{"_id":"6861f6f36cd3fffa099e5d17","title":"{\"ops\":[{\"insert\":\"Can I say the takbirat of Eid as a general dhikr during any time of the year?\\n\"}]}","question":"{\"ops\":[{\"insert\":\"I really like the full takbirah of Eid that many Egyptian mosques do during Eid and ayam tashriq. I will sometimes find myself chanting the takbirah on days when it is not Eid, including all throughout the year and on the first 10 days of Dhul Hijjah. Just today, I found a 2-hour looped YouTube video of the takbirat and have been listening to it and “singing” along all morning. Is what I’m doing allowed? Can you say the Takbirat of Eid anytime or should it just be reserved to those days of celebration? Are there any days when I should avoid saying it? Do you have any recommendations for similar rhythmic adhkar I can replace it with?\\n\"}]}","answer":"{\"ops\":[{\"insert\":\"It's not haram to recite the takbīrāt outside of Eid as long as you’re doing it as a form of general dhikr (remembrance of Allah), not as a sunnah specifically prescribed for that time. \\n\\nIn other words, if you’re saying it out of love and joy in remembering Allah, that’s fine. But if you believe or imply that it’s part of the Prophetic tradition to recite the Eid takbīrāt regularly outside of their designated times (like on ordinary days throughout the year), then that would be an innovation.\\n\\nIt’s similar to someone who enjoys the adhan  and recites it purely as dhikr, not as a call to prayer, just because it uplifts them. That’s not a problem, but it must be kept separate in your intention from its designated religious role.\\n\"}]}","tags":[{"_id":"668d9fe30b76658b4c232823","tag":"Worship: Remembrance","count":40}],"createdOn":"2025-06-30T02:31:15.391Z"}