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Day Prior to Requested Day (day begins and ends at Sunset)
yaum al-jum`a Sha`ban 29, 1664(8/29/1664) on the Islamic calendar
Friday September 2, 2236(9/2/2236) on the Gregorian calendar
rdDate=816562
Requested Day (day begins and ends at Sunset)
Ramadan begins on this day
yaum as-sabt Ramadan 1, 1664(9/1/1664) on the Islamic calendar
Saturday September 3, 2236(9/3/2236) on the Gregorian calendar
sunrise: 1:16 am, sunset: 2:42 pm, rdDate=816563
Day After Requested Day (day begins and ends at Sunset)
Ramadan continues on this day
yaum al-ahad Ramadan 2, 1664(9/2/1664) on the Islamic calendar
Sunday September 4, 2236(9/4/2236) on the Gregorian calendar
sunrise: 1:18 am, sunset: 2:40 pm, rdDate=816564
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Coming Events:
September 2236
Ramadan 1664
delete iconadd icon76854 days until Ramadan
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Friday September 2, 2236 (9/2/2236) at Sunset Sunset icon ( 2:44 pm)
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yaum as-sabt Ramadan 1, 1664 (9/1/1664)
Method: Ramadan 1st on Islamic calendar
Length: 1 month
Period: 1 year

Ramadan (Arabic: رمضانRamaḍān, IPA: [rɑmɑˈdˤɑːn]; variationsPersian: Ramazan‎) is the ninth month of the Islamic calendar, which lasts 29 or 30 days. It is the Islamic month of fasting, in which participating Muslims refrain from eating, drinking, smoking and sex during daylight hours and is intended to teach Muslims about patience, spirituality, humility and submissiveness to God. Muslims fast for the sake of God (Arabic: الله‎, trans: Allah) and to offer more prayer than usual. Compared to the solar calendar, the dates of Ramadan vary, moving backwards by about eleven days each year depending on the moon; thus, a person will have fasted every day of the Gregorian calendar year in 34 years' time. Muslims believe Ramadan to be an auspicious month for the revelations of God to humankind, being the month in which the first verses of the Qur'an were revealed to the Islamic prophet, Muhammad.

The word Ramadan is derived from an Arabic root R-M-Ḍ, as in words like "ramiḍa" or "ar-ramaḍ" denoting intense heat, scorched ground and shortness of rations. Ramadan, as a name for the month, is of Islamic origin. Prior to Islam and the exclusion of intercalary days from the Islamic calendar, the name of the month was Natiq and the month fell in the warm season.[2] The word was thus chosen as it well represented the original climate of the month and the physiological conditions precipitated from fasting. In the Qur'an, God proclaims that "fasting has been written down (as obligatory) upon you, as it was upon those before you". According to a hadith, this might refer to the Jewish practice of fasting on Yom Kippur.[3][4]


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