WeeE
New Member
- Location
- Glasgow in Scotland
andytheflyer said:Nope - there are 2 Eids, one at the end of Ramadan (~70 days ago) and this one.
I'm glad you said that. I was having a very surreal back-to-the-future moment, there.
andytheflyer said:Nope - there are 2 Eids, one at the end of Ramadan (~70 days ago) and this one.
Arch said:..in the North, Ramadan will end up eventually in summer, when the instruction to fast from dawn to dusk is much more difficult than in winter...
WeeE said:It did in the late '80s - 87 or 88, thereabouts. I remember a couple of folk I knew back then looking distinctly peaky - getting up at 4 so they could have breakfast, and beginning to flake out by 8pm with another hour or two to go till dinner. I think more people than the usual not-well/pregnant excused themselves that year - people with exams, driving jobs etc.
People from loads of different places have said to me that the experience of fasting does make them understand something of what poor people go through - feeling hunger-pangs, lethargy, low morale. Apparently it's pretty different experientially from "dieting".Arch said:I gather that Islam is quite sensible and pragmatic in that sort of respect - if following a rule puts you in danger, then it's ok to break it.
Arch said:I gather that Islam is quite sensible and pragmatic in that sort of respect - if following a rule puts you in danger, then it's ok to break it.
Vikeonabike said:Mmm. That will be the excuse many of the Moslem youths on my patch are using for drinking and smoking.....if they don't they are in danger of being beaten up by their mates!
Yellow Fang said:That's interesting. I thought Issac was the son that Abraham was going to sacrifice, who later went on to become ancestor to all the Jews through his son Jacob. I thought moslems regarded themselves to be descended from Abraham by his other son, Ishmael, whose mother was Sarah's handmaiden.