- Playing
- Ramadan Fasting
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- Russ Jennings
In the year 610, in the lunar month of Ramadan, Muhammad was given the Koran, the core text of Islam. For fourteen hundred years, Muslims around the world commemorate this event with a month of fasting, self-examination, and prayer.
This short piece featur Shaykh Ibrahim al Ansari, of Berkeley, California, who leads a community of the Qadiri-Rifai tariqa, a Turkish Sufi order. The piece contains a teaching by one of the shaykh and a Rumi poem (read by Soo Han), over Sufi music by Suleyman Erguner. The poems were selected by Rumi’s transelator, Colman Barks.
This piece is short, and can be inserted into magazine format programs. It offers a way for Americans to learn a bit about the power and spirituality of Islam, in a time when it is only caricatured in the corporate media.
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Piece Description
In the year 610, in the lunar month of Ramadan, Muhammad was given the Koran, the core text of Islam. For fourteen hundred years, Muslims around the world commemorate this event with a month of fasting, self-examination, and prayer. This short piece featur Shaykh Ibrahim al Ansari, of Berkeley, California, who leads a community of the Qadiri-Rifai tariqa, a Turkish Sufi order. The piece contains a teaching by one of the shaykh and a Rumi poem (read by Soo Han), over Sufi music by Suleyman Erguner. The poems were selected by Rumi’s transelator, Colman Barks. This piece is short, and can be inserted into magazine format programs. It offers a way for Americans to learn a bit about the power and spirituality of Islam, in a time when it is only caricatured in the corporate media.
4 Comments
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Review of Ramadan FastingInformative and helpful in understanding the Ramadan fast. I applaud you for trying to educate the public on muslim religous practices - something that we need more of in America. |
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Review of Ramadan FastingRuss Jennings's religious vignettes are admirable and listenable attempts to explain that which is virtually unknown to the mass public: the actual beliefs and practices, the very foundations of a religion with over a billion followers. The speakers are well chosen and the audio is artfully mixed. So why only three stars? It seems that anytime the topic of religion or spirituality is broached, we producers feel required to break out the contemplative music and become respectful, careful and, unfortunately, somewhat plodding. The public would be better served by a less esoteric explanation of Ramadan by an Imam, however articulate. Why not spend a day with a Muslim family out buying dates, fasting, cooking and going to work without eating or drinking until nightfall? Frankly, I'd rather hear a real estate agent tell my why Ramadan matters. And what it's like to celebrate Ramadan in a country where Muslims are a small minority, surrounded by an increasingly hostile majority. |
Broadcast History
New Program
Musical Works
Music by Suleyman Erguner





Martin Macias, Jr.
Posted on October 25, 2006 at 06:19 PM | Permalink
Review of Ramadan Fasting
In a post-9/11 era where muslim and arabs are looked at with scorn and distrust this piece offer a fresh breath of words that enhance the spiritualality of Islam. The act of fasting, as it is explained through classical arab poetry, is a self-imposed ritual or action that reminds the body and soul of a human that to be closer with god one must rid himself or herself of all personal attachments.