The Story That Changed Everything
Imagine this: It’s an ordinary Tuesday morning in Houston, Texas. Sarah, a convert to Islam for three years, is driving her two kids to school when her phone buzzes with a reminder: “The blessed ten days begin tomorrow.”
She pulls over. Her hands tighten around the wheel.
She knows Ramadan. She knows Eid al-Fitr. But this? The ten days of Dhul Hijjah? She’s heard the name, but never truly understood what it meant — why the scholars called these days more sacred than any other ten days on earth, why even the Quran itself swears by them, and why millions of Muslims — from Makkah to Montreal — treat them with a reverence that rivals the last ten nights of Ramadan.
If you’ve ever felt that quiet wondering — “Am I missing something huge in my faith?” — then this article is for you.
Because what you’re about to read will change how you look at your Islamic calendar forever.
What Are the Ten Days of Dhul Hijjah?
Dhul Hijjah is the twelfth and final month of the Islamic lunar calendar — the month of Hajj, of sacrifice, of gathering, and of immense divine mercy. Its first ten days, from the 1st to the 10th of Dhul Hijjah, are not just spiritually elevated — they are, according to authentic narrations, the most blessed days of the entire year.
This is not a folk tradition or a cultural habit passed down through families. It comes directly from the Qur’an and the verified Sunnah of the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ.
Allah, Most High, swears by these days in Surah Al-Fajr: ﴿وَالْفَجْرِ * وَلَيَالٍ عَشْرٍ﴾ — “By the dawn, and by the ten nights” (Al-Fajr: 1-2). The vast majority of classical Quranic commentators, including Ibn Kathir and Ibn Abbas, interpreted “the ten nights” as referring to the first ten nights of Dhul Hijjah. When Allah swears by something in His Book, that is sufficient proof of its magnitude.
And Allah also says: ﴿وَيَذْكُرُوا اسْمَ اللَّهِ فِي أَيَّامٍ مَعْلُومَاتٍ﴾ — “And mention the name of Allah on appointed days” (Al-Hajj: 28). Ibn Abbas (may Allah be pleased with him) explained that “the appointed days” are the first ten days of Dhul Hijjah. [Tafsir Ibn Kathir]
Now add to this the direct testimony of the Prophet ﷺ himself.
The Hadith That Should Stop You in Your Tracks
Ibn Abbas (may Allah be pleased with him) reported that the Prophet ﷺ said: “There are no days on which righteous deeds are more beloved to Allah than these ten days.” The companions asked: “Not even jihad in the path of Allah?” He replied: “Not even jihad in the path of Allah — except for a man who goes out with his life and his wealth and returns with neither.”* — Sahih al-Bukhari محتويات
Let that sink in. The Prophet ﷺ — in a society where sacrifice on the battlefield was the pinnacle of devotion — said that the good deeds you perform in these ten days surpass even that. The only exception is the one who gives everything and returns with nothing.
This is not a minor encouragement. This is a divine opening — a limited-time season when the gates of reward are thrown wide open, when the multiplication of good deeds is unlike any other moment in the year.
For a Muslim living in America or Canada, managing work schedules, school runs, and the demands of daily life in the West, this is profoundly good news: you don’t need to be in Makkah to access the greatest days of the Islamic year. You can seize them from your living room in Toronto, your kitchen in Chicago, or your commute in Vancouver.
A Season Unlike Any Other: What Makes These Days So Special?
The greatness of these days lies in the gathering of the greatest acts of worship within them — prayer, fasting, charity, remembrance of Allah, and Hajj — all meeting in a single sacred window. This convergence of worship is not found in any other period of the year. Agadir24
Think of it this way: Ramadan is the season of fasting and Qur’an. Laylat al-Qadr is the night of worship. But the ten days of Dhul Hijjah are the only time when every major pillar and act of worship combines in one space. It’s the spiritual Grand Slam of the Islamic year.
