'FESTIVAL OF THE BREAKING OF THE FAST'
Muslims mark end of Ramadan
Photo gallery: Muslims celebrate end of Ramadan |
By Dave Dondoneau
Advertiser Staff Writer
About 700 members of O'ahu's Muslim community celebrated the end of the monthlong fast of Ramadan with community prayer and celebration yesterday at Manoa District Park.
Ramadan is the month on the Islamic lunar calendar during which Muslims abstain from food, drinks and other sensual pleasures from break of dawn to sunset. Yesterday's festival was called Eid ul-Fitr, meaning the "Festival of the Breaking of the Fast."
Prayer services started at 8 a.m., followed by a sermon delivered by Dr. Mohamad Abdalla. By 10 a.m., the celebration had turned festive with a breakfast, keiki playing in bounce houses, slides and people of all ages testing their strength at a "high striker" carnival game. The festivities and prayers continued until 5 p.m.
"This festival seems to grow with more and more people every year," said Shaher Jubran, who brought his wife and five children from the North Shore yesterday. "This is a chance for us to celebrate with people who hold the same beliefs. It's like a big family gathering. We took our kids out of school today so they can take part. It's very important to us."
Jubran, 35, has been in Hawai'i the past 19 years. He was born in Nicaragua and raised in Jerusalem. His family has owned and operated the Seashell Man, which sells gift items on the North Shore, since the 1970s, he said.
"There is a good Muslim community here," Jubran said. "It's not quite the same as Jerusalem, but it has the same feel on a smaller scale."
Hakim Ouansafi, president and chairman of the Islamic Information Office that organized the event, said the Muslim community in Hawai'i raised about $75,000 for the poor over its Zakat period.
Zakat is an obligatory act to be performed by every adult and able-bodied Muslim in which they give 2 1/2 percent of their wealth to the poor.
"The money goes to the poor and not to a mosque or minister," Ouansafi said. "Some here give their Zakat to other areas, but it is mandatory charity to help the poor, whether they are Muslim or not."
Ouansafi estimates the Muslim community in Hawai'i is about 3,500. There are about 10 million Muslims in America and more than 1.3 billion worldwide.
Reach Dave Dondoneau at ddondoneau@honoluluadvertiser.com.