In
most of the Islamic world sun down
tonight will start Ramadan, the
ninth month of the Muslim Calendar,
a holy period of fasting. The date is
calculated by the first sighting of the crescent
after the New Moon. Since this can vary in different parts of
the world, so can the marked beginning of the month.
A
movement to mark the beginning by astronomical observation, rather than by the
naked eye thus standardizing the observance is embraced in some of the Islamic
world, but bitterly resisted by some traditionalists.
Because
it is calculated by a lunar, rather
than the western solar calendar,
Ramadan floats backward 10 or 11 days each year in relationship to the Gregorian Calendar.
Ramadan
was the month in which the first verses of the Qur'an were revealed to the Prophet Mohammed.
The
month of fasting is a period of cleansing as the faithful rededicate themselves
to Allah by emphasizing patience, humility and spirituality by an absolute fast
observed by all Muslims over the age of puberty each day between dawn and
dusk. The observant are also called to
be more reverent and fervent in prayer.
During Ramadan the entire Qur'an
is often read in mosques in 30
installments.
Other customs connected to the observance vary somewhat
culturally and between Sunni and Shi'a traditions.
In more secular Islamic countries evenings after the fast are often
filled with feasting and entertainment, while attendance to evening services
following a modest breaking of the fast is customary in more traditional
societies. Acts of charity to the poor
are encouraged.
The holiday of Eid-al-Fitr marks the end of the fasting
period of Ramadan and the first day of the following month, after another new
moon has been sighted, 29 or 30 days after the onset of Ramadan.
This is the most festive of Islamic holidays marked by the donning of
new clothes, feasting, and family gatherings.
The proprietor of this blog sincerely wishes his Muslim friends Ramadan Kareem!
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