Dhul Hijjah is also one of the four sacred months in the Islamic calendar — alongside Dhul Qa’dah, Muharram, and Rajab — months in which Allah has declared: ﴿فَلاَ تَظْلِمُواْ فِيهِنَّ أَنفُسَكُمْ﴾ — “So wrong not yourselves therein”* (At-Tawbah: 36). The sanctity of the month itself elevates the first ten days even further. Al-Qaradawi
Day by Day: The Journey Through the Ten Days
Days 1–8: The Opening of the Sacred Season
These are days of increased worship, repentance, and preparation. For the pilgrim, they are the days of arrival in Makkah, the initial tawaf, and the building of spiritual momentum toward Hajj. For the Muslim living outside the Arabian Peninsula, they are days to:
- Fast as many of the nine days as possible (Day 10 is Eid, when fasting is prohibited)
- Increase Qur’an recitation — even a page more per day carries enormous weight
- Give sadaqah (charity) consistently, even small amounts
- Make abundant dhikr: the Prophet ﷺ specifically recommended increasing Takbir (Allahu Akbar), Tahlil (La ilaha illa Allah), and Tahmid (Alhamdulillah) in these days [Musnad Ahmad, verified by Al-Albani]
- Abstain from cutting hair and nails if intending to make Udhiyah (sacrifice), following the Sunnah: “When you see the crescent of Dhul Hijjah and one of you wants to offer a sacrifice, he should not cut his hair or nails” — Sahih Muslim, 1977
For Muslim parents in North America, these eight days are a remarkable opportunity to bring children into the practice of Islam in a hands-on, experiential way. Let your child place the sadaqah in the donation box. Let them sit with you for five minutes of Qur’an after Fajr. Let them feel the season through your actions.
Day 9: The Day of Arafah — The Heart of the Universe
If the ten days are a jewel, then the Day of Arafah is its diamond.
The 9th of Dhul Hijjah — Yawm Arafah — is the single most important day for pilgrims, and one of the most spiritually potent days of the entire year for every Muslim on earth.
For those performing Hajj, this is the moment everything converges: millions of pilgrims from every corner of the earth, dressed in simple white ihram, standing on the plain of Arafah outside Makkah, raising their hands in du’a, weeping, repenting, asking. The Prophet ﷺ said: “Hajj is Arafah.” [Sunan Ibn Majah; authenticated] — The entire pilgrimage, with all its rituals, is defined by this one standing.
For those not at Hajj — for the Muslim father in New Jersey, the Muslim mother in Calgary — the Prophet ﷺ gave an extraordinary gift:
The Messenger of Allah ﷺ said: “Fasting on the Day of Arafah absolves the sins of the previous year and the coming year.” — Sahih Muslim Greentech Apps Foundation
Two years of sins, expiated by a single day of fasting. No pilgrimage required. No ticket to Makkah needed. Just sincere fasting, remembrance, and du’a from wherever you stand.
The Prophet ﷺ also said: “There is no day on which Allah frees more of His servants from the Fire than the Day of Arafah. He draws near, then boasts of them to the angels, saying: ‘What do these people want?'” — Sahih Muslim محتويات
Scholars interpret this hadith as one of the most overwhelming descriptions of divine mercy in the entire prophetic tradition. On this day, Allah looks upon the servants gathered — physically in Arafah and spiritually everywhere — with a mercy so vast it cannot be contained.
Recommended acts on the Day of Arafah for Muslims in America and Canada:
- Fast the day with intention (the only exception: pilgrims at Arafah themselves, who do not fast)
- Make extensive du’a, especially in the afternoon
- Read: “La ilaha illallah, wahdahu la shareeka lah, lahul mulk wa lahul hamd, wa Huwa ‘ala kulli shay’in Qadir” — the best du’a of Arafah, per authentic narrations [Jami at-Tirmidhi, 3585; declared Hasan]
- Recite Qur’an and reflect on its meaning
- Give sadaqah
- Ask Allah specifically — this is a day when du’a is answered
Day 10: Yawm al-Nahr — The Day of Sacrifice (Eid al-Adha)
The 10th of Dhul Hijjah is Eid al-Adha — the greater of the two Islamic Eids, and one of the most significant religious observances in the entire year.
