Showing posts sorted by relevance for query RAMADAN. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query RAMADAN. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, February 26, 2026

 Lawns light up for Ramadan as Muslim families give holy month the Christmas treatment

(RNS) — Outdoor displays once reserved almost exclusively for Christmas are now lighting up lawns during the Islamic month of fasting.
Ramadan decorations at the Husic home on Feb. 21, 2026, in Kennesaw, Georgia. (Photo courtesy of Jasmina Husic)

(RNS) — Every Christmas season as her neighbors draped their house and grounds with festive lights, Jasmina Husic’s children asked the same question: “Mama and baba, why don’t we decorate for Christmas?” she said.

The mother of five, who lives in Kennesaw, Georgia, would explain that they can appreciate Christmas, but that it’s not a Muslim holiday. That didn’t seem to satisfy their curiosity. So a couple of years ago during Ramadan, she tried something different — Husic bought crescent string lights and inflatables to decorate her yard with her kids. 

“And they were so excited,” said Husic. “Now they realize, ‘Oh, it’s Ramadan, because we have inflatables and our house has decorations everywhere.’ It helps them to be proud that they are different.” 


Big-box retailers such as Target and Party City have been embracing Ramadan in recent years with indoor holiday supplies, from wall decorations to children’s books. Many Muslim Americans have enthusiastically embraced the stores’ nod to representation in return. 

But for a growing number of small retailers and their Muslim customers, the celebration no longer stops at the front door. Outdoor displays that rival those that appear at Halloween or Christmas are now lighting up lawns during the Islamic holy month, which this year began on Feb. 17 in the United States.

Since launching her Muslim-oriented inflatables business in 2020, Basharat Rehman has seen sales increases for her displays for Ramadan and Eid, the holiday marking the end of the month of fasting.

Some of the inflatables sold online by New Traditions Store. (Screen grab)

Her New Traditions Store, based in Toronto, is one of several businesses in North America that sells inflatables worldwide in the shapes of mosques, a crescent and people holding up a “Ramadan Mubarak” banner. “There were a lot of parents out there that felt the same sort of void that we did,” said Rehman. 

The concept is not without its critics, who say Muslims should not mimic non-Islamic holidays, but Rehman said those commentators likely don’t understand the challenges of raising Muslim children in a world where Christmas can overshadow the delights of other faiths.

“If we just tell our children Ramadan is just about praying and fasting, a child will not find that appealing,” she said. “You have to introduce it in a fun way in the beginning years, so that by the time they’re older, they can actually partake in the spiritual aspects of Ramadan.” 


Some mosques across the country have also opted to hang lights or signs to mark the month when Muslims fast from dawn to sunset.



Professional Christmas decorating companies have caught wind of the trend and are extending their season beyond December. Several lighting companies in Michigan, New Jersey and Illinois advertised services ahead of Ramadan this year. 

Ramadan decorations light up Jasmina Husic’s home in Kennesaw, Georgia, on Feb. 21, 2026.  (Photo courtesy of Jasmina Husic)

In Livonia, Michigan, close to Detroit’s western suburbs and their densely Muslim neighborhoods, Martin Zoros, owner of Zoro’s Lights, said the more than 20 homes he has decorated for Ramadan so far is down from previous years, due to what he suspects are lean financial times.

But Nora Farhat, a Muslim who runs the Detroit-area company Wonderly Lights, said Muslim clients make up a slightly larger chunk of her business this year, at about 10%. 

“It’s ironic. We are a proud Christmas lighting company. But actually we are proud Muslims that do holiday lights,” she said. 


Farhat said interest in outdoor displays from both Muslim and non-Muslim families took off during the COVID-19 lockdowns, as outdoor lights, she said, offered joy to people spending holidays apart from their families. 

In 2020, in the middle of the pandemic, Halal Metropolis, an organization in Dearborn, devised a Ramadan home lights competition as a way to maintain the “Ramadan spirit” during a time of isolation, according to organizers. 

In this April 28, 2020, file photo, Ramadan lights are displayed on a house in Dearborn, Michigan. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

Since then, Farhat said more Muslim families have sought her services for string lights and displays, such as crescent-shaped wreaths in traditional Ramadan green. 

“The same way a neighbor might decorate for Christmas, the neighbor next door is decorating for Ramadan. There is a really beautiful unity to it because we’re all doing it, just with our unique touches,” she said. “And when people are able to share their different beliefs and customs, I think it brings more beauty, and the lighting concept is a beautiful way to do that.”



