ISLAMABAD: Eid Al-Fitr, the three-day Muslim festival that marks the end of holy fasting month of Ramadan, brings with it many joys, including the pleasure to meet and greet one’s loved ones and spend time in the comfort of home, enjoying traditional meals and all the festivity. But not everyone around the world gets to have these delights and some spend it away from home too.
In Pakistan, many Arab students and diplomats celebrated Eid by performing folk dances, singing songs and serving traditional cuisines, in an attempt to feel at home.
“Eid is always a busy day as we have a diverse program which started with Eid prayer followed by congratulating the president and the government of Pakistan, visiting and hosting Palestinian families and children,” Ahmed Jawad A.A. Rabei, the Palestinian ambassador to Islamabad, told Arab News.
He said these visits included the tradition of Eidiya, the distribution of gifts among women and children as an expression of celebration and felicitation.
“Traditional Palestinian dishes like Makluba and Msakhan, and sweets, such as Mamoul and Qatayef, are served with aromatic black coffee to visiting families and students, who keep coming to felicitate us on Eid,” Rabei said.
“In the second half, we visit diplomats of other Muslim countries and their families to wish them Eid.”
In Lahore, Ibrahim Hassan, a Palestinian student of civil engineering, said the Dabke dance is an essential part of their Eid celebrations.
“We are more than 25 Palestinian students at different universities in Lahore,” he told Arab News. “As we are far away from our homes, so this is the only option for us to celebrate Eid together like a family.”
Hassan and his friends gathered and offered the Eid prayers at Lahore’s Race Course park.
“After greeting each other and drinking Arabic coffee, we performed Dabke (a traditional Palestinian dance),” he added. “We prepare Palestinian dishes and sweets at my residence to feast together.”
Hassan said everyone visits family and friends on Eid, but the absence of an airport and the current situation in Palestine were hurdles in their way back home.
Abdullah Alqudah, a Jordanian student, and his friends dressed up and came together to go out and share their joy with locals in Islamabad.
“We distribute money among young kids as their Eid gift as we used to do back home in Jordan,” Alqudah added.
Mazen Ahmed Mohammed Al-Salfa is a Yemeni student studying mechanical engineering at Lahore’s University of Engineering and Technology (UET), who has not been able to visit Sana’a for the last three years due to the security situation.
He said he and all other Yemeni students group together and celebrate Eid with traditional fervor. “We wear traditional clothes and go out together for lunch,” he told Arab News.
Al-Salfa said they distributed sweets among students from other countries who were staying at the hostel on Eid.