Karachi clerics spread the word: Getting COVID-19 shot won’t break Ramadan fast

A woman is inoculated with a Covid-19 coronavirus vaccine at a vaccination center in Karachi, Pakistan, on March 16, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 17 April 2021
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Karachi clerics spread the word: Getting COVID-19 shot won’t break Ramadan fast

  • Doctors at vaccination centers in Karachi observe a drop in the number of visitors since the beginning of the fasting month
  • Pakistan Medical Association says more awareness campaigns are needed to convince people that vaccination won't nullify their fast

KARACHI: Prayer leaders in Pakistan's southern megacity of Karachi have asked worshippers during Friday sermons to get vaccinated against the coronavirus in Ramadan as the number of those getting their jabs has dropped during the first days of the fasting month.

While sermons in the country usually revolve around topics such as worship, rituals, and the importance of charity during Ramadan, Maulana Muhammad Miskeen Naqshbandi, a prayer leader at Jamia Masjid Dargah Abdullah Shah Ghazi, stressed during his speech this Friday the importance of vaccination and that it should be done even while fasting, as the country is facing a third wave of the coronavirus disease.

“Injection of vaccine doesn’t violate the principles set by Islamic jurists for fasting. It neither goes to stomach nor mind, so there is no problem in getting any injection, be it the COVID-19 vaccine or normal injection,” Naqshbandi said.

He said he had realized the urgency of the situation after several worshipers had come to him for guidance.

"There was a misconception, which I removed in today’s sermon,” he told Arab News after Friday prayers.

"Mosque is the most effective medium to get people educated. People need vaccines to fight this pandemic," he said.

Dr. Umair Siqqiqui who delivers Friday sermons at Karachi's Majid Ali Haider Karar Clifton, last week, before the beginning of Ramadan, also after Friday prayers asked worshipers to get vaccinated. He said, however, that they can do so after Iftar, when they break the fast.

“Vaccines, including those of coronavirus should be received but there are different conditions," he told Arab News, adding that if doctors prescribe it as urgent, it would break the fast but the person who receives it could just fast again for one day after Ramadan.

“Religious scholars should provide guidelines,” he said, adding that as millions attend Friday prayers, mosques the world’s biggest media.

At Karachi's Khaliq Dina Hall, which is one of the busiest vaccination centers in the seaside metropolis, doctors say the number of visitors has dropped since the start of Ramadan.

“On normal days, we would vaccinate from 1,500 to 2,300 but the number has dropped to 1,000 daily,” Dr. Farhat Abbas, in charge of the vaccination center, told Arab News.

He expressed hope that the numbers will increase again after authorities have extended vaccination until midnight.

Pakistan Medical Association secretary general Dr. Qaisar Sajjad said that despite the fact that religious scholars have endorsed the opinion of doctors to continue with vaccination during the fast, more awareness is still needed.

“The government has done arrangement for vaccination during night but since we are going through the peak of a third wave and the cases of coronavirus infection are growing, the authorities should run a rigorous campaign with video messages of religious scholars so that the process may go fast all the time,” he said.

“This is a pandemic and people should be made aware,” Dr. Sajjad added.

Similar problems related to vaccination during the fasting month are also faced by Muslim communities abroad.

In the UK, the Muslim community has pop-up vaccination centers at mosques.

"We have been provided by National Health Service pop-up vaccination centers at mosques and community centers so that the process may not get slow," Muhammad Asimuddin, a British Pakistani and mosque committee member, told Arab News over the phone from London.

"The British Islamic Medical Association has told the community that getting vaccine jab will not break the fast."
 


Pakistan’s National Assembly speaker to attend Khaleda Zia’s funeral in Dhaka

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Pakistan’s National Assembly speaker to attend Khaleda Zia’s funeral in Dhaka

  • Ayaz Sadiq will convey Pakistan’s condolences to Zia’s family, interim government
  • Visit comes amid warming ties between Islamabad and Dhaka after years of strain

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s National Assembly Speaker Sardar Ayaz Sadiq is due to travel to Dhaka on Wednesday to attend the funeral of Bangladesh’s former prime minister Khaleda Zia, a move that highlights a recent thaw in relations between the two South Asian countries after decades of unease.

Zia, Bangladesh’s first female prime minister and a key political figure for decades, died on Tuesday at the age of 80 after a prolonged illness, her Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) said. Her death prompted messages of condolence from leaders across the region, including Pakistan’s prime minister.

“The Speaker of Pakistan’s National Assembly, Sardar Ayaz Sadiq, will depart for Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Wednesday,” Pakistan’s National Assembly said in a post on social media platform X on Tuesday. “The National Assembly Speaker will attend the funeral prayers of Bangladesh’s former prime minister, Begum Khaleda Zia.”

“The Speaker will also convey condolences to Khaleda Zia’s family on behalf of the government, parliament and the people of Pakistan,” it added. “Speaker Sardar Ayaz Sadiq will also meet senior officials of Bangladesh’s interim government.”

Sharif had earlier described Zia as a “committed friend of Pakistan,” praising her role in Bangladesh’s political life and expressing solidarity with the Bangladeshi people during what he called a difficult moment.

Zia, who served three terms as prime minister, led the BNP and remained a central figure in Bangladeshi politics despite years of ill health and imprisonment under the government of her longtime rival, Sheikh Hasina. She was released last year following Hasina’s ouster after a violent uprising.

Pakistan and Bangladesh were part of the same country until Bangladesh’s secession following a bloody civil war in 1971, an event that has long cast a shadow over bilateral ties. Relations remained largely strained for decades, shaped by historical grievances and political mistrust.

However, Islamabad enjoyed comparatively warmer ties with Dhaka during Zia’s tenure than under Hasina.

Engagement between Islamabad and Dhaka has increased since Hasina’s removal and the formation of an interim administration, with both sides signaling interest in improving political, diplomatic, economic and security ties.