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One of the UAE mosques.
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Khadijah
Al-Zegheimi, IOL Correspondent
DUBAI,
October 6, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – The United Arab Emirates (UAE)
hosts a mosaic of foreign workers from across the Arab and Muslim
worlds. With the advent of Ramadan, each community lives its own
traditions, drawing a colorful cosmopolitan image of Ramadan in the
Gulf Arab state.
The
picture includes various parts, ranging from the Sudanese habit of
collective meals for neighbors in Ramadan, to Maghreb traditions of
distributing food to passersby and Palestinian tradition of women
gatherings for Tarawih Prayers.
Omm
Seif, a Sudanese who has been living in the UAE for long, told IOL
that one of the Sudanese traditions is that “nobody has iftar
(breakfast at dusk during Ramadan) alone.”
“Neighbors
come together and they have a potluck. Men and children eat in the
street or while they are in Noble Qur'an reciting circles, while women
gather in one house for iftar.
"After
Tarawih Prayers, family and friends usually have a dinner gathering
and they might stay up all night till dawn.”
The
Sudanese lady added these traditions were brought to the UAE through
Sudanese workers keen on observing the traditions they have left back
home.
Catering
Omm
Montaser, from Tunisia, gives another Ramadan picture from the Arab
Maghreb, saying welcoming Ramadan in her country takes the form of
catering food and inviting people for iftar or distributing
food among the poor or passersby, who usually are villagers coming to
work in the city.
She
highlighted that such traditions are most noticed during some Ramadan
special nights such as the 15th
and 27th.
Omm
Montaser emphasized that she and other Tunisians in the UAE are keen
on “preserving these traditions especially in those two nights”.
Still she added she does not experience the same thrill she feels back
home, since not many people take part in highlighting the traditions.
Palestinian
Omm Mohamed highlighted a tradition that is not doing with food, but
rather spoke of female gatherings that used to take place in one of
the houses in to perform collective Tarawih Prayers.
“These
gatherings are called Jam’a (meetings) where women perform
the Tarawih Prayer in the house, led by the most religiously educated
woman among the group."
The
Palestinian lady emphasized that the tradition was taken to the UAE,
just like other communities took along their own habits.
Hala
from Syria added that female gatherings for prayers during Ramadan
nights are also common in her native country, emphasizing her keenness
on observing the religious tradition, along with other Syrian and
Palestinian women in the neighborhood.
But
she said sometimes these gatherings would include also Tahajjud (late
night prayers that are not mandatory).
“In
this case, ‘Jam’a’ includes sahur, followed by
Fajr (dawn) prayer, after which all women leave to their house as sun
rises."
But
Hala regrets the fact that time constraints make it hard to hold such
gatherings in the UAE as frequently as the case was back in Syria.
“In
the UAE, we do not hold these gatherings. We only perform Tarawih and
Tahajjud Prayers in one of the mosques,” she explained.
Asian
Muslims
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A mosque at Al Sharjah Emirate.
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Ramadan
traditions projected in the UAE are not limited only to Arabs. Indian
and Pakistani traditions also find their way to the overall
cosmopolitan picture, with the presence of large communities from both
countries.
Seema
Nasim from Pakistan prefers not to serve many dishes in Ramadan, but
she still sends out some food for her neighbors, especially her
son’s bachelor friends.
“In
Ramadan, we care more for worship, donate sadaqat and gather
for du`aa’,” she said.
Abu
Bakr from India believes Ramadan is a chance for more religious and
spiritual performance, adding being in the UAE adds to the merits of
the holy month.
“Mosques
in my town in India are very few. Therefore, many people gather in
houses in Ramadan to pray in jama`ah (collective prayers),
especially the Tarawih Prayer, whereas there are so many mosques here
(in the UAE), thank God.
“In
Ramadan, good deeds increase, since religious sermons augment and some
are even delivered in Indian in some mosques,” he added.
Foreigners
in the UAE make about 85% of the approximately 4 million total
population. This is one of the highest rates in the Gulf countries.
Indians
represent the vast majority of foreigners.
The
economy of the UAE depends heavily on cheap foreign workers from South
Asian and Middle Eastern countries.