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What can you tell me about the Muslim holiday of eid ul fitr ?

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What can you tell me about the Muslim holiday of eid ul fitr ?

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Eid al-Fitr falls on the first day of Shawwal, the month which follows Ramadan in the Islamic calendar. It is a time to give in charity to those in need, and celebrate with family and friends the completion of a month of blessings and joy. Before the day of Eid, during the last few days of Ramadan, each Muslim family gives a determined amount as a donation to the poor. This donation is of actual food — rice, barley, dates, rice, etc. — to ensure that the needy can have a holiday meal and participate in the celebration. This donation is known as sadaqah al-fitr (charity of fast-breaking). On the day of Eid, Muslims gather early in the morning in outdoor locations or mosques to perform the Eid prayer. This consists of a sermon followed by a short congregational prayer. After the Eid prayer, Muslims usually scatter to visit various family and friends, give gifts (especially to children), and make phone calls to distant relatives to give well-wishes for the holiday. These activities trad

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To the Muslim, Eid-ul-Fitr or the Ramadan festival is the day of thanksgiving and rejoicing on the successful completion of a month of fasting. The time of joy should be shared by everyone, rich and poor, and this is why we have been ordered to pay Zakat-ul-Fitr before the Eid so that the needy could also participate in the festival. In the life of a Muslim, fasting occupies a very important place as one of the five pillars of Islam – the others being the Kalima, by which the Muslim bears witness that there is no god but Allah, none worthy of being worshipped but Allah and Muhammad is His Messenger; the obligatory five-times-a-day prayer; the annual obligatory poor-rate or Zakat; and the pilgrimage to Mecca. By these practices, satisfactorily carried out, the individual of no worth is made worthy, and is enabled to conquer his self, the appetitive or animalistic self. With his personality thus fortified he is endowed with the opportunity as a Muslim poet said “of becoming the master of

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To the Muslim, Eid-ul-Fitr or the Ramadan festival is the day of thanksgiving and rejoicing on the successful completion of a month of fasting. The time of joy should be shared by everyone, rich and poor, and this is why we have been ordered to pay Zakat-ul-Fitr before the Eid so that the needy could also participate in the festival. In the life of a Muslim, fasting occupies a very important place as one of the five pillars of Islam – the others being the Kalima, by which the Muslim bears witness that there is no god but Allah, none worthy of being worshipped but Allah and Muhammad is His Messenger; the obligatory five-times-a-day prayer; the annual obligatory poor-rate or Zakat; and the pilgrimage to Mecca. By these practices, satisfactorily carried out, the individual of no worth is made worthy, and is enabled to conquer his self, the appetitive or animalistic self. With his personality thus fortified he is endowed with the opportunity as a Muslim poet said “of becoming the master of

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