Abdullah ibn Qurt reported that the Prophet ﷺ said: “The greatest day before Allah is Yawm al-Nahr (the Day of Sacrifice), then Yawm al-Qarr (the day of settling in Mina, i.e., the 11th of Dhul Hijjah).” — Sunan Abi Dawud, authenticated محتويات
The Day of Sacrifice commemorates the greatest test of obedience in prophetic history: Ibrahim (peace be upon him), commanded by Allah to sacrifice his son Isma’il (peace be upon him), submits completely — and Allah, in His mercy, ransoms the son with a great sacrifice from the unseen. It is the story of tawakkul — complete reliance on Allah — at its most radical and most rewarding.
The Udhiyah (Qurbani) — What Is It and What Does It Mean?
The Udhiyah is the act of sacrificing a livestock animal on Eid al-Adha and distributing its meat. For Muslims living in the West, many Islamic organizations and trusted charities facilitate Qurbani on behalf of families, ensuring the meat reaches those in need domestically and internationally.
The Prophet ﷺ said: “It is the Sunnah of your father Ibrahim.” [Sunan Ibn Majah; authenticated]
For Muslim families in North America, Eid al-Adha offers a precious opportunity: gathering for Eid prayer, hearing the khutbah, sharing a meal, and connecting children to the living Sunnah of sacrifice and gratitude. In a culture that rarely slows down, these moments of collective worship are among the most powerful anchors of Islamic identity.
What to do on the Day of Eid:
- Pray Salat al-Eid (Eid Prayer) — in congregation
- Listen to the khutbah (sermon)
- Say Takbir abundantly: Allahu Akbar, Allahu Akbar, La ilaha illallah, Allahu Akbar, Allahu Akbar wa lillahil hamd
- Perform or arrange for Udhiyah
- Visit family, strengthen ties of kinship
- Give gifts to children and bring joy to those around you
Days 11, 12, and 13: Ayyam al-Tashriq — The Days of Glorification
The Prophet ﷺ said: “The Day of Arafah, the Day of Sacrifice, and the Days of Tashriq are our Eid — the people of Islam — and they are days of eating and drinking.” — Sunan Abi Dawud (2419); declared Sahih by Al-Albani; also narrated in Sunan at-Tirmidhi (773) and Sunan an-Nasa’i (3004)
The Days of Tashriq — the 11th, 12th, and 13th of Dhul Hijjah — extend the joy and spirituality of Eid. The name Tashriq derives from the Arabic root related to the rising of the sun, as the pilgrims in Makkah historically dried their sacrificial meat in the sunlight during these days.
The Prophet ﷺ sent someone to call out in Makkah: “These are days of eating and drinking and the remembrance of Allah. Let no one fast.” The Days of Tashriq are also days of Eid — days of takbir, of dhikr, and of rami al-jamarat (the symbolic stoning of the devil during Hajj).
Fasting is prohibited during the three Days of Tashriq (except for the Hajj pilgrim who has a specific obligation), because they are days of celebration, gratitude, and communal joy.
The abundant Takbir of Tashriq — the Takbir that is recited after every obligatory prayer from Fajr of Arafah day (9th) through Asr of the 13th of Dhul Hijjah — is one of the distinctive acts of these days. Scholars including Imam Malik, Imam Shafi’i, and Imam Ahmad agreed on its recommendation. It is reported that Umar ibn al-Khattab (may Allah be pleased with him) would recite Takbir in his tent in Mina until the whole plain of Mina echoed with it. [Musannaf Ibn Abi Shaybah]
For Muslim Families in America and Canada: Making the Most of These Days
Living as a Muslim minority in the West comes with its own challenges and its own blessings. Weekdays don’t stop for Arafah. Your workplace may not mark Eid al-Adha as a holiday. Your children go to school on days that, in Muslim-majority countries, would be public celebrations.
But here is the truth: these days belong to you wherever you are. The Du’a rises from New York just as it rises from Medina. The fast of Arafah is accepted in Vancouver just as it is in Cairo. The Takbir that echoes in your home in Dallas reverberates through the heavens just as it did in the tent of Umar.
