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i just seen another question saying you have a few days left
do you have a celibration at the end ?
is there anything special you do at this time ?
i would love to hear a little about what happens , even if it is something you do personally or within your community

2006-10-16 11:45:43 · 10 answers · asked by Peace 7 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

sounds good .. all that food lol

2006-10-16 11:52:51 · update #1

please do not feel you have to justify or explain yourself
and i thank you for your answers xx

2006-10-16 11:59:37 · update #2

faisix .. i am asking here because i want to hear from the people themself
dont you be so ignorant please
what is this forum for if not to ask questions about religion and spirituality ?

2006-10-16 12:24:01 · update #3

10 answers

Yes we do celiberate at the end. After the month of ramadan, comes the month of Shawal. The first day of Shawal is called Eid-ul-Fitr, in short Eid. This is one of the two days which are celiberated by Muslims. The second and third days are also celeberated as Eid-ul-Fitr, but the most importance is given to the first day.

"Eid" and "Fitr" are arabic words and mean "festival" and "breaking fast". So its the festival of breaking the fast.

Everyone wears new clothes, cooks good meals, gives charity. If someone else doesn't have the ability to get good food or clothing, then muslims who are capable of providing them give them. In addition to the Zakah (Annual Charity) that is obligatory upon muslims, there is a charity called "Sadqat-ul-Fitr", charity of breaking the fast, which is obligatory for every capable muslim to give in the month of Ramadan.

Judith R, we drink or eat NOTHING from dawn till sunset.

2006-10-16 11:52:47 · answer #1 · answered by mutmainnah 3 · 6 0

after ramadan comes the feast (Eid al adha) it last for 3 days but the most important thing is the Adha prayers, its around 6:30a.m. where all muslims go to the mosque and pray thanking god for Ramadan and asking him to accept their fasting and good things done during the holy month of ramadan and share the happiness with all muslims either you know or don't know.

during the 3 days ppl go out for parks and visit families and there is the traditional cookies (kahk) specially for the feast to be eaten and shared by families and neighbours either muslims or cristians

2006-10-16 12:30:59 · answer #2 · answered by Thank God 4 everything 5 · 2 0

Yes we have a celebration called Eid.
We have wonderful new clothes fun and festivities,lots and lots of food.
It's a time to rejoice with family friends and fellow Muslims.
Just a few more days to go can't wait x

2006-10-16 12:33:52 · answer #3 · answered by Sherzade 5 · 2 0

after Ramadan finish we had eid "festival" for 3 days in which we stop fasting .. rest from word .. visit friends and relatives .. it's one of two eids in year

P.S. "judith r" is very ignorant .. Muslims don't eat nor drink from down to sunset

2006-10-16 11:49:58 · answer #4 · answered by Kimo 4 · 7 0

yea we do. after ramadan finishes, eid comes. it lasts for three days and it is the celebration tht we should enjoy and have fun from what we have done in ramadan.

2006-10-16 11:52:26 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 5 0

yes after ramadan we have eid al fitra(the feast) which means this day we will be eating lots of yummy food.

2006-10-16 11:51:34 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 6 0

are you talking about EID? dont be so ignorant! Any search engine will find you thousands of pages about any religious festival!! DOH!!!!!

2006-10-16 12:18:22 · answer #7 · answered by faisix67 2 · 0 2

Yeap lots of good stuff :)

2006-10-16 12:00:58 · answer #8 · answered by . 3 · 4 0

mind you, they don't really fast, they just don't eat between sunrise and sunset. A real fast would be no solid food at all, no milk , just clear fluids, like a christian fast would be.

2006-10-16 11:52:15 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 10

Fasting was prescribed before the Quran and prophet Muhammad (uwbp) and to people who were Muslims as well, so Islam is no new faith. Fasting is, first of all, prescribed to instil discipline and self-restraint for warding off evil.

Fasting during the month of Ramadan is not guaranteed to ward off evil when it is done during illness or on a journey. Travel outside of home puts the Believer at risk of distraction, discomfort, and unease, while illness is itself a state of impurity, distraction, discomfort, unease and disease. Obedience to the prescriptions of the fast for Ramadan makes the fast similar to the five-times daily prayer, which must be observed with the cleanliness of ablution, since the journey and the illness taint the conditions that purify the fast and make the fast as meaningless as prayer without ablution. The fast therefore demands the same kind of attention and concentration as prayer, for the reasons given are to glorify ALLAH that He has guided you with the Quran and the fast, and “that perchance you shall be grateful” to ALLAH, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.

The perfection of Islam prohibits risks, or further risks, to the health and safety of the Believer. One can reasonably understand this condition to be the effect of the journey on the individual rather than the distance or length of time spent on the journey since ALLAH intends that the fast be without difficulty, and as pure as the offering of the daily prayers. To ignore or to belittle the rules is to stray from the Path of Islam.

The fast continues outside of the month of Ramadan in order to make up for the fasts missed by illness or the journey, which doubles the reward for the one who fasts in the state of purification, since the missed fasts remain open for proper observation and the reward for obedience to the rules for illness or the journey have been adhered to by the Believer.

Self-restraint at the fast demands control of one’s natural desires for food and drink in order earn the discipline to resist the desire to ignore the commands set by ALLAH and the Quran. Submission to the Will of ALLAH, which is what Islam is about, excludes personal satisfaction or self-glorification or self-praise, that is, nothing should be done merely to show off or to follow blindly.

