LAGOS,
October 13 (IslamOnline.net) – Muslims in south Nigeria will start
the holy fasting month of Ramadan Friday, October 15, according to
astrological calculations while their fellow Muslims in the north
insist to start fasting only after the sighting of the new moon.
The
League of the Yorubaland's Scholars and Imams, the highest Islamic
authority in south Nigeria, announced that Friday will
mark the beginning of Ramadan.
In
a statement following the meeting of its members, the league said they
all agreed to follow the astrological calculations which concluded
that the first day of fasting will fall Friday.
The
body appealed to all Muslims in the region to start observing the
dust-to-dawn fasting on that day.
Moon
Sighting
However,
the Nigerian Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) said it will,
as always, only accept the sighting of the new moon.
“The
Fatwa Committee will convene later Wednesday, October 13, on the
sighting of Ramadan crescent,” NSCIA Secretary General Dr. Abdul
Lateef Adegbite told IslamOnline.net.
He
said the council published a list with the names and phone numbers of
47 Muslim leaders who can be reached by any person who sights the
crescent.
“In
case the new moon was seen, the committee would immediately announce
that Thursday, October 14, is the first day of Ramadan and Tarawih
prayers will be performed later Wednesday.
“If
not then Thursday will be the last day of Sha`ban and we will start
fasting as of Friday,” Adegbite said.
He
added that the NSCIA always depends on the sighting of the
crescent in determining the beginning and end of the holy fasting
month, admitting that not all Nigerian scholars are on board.
Adegbite
said Muslim leaders and NSCIA members “particularly in the northern
parts of the country do not favor astrological calculations or welcome
calls to depend on them.”
Contention
He
admitted, however, that the inability to agree on the start of Ramadan
remains a point of contention in Nigeria.
Adegbite
said the NSCIA has been “exerting painstaking efforts for a
compromise between the different viewpoints through brain-storming
sessions.”
He
added that such differences are a cause of embarrassment in a country
such as Nigeria where “Islam and Muslims are facing enemies.”
Muslims
make up around 50 percent of Nigeria’s more than 137 million
population, according to the CIA World Factbook.
Forty
percent of Nigerians believe in Christianity. The state does not
recognize atheism, who make up the remaining 10 percent of the
population.
Observers
blame the inability to agree on the start of Ramadan on the absence of
the state’s support for the religious authority, the ministry of
Islamic affairs.
Nigerian
authorities usually depend on the NSCIA’s decisions and statements
in making decisions about Muslim-related days off.