Requirements
- Target platform
- OpenClaw
- Install method
- Manual import
- Extraction
- Extract archive
- Prerequisites
- OpenClaw
- Primary doc
- SKILL.md
Get daily Islamic prayer (Salah) times, Iftar, and Suhoor schedules for any location worldwide. Supports 15+ calculation methods, Hijri dates, and Ramadan ca...
Get daily Islamic prayer (Salah) times, Iftar, and Suhoor schedules for any location worldwide. Supports 15+ calculation methods, Hijri dates, and Ramadan ca...
Hand the extracted package to your coding agent with a concrete install brief instead of figuring it out manually.
I downloaded a skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder and install it by following the included instructions. Then review README.md for any prerequisites, environment setup, or post-install checks. Tell me what you changed and call out any manual steps you could not complete.
I downloaded an updated skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder, compare it with my current installation, and upgrade it while preserving any custom configuration unless the package docs explicitly say otherwise. Then review README.md for any prerequisites, environment setup, or post-install checks. Summarize what changed and any follow-up checks I should run.
Your daily Islamic prayer companion. Provides accurate Salah times (Fajr, Sunrise, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, Isha) for any city or coordinates worldwide. During Ramadan, also provides Suhoor (pre-dawn meal) and Iftar (fast-breaking) schedules with full monthly calendars.
Use this skill when the user asks about: Prayer times for a specific location Iftar or Suhoor times Ramadan schedule or timetable When to break fast or start fasting Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, or Isha times Islamic prayer schedule
This skill uses the Aladhan Prayer Times API (https://aladhan.com/prayer-times-api), a free and reliable public API that requires no authentication.
curl -L "https://api.aladhan.com/v1/timingsByCity?city={CITY}&country={COUNTRY}&method={METHOD}" Replace {CITY}, {COUNTRY}, and {METHOD} with actual values. URL-encode spaces (e.g., New%20York). Always use -L to follow redirects.
curl -L "https://api.aladhan.com/v1/timings/{DD-MM-YYYY}?latitude={LAT}&longitude={LNG}&method={METHOD}" Use this when the user provides latitude/longitude or when a city name is ambiguous.
curl -L "https://api.aladhan.com/v1/calendarByCity/{YEAR}/{MONTH}?city={CITY}&country={COUNTRY}&method={METHOD}" Use this for Ramadan schedules. {MONTH} is the Gregorian month number (1-12).
The method parameter controls prayer time calculation. Pick the most appropriate one based on the user's region: MethodOrganizationBest For1University of Islamic Sciences, KarachiPakistan, Bangladesh, India2Islamic Society of North America (ISNA)North America3Muslim World League (MWL)Europe, Far East4Umm Al-Qura University, MakkahSaudi Arabia, Gulf5Egyptian General Authority of SurveyAfrica, Syria, Lebanon7Institute of Geophysics, University of TehranIran8Gulf RegionUAE, Kuwait, Qatar9KuwaitKuwait10QatarQatar11Majlis Ugama Islam SingapuraSingapore12Union Organization Islamic de FranceFrance13Diyanet Isleri BaskanligiTurkey14Spiritual Administration of Muslims of RussiaRussia15Moonsighting Committee WorldwideGlobal (moonsighting-based) Defaults: Use method 2 for North America, 4 for Saudi/Gulf, 3 for Europe, 5 for Africa, 13 for Turkey, 1 for South Asia. If the user doesn't specify a preference, select based on their location.
The API returns JSON. The key fields to extract: { "data": { "timings": { "Fajr": "05:12", "Sunrise": "06:30", "Dhuhr": "12:15", "Asr": "15:30", "Maghrib": "18:00", "Isha": "19:20", "Imsak": "05:02" }, "date": { "readable": "19 Feb 2026", "hijri": { "date": "02-09-1447", "month": { "number": 9, "en": "Ramadan" }, "year": "1447" } } } } For the calendar endpoint, data is an array of day objects with the same structure.
Display as a clean table: Prayer Times for {City}, {Country} Date: {Gregorian Date} | {Hijri Date} | Prayer | Time | |----------|--------| | Fajr | 05:12 | | Sunrise | 06:30 | | Dhuhr | 12:15 | | Asr | 15:30 | | Maghrib | 18:00 | | Isha | 19:20 | Suhoor: Stop eating before 05:12 (Fajr). Recommended: 05:02 (Imsak). Iftar: Break fast at 18:00 (Maghrib).
For monthly requests, present a condensed table: Ramadan Schedule for {City} β {Year} | Day | Date | Suhoor (Imsak) | Fajr | Iftar (Maghrib) | |-----|------------|-----------------|-------|-----------------| | 1 | 17 Feb | 05:02 | 05:12 | 17:45 | | 2 | 18 Feb | 05:01 | 05:11 | 17:46 | | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... |
Suhoor must be completed before Fajr. The Imsak time (typically 10 min before Fajr) is the recommended cutoff. Iftar is at Maghrib (sunset). All times are in the local timezone of the requested location. If the user doesn't specify a location, ask for their city and country. If the user doesn't specify a date, use today's date.
User: "What are the prayer times for London today?" β Call: curl -L "https://api.aladhan.com/v1/timingsByCity?city=London&country=United%20Kingdom&method=3" β Display all prayer times in a formatted table with both Gregorian and Hijri dates. User: "When is Iftar in Dubai?" β Call: curl -L "https://api.aladhan.com/v1/timingsByCity?city=Dubai&country=United%20Arab%20Emirates&method=4" β Highlight the Maghrib time as the Iftar time. User: "Give me the Ramadan schedule for Istanbul" β Determine the Gregorian months that overlap with Ramadan for the current year. β Call: curl -L "https://api.aladhan.com/v1/calendarByCity/2026/2?city=Istanbul&country=Turkey&method=13" (and March if Ramadan spans two months) β Filter to only Ramadan days (check Hijri month = 9 / Ramadan) and present the Suhoor/Iftar table. User: "Suhoor time for New York?" β Call: curl -L "https://api.aladhan.com/v1/timingsByCity?city=New%20York&country=United%20States&method=2" β Show the Imsak and Fajr times. Recommend stopping eating at Imsak (10 min before Fajr). User: "Prayer times for coordinates 21.4225, 39.8262" β Call: curl -L "https://api.aladhan.com/v1/timings/19-02-2026?latitude=21.4225&longitude=39.8262&method=4" β Display full prayer times (these coordinates are Makkah, so use Umm Al-Qura method).
This skill makes read-only HTTPS requests to the Aladhan Prayer Times API, a well-known, free, public Islamic prayer times service. Data sent: Only the city/country name or coordinates provided by the user, plus a calculation method number. No personal data, credentials, or device information is transmitted. Data received: Prayer times (JSON) for the requested location and date. No tracking, cookies, or user profiling. No authentication: The API requires no API keys, tokens, or accounts. No data storage: This skill does not write to disk, store user data, or maintain any state between invocations. Single domain: All network requests go exclusively to api.aladhan.com over HTTPS. No other external endpoints are contacted.
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