imam is desirable, this gives us all the more reason to perform the prayer in countries where the congregation is not held because this includes performing the ritual however possible.”

He added that the last date for people to pay Zakat Al-Fitr was before the sunrise of Eid Al-Fitr. 

Meanwhile the secretary-general of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Dr. Yousef A. Al-Othaimeen, said that one of the five imperatives of Sharia was saving lives, especially in the face of “an invisible enemy,” where all components of society had the duty to fight it.

He was speaking during a video call held by the OIC International Islamic Fiqh Academy (IIFA) about the global health emergency. 

Al-Othaimeen added: “The participants in the symposium have a great legal and humanitarian responsibility to explain Sharia provisions about dealing with this pandemic, raising awareness of its seriousness, and highlighting the licenses and necessities called for in studies of Fiqh of calamities. We also need to urge everyone to adhere to the necessary preventive measures taken by governments to confront this pandemic.”


Saudi Arabia assessing global labor policies at GLMC, says deputy minister

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Saudi Arabia assessing global labor policies at GLMC, says deputy minister

  • Ahmed Al-Sharqi: We look at the topics, we assess the experience, and we assess the outcome of each GLMC edition
  • Al-Sharqi: We have over 40 ministers of labor participating in this year’s conference, so that facilitates the spread of knowledge

RIYADH: As the Global Labor Market Conference drew to a close in Riyadh, Saudi labor officials said they were assessing policies across global labor markets, using those findings to reform priorities.

Speaking to Arab News on the sidelines of the conference, Ahmed Al-Sharqi, deputy minister of labor affairs at the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development, said: “We look at the topics, we assess the experience, and we assess the outcome of each GLMC edition, and based on that, we tailor the next topics and the topics that still are very relevant in today’s time and world.”

Al-Sharqi described the process as one of incremental development and knowledge-building.

One initiative hosted at the conference was the policy hackathon titled “The First Job Guarantee,” in which experts discussed ways to tackle the transition from education to employment.

This year’s conference addressed trade shifts, informal economies, the evolving global skills landscape, the impact of artificial intelligence on jobs and productivity, and building more resilient labor markets, with a focus on youth.

“We have over 40 ministers of labor participating in this year’s conference, so that facilitates the spread of knowledge, and the exchange of effective experiences, in matters related to workforce and their adoption (of) AI, and other labor market dynamics,” Al-Sharqi said.

One of the conference’s main objectives is to equip policymakers with vetted, implementable policy frameworks, the deputy minister added.

“I believe one of the most important outcomes of this conference is for the policymakers to have practicable policies that are effective, and ways of implementing these policies in their respective labor markets,” he said.

He added that this year’s edition also marked the graduation of the first cohort of the Global Labor Market Academy, part of broader efforts to strengthen capacity-building for policymakers, develop specialized labor-market expertise and expand international knowledge exchange. A second cohort was launched this year.

On local workforce development, Al-Sharqi highlighted initiatives aimed at aligning skills with market demand, including sectoral skills councils and a training pledge under which private sector establishments commit to providing training opportunities for Saudi nationals.

He said these programs have generated hundreds of thousands of training opportunities across the private sector.

“When it comes to Saudis skilling and upskilling, all these initiatives aim directly at building a stronger Saudi workforce that can compete and meet the demands of the employing organizations,” Al-Sharqi said.