The only one I remember is on one of the road wars/traffic cops program where a copper was fasting and collapsed trying to chase a perp. Should obv be some special arrangements made in cases like these (would you want a fasting bus driver 8 hours into it and getting shakey at the wheel?). But 99.99% of people manage fine so happy Ramadhan or whatever and enjoy.![]()
Good idea to have a light meal, such as porridge or other cereals and toast and hydrate but not tea or coffee. This was successful for me.
Then I made the mistake of looking at this year's Ramadan calendar. Boy it's going to be hard. Fast start at 2.45am and end at near 9.20pm
The rules do seems very unsuitable for locations this far north.
If you were a Muslim living in the north/south poll, you'd be dead.
You do feel the rules should be "reinterpreted" to be sunrise/sunset times in Mecca or something similar.
they already are - people that far North can follow Mecca times... remember the rules were made up before people realised the implications of living in the Northern hemisphere - when that problem arose then a solution needed to be found/interpreted as of course it wasn't really humans with limited knowledge of the world who made all this stuff up but 'God' and he's infallible.
"The Egyptian scholars say that if the days are long - more than 18 hours - then you can follow the Mecca time or Medina time, or the nearest Muslim country time," says Dr Mannan.
"The other (point of view) from the Saudi scholars says whatever the day is - long or short - you have to follow the local time."
Follow the sunrise & sunset of the physical location your are in.
Worked with plenty of muslims over the years and i do not ever remember one of them taking time off to fast... one or two take holidays then but nothing odd about that.
That must suck for Muslims in northern Norway or Iceland, etc. Whilst Australian muslims and muslims in Argentina will be barely inconvenienced. I'd never considered that before.
EDIT: And Ramadahn Mubarak (sp?) to you.