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Ramadan

ISGR Discussion Forum: Islam: Ramadan

Tariq Jangda

Thursday, November 06, 2003 - 07:44 am
Supporting the Hunger for Faith
As Some Children Fast for Ramadan, Schools Are Learning How to Help

By S. Mitra Kalita
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, November 3, 2003; Page B01


This month, as most of her classmates file into Glen Forest Elementary
School's cafeteria to lunch on rectangular pizza slices and peanut
butter and jelly sandwiches, Mona Ali heads for a room filled with
toys and coloring books and other young people who aspire to be
faithful.


At an early age -- 73/4, to be exact -- Mona has decided it's time to
join some fellow Muslim students at the Falls Church school in their
commemoration of Ramadan, a month of fasting that began last week.
More than one-quarter of the school's students come from predominantly
Islamic countries, but most of the students have not reached
adolescence, and Islamic law exempts them, along with the sick and
elderly, from fasting.

Still, children as young as Mona are choosing to partake. From sunrise
to sunset, they are to refrain from eating, drinking or telling even
the smallest untruth, the better to turn away from personal desires
and renew their commitment to God.

As an influx of immigrants redefines the Washington suburbs, educators
say Muslim children feel freer to embrace their religion publicly,
unlike previous generations who might have been tempted to avoid or
conceal the fast in an effort to fit in. Schools with large Muslim
populations are taking steps to accommodate and encourage the students
during Ramadan.

Many schools this month have set up special rooms -- which have toys
and games -- so Muslims can avoid the sights and smells of food during
lunchtime. Gym teachers tell observant children to walk instead of run
the mile, or they allow the students to skip sports. Some
administrators postponed festivities or school functions that feature
treats until Ramadan ends Dec. 6 with a feast known as Eid al-Fitr.

On Friday, as Hyde Elementary School in Georgetown held its annual
Fallfest, Principal Anne Jenkins steered fasting children toward
activities that didn't involve food. "You don't have to eat," she told
them. "The maze and the hay pile and the face painting [are] a lot
more interesting. There are plenty of other things to do."

At Glen Forest Elementary, where teachers handed out Halloween candy
to students, the Muslim children got their treats in little bags to
open at home after the evening meal. A new playground has been
installed at the school, but Principal Theresa West decided to delay
the celebration until Dec. 6, when Muslims can enjoy the hot chocolate
and doughnuts, too.

"We tell [the non-Muslim students] this is about sharing, about
celebrating other cultures," West said. "If the adults could play as
well as they do, we'd have a wonderful world."

Children say that fasting is easier when they have company. Last year,
Mona attended a private school with fewer Muslim students and tried to
fast -- unsuccessfully. "Now I get to go to a place to do my work,"
she said. "I entertain myself so I don't get hungry."

About 150,000 Muslims live in the Washington region. In areas that
have large concentrations of Middle Eastern immigrants, such as Falls
Church, educators say it's not uncommon for Muslim children to learn
as much about their faith from classmates as from parents or religious
school. For some Muslim children, they say, peer pressure can make it
easier to fast than to face questions about why they don't.

"You're kind of doing it for religious reasons," said John L.
Esposito, a Georgetown University professor and author of "What
Everyone Needs to Know About Islam." "But you also want to be part of
the crowd."

In Glen Forest's room for fasting students, children corrected each
other on history and religious terms. They reminded each other that
going hungry is a test of faith. Some spent the lunch period writing
portions of the Koran, their holy book, from memory. Others did
homework or drew pictures of mosques with massive domes and swirly
designs.

Among the three dozen or so children was Sanam Sarwar, 10, the
fifth-grade daughter of immigrants from Pakistan. She says a classmate
helped persuade her mother to let her fast this month.

"My mom didn't let me in the beginning," she said. "But I really
wanted to."

At an outdoor education program recently for students at Forest Oak
Middle School in Gaithersburg, Principal John Burley purposefully
placed two fasting sixth-graders together in a cabin.

At 4:30 a.m., Burley would wake them and accompany them to the kitchen
so they could fill up before sunrise. On Friday, they heated cheese
omelets in the microwave and ate cereal. At lunchtime, they played
chess and checkers.

"For all of the other students seeing what's going on, it makes a very
clear impression of the respect and the special accommodations that we
make," Burley said. "It teaches a lot of good lessons for our school
community."

