Moroccans break Ramadan fast on beach with song, dance, food

Moroccans break Ramadan fast on beach with song, dance, food
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People during Iftar, a meal after the sunset, consumed on Rabat beach, in Rabat, Morocco. Laylat al-Qadr, or Night of Destiny, which falls on the 27th day of Ramadan, in Islamic belief is the night when the first verses of the Quran were revealed to the Islamic Prophet Muhammad. (File photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Moroccans break Ramadan fast on beach with song, dance, food
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People during Iftar, a meal after the sunset, consumed on Rabat beach, in Rabat, Morocco. Laylat al-Qadr, or Night of Destiny, which falls on the 27th day of Ramadan, in Islamic belief is the night when the first verses of the Quran were revealed to the Islamic Prophet Muhammad. (File photo by Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Moroccans break Ramadan fast on beach with song, dance, food
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Moroccan vendors sell local Ramadan delicacies in the old medina of Rabat. (File photo: AFP)
Moroccans break Ramadan fast on beach with song, dance, food
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Moroccan vendors sell local Ramadan delicacies in the old medina of Rabat. (File photo: AFP)
Moroccans break Ramadan fast on beach with song, dance, food
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A Moroccan sits on a chair he placed in the sea on a beach in Agadir as he waits for Iftar, which marks the breaking of a day long fast during Ramadan, the holiest month in the Muslim calendar. (AFP)
Updated 12 June 2018
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Moroccans break Ramadan fast on beach with song, dance, food

Moroccans break Ramadan fast on beach with song, dance, food
  • Families and friends swarm to the beach to enjoy the Atlantic breeze

RABAT: In Morocco’s capital, the beach is a favorite place during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
Waves lap in a steady rhythm, marking time, as hundreds of Moroccans wait for sunset to break their day-long fast.
Stocked with food and drinks, families and friends swarm to the beach to enjoy the Atlantic breeze and, when the fasting is declared over, share in the iftar meal.
Her face drawn from hours without food or water, Rabat resident Nadia Benani said she came with family and friends because staying at home can become tiring.
“This beach takes me down memory lane to my childhood,” she said.
Some beachgoers dance and sing Moroccan music while awaiting the call for prayer that announces the end of the day’s fast. Exhaustion is barely visible on their faces until they collapse on the ground and check their watches.
Then a cannon booms and a muezzin’s voice rings out.
Hands reach for water and dates, an appetizer for the sumptuous dishes that follow. While some people dig into their meals, barely taking time to look up, others pray first.
Reda Fedoul, 20, and his friends built a table from sand to lay out their meals.
“We came here to change the atmosphere ... the day goes much better,” he said. “We’re here to create happiness.”