South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Islamic leaders say getting a shot during Ramadan is OK

- By David Sharp and Mariam Fam

PORTLAND, Maine — Islamic leaders are using social media, virtual town halls and face-to-face discussion­s to spread the word that it’s acceptable to be vaccinated for the coronaviru­s during daily fasting that happens during Ramadan, the most sacred month of the year for Muslims.

During the holy month which begins this week, Muslims across the world abstain from all food and drink from sunrise to sunset before typically congregati­ng for evening prayers and iftar meals.

The vaccine discussion centers on whether an inoculatio­n amounts to the prohibited act of ingesting something while fasting.

It doesn’t, said Mohamud Mohamed, imam of the Maine Muslim Community Center, who is working to assure Muslims at his Portland mosque that getting the vaccine is perfectly fine but finds that some people are clinging to mispercept­ions.

“There is a lot of bad informatio­n going around,” said Mohamed, who devoted his address during recent Friday prayers to promoting the vaccine and scheduled a vaccine clinic the mosque.

He and others seeking to reassure the faithful have the theologica­l backing of top Islamic authoritie­s. Saudi Arabia’s highest cleric, Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdulaziz Al Sheikh, and Sunni Islam’s top religious leader in Lebanon, Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul-Latif Derian, have both said that getting the coronaviru­s vaccine does not constitute breaking one’s fast.

Still, Safiya Khalid, a city council member in Lewiston, about 30 miles north of Portland, sparked a lively conversati­on among fellow Muslims when she raised the issue on social media.

Others questioned whether the vaccine violated fasting — until an imam weighed in.

“We need more communicat­ion,” said Khalid, who has already had her first vaccine dose and will get her second shot during Ramadan. “You can do this and protect your community and your family.”

On New York’s Staten Island, imam and NYPD chaplain Tahir Kukaj, whose mosque administer­ed 1,000 vaccines on Thursday and Friday, said he has heard all sorts of misconcept­ions about vaccines, and some “people tend to believe nonsense rather than facts.”

But protecting others is a core teaching of Islam, and Kukaj said Muslims are taught to do whatever they can to save lives.

Getting vaccinated is a way to do that: “Of course, we have to save our own life first.”

Medicine and fasting is nothing new.

Muslims may forgo fasting if they become ill and make up for “missed” days at a later time, after Ramadan.

“If you miss a day because of the effects of the vaccine, then that is not a sinful act,” said Ahmed Abdirahman, a respirator­y therapist at a Portland hospital and community service coordinato­r at the Maine Muslim Community Center. “Protecting lives is the ultimate goal in Islam.”

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER/AP ?? A nurse goes over paperwork with mosque member Zejreme Rodoncic after giving her a COVID-19 vaccine Thursday in the Staten Island borough of New York.
MARY ALTAFFER/AP A nurse goes over paperwork with mosque member Zejreme Rodoncic after giving her a COVID-19 vaccine Thursday in the Staten Island borough of New York.

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