The sacrifice
The sacrifice is the sacrifice that the Muslim slaughters on Eid al-Adha with the intention of drawing closer to Allaah, one of the rituals of the Islamic religion agreed upon by the scholars, scholars and elders. The Muslim can slaughter whatever he wants from animals such as sheep, cows and camels. The poor, the needy and the needy in the structure of their happiness and feeding them and the sense of some of their suffering, which is one of the rituals that have a place and importance in Islam, because it brings many benefits to the victim and the community and its members as a whole
The origin of the sacrifice
The origin of the sacrifice in the Islamic religion to the story of the Prophet Ibrahim and his son Ismail peace be upon them, where the Prophet Ibrahim saw in a dream that he was sacrificing his son, a believer to the Almighty: (when he reached the age, he said, my son I see in a dream that I slaughter you see what you see said, So, the Prophet Abraham decided to comply with the commands of Allah and to slaughter his son Ismael, so that God was great until the Lord redeemed Abraham with a great ram to lament. "[Al-Saffat: 102] Thus, the sacrifice began in the Islamic religion.
The wisdom of slaughtering the udhiyah
God did nothing for nothing. For everything in the Islamic religion is wisdom and intentional and deliberate intent, followed by some of the divine judgment derived from slaughter on Eid al-Adha:
Following the example of the Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him).
To accustom the Muslim to sacrifice and sacrifice for the sake of Allah by all possible means and means, sacrifice money, self, time and so on.
The Muslim feels his Muslim brother and makes the precious and generous to release his brother Muslim, especially the poor and feeling their suffering and provide meat and sacrifice to them at the time of the Eid to entertain them.