Hungry for Ramadan

An American Date for Ramadan

Monday September 24, 2007

Categories: Traditions

medjool_dates.jpgI had a date last night. No, it's not what you think: Muslims customarily break their fast with a date. Dates have a special significance in Muslim culture and tradition. Referenced many times in the Qur'an, date palms are said to have sheltered and sustained Mary while she was giving birth to Jesus, and dates were a staple of the diet of the Prophet Muhammad and his companions.

My date of choice is a Medjool date, large and plump, and I usually bring to potluck iftars a plate of Medjools stuffed with walnuts and sprinkled with powdered sugar. 90% of Medjool dates available in the US come from the fertile Coachella Valley of California, near where I grew up. In fact, southern California is one of the few areas outside the Middle East where dates are successfully cultivated. Dozens of varieties of dates are grown there. And in my humble opinion, they are the best dates in the world.

My father used to take me on pilgrimages to Mecca. Not the holy city in Saudi Arabia, but the town of Mecca, California, where the annual Date Festival is held. We got to sample every type of date available -- Zahidi, Deglet Noor, Empress, and others. In this part of California, dates are not only celebrated--view the many roadside date shops and billboards along Interstate 10--but their links to the Arab and Muslim world are acknowledged respectfully. The date growers we met even asked us if they were pronouncing the Arabic names properly.

So how did my beloved Medjool date find a home in America? Back in the 1920s, disease threatened the very existence of Medjool dates in their native Morocco. In a desperate attempt to save the Medjool, the ruler of Morocco sent 11 young date palms to southern California, where they found a new home and prospered.

There is a lesson in those thriving date farms of California that can be applied to the Muslim American experience. Like those dates, Muslims have also thrived in American soil--we constitute one of the highest per-capita income communities in the US, and we have become relatively well integrated into American society (at least in comparision with other Muslim-minority countries).

And rather than losing our religion in the American melting pot, our faith has blossomed as well. Native-born and educated US scholars, steeped in both traditional Islam and American creative thinking, are being re-exported to the Muslim world. Scholars from the US may be the key to resolving the post-modern identity crisis that afflicts too many Muslim societies.

Just something to chew on the next time you eat a date.

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Comments
jestrfyl
September 24, 2007 2:28 PM

I am continually impressed by the positive tone, free of political rhetoric or religious jingoism, that is in each of your posts. I hope you will find a way to assempble them into book form. Many of my church members live their lives computer-free, but I would like them to read how eloquently you write about Islam, Ramadan, and your life in America. This is perhaps one of the most thought provoking blogs I have seen in a long while.

Karen DeWitt
September 24, 2007 4:36 PM

I enjoyed your date story. I'm nominally Christian but have both Jewish and Christian friends. Some Jewish friends regularly invite me for the high holy day meals, as I'm "godmother" to one of their sons. Several years ago, I decided that if I was going to break bread with them on Yom Kippur that I ought to share the experience. Don't lose anything by thinking about one's life,omissions and commissions, and how to live it better. I lived in the Middle East in the late 60s and early 70s and remember the Id ul Fitr meals. Not every Yom Kippur fast has been easy, but this one was so pleasant and refreshing, spiritually and physically, that I decided since there are still 18 days left in Ramadan that I'd fast during the remainder. I'm looking forward to it, another way to bridge differences. Just as you pointed out in another posting, Americans, at least more recently, are embracing other cultures and making them uniquely their own. So I now have Western, Chinese, Ethiopian, Jewish new year, Hindi Holi, and Ramadan to celebrate, enjoyo and grow from. All best

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About Hungry for Ramadan

The last update to the Hungry for Ramadan blog was in October 2007. We welcome your comments about Ramadan and Islam in general in our Muslim forums.

Shahed Amanullah, a frequent Beliefnet contributor, is one of the country’s foremost Muslim journalists. He has harnessed the power of the Internet to spread a positive view of Islam. Amanullah is the editor of altmuslim.com, a Muslim news website, and founder of Halalfire Media, a network of Muslim-themed websites with more than five million annual visitors. Through his work Amanullah has tapped into a strong force of online activism. He lives in Texas with his wife and two sons, and looks forward to the spiritual rewards of Ramadan every year.

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