List of Bid'ah practices in the Southern Asia subcontinent

Can you please make a list of commonly spread Bid'ah found in the Southern Asia subcontinent

The list is very long, but here are the most prominent ones:

  1. Special invented styles of dhikr gatherings
    People sitting in circles, often under a sheet, doing loud dhikr in chorus: leader shouts “takbir/tahlil/tasbih/tahmid” and group throws pebbles or date stones while repeating Allahu Akbar, La ilaha illallah, etc.


    In themselves, these adhkar are correct, but fixing a special collective style and rhythm which is not from the Sunnah makes it a bid'ah.


    Ibn Masud رضي الله عنه rejected a similar counted group dhikr and said:
    ﴿كَمْ مِنْ مُرِيدٍ لِلْخَيْرِ لَنْ يُصِيبَهُ﴾
    “How many want good yet never reach it.”
    Reference: Sunan ad Darimi: 13

  2. “Ihtiyati Zuhr” after Jumu'ah
    After praying Jumu'ah, some people also pray 4 fard of Zuhr “just in case Jumu'ah was not valid”.
    • There is no such precautionary fard prayer in the Sunnah.
    • Either Jumu'ah is valid, then Zuhr is not fard, or Jumu'ah is not valid in that place, then they should not pray Jumu'ah at all.


    So making a second “obligatory” prayer after the one Allah and His Messenger ﷺ made fard is an innovation.

  3. Salat ar Raghaib in Rajab
    A special long salah on the first Thursday night of Rajab with amazing “virtues” is read in many masajid.
    • This prayer did not exist in the time of the Prophet ﷺ, Sahabah or early generations.
    • Scholars wrote that it appeared after 480 H and refuted it clearly.
    Reference: Ad Dur al Mukhtar 1/544



    Therefore, fixing this specific night and format as a special ibadah is bid'ah.

  4. Customary Milad (Mawlid) celebrations
    Yearly “Eid e Milad” with processions, flags, loudspeakers, mixed gatherings, qawwali, sweets and lighting, taken as an act of worship and a third Eid.


    • Not done by the Sahabah or Khulafa ar Rashidun رضي الله عنهم.
    • Not practiced or legislated by the four Imams in this form.
    • Many early scholars (including Hanafis) clearly called the practiced Mawlid a bid'ah and said “what the Salaf did not do, there is no good in it.”


    Loving the Prophet ﷺ is fard, but loving him is shown by following his Sunnah, not by innovating new festivals.

  5. “Giyarween Sharif” for Shaykh Abdul Qadir Jilani
    Feeding people or making niyaz every lunar 11th “in the name of Pir Abdul Qadir Jilani”.


    • If it is actually “for him” then it becomes shirk in financial worship.
    • If intention is isal-e-thawab, then fixing the 11th as a special, repeating date is bid'ah, because charity and feeding the poor are not tied in Shari'ah to a fixed monthly date.


    The Sahabah would spend for Allah's sake whenever they could, without binding it to such invented dates and labels.

  6. Bid'ah around death and funerals


    (a) Dua timings fixed by people
    • Making dua immediately after janazah salah as a fixed practice.
    • Walking 40 steps from the grave then stopping for a “special” dua.


    Sunnah: the Prophet ﷺ made dua for the deceased after burial, standing at the grave and said:


    ﴿اسْتَغْفِرُوا لِأَخِيكُمْ وَاسْأَلُوا لَهُ التَّثْبِيتَ، فَإِنَّهُ الْآنَ يُسْأَلُ﴾
    “Seek forgiveness for your brother and ask for his firmness, for he is being questioned now.”
    Reference: Sunan Abi Dawud


    Everything beyond this fixed pattern and turned into a routine is an addition.


    (b) Adhan at the grave after burial
    After burial someone calls adhan by the grave, claiming “we did adhan at birth, now at death for a good ending”.


    • No authentic hadith from the Prophet ﷺ, no practice of Sahabah.
    • Leading muhaddithin called this a bid'ah and denied any analogy with adhan in the newborn’s ear.


    (c) Fatiha / Quran khwani gatherings at the house
    Days of continuous gatherings in the house of the deceased, people sitting, chatting, smoking, then reciting a little Fatiha or Yasin “for isal-e-thawab”, with big expenses on the grieving family.


    Jarir ibn Abdullah رضي الله عنه said:


    ﴿كُنَّا نَعُدُّ الاِجْتِمَاعَ إِلَى أَهْلِ الْمَيِّتِ، وَصَنْعَةَ الطَّعَامِ بَعْدَ دَفْنِهِ مِنَ النِّيَاحَةِ﴾
    “We used to regard gathering at the house of the deceased and their making food after burial as part of wailing.”
    Reference: Sunan Ibn Majah, Musnad Ahmad


    (d) Qul, 3rd day, 7th, 10th and 40th (Chehlum)
    Fixing these specific days for large gatherings, recitation programs and feasts in the name of the deceased.


    • Shari'ah only allows mourning for 3 days (except for a wife in iddah).
    • These repeated scheduled events have no basis in Qur'an or authentic Sunnah and were explicitly condemned by many fiqh scholars as bid'ah.

  7. Bid'ah and shirk at graves and shrines


    Common in the subcontinent:


    • Building solid structures, rooms, domes and big tombs on graves.
    • Plastering, tiling, marble, writing names and dates on tombstones.
    • Covering graves with green or decorated sheets.
    • Lights, decorations, fairs and annual urs at graves.
    • Traveling specifically to shrines seeking “barakah”, making vows there.
    • Tawaf of graves, kissing, touching, bowing or prostrating at them.
    • Calling upon the buried person for help, children, rizq, health etc.


    The Prophet ﷺ said:


    ﴿لَعَنَ رَسُولُ اللهِ ﷺ زَائِرَاتِ الْقُبُورِ، وَالْمُتَّخِذِينَ عَلَيْهَا الْمَسَاجِدَ وَالسُّرُجَ﴾
    “The Messenger of Allah ﷺ cursed the women who frequently visit graves, and those who take graves as places of worship and put lamps upon them.”
    Reference: Sunan Abi Dawud, Tirmidhi, Nasa'i



    ﴿نَهَى رَسُولُ اللهِ ﷺ أَنْ يُجَصَّصَ الْقَبْرُ، وَأَنْ يُكْتَبَ عَلَيْهِ، وَأَنْ يُبْنَى عَلَيْهِ﴾
    “He forbade plastering graves, writing on them and building on them.”
    Reference: Sahih Muslim


Bottom line:
Many of these practices are widespread in South Asia, but spread and popularity do not make a bid'ah into Sunnah. The scale is always:


Qur'an + authentic Sunnah + understanding and practice of the Sahabah رضي الله عنهم.


Anything in worship that is newly invented, fixed in a special form, time or number with the belief of reward, without evidence from these three sources, is to be avoided and gently corrected.
 
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