

14 October 2003
A Statement of Voices in the Wilderness, Pax Christi USA Teachers of Peace, Muslim Peace Fellowship and Fellowship of Reconciliation
Ramadan this year runs from approximately October 26, 2003 to November 23, 2003.
We invite and welcome individuals and groups from our networks to observe all or part of the month of Ramadan in solidarity with our Muslim sisters and brothers.
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In the late fall of 2002, as a US-led invasion of Iraq seemed imminent and as Iraqis endured a 13th year of brutally punitive economic sanctions, Iraq Peace Team members witnessed Iraqi Muslim friends draw strength from observing the month of Ramadan. We saw that Muslims who observe Ramadan strengthen their community’s resolve to practice forgiveness, to live simply, to share resources better, and to understand better the plight of those who have no choice over when they will eat or how much food they will have. We also noted the joy inherent in gathering with family, friends and neighbors to break fast and to share time with one another. Ramadan this year runs from approximately October 26, 2003 to November 23, 2003.
At our request, Umm Haider, who is presently living in Chicago with members of Voices in the Wilderness, told us of her own experience of Ramadan. Umm Haider and her son, Mostafa are in the US for medical care. On January 25, 1999, a US bomb hit her street, killing her eldest son. Her surviving son, Mostafa, has shrapnel embedded in his backside and a mutilated hand. Many Voices in the Wilderness delegation members have received hospitality at her home in Basra, Iraq:
“Ramadan isn’t about how much you eat or drink, it’s an examination of the faith inside of your soul. God said that ‘your reward depends upon your effort,’ and that ‘all the other months of the year are for the people, but this one month is for me.’ Ramadan is the best month to clean your heart and soul. When you feel hungry you can remember the suffering of the poor, who are usually hungry, and by remembering you can help them always. Ramadan isn’t just to forbid you from eating and drinking, it’s to forbid you from doing any bad thing. During Ramadan, Islamic activities increase, like praying, reading from the Quran, and helping others. These activities strengthen Islamic relationships because you must join with other Muslims. There are a lot of traditional Ramadan habits. Families exchange food with one another for the sunset meal (Iftar); this happened even during the sanctions in Iraq. God rewards those people who feed those who don’t have food. We feel that Ramadan is like a religious festival; we buy many kinds of food to serve during this month. We spend the time after Iftar praying and reading from the Quran until midnight. Then we pray and read from the Quran after the predawn meal (Sahur) until sunrise. We never feel tired because we are doing the right thing.”
During the upcoming season of Ramadan, we want to show a gesture of respect and appreciation for Muslim brothers and sisters and to learn from them. We welcome an opportunity to be in solidarity with Muslims who rely on the month of Ramadan to help inculcate values of simplicity, service, sharing, compassion and mercy. We recognize the need for these virtues in our own lives. We invite you to join us in this effort of solidarity with our Muslim brothers and sisters, as a shared prayer and action for peace that depends on conversion from ways of injustice and reliance on war. Attached to this statement is a list of suggested ways to share in this effort.
Pax Christi Teachers of Peace,
Daniel Berrigan, SJ, New York
Roy Bourgeois, MM, Columbus, GA
Joan Chittister, OSB, Erie, PA
Peter Dougherty, Lansing, MI
Shelley and Jim Douglass, Birmingham, AL
Bishop Thomas Gumbleton, Detroit, MI
Mary Evelyn Jegen, SND, Cincinnati, OH
Kathy Kelly, Chicago, IL
Liz McAlister, Baltimore, MD
Kathy and Jim McGinnis, St. Louis, MO
Dianna Ortiz, OSU, Washington, DC
Helen Prejean, CJS, New Orleans, LA
Bill Quigley, New Orleans, LA
Louis Vitale, OFM, San Francisco, CA
Jonah House, Baltimore, MD
Rabbi Douglas Krantz, Armonk, NY
Fellowship of Reconciliation, USA
Muslim Peace Fellowship, USA
Voices in the Wilderness
PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS May we suggest:

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