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Muslim Holiday Begins in Most of Mideast

By PATRICK QUINN
The Associated Press
Friday, October 12, 2007; 11:46 AM

CAIRO, Egypt -- Most of the Middle East on Friday marked the start of the feast marking the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, with crisis, violence, fear and isolation all casting a pall over one of the happiest dates on the Islamic calendar.

In Baghdad, Beirut and Gaza, the beginning three-day Eid al-Fitr festival was somber and muted.


Residents visit the graves of their relatives in a cemetery in Baghdad, Iraq,Friday, Oct. 12, 2007, during the celebrations for Eid al-Fitr marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed )
Residents visit the graves of their relatives in a cemetery in Baghdad, Iraq,Friday, Oct. 12, 2007, during the celebrations for Eid al-Fitr marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed ) (Khalid Mohammed - AP)
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"I can't feel the spirit on this Eid," said Um Mohammed, a 55-year-old widow and mother of four in Azamiyah, a northern Sunni neighborhood of Baghdad. "My elder son was killed last year by gunmen and majority of my relatives either killed, displaced or live in remote areas."

In the Iraqi capital, public festivities were rare as Sunni Arabs marked Eid. Bomb attacks, shootings and sectarian killings have forced many Iraqis to temper all celebrations _ not just Eid.

Most of Iraq's Shiites, along with those in Iran, were to celebrate Eid on Saturday.

In Lebanon, Sunni Muslims and Shiites who follow Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah started marking Eid on Friday. Others who follow Sheik Abdul Amir Qabalan, deputy president of the Higher Shiite Muslim Council, the highest religious authority for the country's 1.2 million Shiites, are expected to begin marking the feast Saturday.

Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Saniora's office said he will not be receiving well- wishers for the Eid due to the tense situation in the country.

For Gazans, the first Eid under Hamas control was marked by international isolation, empty shelves and bitter internal rivalries. Even Friday prayers were divided along factional lines, with separate locations for supporters of Gaza's Hamas rulers and their rivals from Fatah.

Some predominantly Sunni countries delayed the start of Eid until Saturday. The start and end of Ramadan, lasting about 30 days, is determined by the sighting of the new moon.

In the Middle East, Eid began Friday for Iraq's Sunnis, in Jordan and Libya, the Palestinian territories, Yemen, the Gulf states, Sudan, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Tunisia.

It was set to begin Saturday in Algeria, Egypt, Oman and Syria.

In Jordan, thousands of people left the capital Amman to the country's southern resort of Aqaba on the Red Sea, leaving the capital almost deserted. A soon as Jordan TV announced the end of Ramadan late Thursday, people began their celebration with fireworks until the late hours of the evening. Children around the country were wearing new clothes, bought specially for Eid.


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© 2007 The Associated Press