DUBAI,
September 29, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – The moon sighting of the holy
month of Ramadan will not be possible Monday, October 3, due to a
partial eclipse of the sun, which means that the beginning of the
dawn-to-dusk fasting month will fall Wednesday, October 5, an Arab
astronomer has revealed.
"A
partial eclipse of the sun will occur Monday, October 3, before
sunset, which will make it impossible to sight the Ramadan moon,"
Mohamed Owda, vice-chairman of the Arab Union for Astronomy and Space
Sciences (AUASS)'s Moon sighting department, was quoted as saying by Al-Quds
Press Wednesday, September 28.
Owda
added that the sun eclipse will be partial in most Arab countries and
annular in north Africa.
The
sun eclipse will be visible in Europe, western Asia and most of Europe
while it will not be seen in the Americas, Australia and north-western
Asia, he maintained.
The
annular eclipse of the sun differs from a total eclipse in which the
moon appears too small, to a completely invisible sun.
As
a result, the moon is surrounded by an intensely brilliant ring or
annulus formed by the un-eclipsed outer perimeter of the sun's disk.
Lebanese
Fast Wednesday
Within
the same context, Lebanon will start observing the holy fasting month
of Ramadan Wednesday, October 5, Shiite religious leader Mohamed
Hussein Fadlallah announced Thursday, September 29.
"Reliable
astrological calculations showed that the holy month of Ramadan will
fall Wednesday, October 5, as it will not be possible to sight the
Ramadan moon on Monday," he was quoted as saying by Reuters.
Fadlallah
relies on the astrological calculations in deciding the beginning of
the fasting month of Ramadan.
Moon
sighting has always been a controversial issue among Muslim countries,
and even scholars seem at odds over the issue.
While
one group of scholars sees that Muslims in other regions and countries
are to follow this 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 given country (such as Egypt 's Dar al-Iftaa
[House of Fatwa]) announces the sighting of the new moon, then Muslims
in the country should all abide by this.