RAMADAN
RAMADAN Guide - Explore traditions, spiritual growth, and community compassion during this sacred month. Discover resources on Islam, charity, and simple living
➡️ RAMADAN – A Month of Reflection, Compassion, and Community
Ramadan is the most important month in the Islamic year, observed by Muslims around the world as a time of fasting, prayer, self-discipline, spiritual advancement, and community. Ramadan is observed in the ninth month of the Islamic calendar, the dates of which change every year. It commemorates the month the Quran was first revealed to the Prophet Muhammad. It is one of the most sacred times for Muslims.
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Traditions and Customs During Ramadan
During Ramadan, fasting from dawn until sunset is obligatory for adult Muslims, with exceptions for those who are ill, elderly, pregnant, nursing, or travelling. This fast, known as sawm, is one of the Five Pillars of Islam and involves abstaining from food, drink, smoking, and marital relations during daylight hours. The fast is broken each evening with a meal called iftar, which often begins with eating dates, followed by a larger meal.
Ramadan brings together families and friends in festive gatherings as people come together to break their fast. Fasting serves as a reminder of the struggles faced by the less fortunate, including hunger and thirst. This sense of solidarity during a time of compassion and kindness compels many Muslims to offer help to their communities and those most in need.
Ramadan is also a time for increased devotion, with many Muslims engaging in additional prayers, studying the Qur'an, and attending Mosques and Muslim centres more frequently. Celebrations vary around the many Muslim communities, but typical traditions include gathering together with family, visiting, cleaning and decorating ancestors' graves, communal feasts, symbolic spiritual cleansing in rivers, parades with torches and singing, decorating the home with lanterns, banners, calendars, carpets, and table settings.
Some Muslims worry about the increasing commercialisation of this holy month. TV shows, lavish outings, iftar banquets, and throw-away decorations dilute Ramadan's spiritual and religious essence. Whilst the widespread acceptance and welcoming of the holiday outside the Muslim community is an excellent example of inclusivity and diversity, it is important to be wary of capitalism, over-consumption, and clever marketing, which distracts from the original sentiment.
Eid al-Fitr officially marks the end of Ramadan, a festive day when Muslims end their fast. The day is celebrated with communal prayers, feasting, and giving gifts.
Compassion and Humanity During Ramadan
Ramadan is not only about fasting. The month is also a time to abstain from negative emotions and behaviours. It is also about what we can embrace, such as compassion, generosity, and the love we show those around us. It is a time of increased worship, charity, and good deeds.
Showing kindness to others is an integral part of Islamic spiritual practice, even more so during this time when it is believed that acts of kindness hold more weight. Expressing faith in action through generosity is a way Muslims can earn Allah's blessing and seek forgiveness.
The spirit of Ramadan inspires a collective effort to uplift others and strengthen communal bonds. Such acts might include helping a neighbour, donating to a charity, giving food to those in need, offering advice to those who are struggling, and other simple but impactful gestures.
The holiday also serves as an opportunity to reconsider our consumption habits, seek ways to protect our local environment, reduce water wastage, consume less plastics and other unnecessary products, choose environmentally friendly transport options, and be mindful of how we can live more sustainably.
Ramadan for a Better World
At a time when Muslims are facing increasing persecution and discrimination, the peaceful and compassionate message at the heart of Ramadan is more important than ever.
Predominantly Muslim countries such as Iran, Syria, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia live under repressive regimes, dictators, deadly military juntas, and troubling human rights records. In Yemen, citizens have endured the world's worst humanitarian crisis since fighting broke out in 2014.
China has been accused of crimes against humanity and possible genocide against the Uyghur population. More than a million Muslims have been arbitrarily detained in China's Xinjiang region in 'reeducation camps' where they are subjected to forced labour, denied all freedoms including religious, and are even forcibly sterilised.
In Myanmar, the Rohingya have suffered a deadly crackdown under Myanmar's brutal military regime. Around one million Rohingya Muslims have been forced to flee their homes in Rakhine state to neighbouring countries such as Bangladesh.