Such a message from schools is often more effective than parental
instructions in encouraging children to fast, said Samira Hussein, a
Gaithersburg mother of four who conducts seminars for Montgomery
County educators who are trying to understand Islam.

She recalled the elementary school principal who used to ask fasting
students to report to her office during lunchtime.

"But it looked like they were being punished, so we changed that and
now they go to the media center," Hussein said. "The principal made
sure they sat together, and they all got encouraged."

Parents and educators say they expect many young children who started
the Ramadan fast will not finish. And just as they encourage them to
fast, the teachers and parents also tell them it's okay to quit if
they need to. Mona's grandmother, who watches her and her younger
brother, Omar, after school, always greets Mona with the questions:
"Are you hungry? Do you want to eat?" Mona says she's doing fine. But
her mother, too, is watching closely.

"I don't emphasize being so young and starting," Yeline Ali said. "We
told her it was totally up to her."


© 2003 The Washington Post Company

Tariq Jangda

Thursday, November 07, 2002 - 10:40 am
Learning a Lesson for Ramadan

November 6, 2002
By ASMA GULL HASAN


SAN FRANCISCO

Every Ramadan, I learn something new.

When I attended Catholic grade school in Colorado, I
usually sat out of religion class and read textbooks about
Islam that my mom had bought for me. The books said that
Muslims must fast when they are old enough, once a year, to
remember God, to experience suffering and to learn self
control. The last reason always perplexed me.

Every year my mother would tell stories about Ramadan when
she was little and growing up in Pakistan - how the table
at sunset would be full of delicacies; how she and her
siblings would hold handfuls of food in front of their
mouths, waiting for the cue from my grandfather to eat. At
the end of the month of fasting, he would sacrifice a lamb,
in the name of God, and feed it to the poor.

The first time I fasted was when I was 14 and attending
school away from home. Marching up to the man in charge of
the cafeteria, I fully expected to be rebuffed when I asked
for food to take back to my dorm for a predawn breakfast.
But he just looked me in the eyes and asked what I would
like to eat. Had I not been so stunned by his acceptance, I
might have asked for a table full of Pakistani treats.

Later that night, nibbling on the turkey sandwich he gave
me, I proudly told another girl in my dorm, "I'm fasting
for Ramadan!" For the first time, I was doing something
that wasn't primarily for my parents or for good grades. By
fasting, I was doing something for God.

In college, on Saturday nights, other Muslim students and I
would take the school van to a pancake house at 4 a.m. I
told my non-Muslim friends, who always accompanied me to
dinner in the dining hall at sunset, how the entire holy
month of Ramadan to me was about feeling suffering and
deprivation. This impression was reinforced by the fancy
brochures my family and other Muslims I know received in
the mail around Ramadan. They came from Islamic charities
and described how, with only a small donation, one could
feed a Muslim family in Bosnia for a month. Giving to
charity is a central tenet of Islam and a tradition during
Ramadan.

Ramadan begins tonight, but this year I don't have much
enthusiasm for telling people I'm fasting. With the Rev.
Jerry Falwell referring to Muhammad as a "terrorist" and
the Rev. Franklin Graham calling Islam a "very evil and
wicked religion," I can't help but feel that anything that
sounds Islamic will be perceived as anti-American.

If you had told me at Ramadan two years ago that I would
swallow hard before entering airport security or before
logging onto my e-mail account (for fear of receiving
another nasty, anti-Muslim message), I would have laughed.
I have a hard time believing many things this Ramadan: that
my mother's donation to feed a Muslim family in Bosnia
probably landed her name on a list at the Justice
Department; that my grandmother can't ask a relative to
take money to the shrines of Sufi saints in Pakistan and
India like she always does for fear of coming under
suspicion for laundering money for terrorist causes; that I
can't attend a mosque gathering to open the holiday without
worrying that my license plate number will be put in a file
of mosque-goers.

If self control means resolving my frustration at not
feeling free to practice my faith as I did as a little
girl, if self control means not being able to give to
charity at the precise time my God has asked me to help
others, then I now know why God wanted Muslims to learn
self control.

Every Ramadan, I learn something new.

Asma Gull Hasan is author of "American Muslims: The New
Generation."

