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| Eid Mubarak.. A Day of Moral VictorySawmeer AnuradhapuraEid means recurring happiness or festivity. There are two such `Eids in Islam. The first is called `Eid Al-Fitr (the Festival of Breaking Fast). It falls on the first day of Shawwal, the tenth month of the Muslim year, following the month of Ramadan, which is the month of fasting in which the Holy Qur'an was revealed. The second is called `Eid Al-Adha (the Festival of Sacrifice). It falls on the tenth day of Dhul-Hijjah, the final month of the Muslim year. The Islamic `Eids are unique in every way. To them there can be nothing similar in any other religion or any other sociopolitical system. Besides their highly spiritual and moral characteristics, they have matchless qualities. Each `Eid is a wholesome celebration of a remarkable achievement of the individual Muslim in the service of Allah. The first `Eid comes after an entire month of fasting during the days of the month. The second `Eid marks the completion of Hajj to Makkah, a course in which the Muslim handsomely demonstrates his renouncement of the mundane concerns and hearkens only to the eternal voice of Allah. Each `Eid is a thanksgiving day on which Muslims assemble in a brotherly 
          and joyful atmosphere to offer their gratitude to Allah for helping 
          them to fulfill their spiritual obligations prior to the `Eid. This 
          form of thanksgiving is not confined to spiritual devotion and verbal 
          expressions. `Eid also is a day of remembrance. Even in their most joyful times, 
          the Muslims make a fresh start of the day by a congregational Prayer 
          to Allah. Most of the imams when delivering the `Eid khutbah (sermon) will mention that `Eid is a day of victory. The individual who succeeds in securing his spiritual rights and growth receives the `Eid with a victorious spirit. The individual who faithfully observes the duties that are associated with the `Eid is a triumphant one. He proves that he holds a strong command over his desires, exercises sound self-control, and enjoys the taste of disciplinary life. Once a person acquires these qualities, he has achieved his greatest 
          victory because the person who knows how to control himself and discipline 
          his desires is free from sin and wrong, from fear and cowardice, from 
          vice and indecency, from jealousy and greed, from humiliation and all 
          other causes of enslavement. Therefore, when he receives the `Eid, which 
          marks the achievement of this freedom, he is in fact celebrating his 
          victory, and the `Eid thus becomes a day of victory. 
 
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