--- Subject: Culture of extravagance is robbing Ramadhan of its significance

Shelina Zahra Janmohamed

August 14. 2009 

The Muslim world goes topsy-turvy in Ramadhan. Eating, sleeping and socialising 
routines are turned back to front – the first meal is eaten as the sun sets. 
The initial morsel of food into our mouths will usually be a sweet, succulent 
date, according to the Islamic tradition. But are the hours that follow really 
that religious?

Contemporary changes to the Ramadhan culture mean that the spiritual 
significance of Ramadhan is slowlyh being lost. Abstaining from physical intake 
during daylight hours – which means food, drink, and sex – with the 
intention of getting closer to the Divine, has a myriad of philosophies and 
meanings.

It allows appreciation of the suffering of the poor and hungry, a chance to 
devote less time to the physical and more time to the spiritual, a recognition 
that we can live happily and successfully with less than we have.

Come nightfall, these good intentions are put to one side, as though Ramadhan 
is for daylight hours only, and the revelling begins.

Mothers cook sumptuous meals for their families. The food is indulgently 
calorific to the point that many Muslims say they actually gain weight rather 
than lose it as one might expect. The philosophy of restraint and frugality 
adhered to during the day has its mirror image in the excessive culinary 
indulgence after dark.

One of the religious traditions of Ramadhan is to feed others at the time of 
iftar in order to gain reward. Dinner invitations thus abound, and these iftar 
gatherings are warm social events. But in many places they turn into arenas for 
showmanship, outdoing friends and family with ever extravagant menus. “People 
will announce at the end of the meal how much it cost,â€‌ said one Egyptian 
woman to emphasise the one-upmanship that dominates what should be an occasion 
of sharing and community.

Once the iftar is over, there is a wide choice of entertainment. Those who are 
extrovert will find their way to newly erected Ramadhan tents, to smoke shisha 
and chill out with friends for the whole night, going from party to party until 
dawn. Other families will stay at home to watch the multitude of soap operas 
which dominate Ramadhan. In Saudi Arabia last year it was claimed that there 
were 64 such soap operas broadcast each night, staggered over time so audiences 
could watch as many as possible.

This is not a comment on the values or quality of the soaps, or the claims by 
some clerics that they are “debauchedâ€‌. It is simply an observation that 
these soap operas prey on the communal feeling that is generated in Ramadhan 
and profit from it. The audience is understandably drawn towards the high level 
of entertainment but inadvertently becomes distracted from the sweet pleasures 
of contemplation and social intercourse of Ramadan.

And let’s not forget the shopping. Shops are open later than ever, and it 
seems that Ramadhan is not a time of midnight contemplation, but rather just a 
prelude to Eid, a day to show off your new clothes. Ramadhan shopping festivals 
are becoming more common, as is the compulsion to purchase and give Eid 
presents to a wide circle of acquaintances.

Instead of cutting back on the desire to consume, we end up with heightened 
consumption in these 30 days, whether that be in restaurants or in retail.

This is not to say that the Muslim world has become a month-long consumerist 
orgy – far from it. The social and spiritual temperature of Muslim 
communities is high and mosques teem with passionate worshippers.

What may surprise many who live in majority Muslim countries is that this sense 
of community and faith is particularly acute in countries where Muslims are 
minorities.

In these countries, if you are fasting you have to make an active choice to go 
against the grain of mainstream society. You still have to go to work where you 
can stare longingly at your colleagues drinking coffee, or attend meetings 
which run across the iftar time. You have to really know and understand why you 
are fasting, rather than just being swept up in the maelstrom. There is a sense 
of community purpose in these countries and an overwhelming push towards 
spiritual success.

The energy is so focused that I have known Muslims who come to Britain leaving 
Muslim countries behind in order to have a more spiritually profitable month.

As Ramadhan’s religious significance is slowly eclipsed by its commercial and 
cultural status, then it is voided of its meaning, and ultimately of its 
importance. That is exactly what happened in 1960 when the president of 
Tunisia, Habib Bourguiba, wanted to cancel Ramadhan. He felt that although 
Ramadhan was a “beautiful customâ€‌, it “paralysed our societyâ€‌.

He appeared on national television with his cabinet eating during the day and 
tried to get senior Muslim clerics to issue fatwas to say that it was 
permissible not to fast. Of course, this did not happen, but it is a salutary 
tale of how, when religious occasion turns into culture, it becomes vulnerable 
to elimination.

There are some who will say I am being a killjoy and too pious. Others will say 
that if mothers want to spoil their families with delicious food after working 
hard on their fasts all day, then that is their right. There are those who will 
say that spending the night chatting away in shisha bars or comparing notes on 
soap operas, increases the sense of community and social cohesion.

These outcomes are all good things – part of the magic of Ramadhan, no doubt. 
And of course there is no compulsion in how you spend Ramadhan. You do not have 
to sit on a prayer mat all hours of the day. But I do see a worrying trend when 
you piece each of these actions together. Each one may be justifiable because 
everyone has choice, but if you step back, you start to see that the meaning 
and context of Ramadhan is slowly being lost.

If we accept these justifications then we must be wary of opening ourselves to 
the charge of hypocrisy.

Ramadhan and Eid are not the only occasions to have suffered this slow and 
insidious dilution of meaning and impact. Practising Christians in the western 
world complain that Christmas has been sucked dry of its religious meaning. 

Other festivals, too, have lost their meaning. Easter was about rebirth and 
renewal, but now focuses on chocolate eggs and cute bunnies. And Lent, which 
was a 40-day period of frugality and restraint – almost akin to Ramadhan 
itself in its ethos – has been distilled down to Mardi Gras, pancakes and 
gaudy carnivals.

Some people will bristle at the comparison of the way that Christmas has been 
usurped by consumerism with the contemporary experience of Ramadhan. But the 
similarities are striking as the evidence above shows.

You do not have to be religious to appreciate that the social and ethical 
meaning of festivals such as Christmas, Ramadhan and Eid have a great deal to 
contribute to the morality of human society.

For this reason, Muslims add their voices to these complaints, as part of the 
faith communities who share a concern about the sapping of meaning and moral 
compass from these occasions. However, it often turns into pointing fingers at 
the West for becoming “godlessâ€‌ or “decadentâ€‌ due to the excessive 
commercialisation, while turning a blind eye to the same challenges in the 
Muslim world.

Is this a case of pot calling the kettle black?

Ramadhan does not have to be, and should not be, sober pious asceticism. Of 
course not. Enjoyment, sharing and happiness in our togetherness are critical 
components of Ramadhan. But Ramadan should be about more than gluttony, 
shopping and vacuous entertainment.

We do in fact need to recognise and acknowledge the place of Ramadhan’s 
material pleasures. By being honest about the importance of the physical, we 
can de-prioritise it in favour of the spiritual and moral at least for the 30 
days of Ramadhan.

This de-prioritisation is what makes Ramadhan special in the first place. By 
withholding the importance of the physical self, Ramadhan is about recognising 
the importance of our individual spirit, and about finding our place as souls, 
not bodies, in the society in which we live.

Shelina Zahra Janmohamed is a British commentator on Islam and author of Love 
in a Headscarf, a new memoir of growing up as a Muslim woman

 


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