
Eid Al Adha 2025 expected on June 6 with calls for moon sighting tomorrow
Eid Al Adha moved a step closer to being confirmed to begin on Friday, June 6. The likelihood of it falling on that date increased on Sunday when Saudi Arabia's Supreme Court called for Muslims to look for the Dhu Al Hijja crescent moon on Tuesday evening. Eid Al Adha is expected to begin on Friday, June 6, until Sunday, June 8. A four-day break could be likely for many with Arafat Day set to take place on Thursday, June 5. An occasion celebrated by millions of Muslims around the world, Eid Al Adha begins on the 10th day of Dhu Al Hijja, the last month in the Islamic calendar. The first day of the Islamic month is expected to start on Wednesday, May 28.
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The National
an hour ago
- The National
No sheep, no flour, no ceasefire: Gaza struggles to celebrate Eid in the shadow of war
Eid Al Adha in Gaza and the streets echo not with celebration, but with heartbreak. The sacred Takbirat (the recitation of 'Allahu akbar') of Eid plays softly through cracked windows and half-destroyed alleys, one of the few remaining signs that the Muslim world's second holiest festival has arrived. There is no traditional Eid Kaak, no laughter of children in new clothes. Open markets are eerily empty. Goods sit on dusty shelves, far beyond the reach of a population crushed by war, displacement and deepening poverty. For many, this Eid is the harshest in memory. With continuing Israeli bombardment, widespread hunger and total economic collapse, Gazans long to the joy that once defined this holiday. Alaa Mohammed, 43, lives in Gaza city in a house that is partially destroyed, but she refuses to let her children face Eid in complete despair. 'There are no materials to make the traditional Kaak for Eid,' she tells The National. 'I decided to make biscuits for my children. Even that wasn't easy. I couldn't find the ingredients, so I used a dietary supplement made from bean butter, something meant to be in the aid packages, but people are selling it in the market.' She mixes it with flour and baking powder and shapes it into biscuits. 'It's better than nothing. At least my children smiled for a moment," she adds. There's no food, no signs, nothing that tells you Eid is here Hala Aboud, Gaza resident Hala Aboud, 40, has not left her home on Nasser Street in Gaza city for three weeks. 'It's not just the Israeli air strikes,' she tells The National. 'It's the chaos everywhere, gunfire in the streets, thieves roaming freely. There is no sense of safety any more.' She says she almost forgot Eid was coming. 'There's no food, no signs, nothing that tells you Eid is here. We eat rice and macaroni when we can find it. Vegetables aren't even available most of the time. I've lived through wars before, but nothing like this.' 'Worst Eid' In Khan Younis, southern Gaza, Doha Ahmad, 30, tries to keep some semblance of celebration for her daughter 'She kept crying, asking me to buy her new clothes for Eid,' Ms Ahmad tells The National. 'But everything is so expensive, I couldn't afford anything. Still, I took her to the market just to look. I ended up buying her just a T-shirt.' Her daughter was happy with it. But for Ms Ahmad, the moment was bittersweet. 'This is the worst Eid. Even last year, during the war, it was better. We could find food. We made cake. This year, we have nothing.' The item that is missing the most from Eid this year is meat – a crucial part of its sacrifice tradition – with no animals to slaughter and no money to buy meat even if it were available. 'I am not a fan of meat, but I feel now that I really miss meat, and I want to eat meat, as we are deprived from it for more than two months,' Ms Aboud says. The war has stripped Eid of any colour or joy. What remains is only survival, a mother making biscuits out of aid supplements, a single T-shirt, or a quiet moment of prayer before another day of struggle begins. 'I will keep being grateful that I didn't lose anyone and I keep praying for their safety, and really feel sad for the people who lost their beloved one, I hope this war ends soon, so people can keep what remains from their lives,' Ms Mohammed says. And yet, under the rubble and loss, Gaza clings to faith. The Takbirat still echo. Mothers still bake what little they can. Children still smile, even if only for a moment. In a land where everything has been taken, resilience is the one thing that still remains. 'We are abandoned and we are alone. All we want now is for the war to end and to rebuild our lives again,' Ms Ahmad says.


The National
an hour ago
- The National
Pictures of the week: From Eid Al Adha at Al Aqsa mosque to Hajj pilgrims
Some 400,000 shrubs and 13,000 trees in the on-site nursery An additional 450,000 shrubs and 4,000 trees to be delivered in the months leading up to the expo Ghaf, date palm, acacia arabica, acacia tortilis, vitex or sage, techoma and the salvadora are just some heat tolerant native plants in the nursery Approximately 340 species of shrubs and trees selected for diverse landscape The nursery team works exclusively with organic fertilisers and pesticides All shrubs and trees supplied by Dubai Municipality Most sourced from farms, nurseries across the country Plants and trees are re-potted when they arrive at nursery to give them room to grow Some mature trees are in open areas or planted within the expo site Green waste is recycled as compost Treated sewage effluent supplied by Dubai Municipality is used to meet the majority of the nursery's irrigation needs Construction workforce peaked at 40,000 workers About 65,000 people have signed up to volunteer Main themes of expo is 'Connecting Minds, Creating the Future' and three subthemes of opportunity, mobility and sustainability. Expo 2020 Dubai to open in October 2020 and run for six months


The National
6 hours ago
- The National
Pilgrims 'stone the devil' to mark end of Hajj and start of Eid
Muslims performed the last ritual of Hajj on Friday known as the 'stoning of the devil' in Makkah, as millions around the globe celebrated the beginning of the Eid Al Adha break. Saudi Arabia has this year hosted more than 1.6 million Muslim pilgrims. They threw stones at three concrete walls symbolising the devil in the Mina valley, on the outskirts of the holy city of Makkah. Droves of pilgrims had already set out from their accommodation in the sprawling tent city in Mina before dawn, taking advantage of the cool temperatures. The ritual commemorates Abraham's stoning of the devil at the three spots where it is said Satan tried to dissuade him from obeying God's order to sacrifice his son. On Thursday, pilgrims converged on Mount Arafat, praying and reciting the Quran at the 70-metre rocky rise near Makkah, where the Prophet Mohammed is believed to have given his last sermon. Many climbed despite searing heat, though numbers had thinned by midday, following official warnings for pilgrims to stay inside between 10am and 4pm. At this year's Hajj authorities implemented a range of heat-mitigation efforts alongside a wide-ranging crackdown on illicit pilgrims- resulting in noticeably thinner crowds and a heavy security presence at holy sites in Makkah and surrounding areas. This year's statistics, by the General Authority for Statistics (Gastat), showed a total of 1,673, 230 pilgrims performed Hajj. Of these, 1,506,576 were international pilgrims and 166,654 were domestic pilgrims, including both citizens and residents. According to Gastat, 877,841 were men and 795,389 were women. Every year at the Hajj, Muslims gather in Saudi Arabia to unite in religious rituals and acts of worship as they fulfil one of the Five Pillars of Islam, a religious obligation. It can be the spiritual experience of a lifetime for them and a chance to seek God's forgiveness and the erasure of past sins.