Ramadan 2023 greetings explained from Eid Mubarak to Maradan Kareem
RAMADAN is an important month in the Muslim calendar and involves daily prayer and fasting.
During the festival of Ramadan, you may hear "Ramadan Kareem" and "Ramadan Mubarak" a lot but the phrases have different meanings.
What are the greetings in Arabic and English?
Happy Ramadan can be translated to Ramadan Mubarak, which also means "blessed Ramadan".
Ramadan Mubarak is the most commonly used as it was originally used by the prophet Muhammad.
Meanwhile, Eid Mubarak - which means "Blessed Feast or Festival" - is used on the last day of Ramadan, Eid al-Fitr.
You may also hear people say, Ramadan Kareem, which means "may Ramadan be generous to you".
However, there is some debate about if it should be used during Ramadan.
The greetings are different as Ramadan Mubarak offers a blessed or happy Ramadan to the person it is exchanged with, whereas Ramadan Kareem asks Ramadan to be generous to the other person.
Saudi Arabian scholar Sheikh Al-Uthaymeen told : “It should be said ‘Ramadan Mubarak’, or whatever is similar to it, because it is not Ramadan itself that gives so that it can be Kareem (generous), in fact, it is Allah who placed the grace in it, and made it a special month, and a time to perform one of the pillars of Islam.”
However, others believe using Ramadan Kareem is fine because they say the phrase represents the blessings that Allah gives his followers during the month.
Both greetings can be used throughout the whole month of Ramadan but Ramadan Mubarak tends to be the more commonly used of the two.
What do you say at the start and end of Ramadan?
Typically, the start of the month is welcomed with greetings such as Ramadan Mubarak and is continued throughout the festival of Ramadan until the last day.
On the last day of Ramadan, which is Eid al-Fitr, the greeting changes to Eid Mubarak.
In 2023, Eid al-Fitr is expected to take place on April 21.
When is Eid 2023?
Traditionally, Ramadan begins with the sighting of the crescent moon, which usually appears one night after the new moon, meaning the start date can't be predicted.
Eid al-Fitr works in exactly the same way.
The sighting of the new crescent moon brings the end of Ramadan and the onset of the month of Shawwal, the tenth of the Islamic Hijri calendar.
There is debate as to whether the idea of a moon sighting should refer to you physically witnessing the moon where you are, which could be dictated by factors such as the weather, or whether to defer to sightings in Saudi Arabia or other regions.
This year it will begin on the evening of March 22, 2023.
What is Ramadan?
Ramadan, the ninth month in the Islamic calendar, is a period of fasting observed by Muslims across the globe to celebrate "the best of times".
It celebrates the first time the Koran was revealed to Muhammad, according to Islamic belief.
Fasting is only obligatory for healthy adult Muslims, anyone who is suffering from an illness, traveling, elderly, pregnant, breastfeeding, diabetic, chronically ill or menstruating is exempt from the practice.
The fasting period, during which Muslims are not allowed to eat or drink, is from dawn to sunset and Muslims engage in increased prayer activity.
Muslims often try and practise increased self-discipline during the month of Ramadan.
In 2022, Ramadan started on the evening of Friday, April 1, and ended on the evening of Sunday, May 1.