Khaleej Times

Bahrain’s Ramadan drummer goes viral with virus message

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manama — The tradition of musaharati — Ramadan drummers who awaken the faithful for their pre-dawn meal — may be dying out across the Muslim world, but Yasser Al Samak has become a social media hit by adapting age-old songs for the time of coronaviru­s.

The silence of the darkened streets of Bilad Al Qadeem, a village outside the capital Manama, has been broken during the holy month by the voice of the 50-yearold and the pounding of the drummer who accompanie­s him.

In a distinctiv­e Bahraini accent he sings of life in the pandemic, extols the benefits of social distancing, and gives thanks to medics and first responders for their sacrifices on the front line.

“Oh quickly the time of suhoor arrives, but this time it is different from all the years before,” Samak sings of the meal which fortifies observant Muslims for their day of fasting ahead.

“Stay home with your family, and blend your suhoor meal with hope, because those who rely on God, He will protect them,” he sings. “Make yourself strong with prayer and wear the mask as a shield against the pandemic,” go the lyrics, which mix blessings with standard health advice.

Samak also humorously plays on the word “corona” urging people to still eat “macarona” — macaroni — rhyming in Arabic to say that life must go on and that the faithful should not lose their resolve in the face of the crisis.

In a centuries-old tradition, the musaharati once provided the heartbeat to the ritual, but the practice has become rarer across the Muslim world now that people have alarms and smartphone­s to rouse them from their sleep. — —

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