Muslims in India have faced systematic discrimination for decades, which has only worsened under the rule of Hindu nationalist Narendra Modi. Muslims are being targeted by propaganda that demonises and promotes violence towards them. Riots, the destruction of mosques, and demolition of Muslim-owned homes have resulted in the deaths and displacement of thousands. In 2019, a controversial new citizenship law which excludes Muslims resulted in widespread deadly protests.
Palestinians, as further demonstrated in the ongoing War on Gaza, have been subjected to persecution and apartheid for decades. Relentless and indiscriminatory bombing since October 2023 has resulted in the death of 50,000 Palestinians - 18,000 of which were children. An Israeli blockade has cut the West Bank and Gaza off from food, water, fuel, electricity, medical care, and international aid and stripped the citizens of their homes, jobs, safety, and humanity.
Throughout Europe and the United States, there has been a sharp increase in harassment, intimidation, hate crimes, and violence committed against Muslims. Politicians, armed groups, religious leaders, and the mainstream media feed into this Islamophobic rhetoric by promoting religious tensions, anti-Muslim sentiments, and discriminatory laws.
The Qur'an encourages us to seek peace in all aspects of our lives; it is a fundamental aspect of Islam. Let this Eid El Fitr mark the starting point towards a better world, where we all contribute to building a brighter world for future generations.
Better World Info wishes all of our Muslim users a Ramadan Mubarak. In the wise words of celebrated Muslim and Swiss philosopher Tariq Ramadan,
"Serve humanity, regardless of religion. Show solidarity for those suffering and oppressed."
Author: Rachael Mellor, 18.03.25 licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
For more information on Ramadan see below ⬇️
- RAMADAN - Wikipedia, March 1 - 29, 2025 60096
- Islamic Relief - Ramadan timetable 280547
- Ramadan / Calendar Month - Wikipedia 60098
- Video: How NOT to Fast on Ramadan 60101
- Lectures on Ramadan - HalalTube 60100
- Wasting Ramadan (must read) - Al-Ahram 9/09 (Archive) 60103
- Journey to Allah: The Last Ten Nights 60104
- Ramadan Oasis - Islam Web 60105
- Ramadan Online Book (UK) 60106
- Ramadan (UK) - official 60107
- Google NEWS 60108
- ARAB NEWS 60109
- BBC - My Ramadan 280551
- NY Times 280550
- GUARDIAN 60110
- Huffington Post 60111
- History - Ramadan 280544
- Twitter - #Ramadan 60112
- #ramadan2024 402496
- #Ramadan2022 280540
- #RamadanAdvice 60114
- #RamadanMubarak 60115
- #RamadanKareem 280851
- #EidMubarak 60116
- Holy Ramadan - Info 60117
- Healthy Ramadan - NHS Info 60118
- Ramadan Articles ! - Haq Islam 60119
- Diabetes UK - Diabetes and Ramadan 280549
- Ramadan Information Center - IslamiCity 60120
- Ramadan Awareness Campaign - RAC (Australia) 60121
- Ramadan FAQ for Nonmuslims - RAC 60122
- Ramadan Mubarak - Mission Islam 60123
- Ramadan Primetime - Video by LinkTV 60124
- Why Muslims Fast in Ramadan? - IslamicTube 60125
- Ramadan - BBC 60127
- Ramadan - BBC Schools 60128
- Channel 4 (UK) 60129
- YouTube - Ramadan 60130
- YouTube - Ramadan Preparation 60131
- YouTube - Ramadan Lectures 60132
- Ramadan (pictures) - Demotix 60133
- Ramadan Chant - British Council 60134
- Audio - Ramadan Lectures (UK) 60135
- Everything you need to know about Ramadan - The National News 29.04.19 60136
- Ramadan, the Holy month of Islam - Jannah.org 60137
- Shoulder to Shoulder Campaign - Ramadan series 280557
