سُوْرَةُ التَّوْبَةِ

Surah At-Tawba (9) — Ayah 91

The Repentance · Medinan · Juz 10 · Page 201

لَّيْسَ عَلَى ٱلضُّعَفَآءِ وَلَا عَلَى ٱلْمَرْضَىٰ وَلَا عَلَى ٱلَّذِينَ لَا يَجِدُونَ مَا يُنفِقُونَ حَرَجٌ إِذَا نَصَحُوا۟ لِلَّهِ وَرَسُولِهِۦ ۚ مَا عَلَى ٱلْمُحْسِنِينَ مِن سَبِيلٍ ۚ وَٱللَّهُ غَفُورٌ رَّحِيمٌ ﴿91﴾
There is no blame on those who are weak or ill or who find no resources to spend [in holy fighting (Jihâd)], if they are sincere and true (in duty) to Allâh and His Messenger. No ground (of complaint) can there be against the Muhsinûn (good-doers - See the footnote of V.9:120). And Allâh is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful.
لَّيْسَ laysa Not
عَلَى ʿalā on
ٱلضُّعَفَآءِ l-ḍuʿafāi the weak
وَلَا walā and not
عَلَى ʿalā on
ٱلْمَرْضَىٰ l-marḍā the sick
وَلَا walā and not
عَلَى ʿalā on
ٱلَّذِينَ alladhīna those who
لَا not
يَجِدُونَ yajidūna they find
مَا what
يُنفِقُونَ yunfiqūna they (can) spend
حَرَجٌ ḥarajun any blame
إِذَا idhā if
نَصَحُوا۟ naṣaḥū they (are) sincere
لِلَّهِ lillahi to Allah
وَرَسُولِهِۦ ۚ warasūlihi and His Messenger
مَا Not
عَلَى ʿalā (is) on
ٱلْمُحْسِنِينَ l-muḥ'sinīna the good-doers
مِن min any
سَبِيلٍۢ ۚ sabīlin way (for blame)
وَٱللَّهُ wal-lahu And Allah
غَفُورٌۭ ghafūrun (is) Oft-Forgiving
رَّحِيمٌۭ raḥīmun Most Merciful

Tafsir Taiseer ul-Quran (Facilitation of the Quran) is a comprehensive Quran commentary by Maulana Abdul Rahman Kilani, a renowned Salafi (Ahl al-Hadith) scholar from Pakistan. Known for his eloquent and accessible writing style, Kilani authored this tafsir with a focus on clarity — making Quranic meanings understandable to the common reader. The tafsir provides detailed historical context for verses related to battles and expeditions, and firmly refutes modernist ideologies using strong scriptural evidence. It is widely regarded as an invaluable resource for understanding the Quran and countering deviant interpretations. The tafsir is originally written in Urdu, translated to English by tohed.com.

91. There is no blame on the weak, or the sick, or those who do not have anything to spend for participation in jihad, provided they are sincere to Allah and His Messenger [104]. There is no blame on those who do good, and Allah is Most Forgiving, Most Merciful.

[104]
Three Types of Excused Persons and the Condition for Accepting Their Excuse: Sincerity and Their Share in the Spoils of War:

In this verse, three types of people have been exempted from jihad. First, those who, due to old age or any other reason, have become so weak that they are no longer capable of going for jihad. Second, the sick who at that time are unable to go for jihad, and this category also includes such attendants whose presence with the patient is necessary and there is no other option, just as in the Battle of Badr, Sayyiduna Uthmanؓ could not participate only because his wife Ruqayyah, the daughter of the Messenger of Allah ﷺ, was seriously ill, and when the mujahideen returned, she had passed away. Third, those who do not have the means to spend for jihad, because in that era every mujahid had to arrange his own mount, weapons, and provisions, and in return, they would receive a fixed share from the spoils of war. Then, along with these three types of excused persons, it was also made a necessary condition that "they should be sincere to Allah and His Messenger." In other words, those who are not sincere to Allah and His Messenger, their excuse will not be accepted, because such people can only be hypocrites. To understand this, consider that a person is sick and in this state of illness, jihad is announced. Now, if that person is a hypocrite, his feelings will be: how good it is that I am sick at this time and have found such a reasonable excuse to avoid jihad. On the contrary, the feelings of a believer will be: if only I were not sick at this time and would not be deprived of the reward that those who participate in jihad will receive, or he will wish that Allah grants him health as soon as possible so that he too can join jihad, or he will say to his attendants that my Allah is the Master, do not waste time and go for jihad. In short, from every single thing, a person's intention and feelings can be discerned. Now, it is clear that in terms of being sick, both are the same, but their feelings are completely opposite, and these feelings divide them into the categories of hypocrite and believer. And those whose feelings contain sincerity to Allah and His Messenger, only their excuse is acceptable in the Shari'ah, and such people will be considered as having participated in jihad, as is made clear by the following hadith:

Sayyiduna Jabirؓ says that the Prophet ﷺ said, "There are some people in Madinah that whenever you travel or cross any valley, they are with you." The Companionsؓ asked: Even though they are in Madinah? The Prophet ﷺ said, "Even though they are in Madinah, they have been held back by an excuse." [بخاري۔ كتاب المغازي۔ باب نزول النبى الحجر۔ مسلم۔ كتاب الامارة۔ باب ثواب من حبسه عن الغزو مرض او عذر]

In fact, the Messenger of Allah ﷺ even allotted a share of the spoils of war to such excused people. A clear example of this is that immediately after the victory of Khaybar, those emigrants who had migrated from Abyssinia and arrived, the Messenger of Allah ﷺ included them in the spoils of war. [بخاري۔ كتاب المغازي۔ باب غزوة خيبر]