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Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Amid joy and tragedy, Muslims celebrate Eid al-Fitr holiday

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795 days ago
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Muslims pray as they celebrate Eid al-Fitr, marking the end of the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan at Fatih mosque in Istanbul, Turkey, Friday, April 21, 2023. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

Muslims pray as they celebrate Eid al-Fitr, marking the end of the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan at Fatih mosque in Istanbul, Turkey, Friday, April 21, 2023. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)

The hol­i­day of Eid al-Fitr ush­ered in a day of prayers and joy for Mus­lims around the world on Fri­day. The cel­e­bra­tion was marred by tragedy amid the ex­plo­sion of con­flict in Su­dan, while in oth­er coun­tries it came against the back­drop of hopes for a bet­ter fu­ture.

Af­ter the Ra­madan month of fast­ing, Mus­lims cel­e­brate Eid al-Fitr with feasts and fam­i­ly vis­its. The start of the hol­i­day is tra­di­tion­al­ly based on sight­ings of the new moon, which vary ac­cord­ing to ge­o­graph­ic lo­ca­tion.

In Su­dan’s cap­i­tal, Khar­toum, stac­ca­to blasts of gun­fire marked the ear­ly hours of the feast day. A dead­ly con­flict in the vast African coun­try that erupt­ed in the past week has forced many peo­ple to shel­ter in­doors ahead of the hol­i­day, even as wa­ter and food for civil­ians runs low.

In Jerusalem, thou­sands of faith­ful gath­ered at Is­lam’s third holi­est shrine, the Al-Aqsa Mosque com­pound, where ten­sions with Is­raeli au­thor­i­ties have seethed in the past month. The com­pound al­so hosts Ju­daism’s holi­est site.

Fol­low­ing hol­i­day prayers, a clown en­ter­tained chil­dren and a woman paint­ed the cheek of a girl with the green, red, black and white Pales­tin­ian flag. Some at­ten­dees tram­pled on an Is­raeli flag and un­furled ban­ners in sup­port of Pales­tin­ian mil­i­tant groups.

The streets of Arab cap­i­tals Dam­as­cus, Bagh­dad and Beirut were crowd­ed with wor­ship­pers head­ing to mosques and ceme­ter­ies. Many Mus­lims vis­it the graves of their loved ones af­ter the ear­ly morn­ing prayer on the first day of Eid al-Fitr. Vis­i­tors tot­ed bou­quets of flow­ers, jugs of wa­ter for plants, and brooms to clean grave­stones.

“Af­ter the Eid prayer we al­ways vis­it our dead … to pray and pay our re­spects, may God have mer­cy and for­give them on this blessed day,” said Atheer Mo­hamed in Bagh­dad’s Aza­miya ceme­tery.

Is­lam’s hol­i­days fol­low a lu­nar cal­en­dar. But some coun­tries re­ly on as­tro­nom­i­cal cal­cu­la­tions rather than phys­i­cal sight­ings. This fre­quent­ly leads to dis­agree­ments be­tween re­li­gious au­thor­i­ties in dif­fer­ent coun­tries—and some­times in the same coun­try—over the start date of Eid al-Fitr.

This year, Sau­di Ara­bia and many oth­er Arab coun­tries be­gan their Eid cel­e­bra­tions on Fri­day, while Iran, Pak­istan and In­done­sia, among oth­ers, set the first day of the hol­i­day for Sat­ur­day.

In Su­dan, the hol­i­day was eclipsed by a week of rag­ing bat­tles be­tween the army and its ri­val para­mil­i­tary force, which are locked in a vi­o­lent strug­gle to con­trol the coun­try. The fight­ing has killed hun­dreds of peo­ple and wound­ed thou­sands.

In a video mes­sage re­leased ear­ly Fri­day, his first speech since the fight­ing broke out, Su­dan’s top gen­er­al Gen. Ab­del-Fat­tah Burhan marked the som­bre tone of the hol­i­day. “Ru­in and de­struc­tion and the sound of bul­lets have left no place for the hap­pi­ness every­one in our beloved coun­try de­serves,” he said.

