The National - News

FIRST FAST ARRIVES IN REGION FACING VARIOUS CRISES

▶ Holy month begins against backdrop of earthquake recovery, water shortages, soaring inflation, crippled economies and raging Ukraine war

- NADA ALTAHER

The sun rose on the first day of Ramadan in a region that suffered a huge earthquake last month and faces an array of other challenges.

Some Middle East residents will be celebratin­g the holy month while dealing with water shortages, soaring inflation and crippling economic crises.

For the second year, Ramadan is taking place against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine.

This has disrupted grain exports from Ukraine and Russia and caused global prices to soar – with a particular impact in Yemen and Lebanon, both hit by economic turmoil.

Lebanese people recently criticised a shop for pricing lentil soup – a Ramadan staple – at $5 on its iftar menu.

This comes at a time when food prices have risen by 2,000 per cent, in some instances, since 2019.

“If a casual place like this is charging this much, what will ‘fancier’ places be charging? A kidney?” asked a Twitter user under the name Falullahh.

In Yemen, providing drinking water is a burden that largely falls on the shoulders of women and girls, who often have to drop out of school to be able to walk long distances to fetch supplies for their families.

In the Arab world’s poorest country, water was already difficult to find before the conflict between the internatio­nally recognised government and Iran-backed Houthi rebels, which began in 2014.

Now, 90 per cent of the population relies on some form of help to survive and developmen­t projects are vital for millions.

Local non-government­al organisati­on Food4Human­ity has just finished building a solar-powered water station in Yemen’s south-western province of Ibb, helping 11,500 people in five villages.

“We don’t go to school. We can’t,” a young Yemeni child said in a video published by the group. “We are busy travelling to other nearby villages to carry water back home. So, we don’t have time to go to school.” This year is also the first time Ramadan is being spent away from home for many of those displaced by the 7.8-magnitude earthquake that rocked Syria and Turkey in February, killing more than 52,000 people.

“We used to look forward to Ramadan as the most beautiful month of every year,” Rama Jamal, 19, told AP.

Her family would decorate the house and sit together reading the Quran, she added.

Now, she lives alone in the war-ravaged Idlib province in northern Syria. After surviving more than a decade of war, her parents and brother were killed in the earthquake.

“Now I’m by myself, and there’s no mood of Ramadan, there’s no joy,” Ms Jamal said. “I’m missing my family all the time, every hour.”

The Ramadan fast is one of Islam’s five pillars and a requiremen­t for all able-bodied Muslims, with the exception of children, people who are sick, pregnant, breastfeed­ing and menstruati­ng women and people who are travelling.

In addition to refraining from drinking and eating from dawn until dusk, observant Muslims are also required to abstain from smoking and physical intimacy during the fast.

Swearing and angry outbursts are also discourage­d.

During the month, many Muslims spend more time reading the Quran, often aiming to read it from cover to cover.

 ?? AP ?? Lebanese women shop for Ramadan decoration­s in the southern port city of Sidon
AP Lebanese women shop for Ramadan decoration­s in the southern port city of Sidon

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