By
Hany Saleh, IOL Correspondent
TIRANA,
October 10 (IslamOnline.net) - Albanian Muslims are bracing themselves
for the holy fasting month of Ramadan in the secular southeastern
European country.
The
Islamic Sheikdom in Tirana, the highest Islamic body in Albania, has
paid $4,000 for the state television to buy airtime to broadcast part
of the Maghrib Adhan (call to Sunset Prayer that marks fast breaking),
an official source told IslamOnline.net.
After
the downfall of communism in 1991, Albania adopted a strict secular
system, though it guarantees the right to freedom of religion.
The
Sheikdom is also setting stage for a series of seminars across the
country during the holy month, so that Muslims can learn more about
the merits and virtues of observing the dawn-to-dusk fasting.
It
further invited officials, Arab diplomats and public figures to attend
such get-togethers.
Private
televisions are now competing to lure more Muslim viewers during the
holy month.
Some
stations allow free airtime for the Sheikdom scholars all over the
month, while others will broadcast the Adhans (call to prayer) and the
Tarawih prayer live from Makkah, Saudi Arabia.
Muslims
make up a majority of 75 percent of Albania’s 3.2 million
population.
Iftar
Banquets
Iftar
(fast breaking meals) banquets for the needy and the passers-by are a
key feature of Ramadan in Albania.
But
this year several municipalities across the country announced, for the
first time, they would host a number of banquets as a sign of goodwill
and reverence for Islam.
Turkish
Imams are usually dispatched to Albania and other Balkan countries in
Ramadan to lead the worshipers in their prayers and recite the Noble
Qur’an.
There
are now some 270 mosques in Albania out of 1667 established before the
advent of anti-religion Communism.
But
the beginning of Ramadan still divides Muslims in Albania, with one
camp following the Turkish calendar, while the other depends on
crescent sighting.
The
European Council for Fatwa and Research issued on October 6 a
statement announcing that the first day of Ramadan would fall on
Friday, October 15, according to astronomical calculations.
While
one group of scholars sees that Muslims in other regions and countries
should follow crescent sighting as long as these countries share one
part of the night, another states that Muslims everywhere should abide
by the lunar calendar of Saudi Arabia.
A
third, however, disputes both views, arguing that Islam is against
division and disunity, since Muslims, for instance, are not allowed to
hold two congregational prayers in one mosque at the same time.
This
group believes that the authority in charge of ascertaining the
sighting of the moon in a certain country is the body entitled to
announce the start of the holy month.