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"During the `Eid, malls are teeming with young Muslims in their new clothes," Toub said.
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By
Hadi Yahmid, IOL Correspondent
PARIS,
November 13 (IslamOnline.net) – Members of the sizable Muslim
community in this strictly secular European country celebrate `Eid
Al-Fitr, marking the end of the dawn-to-dusk fasting month of Ramadan,
with a shopping spree and a special prayer at mosque.
In
the last days of the holy month, shopping malls are usually buzzing
with Muslims buying new outfits for `Eid Al-Fitr, one of the two main
Muslim religious feasts, which will fall on Sunday, November 14.
According
to the Germany-based Muslim Council for Crescents, `Eid Al-Fitr will
start in all European countries on Sunday.
Aware
of the Muslims’ customs in celebrating their `Eid, the major French
shopping malls announce a ten-day sales while other ready-made clothes
manufactures offer up to 50% discounts during the last ten days of
Ramadan.
In
addition, the major malls and cafes double their working hours during
the three-day `Eid holiday to accommodate celebrating Muslims.
"During
the `Eid, malls are teeming with young Muslims in their new clothes.
They exchange congratulations with smiling faces, drawing attention of
fellow French citizens," Rashid Toub, a Muslim activist, told
IslamOnline.net Friday, November 12.
He
said that while French Muslims usually chat in French they only
exchange `Eid greetings in Arabic.
Toub
noted the phrasing of the `Eid greetings differ according to the
French Muslims’ country of origin.
Haidar
Demirerk, Secretary General of the French Council for the Muslim
Religion (CFCM), agrees.
"French
Turks are no exception. We celebrate `Eid Al-Fitr by buying new
clothes for children and exchanging `Eid congratulations, but in
Turkish."
Estimates
indicate there are some 6 million Muslims living in France, mostly
from north African countries and Turkey.
`Eid
Joy
Readying
to welcome worshipers to perform the special `Eid prayer, hanging
lights and beaming ribbons are usually fixed at mosques’ minarets.
Sheikh
Mahmoud Al-Hamami, imam of the Omar bin Al Khattab Mosque in Paris,
urged the Muslim community to demonstrate their `Eid joy.
"Just
like French Christians encourage their children to celebrate Christmas
and other religious feasts, Muslims do the same with their kids."
Hamami,
a leading influential Muslim figure in Paris, further called on Muslim
employees, workers and vendors to take days off during `Eid Al-Fitr
holiday to celebrate the feast with their families.
During
the three-day `Eid holiday, Muslim school students usually make
no-show.
The
20-member Stasi commission recommended on Thursday, December 11, 2003,
that France add
Jewish and Muslim holidays to the calendar for state schools.
It
suggested that Yom Kippur - the Jewish Day of Atonement – and `Eid
Al-Adha be celebrated in the schools.
It
also recommended that companies allow employees to choose a religious
holiday, for instance Yom Kippur, `Eid Al-Adha, or the Orthodox
Christmas to add to their number of days off.
The
country currently marks 11 public holidays, most of the based on Roman
Catholic celebrations reflecting the denomination of the majority of
its 60 million inhabitants.
However,
the parliament spurned all these recommendations and only voted in
favor of issuing new law to ban "conspicuous" religious
signs, including Hijab, in state schools.