Muslims worldwide are counting the days in anticipation to the end Ramadan.

Yearly, most would be familiar with the often repeated questions from their non-Muslim counterparts who are curious about the preamble to Eid.

Look no further, here are six frequently asked questions that non-Moslems have about this great holiday.

Ramadan is the most sacred month of the year for Muslims — the Prophet Muhammed reportedly said, “When the month of Ramadan starts, the gates of heaven are opened and the gates of hell are closed and the devils are chained.”

Muslims believe it was during this month that God revealed the first verses of the Quran, Islam’s sacred text, to Mohammed, on a night known as “The Night of Power” (or Laylat al-Qadr in Arabic).

Fasting during Ramadan is one of the five pillars or duties of Islam. Those are:

  • The testimony of faith
  • Prayer
  • Charitable giving
  • Making a pilgrimage to Mecca
  • Fasting during Ramadhan

All Muslims are required to take part every year, except the ill, the pregnant, the breastfeeding mothers, the menstruating ladies, the travelers, the elderly and young children.

Fasting in Ramadhan is meant to remind you of your human frailty and your dependence on God, to show you what it feels like to be hungry and thirsty so you feel compassion for the poor and needy, and to reduce the distractions in life so you can more clearly focus on your relationship with God.

No. Some of you be thinking, “Wow, that sounds like a great way to lose weight!” Well, no. Ramadan is actually notorious for often causing weight gain. That’s because eating large meals super early in the morning and late at night with a long period of low activity bordering on lethargy in between the meals can wreak havoc on your metabolism.

For religious matters, Muslims follow a lunar calendar — that is, one based on the phases of the moon — whose 12 months add up to approximately 354 days. That’s 11 days shorter than our Gregorian calendar. Therefore, the Islamic lunar year keeps moving back by about 11 days each year in relation to the Gregorian calendar.

In some Muslim countries, it is a crime to eat and drink in public during the day in the month of Ramadan, even if you’re not Moslem. This is not the case in Uganda and our Moslem brothers don’t expect us to change our eating patterns to accommodate their religious fast during Ramadan.

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