Today Eid-el-Fitr. What you need to know about Eid-el-Fitr
Today Eid-el-Fitr, a day widely celebrated by over 1.6 billion Muslims around the world. But here is what you should know as you prepare to mark the end of the holy month of Ramadan.
Is today Eid-el-Fitr?
What is Eid al Fitr?
Why is Eid important?
What do Muslims do on Eid?
How do you wish someone a ‘Happy Eid’?
But since the moon has been sighted yesterday, then the Eid-el-Fitr celebration will hold today across the world.
But what is Eid and why do Muslims celebrate it? trtworld.com gives us a detailed insight into the celebration holding across the world today.
Yes, Muslims across the world will celebrate Eid today June 4th, 2019.
Eid al Fitr, meaning ‘Festival of Breaking the Fast’, celebrates the end of the holy month of Ramadan.
Eid
is announced at the beginning of the tenth month of the Islamic
calendar called Shawwal, which follows the month of Ramadan. The
sighting of the moon is therefore important in announcing the start of a
new lunar month.
This year, Eid begins on June 4 and
ends on June 5, marking the Ramadan 29 – or the 29th day of fasting –
which falls on June 3. Muslims worldwide will celebrate the religion’s
1,440th end of fasting.
Eid follows Ramadan, which marks the month in which the Qur’an
was first revealed to the Prophet Muhammed, who Muslims consider the
final prophet and who they honour by adding the term ‘peace be upon
him’.
There are two Eids in Islam. Eid al Fitr, also referred to as the smaller Eid, and Eid al Adha or ‘Festival of the Sacrifice’ which is the bigger Eid.
Muslims
celebrate Eid to show thankfulness to Allah for allowing them to finish
and be able to fulfil their obligation by fasting, completing good
deeds in the month that Muslims consider as being better than 1,000
months.
Eid
is also an opportunity for Muslims to show thankfulness to God in the
hope of having past sins forgiven and an opportunity to wipe the slate
clean.
A
few days before Eid, every adult Muslim, who has food in surplus to
requirement, irrespective of whether they could fast or not, has to pay
Zakat al Fitr, which is a small amount of money that is then
redistributed so that people in need can also enjoy Eid.
On
the day of Eid, Muslims prepare by taking a shower, wearing perfume and
donning new clothes. Across the world, Muslims will dress in their best
traditional clothes in a show of global diversity.
Before
heading to the special congregational prayer that Muslims observe on
Eid, the Prophetic tradition recommends that Muslims should eat
something sweet, usually dates before leaving the house.
As Muslims make their way to the prayer they will praise God by saying ‘Allahu Akbar’, meaning ‘God is great’.
While very young children do not fast, Eid is also when they will receive gifts, sweets and money from family members.
In Turkey, people will commonly say ‘bayramınız kutlu olsun’, which means ‘may your Bayram (Eid) be blessed’. To which the response is ‘allah razı olsun’. or ‘may God bless you’.
In Arabic, the liturgical language of Islam, Muslims will also generally say a variation of ‘Eid Mubarak’ or ‘Eid Saeed’, which mean ‘Have a blessed Eid’ and ‘Happy Eid’ respectively.
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