The Crescent Moon was spotted in Saudi Arabia. |
Note—In light of the bigotry and hatred that has now been
enshrined by a once progressive American political party with its embrace of an
open racist and only mildly closeted fascist as its Presidential nominee, it
has never been more important to understand Islam and honor the traditions that
have brought meaning to the lives of millions.
In
most of the Islamic world sun down last night was the 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.
In the United States the western calendar date was June 5.
A movement to mark the beginning by astronomical calculation, rather than
by visual confirmation thus standardizing the observance is embraced
in some of the Islamic world, but bitterly
resisted by some traditionalists.
This
year in deeply traditional Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates religious leaders
observed the new crescent using powerful telescopes
was sited late yesterday in crystal clear skies. Religious authorities there declared that
today, June 6, the first full day of the sighting will mark the beginning of Ramadan
for Hijri year 1437.
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 Mohammad.
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.
Muslims pray at the Central London Mosque during Ramadan. Longer days at Northern latitudes can mean up to 20 hours of daylight and fasting, |
Dawn to dusk fasting is significantly longer every day for Muslims in northern latitudes where the day is longer than close to the equator.
This affects the growing number of believers across North America, northern Europe, and parts of Russia
and China. That has caused tensions between traditionalists
and moderates in some countries. In Britain
moderate scholar Dr. Usama Hasan
of the Quillian Foundation issued a Fatwa—simply
a ruling or opinion by a recognized
Islamic scholar—that Muslims there should observe the hours of fasting at Mecca, around 12 hours a day,
instead of during the up to 20 hours of
daylight in the northern Scotland. Traditionalists in Great Britain’s diverse Muslim population still demand
a dawn to dusk fast. It is unclear how
many believers will embrace the new Fatwa.
Islam is the world’s
fastest growing religion due to a population
explosion across much of its traditional
territories, migrations, and conversions particularly in Africa and North America. And that, along
with the emergence of violent
fundamentalist movements, causes much anxiety. Nowhere more so than in China where officials have once again
clamped down on the Turkic-speaking
Uighur in the semi-autonomous
northwest region of Xinjiang—called call
East Turkestan by local activists. After years of low-key unrest and a handful
of case of bombings, Chinese official fear the development of the kind of insurgency
that occurred across the Caucuses in areas of the former USSR. Mirroring
crackdowns on Tibetan Buddhists, Christians,
and minority sects, Chinese
officials have banned the observance
of the fast, forced restaurants to stay open during the day and shops to sell tobacco and
liquor, and ordered schools and workplaces to serve lunches and
compel participation. Naturally this only builds resentment to the central government and to local Communist Party officials charged with carrying the edict out.
In the United
States resentment against Muslims is on the rise yet again after the widely
reported atrocities of ISIS in France, Belgium, Syria and Iraq
and attacks by other groups in Africa.
A few arrests of Americans
for allegedly trying to join ISIS or al
Qeada, using social media for recruitment, or trying to hatch their own domestic attacks has revived some hysteria and fed right wing hate groups. Across
the country mosques and Islamic centers are appealing to authorities for extra protection and beefing up their
own security during Ramadan.
After sunset in Cairo there are festive communal dinners known as Iftar. |
Customs connected to the Ramadan 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 Mubarak!
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