• There are some people who, when the imam finishes the witr prayer, perform another rak'ah after completing it, on the pretext that he will perform his witr prayer at the end of the night. Are we rewarded for this action?
The answer: There is nothing wrong, God willing, and if he left and prayed at the end of the night as much as he could, and the first Witr suffices him, and if he prayed with the imam at the beginning of the night and came with a rak’ah and left the Witr at the end of the night, then there is no harm, God willing, and if he prayed with the people and greeted with the people, then the Witr is sufficient for him. And when he gets up at the end of the night, he prays as much as he can, two rak’ahs, four rak’ahs, six rak’ahs, eight rak’ahs, giving the salutation from every two rak’ahs, and he does not need Witr. The first Witr suffices him.
• What is the ruling on someone who was afflicted with a disease on the night of Ramadan, and he said: If God healed me, he fasted, and if he continued, he will break his fast, so God healed him. Is the intention correct?
Answer: If God healed him before dawn and he intended to fast, praise be to God, but if he broke the fast and then God healed him during the day, he abstains, but he spends the day. Allah.
• Do diabetes needles break the fast?
Answer: If the needles are in the vein or in the muscle and are not in the food, they do not break the fast, according to the correct opinion. But if they are feeding needles, then they break the fast.