Showing posts with label Celebration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Celebration. Show all posts

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Ramadan a time to learn lessons

Fasting during the month of Ramadan is one of the five pillars of Islam. It is obligatory on every mentally and physically fit Muslim to abstain from eating, drinking, and smoking from before the break of dawn till the sunset. “Those of you who witness this month shall fast therein.” Muslims fast in response to that command, and in obedience and out of love of God. For more than a billion Muslims, Ramadan is a month of blessing marked by prayers, Qur’an recitation, fasting and charity. Although fasting indicates restraining the stomach, other restraints are also in order. “He who doesn’t desist from obscene language, Allah has no need that he did not eat or drink.” The tongue must avoid backbiting, lies and slander. Ears, eyes, heart and mind must all be involved to avoid anything that spoils the spirit of fasting, which may render fasting as worthless despite the hunger and thirst. “If one slanders you or aggresses against you, tell him I am fasting.” It would be a grave mistake to think of fasting only in the literal sense of total abstinence from food and drink. Fasting teaches principles of honest devotion and sound conscience. When fasting, a person is faithful in secret and in public, for there is no authority to check his behavior, whether he is secretly breaking fasting. Fasting teaches patience, selflessness and self-control. When fasting, a person feels for those who are needy and deprived. It teaches adaptability and strengthens the will power to change the entire course of daily activities by breaking 11 months of routine. While they are hungry, Muslims are reminded of the suffering of the poor. This is clear because fasting is broken with a meal known as Iftar, beginning simply with dates and water.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

A Father's Special Day

“Papa, what a real man you are. Since the day I started to observe things around me, I saw you waking up before sunrise, going to work in the farm alone, and then returning home after sunset. “I came to know that you work under direct exposure to the sun, heat, humidity, dust and cold. You do all of that to spend your hard-earned money on me and my other three sisters. “I love you Papa.” I wrote that to my father when I was 12 years old. Now I am mature enough, and I realize the full value of my father’s sacrifice even though I’m not yet a father.



My father is still alive, so I have gotten the chance to take care of him the way he did for me. Now, as I recall what I wrote at age 12, I have the same feeling. “pTo my father, I know you love me and my three sisters. I know you sacrificed to put food in our mouths and smiles on our faces. No one ever made a certificate of recognition for the great sacrifice you made. No institution could accommodate your credentials. I am really proud of you.”

With those words, I try to express my feelings to all those who work with dignity especially to those fathers working abroad. Most of them have children back home, awaiting their return. So I call everyone to treat the workers all around us with full dignity as they sacrifice to earn every single cents of money. To all the fathers in the whole world, HAPPY FATHER’S DAY!!!