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At least some 400 Muslims perform Tarawih every day.
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By
Khaled Abu Bakr, IOL Correspondent
KIEV,
October 30, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – Breaking their fast together on
collective iftar banquets, performing Tarawih prayer and reciting
verses from the Noble Qur'an are but some of the activities with which
Muslims in Ukraine busy themselves during the holy month of Ramadan,
attracting a curious local media.
Minutes
before Maghrib (sunset) prayer, when Muslims break their fast, children
fan out inside the headquarters of the Federation of Social
Organizations (ARRAID), the Muslim umbrella body in the country, to help
put the final touches for iftar banquets.
They
give dates to fasting Muslims, place kitchen utensils, take the food to
the women dinning hall, with almost every body busy doing something to
set the table for the iftar.
This
year ARRAID's mosque is increasingly teeming with some 400 worshipers
opting to break their fast with fellow Muslims every day.
"In
the past, Muslims used to think that iftar banquets are only for
the poor or the needy. Now they see it as a chance for communal
solidarity during the holy month," Dr. Ismail Kadi, ARRAID
chairman, told IslamOnline.net.
Qur'an
& Prayer
After
breaking their dawn-to-dusk fast, worshipers sit at the mosque, reciting
verses from the Noble Qur'an.
Others,
especially reverts, attend classes on tajweed (rules of
recitation) of the Muslim holy book.
Worming
up for a contest organized on the 25th
day of Ramadan every year, children spend time memorizing short verses
of the Qur'an.
As
the time for Tarawih prayer draws nearer, more Muslims come in droves to
the mosque.
ARRAID
is always keen on offering religious sermons for the faithful, which
this Ramadan taste special with Kuwaiti preacher Sami Saad Belal, a
presenter of a religious program on the Kuwaiti TV's channel three.
Unlike
in previous years, sermons are now followed by a translation in Russian
to help non-Arabic speaking Muslims to understand the lessons.
Diplomats
The
collective iftar banquets have attracted a number of Arab and
Muslim diplomats serving in Ukraine.
"When
I was packing up to Kiev, I was worried I would suffer loneliness in
Ukraine," said South Africa's ambassador Ashram Sentso, who
reverted to Islam five years back.
"The
Islamic center here makes a marvelous place for Muslims to meet and
enjoy the ambiance of the Islamic month of Ramadan," he said.
The
diplomat noted that though the Muslim minority in Ukraine in relatively
small, it is "growing up real fast."
Curious
Media
Ramadan
events have attracted a curious Ukrainian media.
Local
TV networks send reporters to shoot the prayer and interview some of the
Muslim worshipers inside the mosque.
Others
talk to children about what Ramadan means for them.
Ukraine
is home to some two million Muslims making up 4% of the overall
48-million population.
There
are up to 200 mosques and 20 Islamic centers nationwide, which
experience no restrictions by the Ukrainian authorities.
Founded
in 1997, the ARRAID, which means "pioneer" in Arabic,
integrates public Muslim organizations from ten regional centers of
Ukraine.