Nigeria
is the only country in the world whose Muslim faithful are celebrating
Eid-El-Fitri (the end of Ramadan festivities) today following the controversial
announcement by the Sultan of Sokoto, Abubakar Sa’ad, on Saturday night that
the new moon of Shawwal was sighted in some cities across the country, PREMIUM
TIMES can report today. This newspaper gathered, through extensive
investigations and interviews with leading Islamic clerics, that the Ramadan
fast in other parts of the world would only end today (Sunday), with the
Eid-El-Fitri celebrations holding on Monday.
The
Chairman of the Nigerian National Moonsighting Committee, Hafiz Wali, as well
as a member, Sheikh
Habeebullahi Al-Ilory, told PREMIUM TIMES that in no
other country was the sighting of the moon reported by anyone. “It will
interest you to know that Nigeria is the only country celebrating Eid-El-Fitri
today,” Dr. Wali said. “That is because it is the only country where people
claimed they sighted the moon.” Dr. Wali said his committee advised the Sultan
that it was impossible for the moon to be sighted on Saturday but that the
Sokoto monarch came under pressure from people who claimed they sighted the
moon.
“By
the estimation and calculation of our committee, the moon could not have been
sighted and we did not sight it,” the moon sighting committee chairman said.
“We gave a report that the moon was not sighted but the Sultan received a lot
of messages from people who said they sighted the moon. The Sultan could not
tell them they lied. He made his announcement which is the right thing to do.”
Mr. Wali said he and his committee would however continue the search for the
new moon on Sunday night and that the Sultan and other NSCIA officials would be
briefed on the outcome of the exercise. In his own comment, another member of
the moon-sighting committee, Sheikh Al-Ilory, the Rector of the Marcaz
Institute of Arabic and Islamic Studies, said the Sultan’s announcement misled
Muslim faithful in the country and made Nigeria the only country on earth
observing the Eid celebration on Sunday. “The moon was not sighted anywhere in
the world,” Sheikh Al-Ilory said. “As at 11:00 p.m. on Saturday, our committee
advised that the moon was not sighted but the Sultan still went ahead to
announce the end of Ramadan.
I’m
just wondering why we have to do this to Islam. Is our own moon different from
the rest of the world? “As far as we are concerned, tomorrow (Monday) is
Eid-El-Fitri.” Sultan Sa’ad, who is also the President of the Nigerian Supreme
Council for Islamic Affairs, NSCIA, had around midnight on Saturday announced
the sighting of the new moon and therefore the end of Ramadan. “The new month
of Shawwal was sighted in different places within Nigeria and therefore
tomorrow (Sunday) is the first day of Shawwal equivalent to 27 July 2014,” the
Sultan said in an announcement aired on the Nigerian Television Authority
[NTA].
The
well-regarded moonsighting website, www.moonsighting.com, also indicated that
the celebration of Eid by Nigerian Muslims on Sunday was “based on mistaken
claims of sighting” the moon. Another globally respected Saudi Arabian timing
website, http://makkahcalendar.org, which provides very accurate prayer times
for all countries around the world, said the Ramadan Eid ought to be celebrated
on July 28 in most parts of the world as crescent visibility can be extended to
the whole world. “We are very pleased to announce that North, Central and South
America, all of Africa, all of Europe, and almost all of Asia except Japan
& North Korea and few countries of Oceania will be able to celebrate Eid
Al-Fitr 2014 (1435) on Monday, 28th July 2014,” the website announced on Sunday
afternoon. “The other countries in the world, mainly in Oceania, but also Japan
and North Korea as well as some parts of Russia & China will be able to
celebrate Eid Al-Fitr on Tuesday, 29th July 2014.” The Sultan made the Nigerian
moonsighting announcement despite receiving the report of Mr. Wali’s
Moon-Sighting Committee that the moon was not sighted.
But
when contacted after the Sultan’s announcement, the Secretary-General of the
organisation, Is-haq Oloyede, a professor of Islamic Studies, said he was not
aware that the moon had been sighted. “I spoke to the Sultan about four times
tonight and he did not tell me that the moon has been sighted,” Mr. Oloyede
told PREMIUM TIMES. “In any case, any such claim is ridiculous and
unscientific. It cannot be right. “The National Moonsighting Committee has not
informed us of any credible sighting of the moon. Rather, they said the moon
wasn’t sighted. The new moon was only born at 11:45 P.M. tonight (Saturday) and
it will take several hours for it to be sighted. “Is our own sky different? Is
our own moon manufactured in Nigeria?
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