The city of Dearborn, where the large Muslim population has sometimes been a flashpoint, has decorated its street lights with the crescent moons and stars for Ramadan. The display, commissioned by the city’s development authority, is the first of its kind in Dearborn, a spokesperson said. 


“This initiative reflects who we are as a city,” said Mayor Abdullah H. Hammoud in a statement. “Each season, we stand side-by-side to celebrate all of the traditions that make us special. It’s no wonder we continue to set new standards for holiday and cultural displays.”

FILE – In a file photo from Tuesday, April 28, 2020, Ramadan lights are displayed on a house in Dearborn, Mich. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio)

Light Up Columbus, an Ohio company, created Dearborn’s custom Christmas and Ramadan displays. Since then, owner Chris Apfelstadt said mosques and a school have expressed interest in his work, which he said shows the importance of having holidays represented in a public way.

“Being on display is a big deal, and it brings people joy,” Apfelstadt said. “When we can bring people joy with lighting, we want to do that, and it doesn’t matter to us what the religion is, what the reason is.”



But for Muslims, the reason comes down to community. Randa Restum, a mother of two, said public recognition of Ramadan in Dearborn’s streets and schools has made it easier for her young children to practice some aspects of the holy month.

“It’s really important for them to just be proud of their culture and their religion,” said Restum, who paid Wonderly Lights to light up her Dearborn home this year. “I just want my kids to remember that it’s just a special time.”


Husic, the Georgia mother, said it is also important that her displays spark conversations with curious neighbors who want to learn about her beliefs. “It just makes it even more special that my neighbors appreciate it,” she said. 

Thursday, April 07, 2022

 Cairo's city centre has turned festive ahead of Ramadan, albeit the economic situation has left many families struggling.

Middle East
Ukraine overshadows Ramadan 2022

Ahead of Ramadan, most Middle Eastern countries have eased restrictions to near pre-pandemic times. However, increases in prices and food shortages due to the war in Ukraine are casting new shadows on the Holy Month. Jennifer Holleis reports

In the run-up to Ramadan, which began on 2 April in most countries, city centres across the Middle East were transformed. Streets and shops have been decorated with the symbol of the crescent moon, lanterns and banners are emblazoned with well-wishing words like "Ramadan Kareem" or "Ramadan Mubarak.".

In Lebanon's capital Beirut, however, much of the decoration on sale for private homes remained unsold this year. "I remember the times when I used to buy decorations for Ramadan and invite my siblings over for a large meal in the evening," said Randa Mohsen, a nurse and mother of four in Beirut. "This year, we can't even afford to pay for our own iftar meal that breaks the fast after sunset."

In order to prepare fattoush, a traditional iftar salad, Mohsen would have to buy ingredients for around €3.60, she says. Given that the family income is around €75, this is simply out of reach. "For us as a family, it doesn't matter whether the pandemic restrictions are removed or not, we don't have money to go out anyways, we can barely afford to eat," she said. "At least COVID-19 was an excuse to stay home."

Almost like 2019

For the past two years, or in other words, since the beginning of the pandemic, Ramadan traditions – such as meeting family and friends for meals after sunset – have been restricted or banned throughout the region. However, as of this Ramadan, only masks remain, as well as occasionally reduced prayer periods and social distancing inside mosques.

"Ahead of this Ramadan, most governments in the Middle East have removed or eased restrictions almost to a pre-pandemic level," Simon Wolfgang Fuchs, a lecturer of Islamic and Middle East Studies at the University of Freiburg, Germany, explained.

A father and son decorate their local street in Cairo ahead of Ramadan (photo: DW)
The origins of Ramadan: also spelled Ramazan and Ramzan, the month of fasting – one of the five pillars of Islam – is observed by about 1.6 billion Muslims globally. Adults who are physically and mentally healthy are required to not drink, eat or smoke from sunrise to sunset for 30 days. Muslims believe God revealed the first verses of the Koran to the Prophet Muhammad during the ninth month of the Islamic calendar around 1,400 years ago. The word Ramadan derives from "al-ramad" which means intense heat or fire and symbolises the hardship of fasting and the burning of sins

Sheikh Mohammed Abu Zaid, Chairman of the Sunni Court and imam of the largest mosque in Saida, near Beirut, confirmed the new freedom. "In Lebanon, all mosques are open and people are welcomed to gather and pray. Imams are free to ask for social distancing or to request wearing masks," said Abu Zaid. "However, most imams agreed to advise old people and those who have chronic diseases to not attend mosques."