What these days demand is intention and preparation. Here are practical steps for Muslim families in North America:
Plan your Arafah fast in advance. Mark it in your calendar. Prepare your suhoor the night before. Talk to your family about it so you can support each other.
Engage your children in the Takbir. Teach them to say Allahu Akbar in the car, at breakfast, at bedtime. Make the sounds of these sacred days fill your home.
Arrange your Qurbani early. Many trusted organizations accept orders weeks before Eid. Don’t leave it to the last moment.
Attend Eid prayer as a family. The Prophet ﷺ encouraged even women and children to attend — let your children experience the sight of thousands of Muslims gathering as one.
Use these days to open a conversation about Qur’an. What better time than the most sacred days of the year to take a step toward understanding the Book of Allah?
The Qur’an Connection: Why These Days Are the Perfect Time to Begin
The ten days of Dhul Hijjah, the Day of Arafah, and the celebration of Eid al-Adha are all deeply rooted in Qur’anic revelation and the Sunnah of the Prophet ﷺ. To truly live these days — to feel their depth, to understand their vocabulary, to recite their prayers with meaning — you need a connection to the Qur’an that goes beyond recitation.
This is where thousands of Muslim families in the United States and Canada have found that learning the Qur’an properly — with Tajweed, with comprehension, with a qualified teacher — transforms not just their Ramadan or their Hajj, but every single day of their Islamic calendar.
At Quran Ona Academy, we work with Muslim families across North America — parents who want their children to recite the Qur’an correctly, adults who want to reconnect with their faith, new Muslims who want to learn from the beginning. Our teachers are qualified, our classes are flexible to your schedule, and our approach is rooted entirely in authenticated Sunni scholarship.
The ten days of Dhul Hijjah are the most beloved days to Allah. What better time to take your first step?
👉 Book Your Free Trial Lesson Today — quranonaacademy.com/free-trial
👉 Connect With Us on WhatsApp: wa.me/201505852965
Sources and References
- Sahih al-Bukhari, Hadith 969 — Narrated by Ibn Abbas on the superiority of good deeds in the ten days | sunnah.com/bukhari:969
- Sahih Muslim, Hadith 1162 — Narrated by Abu Qatadah on fasting the Day of Arafah | sunnah.com/muslim:1162
- Sahih Muslim, Hadith 1977 — On the prohibition of cutting hair and nails for one intending Udhiyah | sunnah.com/muslim:1977
- Sunan Abi Dawud, Hadith 2419 — Narrated by Uqbah ibn Amir on Arafah, Nahr, and Tashriq as Eid days | sunnah.com/abudawud:2419 — Declared Sahih by Imam Al-Albani
- Sunan at-Tirmidhi, Hadith 773 — Same narration as above; declared Hasan Sahih by Imam at-Tirmidhi | sunnah.com/tirmidhi:773
- Jami at-Tirmidhi, Hadith 3585 — Best du’a of Arafah | sunnah.com/tirmidhi:3585
- Sunan Ibn Majah — “Hajj is Arafah” | sunnah.com/ibnmajah
- Tafsir Ibn Kathir — Commentary on Surah Al-Fajr (89:1-2) and Surah Al-Hajj (22:28) | Available via islamweb.net and quran.com
- Musannaf Ibn Abi Shaybah — Report of Umar ibn al-Khattab’s Takbir in Mina
- Islamweb.net — Scholarly resources on the rulings of Tashriq and Udhiyah | islamweb.net/ar/article/136204
- Binbaz.org.sa — Rulings on fasting during Tashriq by Imam Ibn Baz | binbaz.org.sa
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q1: When exactly are the ten days of Dhul Hijjah in 2026?
Q2: Is fasting on the Day of Arafah obligatory?
Q3: What are the Days of Tashriq and can I fast during them?
Q4: Can Muslims in America and Canada participate in these blessed days?
Q5: What is the Udhiyah (Qurbani) and do I have to do it in person?
Q6: What should children learn about Dhul Hijjah?
Q7: How can learning Qur’an help me benefit more from these days?
Join Quranona Academy

