Praise be to Allaah.
If a rabbit or any other animal walks in front of the
person who is praying, it does not interrupt the prayer. Rabbits, goats
and other animals do not interrupt the prayer. Rather the prayer is only
interrupted by three things according to the correct scholarly opinion: an
adult woman, a black dog and a donkey. This is what is narrated from the
Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him), that he said: “Three
things interrupt a man’s prayer [by passing in front of him] if he does
not have in front of him something the height of the back of a saddle: a
woman, a donkey and a black dog.” It was said: O Messenger of Allah, why
black and not red or yellow? He said: “The black dog is a devil.”
What is meant is that these three are the things that
interrupt the prayer according to the correct scholarly opinion. There is
some difference of opinion among the scholars, but the correct view is that
prayer is only interrupted by one of these three things, either a woman, or
a donkey in general, or a black dog specifically. As for other kinds of
animals, such as dogs that are not black, or camels, goats, rabbits, cats
and so on, none of these interrupt the prayer. But if it is possible not to
let them walk in front, and the worshipper tries not to let them pass in
front of him that is better. So he should not let anything pass in front of
him.
Similarly, if a man walks in front of the worshipper it does
not interrupt his prayer, but it detracts from its reward, so he should
prevent anyone walking in front of him if possible. It is not permissible to
walk in front of the worshipper. The Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah
be upon him) forbade that and said: “If the one who walks in front of a
person who is praying knew (the sin) that is upon him, standing for forty
would be better for him than passing in front of someone who is praying.”
And he enjoined the one who is praying facing something to screen him from
the people not to let anyone walk in front of him; rather he should stop
him. He (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: “If one of you
prays facing something to screen him from the people, if someone wants to
walk in front of him, let him push him away, and if he insists then let him
fight him, for he is no more than a devil.”
The Sunnah indicates that the one who is praying should
prevent the one who wants to pass in front of him even if he is not one of
those three, if he is not a dog or a woman or a donkey. He should not let
anything pass in front of him, whether it is a human being or an animal, if
it is possible for him to prevent that. But if it overcomes him and passes
in front of him, it does not affect his prayer. His prayer is affected and
interrupted by one of the three: a black dog or a woman or a donkey. These
three interrupt the prayer because of the saheeh hadeeth quoted previously.
The Sunnah is for the believer who wants to pray to put
something in front of him, such as a chair or a spear that he sticks in the
ground, or a wall or pillar that he faces towards when he is praying so that
nothing will pass in front of him that could interrupt his prayer. If people
are passing beyond his sutrah (screen), that does not affect his prayer. But
if they pass in front of him and between him and the sutrah, this is what is
not allowed. If the one that passes in front of him is a woman or a donkey
or a black dog, his prayer is interrupted. If he has a sutrah and they pass
in front of him close to him, this is not allowed. If he does not have a
sutrah and they pass close to him, within three cubits or less, then that
interrupts his prayer, but if they pass far away, then that does not matter.
If they pass in front of him, more than three cubits away, that does not
matter, because the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him)
prayed inside the Ka‘bah, leaving three cubits between him and the western
wall. The scholars quoted this as evidence that this is the maximum distance
at which the sutrah should be placed; the sutrah should be three cubits away
or less. If the thing passes further away than that, its passing (in front
of the worshipper) does not affect his prayer. If there is a sutrah,
whatever passes beyond it does not matter. What is meant by interrupting the
prayer, as mentioned here, is rendering it invalid.
The majority of scholars say that his prayer is interrupted
in the sense of being rendered imperfect, but the correct view is that it is
interrupted in the sense that he has to repeat it. So if it is an obligatory
prayer then he has to repeat it. So he has to repeat it if one of these
three pass in front of the worshipper between him and his sutrah, he has to
repeat the prayer.
End quote.
Shaykh ‘Abd al-‘Azeez ibn Baaz (may Allah have mercy on him).