Ramadan begins as crises loom
Holy month conicides with Iraq conflict, rough times
Muslim men mark start of Ramadan in prayer at Istiqlal Mosque in Jakarta, Indonesia. Istiqlal is southeast Asia's largest mosque and Indonesia the most populous Muslim nation.
Suzanne Plunkett, Associated Press
CAIRO, Egypt The holy month of Ramadan has begun throughout the Middle East, with Muslims observing their first day of weeks of dawn-to-dusk fasting, followed by sumptuous meals at family homes, five-star restaurants or free-to-eat-at tables lining city streets.
Traditionally a period of spiritual reflection, Ramadan this year coincides with the war in Iraq, the ongoing Palestinian-Israeli conflict and harsh economic times in countries like Egypt, the most populous nation in the Arab world.
Millions of Muslims in Egypt, Jordan and Yemen began fasting Sunday. Muslims elsewhere are expected to begin marking Ramadan on Monday because Islamic officials there decreed that the holiday should begin a day later.
Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation, and Iraq will officially begin the fasting month today.
Muslims believe it was during Ramadan about 1,400 years ago that the Quran, the Islamic holy book, was revealed to the Prophet Muhammad.
Abdel Hakem Abaed, a Yemeni university student, said he will be "praying to God during Ramadan for the sake of Muslims everywhere in Iraq, Palestine, Afghanistan. This is our task."
In Egypt, Ramadan is usually a festive affair, where strings of colored lights and lanterns brighten streets throughout the capital, Cairo, and in most other centers.
For more than two hours after the first daily fast-breaking meal, or "iftar," on Sunday, Cairo's normally traffic-choked streets were nearly empty as Egyptians feasted on meats, salads, rice dishes and desserts.
But Egypt's deteriorating economy, marked by a weak currency and a bread crisis that hit just weeks before Ramadan began, has cast a pall over the holy month, forcing some Muslims to give up some culinary staples because of high prices.
"The country is now like a fatigued old man," said Salem el-Khateeb, a 64-year-old spice shop owner in Khan al-Khalili, a market district in the capital.
"Prices of all kinds of nuts and dried apricots have doubled compared to last year. Most people I know are replacing apricots with oranges to make juice for their children. And now I am selling nothing."
Nasser Lashen, who owns a shop selling popular Ramadan lanterns, or "fanous," said prices for the mostly Chinese-made lamps are higher, but "there are various types, so I think people don't have a major problem."
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