Muslim fast of Ramadan begins today
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Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- With the first ray of dawn this morning came the start of
the Muslim fast of Ramadan.
Ramadan is the month on the Islamic lunar calendar during whichMuslims
abstain from food, drink and other sensual pleasures from the break of
dawn to sunset.
Through the fast, Muslims hope to learn discipline, self-restraint and
generosity.
For the Pierstorff family of Costa Mesa, it is an exciting and spiritual
time.
“It’s incredible,” said 25-year-old Ahmed Pierstorff. “You go through an
entire year doing things right and more often than not doing wrong -- and
[Ramadan] gives you a chance to right those wrongs through willful
abstinence.”
Through that abstinence, he said, senses are heightened.
“You become so much more aware of how even the most benign things can
lead to impurity. You become so aware of the importance of being able to
have a meal,” Pierstorff said.
Besides the fasting -- one of the “five pillars” of Islam, along with
declaration of faith, daily prayers, charity and pilgrimage to Mecca --
Muslims abstain from intimate relations as well as curtail their speech
during this time.
“A lot of what gets people in trouble is their tongue, through idle
conversation, backbiting and gossip,” he said. “So we make sure the
things we say are good and wholesome.”
The month of Ramadan begins with the sight of the new moon in the ninth
month of the lunar calendar. The next dawn begins the fasting.
“At one time, a thread was placed in the east. As soon as you can see it
-- it’s dawn,” said Ahmed’s father, Don. “Once you can no longer see it,
it’s sunset.”
During Ramadan, the fast is traditionally broken with dates, water and
bread, Don Pierstorff said. In his family, a feast often follows the
traditional fare.
At the end of Ramadan begins Eid ul-Fitr, or the festival of
fast-breaking. It is a time of relaxation and celebration, in which
presents are exchanged.
As the father of seven children ranging in ages from 11 to 42, Don
Pierstorff said it is impossible for the whole family to be together. But
during this month, they try to pray together, he said.
Don Pierstorff was not always Muslim. He became interested in Islam in
1970 when he was working on his doctorate at USC. He was teaching
rhetoric and linguistics at the American Language Institute, where the
students in the English as a Second Language program were primarily from
Arabic countries.
Don Pierstorff said he felt he could better teach the students if he
could reach them on a cultural level.
“As I started reading, I realized that this was for me,” he said.
After that, his children were raised in the Islamic traditions. Ahmed
Pierstorff, however, said he has consciously been a Muslim for about four
years.
“So my first [Ramadan] seemed like a punishment. Now it is such an
incredible cleansing,” he said. “You become acutely aware of how fallible
we are -- how much we take for granted.”
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