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Zaid Alsalami,
Shaykh Dr Zaid Alsalami is an Iraqi born scholar, raised in Australia. He obtained a BA from Al-Mustafa University, Qom, and an MA from the Islamic College in London. He also obtained a PhD from ANU, Canberra. He has written and translated several Islamic texts and also prepared educational videos on Islamic rulings and practices. 515 Answers
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Masuma Jaffer,
Dr Masuma Jaffer is a qualified dentist, with a Masters in Islamic Studies and has also attended Hawza in Qum. She obtained a PGCE - teaching qualification – and has taught Hawza studies at the Islamic College in London. She also has a Diploma in Counselling and is a Qualified Chaplain and worked with women prisoners at Holloway and with Hertfordshire Police advising them on Muslim matters. 10 Answers
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Bismihi ta'ala,
In our Fiqh, a wet-dream is called Ihtilam, (from the word hilm, which means dream). A wet-dream is one of the signs of religious maturity for a male, and its general definition is "the ejaculation of semen while sleeping."
Naturally a wet-dream occurs for both males and females, but there is a view that a woman does not have to do ghusl janabah when she has a wet-dream, and discharge.
Most of our esteemed Jurists do believe that a woman must do ghusl janabah if she has a wet dream, on the condition that she has a discharge of sexual fluid from an ejaculation/orgasm.
This means that in the wet-dream, if there is no discharge ghusl is not wajib.
Another important point is that according to most Jurists, the sexual fluid that emmits from an orgasm is considered to be Najis (impure).
And Allah knows best.