NYTimes. Com

Stuart Carter

Friday, December 21, 2001 - 09:12 am
Scott is age 13. He learned about Ramadan as part of his Social Studies class at St. Bridget's School where he is in the 8th Grade. The class studied the Middle East and also the prophet Muhammad and how he was the founder of Islam. Students were asked to think about important customs that they had learned about and to illustrate one of them. Scott drew this Art Work as part of that project.

St. Bridget's School is a Catholic school located here in Richmond and goes from Kindergarten through 8th Grade.

Tariq Jangda

Tuesday, November 28, 2000 - 10:07 am
Malaysia

Malaysian 6-year-old boy gets first taste of
fasting experience Kuala Lumpur


Nov 28, IRNA -- Six-year-old boy,
Wan Mohammad Safuan an Bakar observed the holy festival of
Ramadhan for the first time by fasting from dawn to dusk. The boy
rested several times on Monday as he went shopping with his
family at Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman, the traditional site of the
Malay bazaar, to mark the start of the month-long festival. His
father, librarian Wan Abu Bakar, 48, said: "He was feeling a
little thirsty in the afternoon. But as parents we must be firm
and not give in." He found inspiration in his brother, Wan
Mohammad Shahril, 10, who fasted all through Ramadhan for the
past two years and would do so again this year. Wan Bakar, said:
"We promise them big `green packets' (money) on Hari Raya (Eid-
Al-Fitr) if they fast. Or occupy them with activities so they
won't think about food." Fasting during Ramadhan, one of the five
basic requirements of Islam, involves abstinence from eating,
drinking and smoking. The spirit of fasting could be felt all
around Kuala Lumpur on Monday and Tuesday, especially at the
mosques. At Masjid Jamek in Kampung Baru, near here, the cooking
of the traditional bubur mosque or "bubur Lambuk" (mosque
porridge), which the faithful take after sunset, began as early
as 6 am. By evening, more than 20 stalls were busy selling Malay
cakes, Kurma, and other Malay famous cuisines outside the mosque
compound - also to be consumed after dusk. At Masjid Jamek, where
some 2000 worshippers came to end their fast after sunset and to
perform terawih prayers, its famous bubur lambuk was gone within
30 minutes. At Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman most shops reported
brisk business, with food stalls drawing maximum crowds. But
housewife Hajati Zainuddin, 28, said she preferred a home-cooked
meal with her family. Muslims will celebrate the end of the
fasting month with Aid-al-Fitr, or Hari Raya Puasa, which falls
at the end of December this year. Fasting month rituals in
Malaysia -- special prayers and the observance of age-old customs
make Ramadan, the ninth month of the Muslim calendar, a memorable
time for adherents. Terawih prayers: Performed only during
Ramadan, terawih prayers are conducted immediately after the
Isyak (night) prayers, which is the last of five obligatory
prayers of the day. Worshippers then recite portions of the Quran
each day after the terawih, completing the whole Quran by the end
of Ramadan. Sahur (meal before dawn): Fasting is from dawn to
dusk, regardless of season or location. Muslims take pre-dawn
meals to minimize possible hardship during the day. Iftar
(breaking of fast): Muslims should observe iftar as soon as the
sun has set. Light food is recommended, such as a fresh fruit or
three dates or water, as the Maghrib (evening) prayers have to be
said soon; Zakat Fitrah: This is an annual personal tithe, paid
by the head of the household for himself and his dependents
during Ramadan. It is pegged at RM3.40 (0.90 Us dollars) per
person; Kurma (dates): It is customary to break a fast with dates,
a practice which was initiated by Prophet Muhammad (pbuh). Dates
sold here come from countries such as Saudi Arabia, Iran and the
US; Air Katira: Very popular during Ramadan, this white, cooling
drink is made of condensed milk, jelly and fruit seeds;
Traditional bubur lambuk: Spiced rice porridge given free to
visitors every day at mosques. Cooked as early as 6 am by mosque
volunteers or caterers, this porridge is available only during
Ramadan; and Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman: Capturing the spirit of
Hari Raya, Eid-Al-Fitr, it stretches from Jalan Raja Muda to Sogo
Shopping Complex before Isfahan road junction. Some 300 stalls
sell clothes, shoes and food, 10 am to 11 pm daily. Malaysia has
22 million population, 55 percent of them are Muslims.

