Praise be to Allaah.
What is mustahabb during the nights of Ramadan is to spend
them in qiyaam, prayer and worship, and to single out the last ten nights
for extra worship and striving, seeking forgiveness and mercy and seeking
Laylat al-Qadr which is better than a thousand months.
Moreover, Taraaweeh prayer is regarded as a kind of Qiyaam
al-layl and they call it Taraweeh because people take brief breaks between
rak’ahs. Hence the matter is broad in scope, and it is permissible for a
person to pray whatever he wants of rak’ahs, at whatever time of the
night he wants.
It says in al-Mawsoo’ah al-Fiqhiyyah (34/123):
There is no difference of opinion among the fuqaha’ with
regard to it being Sunnah to pray during the nights of Ramadan (Qiyaam
al-layl), because the Prophet (blessings and peace of Allah be upon him)
said: “Whoever spends the nights of Ramadan in prayer, out of faith and
seeking the reward of Allah, his previous sins will be forgiven.”
The fuqaha’ said: Taraweeh is the qiyaam (Qiyaam al-layl) of
Ramadan. Hence it is best to spend most of the night in it, because it is
Qiyaam al-layl. End quote.
What many imams do nowadays -- especially in the last ten
days of Ramadan -- leading the people in Taraweeh prayer immediately after
‘Isha’, then going back to the mosque in the last part of the night to pray
qiyaam, is something that is prescribed and it is not forbidden. There is no
reason to suggest it is not allowed. What is required is to strive hard in
the last ten days according to one's ability. If a person breaks up his
night between prayer, resting, sleeping, and reading Qur'aan, then he has
done well.
Shaykh ‘Abd-Allaah Abaabateen said, as is narrated in
al-Durar al-Saniyyah (4/364):
In response to what some people do of objecting to the one
who prays more during the last ten days of Ramadan than he usually did in
the first twenty days, on the grounds that this is more than is usual and is
ignorance of the Sunnah and the practice of the Sahaabah, Taabi’een and
imams of Islam,
We say: There are hadeeths from the Prophet (blessings and
peace of Allah be upon him) which encourage praying Qiyaam al-layl during
Ramadan, and particularly emphasise it during the last ten days.
Once it becomes clear that there is no specific number of
rak’ahs for Taraweeh, and that the time for it according to all scholars is
from after the Sunnah of ‘Isha’ until the break of dawn, and that spending
the night in worship is a confirmed Sunnah, and that the Prophet (blessings
and peace of Allaah be upon him) prayed taraweeh for many nights in
congregation, then how can anyone object to the one who prays more during
the last ten nights than he did at the beginning of the month? So during the
last ten days, he prays at the beginning of the night, as he did at the
beginning of the month, or a little, or a lot, without praying Witr, for the
sake of those who are weak and want to limit themselves to that; then after
that he does more prayers in congregation and calls all of it qiyaam or
taraweeh.
Perhaps the one who objects to that is confused by what many
of the fuqaha’ say, that it is mustahabb for the imam not to pray more than
one includes than one khatmah (reading of the entire Qur’aan), unless the
people behind him prefer to do more than that. The reason they gave for not
doing more than one khatmah is the hardship that may be caused for the
people behind him, not because doing more than that is not prescribed in
sharee’ah. So from their wording we may conclude that if people behind him
want to do more than one khatmah, that is good, as was clearly stated in the
words of the scholars.
As for what many of the common people say, calling what is
done at the beginning of the night Taraweeh and the prayers offered after
that qiyaam, this is what the uneducated people say. Rather all of it is
qiyaam and taraweeh. The qiyaam of Ramadaan is called Taraweeh because they
used to have a rest (yastareehoona) after every four rak’ahs because they
used to make the prayers lengthy. The reason why some people object to that
is that it is contrary to what is customary among the people of their
countries and most of the people nowadays; and because of ignorance of the
Sunnah and reports and of the practice of the Sahaabah, Taabi’oon and the
imams of Islam; and because of what some people think, that our prayer
during the last ten days is a kind of salat al-ta’qeeb which was regarded as
makrooh by some scholars, but that is not in fact the case, because ta’qeeb
is a voluntary prayer offered in congregation after finishing Taraweeh and
Witr.
This is how all the fuqaha’ defined ta’qeeb, as a voluntary
prayer offered in congregation after finishing Witr immediately after
Taraweeh. From these words it is clear that prayer offered in congregation
before Witr is not ta’qeeb. End quote.
Shaykh Saalih al-Fawzaan said in Ithaaf Ahl al-Eemaan bi
Majaalis Shahr Ramadaan:
In the last ten days of Ramadan, the Muslims increase their
efforts in worship, following the example of the Prophet (blessings and
peace of Allah be upon him) and seeking Laylat al-Qadr which is better than
a thousand months. Those who pray twenty-three rak’ahs at the beginning of
the month break it up during the last ten days, so they pray ten rak’ahs at
the beginning of the night, calling it Taraweeh, and they pray ten at the
end of the night, making them lengthy, and following it with three rak’ahs
of Witr, which they call qiyaam. This is a variation in naming only. In fact
all of it may be called Taraweeh or it may be called qiyaam. As for those
who pray eleven or thirteen rak’ahs at the beginning of the month, they add
ten rak’ahs to that during the last ten days, which they pray at the end of
the night, making it lengthy, making the most of the virtue of the last ten
days and increasing their efforts to do good. They have a precedent among
the Sahaabah and others who prayed twenty-three rak’ahs, as stated above.
Thus they combine the two opinions: the opinion which favours offering
thirteen rak’ahs during the first twenty days and the opinion which favours
offering twenty-three during the last ten days. End quote.
For more information please see question number
82152.
And Allah knows best.