For Ramadan's extended morning and evening prayers in his mosque, Abu Zaid decided to advise the faithful to wear masks.

Problems emerging

And yet, with the end of many pandemic-related restrictions, new problems are casting their shadows on the Holy Month. "Inflation and food insecurity have started to affect many countries in the region at an unprecedented level," Fuchs said.

Egypt, in particular, has suffered from price hikes and a devaluation of the currency ahead of this Ramadan. "We expect Ramadan to be extremely hard as a soar in prices happened just a few days before the Holy Month," admitted Haitham El-Tabei, CEO of the Abwab Elkheir NGO in Cairo.

On Friday, a day before the beginning of Ramadan, around 20 volunteers met in the early hours at the NGO's headquarter in Cairo's Mokattam neighbourhood, to prepare food baskets with meat and dates. During Ramadan, they expect that more families than ever come by and pick up the food donations. "This year, the situation is exacerbated by a decrease in donations and a stark increase of prices," said El-Tabei.

So far, though, the NGO has been able to cover the extra costs. "In such a tough period, we cannot let families down during the Holy Month," he added.

Market during Ramadan in the Iraqi city of Mosul (photo: Zuma Wire/picture-alliance)
Holy month overshadowed by war in Ukraine: "Inflation and food insecurity have started to affect many countries in the region at an unprecedented level," explains Simon Wolfgang Fuchs, a lecturer of Islamic and Middle East Studies at the University of Freiburg, Germany. This comes on top of searing economic crises, poignantly expressed by Lebanese mother-of-four Randa Mohsen: "This year, we can't even afford to pay for our own iftar meal that breaks the fast after sunset." For fattoush, a traditional iftar salad, Mohsen would have to buy ingredients for around €3.60. With a family income of €75, this is simply out of reach. "For us as a family, it doesn't matter whether the pandemic restrictions are removed or not … we can barely afford to eat"

Crescent moon in Saudi Arabia

Ramadan, also spelled Ramazan and Ramzan, is observed by about 1.6 billion Muslims globally. Adults, who are physically and mentally healthy, are required to not drink, eat or smoke from sunrise to sunset for 30 days. The annual month of fasting and praying is considered one of the five pillars of Islam.

Muslims believe that God revealed the first verses of the Koran to Prophet Muhammad during the ninth month of the Islamic calendar around 1,400 years ago. The word Ramadan derives from "al-ramad" which means intense heat or fire and symbolises the hardship of fasting and the burning of sins.

The exact beginning of Ramadan, however, depends on the first glimpse of the rising moon, and therefore differs from country to country. Traditionally, the day and time are calculated by astronomy experts in the Saudi Arabian village of Hautat Sudair.

In 2022, Ramadan begins on 2 April for Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait, Egypt and Bahrain. In Lebanon, Morocco and Syria, Ramadan begins on Sunday, 3 April.

After two years and in line with most other countries in the region, Saudi Arabia has also lifted most of its restrictions in the run-up to this Ramadan. However, pilgrims are required to wear masks and use either the Tawakkalna or Eatmarna app when signing up for a prayer slot in Mecca and Medina. Using the governmental Tawakkalna apps became mandatory for Saudi citizens during the pandemic.

 

The Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority (SDAIA) developed the app to monitor the movement of citizens during curfew hours. However, Simon Fuchs sees the prolonged mandatory use of these applications as a pretext. "The pandemic has given authoritarian regimes new tools to control their population under the pretext of health," he said.  

Despite its efforts to become a new hotspot for tourists and foreign investment, Saudi Arabia has also been in the spotlight for neglecting human rights and sentencing or killing dissidents – like Loujain al-Hathloul or Jamal Khashoggi – in the past years.

Kuwait and Morocco

However, it is not only Saudi Arabia that is keeping an eye on its citizens, other countries in the region have decided to uphold restrictions and limits. In Kuwait, iftar gatherings remain banned inside and outside mosques. Only distributing free pre-cooked meals is allowed.

And Morocco's government has just extended the ongoing state of emergency until 30 April, due to fears of a new COVID-19 surge, despite current low levels of infection. Moreover, the kingdom has been battling a severe drought and the situation is exacerbated by worries about food security due to the reduction of wheat imports as a consequence of the war in Ukraine.

So far, however, the state of emergency ends on 30 April. If not extended, the Eid ul Fitr celebration, which marks the end of Ramadan, could therefore be celebrated with friends and family on 3 May.

Jennifer Holleis

© Deutsche Welle 2022