close
NEW YORK: Members of the Muslim community gather at Times Square for the first Tarawih prayer of Ramadan on March 10, 2024. — AFP photos
NEW YORK: Members of the Muslim community gather at Times Square for the first Tarawih prayer of Ramadan on March 10, 2024. — AFP photos

Muslims gather to pray in NY’s Times Square

NEW YORK: Dozens of Muslim worshippers gathered in New York’s Times Square Sunday to mark the start of the holy month of Ramadan, with some displaying Palestinian flags in solidarity with people in Gaza.

They performed Tarawih, the Ramadan night prayers, against the backdrop of the bright LED advertising billboards that illuminate the Manhattan landmark. “It’s good to come here as Muslims. I saw Muslims from everywhere — I was surprised, it’s my first time here. I wanted to come and see the community,” said one of the worshippers, Salman al-Hanafy, 20, a forklift operator from Cairo who wore a pristine white thobe.

More than 100 faithful gathered for the prayer meeting despite cold, windy conditions, with a vocalist chanting Nasheeds, and children reciting from the Quran, copies of which were offered to both Muslims and curious passersby.

“A lot of people are interested in the Quran, we have almost run out of French ones. It explains the importance of fasting during Ramadan,” said Ahmad Yasar, 20, an IT student in New York as a mound of donuts were delivered to him and his team handing out the holy books.

Observant Muslims refrain from eating and drinking from dawn to dusk during Ramadan and gather with family and friends to break the fast in the evening. It is also a month of prayers during which Muslims traditionally converge in large numbers at mosques, especially at night.

Organizers projected prayers from the Quran onto a white sheet that was buffeted by the wind as giant ads for Broadway musicals and candy glowed overhead. Yasar said that communal prayer meetings were important to “raise awareness and show people what’s going around the world” — including in Gaza.

Nearby a speaker had the red, white, green and black colors of the Palestinian flag emblazoned on his hat, while a young boy in an electric wheelchair flew the banner.

New York has been the venue for dozens of protests, some pro-Palestinian and others pro-Zionist, since the Zionist war on Gaza and the attack staged by Hamas on the south of the Zionist entity last October. — AFP

Did she say it, or was it a remark as she climbed the guillotine? She did not exceed forty years of age. Her remark is what made the imaginations of writers depict that famous sentence that became the title of many events: “O, freedom, how many cr...
Kuwait’s land border posts hold a lingering mystery — one that citizens have yet to uncover. For years, Kuwaitis have discussed the state of these posts. The Al-Reqei border post is reached only after navigating a sea of potholes that threaten v...
MORE STORIES