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Ramadan and fasting.

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jamesy boy | 20:32 Mon 10th Sep 2007 | Religion & Spirituality
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...Can anybody put me and my colleagues (including two Muslim women) out of our collective misery?
During Ramadan, Muslims are not allowed to eat or drink between sunrise and sunset; fair enough. What we want to know is: How do Muslims do this in Scandinavian countries (say) where it can be daylight 24 hours a day at some times of the year? Do they just go by the clock in Mecca or something?
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Interesting question James. I'm curious too.
-- answer removed --
This has been asked before, I'm afraid I can't find the link but I do recall that the answer is that they take the times of sunrise and sunset at Mecca and use those.
I believe there is also a general cut off agreed locally, for example when I was in Eygypt this was 5pm even though it wasn't the time the sun set.
This may be the link jake was hoping to reference...

http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/How-it-Works/Qu estion154407.html
In A Pickle - of course there are Muslims living in Sweden, around 3.6% of the Swedish population are Muslim:

http://www.islamawareness.net/Europe/Sweden/sw eden.html

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Ramadan and fasting.

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