http://www.arabnews.com/?page=13&section=0&article=79568&d=24&m=3&y=2006


            Wednesday, 22, March, 2006 (21, Safar, 1427)


                  The Dark Streak of the Sun
                  Fahd Al-Ahmadi . Al-Riyadh 
                    
                  "On Shawwal 28, the Sun was eclipsed after Asr and continued 
until the time of sunset. It cleared up after the conclusion of the eclipse 
prayer, which I led in the Great Mosque. Then the sun set and we prayed the 
Maghreb in the mosque. When the eclipse prayer was concluded, I sent a witness 
to ascend the minaret of the mosque to see if the sun had cleared. He returned, 
saying that it had cleared completely."

                  - Imam ibn Hajar Al-Asqalani,Aleppo, Syria, June 17, 1433

                  On Wednesday, March 29 Planet Earth is going to witness a 
solar eclipse that will be seen clearly above Africa, especially Libya, parts 
of Asia, especially Turkey and the Atlantic Ocean to the westernmost tip of 
Brazil. In Saudi Arabia, a partial eclipse will be viewable from 1:05 p.m. for 
about an hour, according to NASA website.

                  It is known that solar eclipses appears three times every 
four years, whereas lunar eclipses appear five times every six years. Contrary 
to lunar eclipses, solar eclipses are viewable only in a narrow streak across 
the globe that is only few miles wide. However, its length could be equal to a 
large swathe of the globe. This makes witnessing a solar eclipse rare.

                  A solar eclipse last year didn't exceed 17 miles in width, 
and this year's eclipse won't exceed 118 miles. And according to my estimate, 
we will have to wait until August 2027 to be in a solar eclipse streak that 
hits countries in the Middle East in order to enjoy seven minutes of summertime 
darkness during the day.

                  On this basis, I consider myself very lucky that I was in 
Europe when the solar eclipse happened there in 1999. In spite of the fact that 
the Swiss city of Berne wasn't included in my trip agenda, I made sure to be 
there on Aug. 21 because it is one of the few cities where you can see the full 
solar eclipse. (Seeing a solar eclipse is rare; seeing a total eclipse - when 
the moon passes directly in front of the sun, shutting it out complete for a 
few seconds - is even more rare.) As I watched this phenomenon I wondered about 
the types of reactions by people of different nations when the moon right above 
them eclipses the sun in the middle of the day.

                  Our Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said, "The sun and 
the moon are two Godly miracles that don't eclipse for the death or the birth 
of a human being."

                  Ancient cultures used to consider this phenomenon as a bad 
omen, a sign of catastrophes to come. For example, in Japan they used to cover 
wells and potteries thinking that the weather would be poisoned. Indians used 
to shut down their houses in fear of harmful moonlight. Scandinavians thought 
that diseases would float in the air during the solar eclipse. Babylonians 
assumed that catastrophes and diseases would come under a solar or lunar 
eclipse, so they made sure to lie down with their faces to the ground to avoid 
the pox.

                  Each nation faced this phenomenon in its own way. Eskimos 
used to sacrifice animals to satisfy their gods. Indian Aztecs sacrificed human 
beings to convince the moon to return and the sun to appear. In Korea, Japan 
and China, where they think that dragons eat the moon, people used to gather to 
make loud noises to scare the dragons and stop them from eating their meal.

                  Nowadays, the phenomenon - at least for civilized nations - 
is only a matter of astronomical events that happens regularly. History tells 
us how some people used others' ignorance of this fact to achieve different 
worldly interests. Christopher Columbus in 1504 accomplished a rare feat that 
saved him from a disaster. (The story is chronicled in "Columbus: Master of the 
Atlantic," a biography by David A. Thomas published in 1991.) When he arrived 
to the Jamaican Islands on his fourth trip across the ocean, he had run out of 
supplies and his ships' hulls had been ravaged by worms and needed repair. 
Columbus couldn't get any help from the islands' residents because they refused 
to sell him even food. Suddenly, he remembered that a lunar eclipse was going 
to happen in the near future.

                  Columbus asked for a meeting with tribes' leaders on the 
appointed date claiming he had a message from their gods. When everyone showed 
up, he said that the gods told him they are angry and their anger will deprive 
the tribes from moonlight. They didn't believe him of course and made fun of 
him. Suddenly, the moon eclipsed and Indian Aztecs were terrified and begged 
Columbus to accept their help and ask their gods to forgive them. He agreed and 
fulfilled all his needs and then continued his trip.

                  For more information on eclipses, as well as a list of 
historical quotes regarding the astronomical phenomenon, visit: 
www.mreclipse.com .
                 
           
     


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