Bacaan Talqin Mayit [verified] -
In the rush of funeral rites—the washing ( ghusl ), the shrouding ( kafan ), and the hurried procession—it is easy to overlook the brief, solemn moment that bridges the living and the dead: the .
For Muslims who practice it, Talqīn is not a magic formula but an act of duʿāʾ , empathy, and fulfillment of communal duty — whispering faith into the ear of one who once professed it, in hopes that Allah, the Most Merciful, will accept their intercession and grant the deceased steadfastness until the Day of Resurrection.
: Sebagian ulama Hanafi dan Ibnu Taimiyah berpendapat bahwa ini diperbolehkan meski bukan amalan masyhur di zaman Nabi. bacaan talqin mayit
“Bismillāhir raḥmānir raḥīm. Alḥamdulillāhi rabbil ‘ālamīn, waṣṣalātu wassalāmu ‘alā sayyidinā Muḥammadin wa ‘alā ālihi wa ṣaḥbihi ajma‘īn.”
The reciter calls out the name of the deceased (e.g., "O servant of Allah, son/daughter of Hawa"). In the rush of funeral rites—the washing (
The practice of Talqīn is not explicitly found in the Qurʾān. Its basis is derived from ḥadīth and the practices of early Muslim communities. Key narrations include:
(And Allah knows best).
Yaa [Name] bin [Father’s Name], udzkur maa kharojta ‘alaihi minad-dunyaa: syahaadata an laa ilaaha illallaah wa anna Muhammadar-rasuulullaah. Idzaa jaa’aka Munkar wa Nakiir wa sa-alaaka: Man robbuka? Faqul: Allaahu robbii. Wa man nabiyyuka? Faqul: Muhammadun nabiyyii. Wa maa diinuka? Faqul: Al-Islaamu diinii. Allaahumma tsabbit-hu bil-qaulits-tsaabit.