As the blessed month of Ramadan concludes, Muslims across the world gather to celebrate Eid-ul-Fitr – a day of joy, gratitude, and spiritual renewal. Yet this celebration is not merely the end of fasting but the beginning of a transformed life. The Quran and Hadith illuminate Eid as a moment to express thanks for divine guidance and to commit to carrying Ramadan’s spirit forward. The Quran links Eid directly to the completion of fasting with gratitude: “He wants you to complete the prescribed period and to glorify Him for having guided you, and perhaps you will be grateful” (2:185). This verse establishes the purpose of Eid—not indulgence after restraint, but glorification of Allah for the gift of Ramadan. The takbir recited on the way to prayer echoes this theme: Allahu Akbar, Allahu Akbar, la ilaha illallah – a declaration that all greatness belongs to God, who enabled us to fast and stand in prayer. The Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) taught that Eid is a day of modest celebration and profound connection. Yet the greatest lesson of Eid lies in continuity. The Prophet (PBUH) warned against treating Ramadan as a seasonal obligation: “The worst people are those who only remember Allah during Ramadan” (Al-Tabarani). The Qur’anic fast was prescribed to cultivate taqwa – God-consciousness – that endures beyond the month. Eid is not permission to abandon the habits cultivated in Ramadan but a celebration of having built a foundation that will sustain the rest of the year. This demands celebration with austerity, not as deprivation but as intentionality. The money saved on lavish feasts can reach the poor through Zakat-ul-Fitr, the charity that purifies the fast and ensures that all believers share in Eid’s joy. The Prophet (PBUH) made this charity obligatory, emphasizing that no Eid is complete without ensuring that the needy are fed. The spirit of Ramadan -increased Qur’an recitation, nightly prayers, charity, and discipline – must not vanish with the crescent moon. The believer who returns to heedlessness after Ramadan is like one who builds a house only to abandon it. Eid is the door through which the Ramadan-trained soul steps into the rest of the year, carrying its habits as provisions for the journey ahead. Let this Eid be a celebration of gratitude, not excess; of community, not consumption; of continuity, not conclusion. For the true Eid is not the day we break our fast, but the day we prove that Ramadan changed us forever.
Ramadan ends. The month of mercy, forgiveness, and emancipation from hellfire has completed its annual visit, leaving behind a soul either elevated by its blessings or diminished by its neglect. This moment of farewell...
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