The day be­fore, Su­dan’s mil­i­tary ruled out ne­go­ti­a­tions with the ri­val para­mil­i­tary force, known as the Rapid Sup­port Forces, say­ing it would on­ly ac­cept its sur­ren­der as the two sides con­tin­ued to bat­tle in cen­tral Khar­toum and oth­er parts of the coun­try, threat­en­ing to wreck in­ter­na­tion­al at­tempts to bro­ker a sus­tain­able cease-fire.

Yet in oth­er parts of the re­gion, the re­cent rap­proche­ment be­tween arch-ri­vals Sau­di Ara­bia and Iran has kin­dled hopes for peace.

In Yemen, the Sau­di-Iran­ian rap­proche­ment raised the pos­si­bil­i­ty for an end to the civ­il war that had turned in­to a proxy con­flict and torn the im­pov­er­ished coun­try apart since 2014.

Sau­di of­fi­cials and Iran-backed Houthi rebels re­cent­ly be­gan talks in Yemen’s cap­i­tal of Sanaa. Dur­ing the last days of Ra­madan, the war­ring sides ex­changed hun­dreds of pris­on­ers cap­tured dur­ing the con­flict.

How­ev­er, the mo­ment of hopes was marred by a stam­pede late Wednes­day at a char­i­ta­ble event in the rebel-held cap­i­tal that killed at least 78 peo­ple and in­jured 77.

This year’s Eid al-Fitr al­so came on the heels of in­ten­si­fied vi­o­lence in Is­rael and Pales­tine.

Alaa Abu Hatab and his on­ly re­main­ing daugh­ter start­ed the hol­i­day in the Pales­tin­ian Gaza Strip by vis­it­ing the graves of his wife and four chil­dren who were killed in an Is­raeli airstrike on the day of Eid al-Fitr in 2021. That strike al­so killed Abu Hatab’s sis­ter and her chil­dren.

“Be­cause they were killed in the Eid, I miss them, es­pe­cial­ly dur­ing Eid al-Fitr. I miss their laugh­ter,” Abu Hatab said, stand­ing by his fam­i­ly’s grave with his six-year-old daugh­ter, Maria. The hol­i­day has be­come a “scene of pain and loss,” he said.

In Afghanistan’s Kab­ul, where wor­ship­pers gath­ered un­der the watch­ful eyes of its Tal­iban rulers, 35-year-old Ab­dul Matin said, “I wish that be­sides se­cu­ri­ty we had good in­come and good jobs. Un­for­tu­nate­ly, peo­ple can’t af­ford to buy all their ne­ces­si­ties at this dif­fi­cult time.”

In Turkey and Syr­ia, many are still mourn­ing loved ones lost in the dev­as­tat­ing 7.8-mag­ni­tude earth­quake that struck the two coun­tries on Feb. 6, killing more than 50,000 peo­ple.

Turk­ish Pres­i­dent Re­cep Tayyip Er­do­gan on Fri­day per­formed morn­ing Eid prayers at Ha­gia Sophia, the 6th cen­tu­ry Byzan­tine church in Is­tan­bul that was re­con­vert­ed in­to a mosque three years ago.

Er­do­gan, who is fac­ing elec­tions next month amid an eco­nom­ic cri­sis and the fall­out of the earth­quake, hand­ed out choco­late and pas­tries to jour­nal­ists out­side the mosque, re­named Holy Aya­so­fya Grand Mosque af­ter 85 years as a mu­se­um. —BEIRUT (AP)

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Sto­ry by AB­BY SEWELL | As­so­ci­at­ed Press

As­so­ci­at­ed Press jour­nal­ists Ali Ab­dul-Has­san in Bagh­dad, Tia Gold­en­burg in Jerusalem, Fares Akram in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, Rahim Faiez in Kab­ul and An­drew Wilks in Is­tan­bul con­tributed to this re­port.

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