Italian Muslims spend second Ramadan amid pandemic

Muslims, wearing face masks to prevent the spread of coronavirus, attend prayers for Eid Al-Fitr, the feast of breaking the fast, marking the end of Ramadan, Piazza Vittorio, Rome, May 2020. (AP Photo)
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Updated 13 April 2021
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Italian Muslims spend second Ramadan amid pandemic

  • Worshippers, mosques urged to respect measures to limit spread of COVID-19
  • Unlike last year, mosques in Italy will be open for prayers

ROME: Some 2.5 million Muslims in Italy will spend their second Ramadan under restrictions in place to limit the spread of COVID-19.

The Union of Islamic Communities in Italy (Ucooi) has instructed mosques and prayer centers in the country to ensure that all coronavirus-related rules, including the national curfew, are fully respected. In order to respect the 10 p.m. curfew, nighttime prayers will end by 9:30 p.m.

“We appeal to avoid crowds at the entrance and exit of places of worship, provide the faithful with masks and disinfectant gel, and not to bring children. We also ask everyone to bring their own prayer mat,” said Ucooi President Yassine Lafram.

“We will miss the social dimension of Ramadan very much as there will be no visits to families, and sermons and lessons will take place only online. We have adapted to the current situation.”

However, some Muslims say this year’s Ramadan will be better celebrated than in 2020, when all places of worship were closed for the national lockdown.

“At least it will be possible to go to the mosque for prayers this year, of course with all the possible precautions in order not to take any risks. That’s quite a big step ahead compared with last year, when we couldn’t leave our homes,” said Sana El-Gosairi.

“We’ll be very careful. We can’t run any risk now that we can see the light at the end of the tunnel with the vaccines.”

She will spend Ramadan without her parents, who are stuck in Morocco due to a travel ban that the country has extended until May 21.

Hamid Zariate, 38, a doctor and imam in the Italian city of Biella, told Arab News that he is advising Muslims to avoid crowds.

“The message of Islam will still be able to travel among us through the internet. It’s a formidable opportunity that has also allowed us to reach many young people,” he said.

The Islamic Center in Brescia wrote on Facebook: “This Ramadan will be restricted, but we can acknowledge that we’ll be living it in better conditions than last year. We won’t have complete normality, but we’ll live it with an even more conscious spirituality.” The center announced that food parcels will be donated to the needy.

Many Catholic bishops have sent messages to Muslim communities to mark the start of the holy month.

Marco Prastaro, a bishop in Asti, expressed to Muslims his “sincere friendship and spiritual closeness, and the wish that through the sincere practice of fasting, prayer and almsgiving, every believer may receive abundant blessings from the Highest, especially in the hard time of the pandemic. Ramadan Karim! A generous Ramadan to all of you!”


Faced with Trump, Greenlanders try to reassure their children

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Faced with Trump, Greenlanders try to reassure their children

NUUK: In a coffee shop in Greenland’s capital Nuuk, Lykke Lynge looked fondly at her four kids as they sipped their hot chocolate, seemingly oblivious to the world’s convulsions.
Since Donald Trump returned to the White House last year with a renewed ambition to seize Greenland, international politics has intruded into the Arctic island’s households.
Dictated by the more or less threatening pronouncements of the US president, it has been an unsettling experience for some people here — but everyone is trying to reassure their children.
Lynge, a 42-year-old lawyer, relied on her Christian faith.
“There’s a lot of turmoil in the world,” she said. “But even if we love our country, we have even higher values that allow us to sleep soundly and not be afraid,” she said.
As early as January 27, 2025, one week after Donald Trump’s inauguration, the Greenlandic authorities published a guide entitled “How to talk to children in times of uncertainty?“
“When somebody says they will come to take our country or they will bomb us or something, then of course children will get very scared because they cannot navigate for themselves in all this news,” said Tina Dam, chief program officer for Unicef in the Danish territory.

- Unanswerable questions -

This guide — to which the UN agency for children contributed — recommends parents remain calm and open, listen to their children and be sensitive to their feelings, and limit their own news consumption.
As in many parts of the world, social media, particularly TikTok, has become the primary source of information for young people.
Today, children have access to a lot of information not meant for them, said Dam — “and definitely not appropriate for their age,” she added.
“So that’s why we need to be aware of that as adults and be protective about our children and be able to talk with our children about the things they hear — because the rhetoric is quite aggressive.”
But reassuring children is difficult when you do not have the answers to many of the questions yourself.
Arnakkuluk Jo Kleist, a 41-year-old consultant, said she talked a lot with her 13-year-old daughter, Manumina.
The teenager is also immersed in TikTok videos but “doesn’t seem very nervous, luckily, as much as maybe we are,” she added.
“Sometimes there are questions she’s asking — about what if this happens — that I don’t have any answers to” — because no one actually has the answer to such questions, she said.

- ‘Dear Donald Trump’ -

The Arctic territory’s Inuit culture also helped, said Kleist.
“We have a history and we have conditions in our country where sometimes things happen and we are used to being in situations that are out of our control,” said Kleist.
“We try to adapt to it and say, well, what can I do in this situation?“
Some Greenlandic children and teenagers are also using social media to get their message out to the world.
Seven-year-old Marley and his 14-year-old sister Mila were behind a viral video viewed more than two million times on Instagram — the equivalent of 35 times the population of Greenland.
Serious in subject but lighthearted in tone, the boy addresses the American president.
“Dear Donald Trump, I have a message for you: you are making Greenlandic kids scared.”
Accompanied by hard stares, some serious finger-wagging and mostly straight faces, he and his sister go on to tell Trump: “Greenland is not for sale.”
“It’s a way to cope,” his mother, Paninnguaq Heilmann-Sigurdsen, told AFP of the video. “It’s kid-friendly, but also serious.
“I think it’s a balance between this is very serious, but also, this is with kids.”