| Hope Love and Laugher, warmth, wishes, joy and a bouquet of Eid wishes, jubilations, become a part of your Eid and Your Life. Have a Happy Eid Mubarak.  Coming  with the new moon, the festival marks the end of 'Ramadan' - a month  when Muslims fast throughout the day and eat only at night Prayers,  feasts and family get- together are the major highlights of the  celebrations. It was during this month that the holy Koran was revealed.  Eid means recurring happiness or festivity. Eid is celebrated in India  with much enthusiasm and fervor and Muslims from all strata of life can  be seen adorned in beautiful new clothes, visiting the mosques to attend  Salatul Eid (Eid prayers). Greetings of "Eid-Mubarak" or "a blessed  Eid" are exchanged.    A very  important aspect of eid is the charity, which all the Muslims are  expected to extend to the needy. Earlier, this was in the form of gifts  in kind but now cash is given to the needy. The first Eid of the year is  known as "Eid Al Fitr". Al Fitr literally means breaking of fast. Thus  Eid Al Fitr is celebrated on the first day of Shawaal, the tenth month  in the Muslim calendar, to mark the end of a month long fast during the  month of Ramadan. As the third "pillar" or religious obligation of  Islam, fasting has many special benefits. Among these, the most  important is that it is a means of learning self-control. Due to the  lack of preoccupation with the satisfaction of bodily appetites during  the daylight hours of fasting, a measure of ascendancy is given to one's  spiritual nature, which becomes a means of coming closer to Allah.  Ramadan is also a time of concentrated worship, reading of the Quran,  purifying one's behavior, giving charity and doing virtuous deeds.    The secondary  objective of fasting is a way of experiencing hunger and developing  compassion for the less fortunate, and learn to be thankful and  appreciative for all of God's bounties. Fasting is also advantageous to  the health and provides a break in the cycle of rigid habits.    Eid Al Fitr is  a day of joy and thanksgiving. On this day, Muslims show their joy for  the health, strength and opportunities of life, which Allah has given  them to fulfill their obligations of fasting and other good deeds during  the month of Ramadan. It is considered unholy to fast on this day. It  is also a day of forgetting old grudges and ill feelings towards other  fellow men. The second important Eid celebration is called "Eid  Al-Adha".    Although only  the pilgrims in Makkah can participate in the Hajj fully, all the other  Muslims in the world join with them by celebrating Eid Al-Adha, or  "Celebration of Sacrifice." On the 10th day of Dhul-Hijjah, the last  month of the Islamic calendar, Muslims around the world celebrate this  feast of commitment, obedience and self-sacrifice to Allah. They wear  their nicest clothing and attend Salatul-Eid (Eid Prayer) in the  morning. This is followed by a short sermon, after which everyone  socializes. Next, people visit each other's homes and partake in festive  meals with special dishes, beverages, and desserts. Children receive  gifts and sweets on this happy occasion. In addition, like the pilgrims  in Makkah, the Muslims, who can afford to do so, offer domestic animals,  usually sheep, as a symbol of Ibrahim's sacrifice. The meat is  distributed for consumption to family, friends, and to the poor and  needy. Prayers are offered in mosques and Idgahs and elaborate  festivities are held. | 
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Friday, September 10, 2010
Happy Eid Mubarak.
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