Clothing from the perspective of Islam – Part 10

In this post we’ll address a topic that has created significant confusion among MuslimsIs it forbidden to wear clothes below the ankles? Is every garment that touches the ground sinful?

Many have reduced this issue to a mechanical ruleBut Islam is not mechanical. It is intentional, purposeful, and deeply rooted in meaning.

Let us explore this carefully.

The Hadith: What Does It Actually Say?

There are narrations where the Prophet ﷺ said:

  • The one who drags his garment will not be looked at by Allahﷻ
  • The part of the garment below the ankles is in the Fire

At first glance, these seem strict. But look closely. In multiple narrations, an important condition is clearly mentioned: “Whoever does this out of pride…”

This condition is not optional, but it is central and we have misunderstood the entire ruling. 

A Fundamental Principle in Islam

Here is a powerful rule in Islamic understanding:

  • If something is prohibited without reason → it is always prohibited
  • If something is prohibited with a reason → it depends on that reason

So, if pride is the reason—

Then:

With pride → prohibited
Without pride → not prohibited

This is how Islamic law works.

A Simple Example to Understand This

The Prophet ﷺ instructed: “Extinguish lamps before sleeping.”

Why? Because fire could spread and rats might carry burning wicks

Now ask: Does this mean that “No light should exist at night”?

No. Because the reason was due to fire hazard and not light itself. So, today electric lights are safe and therefore it is allowed. This example teaches us to understand the reason—not just the wording

Now return to clothing. The warning is not about Cloth touching the ground rather it is about pride expressed through appearance

The Incident of Abu Bakr (RA)

A powerful example: A companion noticed that his garment naturally slipped below his ankles.

He asked: “Does this apply to me?”

The Prophet ﷺ replied: “You are not doing it out of pride.”

This answer changes everything.

It shows clearly:

  • The ruling is not about length alone
  • It is about intention

If it happens naturally— There is no sin.

What is Pride in Clothing?

Let us define it clearly.

Pride is not:

  • Wearing long clothes
  • Wearing good clothes

Pride is:

  • Wanting to appear superior
  • Wanting others to admire you
  • Wanting to stand above others

This happens when:

  • You deliberately differ to show status
  • You exaggerate beyond normal usage

Historical Example: Kings and Excess Clothing

In earlier times, kings wore garments that dragged behind them, with extra cloth often carried by attendants—not for comfort or modesty, but as a deliberate display of power and superiority.

That is pride.

The Key Indicator of Pride

Here is a simple test:

If everyone wears something normally and one person exaggerates it to stand out, that is where pride enters. But if everyone wears similar styles then it is normal in society and not a sample of expressing pride.

Important Clarification: It Is Not Just About Lower Garments

Many people think:

“This rule applies only to lungi or pants.”

This is incorrect.

The Prophet ﷺ used the word: “Clothing” (general term)

Which includes:

  • Lower garments
  • Shirts
  • Turbans

Anything worn.

Examples of Misunderstanding Today

Some people Shorten their lower garments strictly

But they’ll wear,

  • oversized, exaggerated upper garments
  • massive turbans
  • Dress in unusual ways to appear “religious”

This is a contradiction because The issue is not the type of garment— but the intention behind it.

Consider this:

Some garments are naturally long, flowing and designed to extend lower. s that wrong?

No. Because it is part of the design and not pride.

There is a narration in which, during a solar eclipse, The Prophet ﷺ hurried outside and his garment trailed on the ground.

Was that pride? No. It was just an urgency—not intention. This clearly proves that the action alone is not the issue rather the intention is.

Where Does Pride Truly Exist?

The Prophet ﷺ explained:

Pride is rejecting the truth and looking down on others. Even someone dressed in simple clothes can be full of pride if they think, “I am better than others.” On the other hand, a person may wear elegant or refined clothing and still remain humble in their heart—such a person is not prideful.

A Deeper Psychological Insight

Pride is not in the cloth. It is in the mind.

It appears when a person wants:

  • Recognition
  • Admiration
  • Status

Without that intention— Clothing is just clothing.

The Real Problem Today

People focus on inches of cloth and exact measurements but ignore:

  • Arrogance
  • Ego
  • Behavior

This is a reversal of priorities.

Islam focuses on the inner reform—not external obsession

A Balanced Conclusion

Let us summarize clearly:

  • Clothing below the ankle → not automatically sinful
  • Dragging clothes → not automatically pride
  • Pride → depends on intention

The real rule is: Do not use clothing as a tool for arrogance

Final Reflection

Islam is not about:

  • Measuring fabric
  • Policing appearances

It is about:

  • Purifying hearts
  • Correcting intentions
  • Living with humility

Wear what you wish but ask yourself: Am I dressing to honor Allahﷻ or to impress people?

That question is the true معيار (criterion).

May Allahﷻ protect us from arrogance, guide us to humility, and grant us both inward purity and outward dignity.

Peace be upon you, and the mercy and blessings of Allahﷻ.

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