30 March marks the end of the most blessed time of the year, as Muslims call the month of Ramadan. This year it started on 1 March, and the most important obligation Muslims have during this 30-day period is to refrain from food, drink and temptation from dawn until sundown which helps them become better people, more compassionate and spiritually elevated.
It is believed  that Ramadan is the leader of all other  months of the year. On its first day an iftar dinner is given by the president  of Bulgaria – the start to this tradition was given by President Petar Stoyanov  (1997-2002) and it has come to be established over time as a unique endeavour,  focusing on respect for others and good neighbourhood. 
“This year, once again,  President Rumen Radev invited the Muslim community, but also all leaders of the  religious communities on the first night of iftar, and we, from Radio Bulgaria’s  Turkish language service, were very pleased to have been among the guests. And  as the president said in his speech – in these difficult times this is an  example of tolerance. That was how the month of Ramadan began,” says Sevkiye Cakır  from Radio Bulgaria’s Turkish language service.
The role of the  iftar dinner is to bring people together at one table, whatever their religion  or beliefs, with charity coming to the fore. Dinners like this, to which near  and dear ones are invited, and people from the community who are in need, are given  throughout the month of Ramadan by Muslims who are able to, and who are  grateful for what they have earned through the year – starting with the Grand  Mufti’s Office, and ending with wealthier families in towns and villages. “The  role of the iftar dinner is to bring together the people in need, to unite the  community. 
For example, a few days ago the biggest iftar dinner was held in  Momchilgrad – bringing together 3,000 people outdoors. No invitations are sent  out, an announcement is made there will be such a dinner and everyone is  welcome to attend,” says Sevkiye Cakır.

The feast of Ramadan Bayram is preceded by the day  Arife on which the friends and relatives we have lost are mentioned. “It resembles the Christian All Souls’ Day. Families prepare  the dough to make mekitsas which they hand out to neighbours, acquaintances,  and passersby. Before Bayram the cemeteries are tended to – both Muslim and Christian.”
Ramadan Bayram is  a time when the young visit with their parents and older relatives to kiss  their hand and pay their respects. The  eagerly awaited feast day is welcomed in many Muslim homes in Bulgaria with a  certain sense of sadness: 
“The situation in  Bulgaria is such that the young people are gone, especially in the villages –  they are abroad, earning money, and they can only come back in summer, for a  vacation, and one more year the table is left empty. The elderly parents, of  course, sit and wait for someone to come knocking at their door… There is joy  but there is sadness too, and that is something that is reflected in Radio  Bulgaria’s programmes in Turkish. There is no person, or letter, or telephone  call without the words “My children are in England, Germany, France, I love  them, once again I am sending them my blessing and my love, but they are not  here”. That is the saddest thing, and I share in the sorrow of all Bulgarian citizens  because that is the destiny of our country – that the young are away. That is  how things are in the villages – so many people waiting for someone to come to  kiss their hand - because the most important thing on Bayram is that the young  kiss the hand of their elderly parents, ask for their forgiveness and stand by  them.”

Life, they say, is  a string of Ramadans – for some it will be the first, for others the last, that  is the circle of life. Our time on this Earth is invaluable, so let us use it  to do good, to show compassion for the problems of others, of society, as  ordained by this day.
Happy Ramadan to all Muslims in Bulgaria and around the world! May there be health in every home, may the joys and good deeds multiply!
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Translated and posted by Milena Daynova
  Photos courtesy of  Sevkiye Cakır, BGNES, BTA, BNR, Momchilgrad municipality, archive 
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