Rabia Terri Harris's blog
Blessed Return
“Eid Mubarak!” The greeting for the end of the holy month, Islam’s global spiritual retreat, the great commemoration of God’s care for humanity. It’s a door now closing behind us. Most who have fasted feel at this moment both relief and loss. Farewell, rare beauty, rare opportunity! Hello again, dear morning coffee, ordinary life. “Eid Mubarak” means blessed return. May our return be blessed.
Under the Waning Moon
You have to wait much longer these nights before you can see the light in the sky. And there is less and less of the rich silver that showered upon us at the peak of the month, just a few days ago. It puts a person in mind of that wisest of ancient sayings, "All things must pass." Perseverance in hard times depends on this solid truth. So do moderation and justice when life grows lush. Ephemerality underlies morality.
Bush, Ahmedinejad, History, Truth, Pride
Less is More
The same or different?
"I don't get it," said my non-Muslim friend in Hackensack, far from home. "In Lent, if people give something up, they give it up. How is it you can pick and choose?"
Ramadan, but no fast?
Mine, today, is travel. Travelers have an option: to fast or not to fast, it's your call. Fasting is meant to be a kind of workout, not a form of tyranny, and only the traveler herself can judge how much hardship would be imposed by toughing it out on the road.
Headaches
I stopped eating for the day at 5:04. Some of us like to leave a little safe zone before the moment when we calculate that first light arrives and fasting begins. (What would happen, I wonder, if I actually went outside and looked? Does the cosmic watch really have a minute hand?)
Living in Multiple Worlds
Peace be upon you, readers of these words: it's Ramadan. This year, by rare convergence of calendars, it's also Rosh Hashanah, and may well be other celebrations too: peoples who attune themselves to the natural cycles of the planet frequently count time by the moon, and the moon has just been born.
