As the crescent moon ushers in the holy month of Ramadan, over 1.8 billion Muslims worldwide embark on a spiritual journey unlike any other in the Islamic calendar. This is not merely a month of abstinence from dawn to dusk; it is a divinely ordained season of profound transformation—a comprehensive training program for the human soul, designed to elevate consciousness, purify character, and renew one’s covenant with the Creator. The Qur’an establishes Ramadan’s unparalleled significance with a single, luminous verse: “The month of Ramadan is that in which was revealed the Qur’an, as guidance for mankind and clear proofs of guidance and criterion” (2:185). This is the month when the divine words first descended, making it the fountainhead of all spiritual illumination. To fast is to honour this revelation, to empty the vessel of the self so that it may be refilled with divine light. The Prophet Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Him) declared in a sacred hadith that Allah Himself proclaims: “Every deed of the son of Adam is for himself except fasting; it is for Me, and I shall reward it” (Sahih al-Bukhari). This exclusive divine attribution elevates fasting beyond mere ritual. It becomes a private conversation between the servant and the Lord—an act of worship untainted by show, witnessed only by the One who sees all. The month’s blessings are layered with mercy. Yet Ramadan’s significance extends beyond personal piety. It is the great equaliser, where hunger becomes a shared human experience, dissolving barriers between rich and poor. Through this embodied empathy, the believer internalises the Qur’anic command to care for the needy. The month cultivates taqwa—God-consciousness—not as a theological concept but as a lived reality, where every hunger pang reminds one of divine presence and every act of charity multiplies like a seed in fertile soil. Ramadan is the Muslim’s annual spiritual intensive care unit—a month to detoxify the soul from heedlessness, to recalibrate priorities, to strengthen willpower, and to emerge purified, closer to the Qur’an, and more deeply connected to humanity. It is not an end but a beginning: a launch pad for a year of transformed living. May this Ramadan be for us all a month of mercy, forgiveness, and emancipation from the fire.
Chief Minister Omar Abdullah's detailed review of arrangements for Ramadan across Jammu and Kashmir shows what good governance looks like. By asking all departments to ensure smooth services, strict market checks, and...
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