Praise be to Allaah.
Firstly:
We ask Allaah to accept
your repentance and to forgive your sins, and to make you steadfast in
obedience and righteousness.
Deliberately breaking the
fast in Ramadaan is a grave sin, because it is neglecting an important
obligation that Allaah has enjoined upon His slaves, which He prescribed for
us and for those who came before us. If this transgression involves another
sin, which is the forbidden secret habit, then the sin is compounded – we
ask Allaah to keep us safe and sound.
We have stated that this
habit is haraam and explained that it invalidates the fast in the answer to
question no. 40589.
Secondly:
You have to make up the
days on which you broke the fast. If you cannot do that before Ramadaan, it
remains a debt that you owe and you have to make them up after Ramadaan. In
order to be on the safe side, you should also offer expiation for each day,
which means feeding one poor person half a saa’ of rice or the like. Half a
saa’ is equivalent to approximately one and a half kilograms.
Ibn Qudaamah (may Allaah
have mercy on him) said: If a person owes any fasts from Ramadaan, he may
delay them so long as the next Ramadaan has not come, because of the report
narrated by ‘Aa’ishah who said: I would owe fasts from Ramadaan, and I would
not make them up until Sha’baan came. Agreed upon.
It is not permissible for
him to delay making them up until the next Ramadaan comes with no excuse,
because ‘Aa’ishah (may Allaah be pleased with her) did not delay it to that
extent, and if she could she would have done so.
If he delays it until after
the following Ramadaan, then it depends. If it was due to a (valid) excuse,
then he does not have to do anything but make up the missed fast, but if it
is without an excuse, then in addition to making it up, he has to feed one
poor person for each day. This is the view of Ibn ‘Abbaas, Ibn ‘Umar, Abu
Hurayrah, Mujaahid, Sa’eed ibn Jubayr, Maalik, al-Thawri, al-Awzaa’i,
al-Shaafa’i and Ishaaq.
Al-Hasan, al-Nakha’i and
Abu Haneefah said: He does not have to offer the fidyah, because it was an
obligatory fast, and no expiation is required for delaying it, as is also
the case if he delays fulfilling a vow. End quote.
From al-Mughni
(3/40).
This expiation does not
increase as the years pass, so if a person delays making up missed Ramadaan
fasts for many years with no excuse, he only has to offer one expiation for
each day.
And Allaah knows best.