Wednesday , October 23 2024

‘Gaza receives Ramadan with grief, starvation, sadness & blood’

13-03-2024

GAZA CITY: Nader Abu Sharekh, an Islamic preacher, has told media from Rafah that “the whole world has forsaken” Gaza.

“We address Muslims in every corner of the world. How can you accept seeing Gaza people suffer in this holy month,” he said.

Abu Sharekh said Gaza’s residents are “forsaken, left with nothing, not even potable water”, adding that “people in the north of Gaza are forced to eat animal fodder”.

“Israel is slaughtering our people, innocent women and children … There is not a single house that is not mourning the loss of loved ones and above all, we are starving to death,” he said.

“The Gaza people are receiving Ramadan, the holy month, with grief, sadness, starvation and blood,” he concluded.

The holy month of Ramadan has started. Muslims across the world are fasting, spending time with their families and dedicating themselves to prayer and worship but for us, the Muslims of Gaza, this holy month is filled with heartbreak and mourning.

For more than five months now, we have endured massacres, disease, starvation and thirst at the hands of the Israeli army. Its violence and brutality have not stopped or lessened as Ramadan begins.

As many of us struggle to put food on the table to breakfast or to find a safe place for prayer, the memories of past Ramadans keep us warm. Amid the buzzing of Israeli drones and the sound of explosions, I close my eyes and remember the splendour of Ramadan in Gaza.

The preparations for the holy month would always start early. Several weeks ahead of it, people would go out shopping for all the Ramadan necessities.

A favourite place to go would be the Old City and its traditional market, Al-Zawiya. There, all the traditional Ramadan food items could be found: sour pickles, the best dates, delicious olives, spices that filled the air with their aroma, thyme, dried apricot paste to make qamar al-din drinks, dried fruits, and various types of juices, with khoroub (carob) being the most popular.

New clothes would also be a necessary purchase. Prayer gowns would be a popular choice, as would fancy dresses for the girls and sleek costumes for the boys.

Children would pull on parents’ hands and ask them to buy one of the colourful lanterns on display that read “hallou ya hallou, Ramadan Kareem ya hallou”. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)

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