HOW TO WASH(GHUSL) TO A DECEASED MUSLIM
Prepare the body of the deceased as follows:
1. When death is confirmed, the eyes of the deceased should
be closed and jaws should be tied shut.
2. While washing the body, the ‘Awrah should
be covered, body should be slightly raised and stomach is
lightly pressed to get the waste out of it. Then the person
who washes, wraps his/her hands with a wash cloth or the
like, to clean the expelled remains from the deceased’s
stomach. Then the washer should wash the dead as in
Wudhu (ablution) for the Salaat (obligatory prayer). The
head and beard is washed with water and Sidr (Lote tree
leaves) or soap, and the right side of the body is washed
before the left side. The body can be re-washed three times,
with the last one requiring plain water.
Each time the stomach should be pressed. If there is
any excretion, it should be washed and the anus should be
covered with cotton or the like. If it does not work then use plain
earth or any medical material such as plaster, then wash the
deceased again as in Wudhu.
If the washer feels that three washes are not enough to
clean the body properly, then he can wash five or seven times.
The body should be dried with a clean cloth and some perfume
should be applied to the hidden parts of the body and the sujood
parts. It would be better to apply wood perfume (‘oud) to the
entire body of the deceased and to the coffin. The washer can
clip the fingernails, and trim the mustache of the deceased, but
should not comb the hair. If the deceased is a female, then her
hair can be groomed in three plaits and placed behind the back.
3. Shroud the body of the deceased (Kafn.)
It is better to shroud the dead man’s body in three white pieces
of cloth without using a shirt or turban. The three pieces should
be rolled up together. It doesn’t matter if the dead body is
shrouded in a shirt, waist-sheet or a wrap.
The woman is shrouded in five pieces of cloth; a loose piece of
cloth (dir), a veil, a waist-sheet and two wraps. The body is
shrouded in one to three pieces of cloth. A young female is
shrouded in a shirt and two wraps.
4. People who are more entitled to wash the deceased man and
pray for him and bury him are his male guardians e.g. father, the
closest kin and so forth. Similarly female guardians are more
entitled to wash a deceased female i.e. the mother, grandmother,
closest female relatives, etc.,
The husband or wife can wash the deceased spouse, in the
same way that the dead body of Abu Bakr (r.a.) was washed by
his wife. Ali (r.a.) on the other hand, washed the body of his wife Fatima (r.a.) on her death.