Ramadan Fast Highlights Shared Religious Practices

The dinner featured live Sufi music. (Photo by Jim Mancari)
The dinner featured live Sufi music. (Photo by Jim Mancari)


Date posted: August 2, 2013

Jim Mancari

As part of the month-long celebration of Ramadan, the Turkish Cultural Center (TCC) of Queens hosted its annual interfaith Ramadan Iftar Dinner July 24 at the Woodhaven Manor.

Its purpose was to break bread after a long day of fasting. During Ramadan, which lasted this year from July 8 through Aug. 7, Muslims refrain from eating, drinking and sensual pleasures from sunrise to sunset as a form of spiritual cleansing.

Turkish Cultural Center (TCC) Queens is based in Sunnyside and is a non-profit organization dedicated to promote harmony in a diverse cultural setting in the U.S. The nation of Turkey is at a crossroads of the world between the continents of Europe, Asia and Africa and is similar to New York in that both house many different cultures

The theme of the evening was “Fasting in All Religions,” so TCC Queens hosted speakers from all religions to discuss their fasting methods.

“We invited the different friends from the different religions, and we tried to find out that we have similarities instead of differences,” said Oguzhan Turan, vice president of TCC Queens. “We maybe have thousands of differences, but on the other side, we have millions of similarities.”

Speakers included Rabbi Simkha Weintraub (Judaism), the rabbinic director of the Jewish Board of Family and Children’s Services; Rev. Joshua Hollman (Christianity), pastor of the Lutheran Christ Church in Woodside; Dr. Uma Mysorekar (Hinduism), president of the Hindu Temple Society of North America; Rev. Dr. T. Kenjitsu Nakagaki (Buddhism), president of the Buddhist Council of New York; and Ibrahim Sayar (Islam), director of the Center for Interfaith Affairs at the Peace Islands Institute.

Sayar said that fasting was willed by God, and that is reason enough to take the practice seriously. He said fasting allows Muslims to realize the value of all gifts from God, including the sun rising and setting each day.

“When they (Muslims) break fast, they try to invite other people, not just among themselves but people of other cultures,” said Monserrat Ocampo-Washburn, adjunct assistant professor in the department of theology and religious studies at St. John’s University, Jamaica. “They really show that they are in solidarity. There is a commonality of the fasting. They may think of it differently, but it seems that all the Abrahamic faiths all do have fasting from the very beginning.”

Ramadan occurs in the ninth month of the Islamic lunar calendar, meaning that the month-long fast falls 11 days earlier than the successive year. Muslims believe that during this month, God revealed the first verses of the Quran to the prophet Muhammed. Fasting is one of Islam’s foremost pillars in which Muslims learn discipline and self-restraint.

In addition to sharing the meal with representatives of different religions, TCC Queens opened its doors to its neighbors of the surrounding Queens communities, thus fulfilling the Muslim obligation of helping others during the month of Ramadan by sharing the wealth God has bestowed upon them.

“I admire their (Muslims’) devotion very much,” said Father Jonas Achacoso, a visiting summer priest at Queens of Angels parish, Sunnyside. “I tend to make a reflection of how I and we Catholics in general are being faithful and so I learned a lot from the talks before the dinner.”

Throughout history, many of the disputes have been based on religious ideologies. By bringing all the faiths together at the Iftar dinner, members of different religions could understand that similarities, like fasting, do exist.

“People use the word ‘tolerance,’ but I hate the word ‘tolerance,’” said Sister Annelle Fitzpatrick, S.J., Ph.D., a cultural diversity professor at St. John’s. “I think it implies ‘you stay on your side of the fence’ and ‘I’ll stay on my side of the fence.’

“I think Jesus challenges us to go beyond tolerance. The more we can do to realize what we have in common, the better. Love one another, not club one another.”

Through these interfaith events, TCC Queens promotes its vision of interfaith solidarity, regardless of a particular group’s race, culture, language or religion.

Source: The Tablet , July 31, 2013


Related News

Mosque, cemevi to be built in same complex

İLYAS KOÇ, ANKARA In an effort to strengthen the bonds between the Alevi and Sunni communities in Turkey, a mosque and a cemevi — an Alevi house of worship — will be built in the same complex in Ankara, the head of the Alevi CEM Foundation, Professor İzzettin Doğan, said on Saturday. The construction will […]

Turkey’s first intercultural dialogue center built on trust, offers quality services

The official data from the regional police department shows that there are 30,000 settled foreign citizens in Antalya and the surrounding cities. According to Kundak, this number could reach 100,000 as high when taking unofficial numbers into account.

Fethullah Gulen’s Statement on Mass Shooting at Pittsburgh Synagogue

I am shocked and deeply saddened by the horrific attack against the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh. It is heartbreaking to see such a tragedy happen at a place of worship. I strongly condemn this hate-driven attack on the worshippers.

Monday Talk with Michael Rubin on Trump, Iran and Turkey

There is a rule-of-law in the United States and a process which the president simply does not have the power to short-circuit. If Gulen is turned over, however, I suspect relations will get worse because the extradition will convince Erdogan that blackmail and bluster work.

Religions Come Together To Celebrate Unity Amid Tragedy

“Today is the highest Islamic holiday,” said Ismail Akbulut for the Multicultural Mosaic Foundation. “We are commemorating the story of Prophet Abraham when he was going to sacrifice his oldest son. Today we are getting together as cousins and celebrating this festival,” Akbulut added. “We have a future in this country together.”

Virginians Deliver 114,000 Pounds of Winter Warmth to Refugees in Turkey

Local governments working with volunteers from religious groups and private business in Virginia delivered more than 72 tons of coats and blankets this winter to Syrian refugees in Turkey. The Northern Virginia Regional Commission, made up of 14 local governments in the Washington, DC suburbs, has been coordinating the coat and blanket drive for each of the last three winters.

Latest News

Fethullah Gulen – man of education, peace and dialogue – passes away

Fethullah Gülen’s Condolence Message for South African Human Rights Defender Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Hizmet Movement Declares Core Values with Unified Voice

Ankara systematically tortures supporters of Gülen movement, Kurds, Turkey Tribunal rapporteurs say

Erdogan possessed by Pharaoh, Herod, Hitler spirits?

Devious Use of International Organizations to Persecute Dissidents Abroad: The Erdogan Case

A “Controlled Coup”: Erdogan’s Contribution to the Autocrats’ Playbook

Why is Turkey’s Erdogan persecuting the Gulen movement?

Purge-victim man sent back to prison over Gulen links despite stage 4 cancer diagnosis

In Case You Missed It

Pro-gov’t daily sets up hotline for informing on Gülen followers in EU

Interview with Kimse Yok Mu Foundation’s President Ismail Cingoz

German intelligence did not warn against Hizmet Movement

Nigeria’s House of Representatives wants Turkey to know that Nigerian lives matter

The Hizmet Movement: Reflections from Sri Lanka

Can Washington Ever Welcome a Nonviolent Muslim?

Flautre: Investigation into Taraf daily, journalist over MGK docs ‘scandalous’

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News