- Ramadan Around the World - IslamiCity 60138
- Complete Guide to Ramadan *.pdf (Fisabilillah Publications) - Archive 60139
- Preparing for Ramadan - Haq Islam 60140
- 6 Favorite Children’s Books about Ramadan 60141
- Ramadan - Amazon 60142
- Ramadan - Guardian (UK) 60143
- Interactive Guide on Ramadan - Guardian 60144
- Fasting - Wikipedia 60145
- SAWN (fast) of Ramadan - Wikipedia 60146
- Sawn (fasting) - Wikipedia 60147
- Objective of Fast - Al Mawrid 60148
- Fasting in Ramadan ! - Ahadith from Riyad As-Salihin 60149
- Ramadan and Fasting - Abdur Rahman 60150
- Fasting and Tafsir of Ma'ariful Qur'an 60151
- Suhoor (daily meal before the fast) 60152
- Iftar (daily meal to break the fast) - Wikipedia 60153
- Iftar Gathering / London - Tayyibun Institute 60154
- Tarawih (extra prayers at night) - Wikipedia 60155
- Ummah - Eid, Ramadan, Mubarak 60156
- Laylat al-Qadr (Night of Decree) - Wikipedia 60157
- Al-Qadr (sura) - Wikipedia 60158
- Explanation of Soorah al-Qadr (Archive) 60159
- Itikaf (retreat in a mosque) - Wikipedia 60160
- EID UL FITR (end of Ramadan, July 16) - Wikipedia 60161
- Eid al-Fitr - Islam Online (Archive) 60162
- Eid ul Fitr - Demotix 60163
- Ramadan Sonnets - by Daniel Moore 60166
- Suggested timetable for the month of Ramadan (Archive) 60165
- The man behind ‘Khawater’ offers words of wisdom 60176
- Muslim Cartoonist Adam Elrashidi Explains Ramadan, From A To Z 60167
- A to Z of Ramadan - Masood Chowdhury (YouTube, Arabic & English) 60178
- Welcome O Ramadan - Abu Hamza (YouTube, Arabic & English) 60177
- Classic Ramadan Recipes - Ahram 60174
- This Ramadan in Gaza we pray for mercy, share what we have and light a single candle for hope - Guardian 21.02.26 509259
- Our Mosques Are Rubble, But We Are Determined to Create Joy for Ramadan in Gaza - Truthout 18.02.26 509134
- When is Ramadan 2026, and how is the moon sighted? - Al Jazeera 16.02.26 509171
- Ramadan 2026: Fasting hours, suhoor and iftar times around the world - Al Jazeera 15.02.26 509177
- Young Muslims have created an inclusive Ramadan that works for everyone. Now that’s in danger - Guardian 06.02.26 508647
- Eid al-Fitr: Why do Muslims celebrate it and how can you wish someone a Happy Eid? - Independent 31.03.25 465634
- ‘Eid of Sadness’: Gaza marks festival amid Israeli bombings, lack of food - Al Jazeera 30.03.25 463132
- Month of giving: Syrians in Ethiopia keep Ramadan iftar tradition alive - Al Jazeera 29.03.25 463130
- Ramadan in colour for Muslims in Africa - Al Jazeera 28.03.25 463128
- With the bang of his drum, he wakes up the whole neighborhood in a Ramadan tradition - AP News 27.03.25 462855
- Ramadan 2025: Where does suhoor end as iftar begins elsewhere? - Al Jazeera 17.03.25 461146
- Ramadan 2025: Fasting hours and iftar times around the world - Al Jazeera 02.03.25 459424
- Saudi Arabia, other Muslim countries welcome start of Ramadan - Al Jazeera 01.03.25 459433
- Palestinians ‘in mourning’ as Muslims mark Eid al-Adha - Al Jazeera 16.06.24 418926
- Millions start Hajj in shadow of Israel’s war on Gaza - Al Jazeera 14.06.24 418800
- When are Hajj and Eid al-Adha 2024? - Al Jazeera 12.06.24 418644
- When is Eid al-Fitr 2024 and how is it celebrated? - Al Jazeera 07.04.24 407604
- Palestinians mark last days of Ramadan on the eve of six months of war - Al Jazeera 06.04.24 406121
- Ethiopia: Addis Ababa celebrates Ramadan with its grand annual Iftar - africanews 01.04.24 404909
- Ramadan 2024: Where do your dates come from? - Al Jazeera 31.03.24 404907
- Observing Ramadan During the Gaza Massacre - Jacobin 29.03.24 404530