Tariq Jangda

Tuesday, November 28, 2000 - 10:29 am
Muslims See New Clouds Of Suspicion

Muslims in the Washington area and across the country begin observing
the holy month of Ramadan today amid signs of Islam's growing
acceptance in the United States--but also persistent examples of how
Muslims here sometimes face mistrust and unusual legal problems
because of suspicions about their Mideast ties.

Muslim chaplains now serve in the U.S. armed forces and on many college campuses, and women
in head scarves are not an unusual sight in the workplace. The Clinton
White House has hosted Muslims on several Islamic holidays, and for
the first time, a Muslim gave the benediction at the opening session
of this year's Republican Party convention.In public schools, rooms
have been set aside during Ramadan for fasting Muslim students to
study while their non-Muslim peers eat lunch. The U.S. Postal Service
is releasing a stamp next year that commemorates the two most
important Islamic holidays. And banks are creating new kinds of
transactions for Muslims, whose religion fo! rbids them from accepting
interest on deposits.

But when violence flares in the Middle East or
when Islamic extremists target Americans, as in the recent USS Cole
attack, Muslims in the area say they face increased scrutiny by U.S.
law enforcement agencies, suspicions about their faith and accusations
that they support terrorism."There is a growing recognition of the
role of Muslims as a positive factor in the building of American
society's fabric," said Aly R. Abuzaakouk, director of the D.C.-based
American Muslim Council. But events in the Middle East, he said, can
"put a damper on our image as family-oriented, value-oriented,
hardworking members of society."For the next month, Washington area
Muslims, who number between 100,000 and 200,000, will observe Ramadan,
abstaining from food, drink and other sensual pleasures during the day
to learn discipline, self-restraint and generosity. They make up a
racially diverse community that includes people of Arab descent,
Americ! an-born converts, Pakistanis, Afghans, Indians and Africans,
and they worship in nearly 40 sites and support five Islamic schools.
In 1996, the country's first school for training imams, or prayer
leaders, opened in Leesburg.

Local politicians are noticing. Virginia
Reps. James P. Moran Jr. (D) and Thomas M. Davis III (R) regularly
visit Dar Al Hijra, a mosque in Falls Church, members said. And
Fairfax County Supervisor Penelope A. Gross (D-Mason) helped Afghan
Muslims overcome neighborhood opposition when building their Annandale
mosque, Mustafa Center."The Muslim community, both men and women, are
anxious to participate in our American way of life," Gross said. But
"there is still a great deal of misperception among longtime residents
about just what Muslims believe, and that is going to mean continuing
outreach to educate non-Muslims."Muslims also have tossed aside an
earlier generation's reluctance to be politically active, forming
several organizations to promote their interests and starting voter
registration drives. For the first time, Muslim advocacy groups
endorsed a U.S. presidential candidate, backing Texas Gov. George W.
Bush. These efforts to form what they call "a Muslim voting bloc" have
begun to bear fruit, activists said. The D.C.-based Council on
American-Islamic Relations sent a post-election questionnaire to
mosques across the country. Of the 1,774 respondents--10 percent of
whom live in Virginia--72 percent reported voting for Bush. Of those,
85 percent said their decision was influenced by the endorsement of
the Muslim groups.

Yet despite efforts to move into mainstream America,
Muslims say violence overseas often leads to a backlash. "There are
still some impediments and hardships caused by elements in American
society that do not welcome us," said Abuzaakouk, who cited the case
of Alexandria resident Abdelhaleem Ashqar.Ashqar arrived in the United
States from Gaza in 1989 on a U.S.-financed Thomas Jefferson Fellows!
hip to get his doctorate in business. But in February 1998 he was
jailed for civil contempt after refusing to testify before a New York
grand jury investigating the Islamic Resistance Movement, also known
as Hamas. Calling the probe a "witch hunt" against Palestinian
political activists, Ashqar told a judge that testifying would violate
his religious, political and personal beliefs and betray friends,
relatives and colleagues in the Palestinian liberation movement.

"I would rather die," he said.In jail, Ashqar began a hunger strike, and
a federal judge ordered that he be force-fed. After Ashqar went from
180 pounds to 120 pounds during his six-month confinement, the judge
concluded that Ashqar would never testify and ordered him released.

