When is Ramadan 2025? What to know about Islam's month of sacrifice
Believers say it was during Ramadan that Allah revealed the Koran to the Prophet Muhammad. The text would become the religious guide for Muslims.
Falling in the ninth month of the Islamic calendar, the appearance of the crescent moon denotes the start of Ramadan. Mosques are filled with the faithful praying together. Along with prayers, fasting marks the month of Ramadan.
Forgiveness is sought from Allah by those observing the tenets of Ramadan. Although Ramadan does feature elements of atonement among worshippers., this period is less about seeking forgiveness and more about self-restraint.
Here is what to know about Ramadan and how the faithful honor its traditions, according to Britannica.com and Brandeis University.
Ramadan begins Friday, Feb. 28, and ends Saturday, March 30.
Because Ramadan follows the lunar calendar, which is shorter than the sun's cycle, its dates shift ahead by 11 days every year. Last year, for instance, Ramadan started on the evening of March 10.
From dawn until sundown, Ramadan observers abstain from food, drink and sexual relations.
Adolescents and some pre-adolescents fast, at least for short periods, but there is no exact age for Muslims to start to fast during Ramadan. Fasting is generally introduced to children according to their age and their capacity.
People who are not obligated to fast during Ramadan include pregnant or nursing women, older people, those who are too weak and those with mental illness.
Observers of Ramadan cannot drink water during Ramadan's daylight hours.
An iftar meal is the one observers of Ramadan enjoy once they break their fast.
Ramadan fast can be broken at sunset.
Ramadan will be observed twice in 2030. The shift ahead in days due to the lunar calendar being shorter than the sun's cycle will mean Ramadan will come the evenings of Jan. 5 and Dec. 26.
This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Ramadan: What to know about this religious holiday for Muslims
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