He who, for some reason, must miss the fast of Ramadan, if he can afford to feed a needy person he may do so as a ransom. Islam is purification of human life and ALLAH encourages that the good deed be done to the needy, as another form of purification, and it can also be described as purification of one’s wealth. But that the payment of the ransom is not taken to be merely a bribe, ALLAH advises that the good deed can be done of one’s own accord and made better if the fast is added.

The month of Ramadan, the Fast and the Quran are inseparable. The favour of perfection is not to be claimed without the purity of the Quran. The fast cannot stand alone as a claim to Islam since the Quran, whole and complete, is the Guidance that identifies the evils that must be warded off. The Quran is the Muslim Believer’s Owner’s Manual without which the Muslim is without the Faith that is required for the Pleasure of ALLAH, and for the claim to Islam.

ALLAH then repeats the exemption from the fast of Ramadan for the sick and the one who must journey and who is therefore outside of the safety of the home, with the opportunity to make up the missed fasts at later dates. ALLAH further dismisses the idea that the fast is to be viewed as a form of punishment as the Believer is given the assurance that ALLAH intends every service to you and does not want to put you to difficulties to complete the prescribed period. Islam is the perfect way of life and too purifying for ALLAH the Most Merciful to call on the Muslim to volunteer self-punishment as a form of worship. A Muslim does not have a cross to bear and Allah says that He does not give to any person more than one can bear.

Glorify ALLAH for the Fast and the Quran, in that ALLAH has guided you, and perhaps you shall be grateful.

The fast of the month of Ramadan is better spent reading the Quran in order to understand the Mercy that ALLAH has sent down to mankind through the Quran and the prophet Muhammad (uwbp). Even if one short Sura is read until it is clearly understood, then the fast is fulfilling. ALLAH has said that none shall grasp the Message but men of understanding. The Quran and the Fast and the Ramadan should therefore be the key to our way of life, in perfect submission to the Will of ALLAH.

ALLAH has created the Planet Earth in the shape of a globe that gives this planet the spin that produces continuous night and day, and continuous sunrise and sunset, that result in an unbroken chain of prayer from His worshippers. The merciful provisions that allow for the making up of lost fasts ensure a similar continuity of the fast and of the remembrance of ALLAH and the Guidance that is within the Glorious Quran, without difficulty.

The poor man who fasts throughout the year because of his lack of means, or scarcity of meals, will have the fasts of Ramadan take on a greater measure of meaning to him when he can look forward to a proper meal that comes from the one who can afford it, and this feeling is equally shared by both parties in obedience to the commands of ALLAH for the Mercy of ALLAH.

FASTING REVEALED


What is significant about the month of Ramadan? – It is the month in which the Quran was revealed to prophet Muhammad (uwbp), with the renewal of the fast for Muslims.

In the month of Ramadan is the Quran of more importance than the Fast? – Yes, the Quran is of more importance since it contains the Perfection of Guidance from ALLAH while Fasting is only one of the commands of ALLAH that helps to purify Islam as our way of life and the final way of Life for Muslims.

Will fasting and reading the Quran be sufficient for the faith of the Muslim? – No, one must seek to follow, or intend to follow the commands of ALLAH in the Quran.

According to the Quran, what is the main purpose of the fast to him/her who fasts? – That you may practise the discipline that is required to ward off evil and to be faithful to the commands of ALLAH as set down in the Quran.

What does ALLAH identify as His intentions for him/her who fasts? – ALLAH does not want to put you to difficulties to complete the prescribed period. ALLAH wants that you should glorify Him in that He has guided you. ALLAH wants you to show your gratitude.

Is any Muslim exempt from fasting in the month of Ramadan? – Yes, ALLAH states that he who is sick or he who is on a journey should cease to fast, but that that person’s fast must be made up on other day(s).

Does ALLAH make the fast compulsory for the Muslim who can afford to feed a needy person? – No, the Muslim who can afford to feed a needy person can do so and be exempt from the fast, by the Mercy of ALLAH, but ALLAH still reminds Muslims that it is better if you can do both, that is, feed the needy and fast since Allah can not be bribed but He is them Wisest of Judges.

In what way is the fast similar to prayer? – Prayer and fast ward off evil, must be free from distractions, must not present a risk to health and safety.

Does ALLAH therefore exempt the chronically ill from fasting? – Yes, ALLAH does exempt the chronically ill from fasting as long as the person’s health is put at risk by the fast. One should therefore consult your Doctor about the dangers of the fast for diseases like diabetes and other health conditions.

What does ALLAH command to be your mental approach to the fast? - ALLAH commands that you be thankful that ALLAH has guided you and that you glorify ALLAH for the Guidance.

What is this Guidance that ALLAH wants you to Praise and Glorify ALLAH for in this holy month of Ramadan? – ALLAH wants you to Praise and Glorify ALLAH for the Guidance that is the Quran, this Scripture of Exalted Power, that ALLAH has sent down to Muhammad (uwbp) in the month of Ramadan.

Was fasting prescribed for any people before the Revelation of the Quran? – Yes, and this should remind us that there was Revelation other than the Quran, but that the Quran is the final Revelation, and Muhammad (ubwp) was ALLAH’S last Servant and Messenger.

In what words does ALLAH put the seal on the Quran and the prophet Muhammad (uwbp) and the Religion or Way of Life that is Islam? – ALLAH has placed His Seal on the prophet Muhammad and the Quran in the following words: “This day have I perfected your Religion for you, completed My favour upon you, and have chosen for you Islam as your Religion.” S. 5:3

2006-10-16 13:55:13 · answer #10 · answered by mythkiller-zuba 6 · 0 0

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