There
are two dilemmas facing a Muslim living in the west today. The first
is how to have a feast when every day is a feast. The point of `Eid is
feasting after fasting. We enjoy the abundance of food at `Eid after
the frugality of Ramadan. For a day or so we are encouraged to enjoy
some of the special luxuries whilst the norm for the rest of the year
is moderation and the pattern for Ramadan is extra restraint.
But
what if chocolates and sweets are no longer treats but have become
everyday food for children in this part of the world? What if people
have come to expect cakes and biscuits at iftar as a reward for
fasting? What is the thrill of roasted meat when a family eats meat at
suhoor and meat at iftar all through the holy month? We all know the
principle that the more you get the more you want, so what is the
thrill for a child when daddy produces a bag of sweets just like
you’ve had every day of the year? He would have to buy up the sweet
shop to impress today’s children.
In
a land where a pair of shoes can be bought for a couple of pounds and
worn out and thrown out with the household refuse, what is the
excitement of shiny new shoes? In a place where people chuck clothes
into their trolley with the supermarket shop what is the thrill of the
prospect of a new outfit? The dilemma - what to give the Muslim who
has everything? How to make the indulged child satisfied?
Well,
we have a secret weapon. As we know, by the grace of Allah few of us
in this part of the world are wanting for clothes and food but what we
crave is the company of good people. That’s what many of the Muslims
here are losing caught up in the hurly burly of trying to amass
material wealth. So `Eid is a chance for many branches of a family to
gather and spend time together. For some Muslims here, it’s the only
chance they get to see the inside of a mosque and to meet their
co-religionists. Though many ignore the advice of the Imam who every
year lectures about proper dress on `Eid, especially for ladies
because he always give that advice before `Eid, the newcomers can feel
a particular pride at being part of this well dressed, sweet smelling
congregation who have undergone the rigors of Ramadan and now stand in
disciplined rows before Allah. It’s true that the women often get
ticked off for talking through the khutbah (sermon) but it is usually
because they are often placed in a room sealed off from the main
congregation and have to contend with a fuzzy sound system. They are
usually bursting with pleasure at greeting old friends and marveling
at how great people look in their `Eid best.
When
children grow up and you ask them what they remember about `Eid, it
will be these gatherings they will remember: the presence of beloved
grandparents, aunts and uncles and their presents.
The
second dilemma for Muslims in the west is how to compete with the
Christmas scene. This has been particularly obvious in the past few
years when `Eid and Christmas have fallen around the same time. The
Christmas celebrations no longer bear much relation to Christian
teachings but they include elaborate, meticulous decorations, catchy
songs, well organized parties and dinners, Santa and his grotto and
the prospect of all the toys you ever wanted and if children are
allowed to watch local TV they will see it. Schoolchildren are drilled
in the nativity rites from early November. Some Muslim parents ask for
their children to be excused whilst others don’t want little Hassan
to be left out. The teachers are greatly concerned that Muslim
children will miss out on the fun because Christmas has become a kind
of multicultural knees-up which welcomes people of all religions and
none. They are not reassured when we say, ‘it’s OK we have our
`Eid’. So if little Hassan is exposed to the full regalia of
Christmas festivities who can blame him if when `Eid comes and faced
with the prospect of a disorganized party in a tatty hall, he is less
than over-awed?
It
has taken Muslim communities a long time to get their party organizing
genes into gear and the professionalism of `Eid arrangements has
improved. This is because when set against Christmas they have a lot to live up to. For parents brought up in the Muslim world, a
little toy would have meant a lot. For their children they would have
to produce two or three presents from the catalogue. The parents of
their non-Muslim pals will have been saving all year to get their
children all the latest toys. Who can blame the Muslim children for
being materialistic when for many of them their parents or
grandparents came to the west to improve their standard of living?
Well, here it all is in abundance. For those brought up with all the
luxuries in the west, the challenge is what to resist. ‘`Eid is all
about family Hamza’. ‘Yea right Mum. Now this is the video game I
was talking about’.
Many
of the older or newcomer Muslims living in the UK today did not have a
tradition of organizing public events and doing it properly. It takes
planning and plenty of help. Very hard in a community where everyone
wants to be the mudir (manager) and no one wants to sweep the floor or
shift the tables. On the 28th of Ramadan it dawns on someone. ‘Oh
we’d better get something organized for `Eid!’ The Christmas
committees will have planned and practiced for at least a month to put
on their pageants, concerts and parties.
But
things are getting better. As the generation of Muslims born here are
becoming parents themselves, we have learnt from Muslims in the US for
example and we can run our own show a bit better. The openness of
Muslim hospitality provides a welcome refuge for the lonely and
disenfranchised non-Muslims who have no family to go to. Even the
government are endorsing our `Eid. This year we are graced with
greetings from the Prime Minister himself in a glossy magazine given
out containing `Eid listings. The shine is rather taken off the
gesture by the fact that the publication comes complete with
entreaties to Muslims to join the Navy or the Raf. Incidentally, the
Raf accepts anyone regardless of nationality, religion, etc. and
regardless of gender, except that is, if you are a woman. In the small
print it says-‘for reasons of combat effectiveness women cannot join
the Raf regiment’. What a disappointment we hear the Muslim
women cry and there we were ready to join up after `Eid! God help us!
Every one knows that the best `Eid present the Prime Minister could
give us would be to get his armies off our people’s backs and to
stop arming people who love to kill Muslims. That’s really the
limit, eh! `Eid in the West. `Eid Mubarak to you all and excuse us
while we bomb the living daylights out of you.
It
remains for me to pray that Allah accepts our fasting and our prayers.
This
year I pray that Allah helps us turn our du`a’ tears into actions so
that future `Eids will be a time of joy for all the Ummah and there
will never be children who face `Eid morning with the same sense of
dread as every other day of the year.
We
are blessed. We are in the best religion.
`Eid
Mubarak wa alhamdulillahi Rabbil `alameen