Ruling on praying in places frequented by dogs

Question I am in America and there are no mosques nearly to which I can walk or from which I can hear the adhaan. I have two questions: The first question is: Should I give the adhaan for each prayer, knowing that I am going to pray on my own, because there is no musalla…

Question

I am in America and there are no mosques nearly to which I can walk or from which I can hear the adhaan.

I have two questions:

The first question is:

Should I give the adhaan for each prayer, knowing that I am going to pray on my own, because there is no musalla (prayer room) in the building and there are few worshippers who pray regularly among the Arabs here, because they are at work during the times of prayer, and the neighbours on my right and left are American.

I am anxious about my situation and I started to offer my prayer in the lobby of the building, and some of the worshippers who have travelled and left me on my own told me that dogs and their owners pass through that place, and it is not permissible to pray in it.

My second question is:

Should I pray there when the dogs come and go in that place, but it is the only place that we think is suitable for praying in congregation?

Praise be to Allah.

Firstly:

It is not obligatory to give the adhaan for one who is
praying alone; rather it is Sunnah in his case, and there is a great reward
for it.

This has been discussed previously in the answer to question
no. 147210

However, if you raise your voice when giving the adhaan, that
is better, but if you give the adhaan in a low voice, there is nothing wrong
with that.

Secondly:

With regard to the place being frequented by dogs, this does
not mean that it is not allowed to pray there, because the mere fact of a
dog passing through a place does not render it najis or impure.

Al-Bukhaari (168) narrated that Ibn ‘Umar (may Allah be
pleased with him) said: I used to stay overnight in the mosque at the time
of the Messenger of Allah (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) when I
was young and single, and dogs used to urinate and come and go in the
mosque, and they did not sprinkle water over any of that.

The hadeeth indicates that the fact that a dog passes through
the mosque does not mean that one is not allowed to pray there, and the
mosque does not become najis (impure).

With regard to dogs urinating in the mosque, some of the
scholars responded that they did not actually urinate inside the mosque,
rather they would come and go in the mosque and urinate outside.

Others stated that this occurred before the ruling came that
dogs are najis and it is necessary to purify (things and places) of their
impurity.

Al-Haafiz Ibn Hajar (may Allah have mercy on him) said:

The most correct opinion is that this happened at the
beginning, on the basis of the principle that all things are permissible
(unless there is evidence to the contrary), then the command came to honour
and purify the mosques, and doors were put on them.

End quote from Fath al-Baari, 1/279

Shaykh Muhammad ibn Muhammad al-Mukhtaar ash-Shanqeeti (may
Allah have mercy on him) said:

There are two issues in this hadeeth. The first issue is the
coming and going of dogs. The scholars answered that by saying: In the
version of this hadeeth that mentions (the dogs) coming and going, it refers
to them coming and going in the mosque. With regard to their urinating, that
was not in the mosque; rather the coming and going was inside the mosque,
but urinating did not happen inside the mosque. Al-Haafiz ibn Hajar (may
Allah have mercy on him) referred to this in his commentary on Saheeh
al-Bukhaari, i.e., al-Fath.

But if we assume that what is meant is that coming and going
and urinating all happened in the mosque, then we may say that with regard
to urinating inside the mosque, one of the following two scenarios must
apply:

(i)Either the dogs urinated and
the people were aware of where it happened, in which case there is no
confusion concerning it, and this strengthens the view that dogs are not
impure, if it is proven that the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be
upon him) and the Sahaabah knew where it was and prayed in the place where
the dogs had urinated. But there is nothing in this hadeeth to indicate
that.

(ii)Or it may be said in response
that this happened before the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon
him) instructed people to wash a vessel if a dog licks it. This is the
strongest answer. To explain further, the mosque of the Prophet (blessings
and peace of Allah be upon him) did not have doors (at that time). There is
also a report from Ibn ‘Umar (may Allah be pleased with him), to which
al-Haafiz (may Allah have mercy on him) also referred in al-Fath,
which states that he paid attention to the mosque after that, and took
measures to prevent dogs entering it. This proves that the later development
was the Prophet’s paying attention to the mosque. We may also note that the
hadeeths that enjoin washing vessels if licked by a dog, were narrated by
Abu Hurayrah and ‘Abdullah ibn Maghfal (may Allah be pleased with them, who
both became Muslim later on). Based on that, the scholars said that what is
narrated in the hadeeth (about dogs coming and going in the mosque) occurred
earlier on, and the instructions to wash vessels if licked by a dog is what
came later.

The basic principle is that we should follow the later
report, which abrogates the previous report. Then there will be no confusion
about the matter, which is the coming and going of dogs in the mosque.

End quote from Sharh Sunan at-Tirmidhi.

And Allah knows best.

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