"It was actually the worst experience of my life," said Ashqar, 42, who is
a college teacher and a board member at Dar Al Hijra Mosque.A former
spokesman for Islamic University of Gaza, Ashqar said he has been an
activist since colleg! e and is "sympathetic to the Islamic movement
in general." But, he said, he was never a member of Hamas and deplores
terrorism."I'm against killing civilians period, both sides . . .
Palestinians and Israelis," he said.Hamas, an Islamic movement seeking
Palestinian independence, has a charitable wing, which operates a
network of schools and hospitals in Gaza, and a military wing, which
has carried out suicide bombings and other attacks on Israeli
civilians. In 1997, the U.S. government declared Hamas a terrorist
organization.In other examples of what they say is guilt by
association, Muslims here have complained about being unfairly singled
out by airport security officers using racial profiling. And they
object to a 1996 anti-terrorist law that permits immigrants to be
deported on classified evidence that is withheld from the immigrants
and their attorneys.

Critics say that such "secret evidence" has been
used disproportionately against Muslims and Arabs, some of whom ! have
been jailed for years while they seek access to the evidence in order
to refute it. In at least three cases, Muslim immigrants held for more
than a year were released after courts let them see and challenge such
evidence."I think it's fair to say that in the last four to five years,
virtually all the immigrants who've had secret evidence used against
them have been Arab or Muslim," said David Cole, a professor of
constitutional law at Georgetown University Law Center who was
involved in several cases.

"The United States will say that's because
that's where the terrorist threat comes from. But I'm not satisfied
with that response," he said. "There seems to be a presumption among
[federal law enforcement authorities] that anyone associated with
these groups must be a terrorist."Muslims also say that outspoken
critics of Israel and its policies toward Palestinians are sometimes
accused of supporting terrorism. Last year, the nomination of a
prominent Muslim activist to ! the advisory National Commission on
Terrorism was rescinded after Jewish leaders complained that the
nominee had said Israeli policies helped cause Palestinian
terrorism.Last month, Sen.-elect Hillary Rodham Clinton returned
$50,000 to the American Muslim Alliance after New York newspapers
reported that the group supports the use of force by Palestinians in
their battle with Israel. The alliance countered that it is a
"mainstream" organization that "unequivocally denounces terrorism by
both sides: Israeli as well as Palestinian."Ashqar said his troubles
with U.S. law enforcement agencies began when he was studying business
management at the University of Mississippi.In 1991, he said, the FBI
office in Oxford, Miss., started asking questions about him at the
university. In June 1996, people he believed were law enforcement
agents began following him, he said. In September 1996, he said, he
was asked to meet with John R. Hailman, chief of the criminal division
in the U.! S. attorney's office for northern Mississippi, and several
FBI agents, whose names and business cards Ashqar provided to The
Washington Post. During that meeting, Ashqar said he was asked to help
"incriminate some people" who were Hamas activists. He said he
declined offers of money, U.S. citizenship and jobs for himself and
his wife in exchange for his cooperation.Reached by phone, Hailman
said, "The only thing I can say is that I can't comment."Ashqar said
he spoke to Muslim student groups across the country and raised money
for schools in Gaza. But he said he never raised money for Hamas. And
the Israelis, he argued, would not have let him come to this country
if he had been involved in terrorist activities.According to news
reports, the New York grand jury that subpoenaed Ashqar was probing
the activities of Mohammed Abu Marzook, a Hamas leader and former
Fairfax County resident. Marzook was jailed for 22 months by U.S.
authorities and deported to Jordan in 1997 af! ter Israel dropped its
request for his extradition. He was at the Islamic University of Gaza
when Ashqar was its spokesman. Ashqar, who moved to Northern Virginia
after obtaining his doctorate in 1997, said he went on a hunger strike
because "I'd been through too much harassment, and this was one way to
express my anger and frustration and end this campaign against Muslims.
We cannot give up our beliefs for money and stand in court as
collaborators and traitors against each other."He was pained, he said,
by "the feeling that justice was not being served. If you have
anything against me, please go ahead and press charges and give me a
fair trial."Ashqar--who has never been charged with a crime--still
faces an uncertain future. He was arrested once by the Israelis before
coming to the United States and fears persecution if he returns to his
homeland. He has applied for political asylum.If it is granted, he
said, he wants to become a U.S. citizen. "Why not?" he said. "It'! s a
country of immigrants. I'll work as a civil rights advocate."

Source: Washington.com