New twist on moonsighting fitnah

The issue of when to start Ramadan and when to have Eid has been a bone of contention as long as I’ve been Muslim and probably for much longer. I was made aware of it during my first Ramadan, as the group I was staying with fasted what seemed to be an extra day and went from Harlesden to Dalston to offer our Eid prayers in the Suleymaniye mosque instead of our local one. The issue was that some of the local mosques were basing their decision off calendars, while the Turkish-run mosque was waiting for the moon to be sighted before declaring Ramadan over. Over the past few years there has been an uneasy truce; some mosques, including the so-called major mosques, follow the sightings reported from Saudi Arabia while others waited for more reliable sightings, usually a day later, from anywhere east of the UK but usually South Africa (which is slightly more easterly than the UK but a lot further south than east). There is a communal effort, organised through the New Crescent Society, to sight the new moon in the UK and the old perception that the moon could not be reliably sighted in the UK has been overturned and with it the reliance on South African sightings. This year, however, a Deobandi organisation broke with this tradition by announcing the start of Ramadan the same day as the Saudis did, on the basis of a single sighting through binoculars against a welter of negative sightings from around the UK, and the mosques that followed them relayed it to their followers. This was a great surprise to a lot of us: why was Croydon mosque starting their fasting on Saturday, despite so many negative sightings?
Why is there this disunity? The simple answer is that Saudi Arabia persists in announcing the sighting of the moon when it cannot possibly have been sighted, and their sightings are routinely accompanied by negative sightings from the same region and sometimes from Saudi Arabia itself. The pattern seems to be that they announce a sighting on the first day on which a sighting was possible anywhere in the world. On one occasion, scientific data showed that the new moon might be visible, albeit only with a telescope, in one corner of South America and nowhere else, which Muslim observation bore out, but the Saudis still claimed a sighting. Every year, following these announcements, Muslim satellite TV relays it and Muslim social media is full of of Ramadan or Eid greetings, and without bothering to verify the claim, governments across the Arab world and “major mosques” in the diaspora announce that the new moon has been sighted and it’s Ramadan or it’s Eid. There’s a lot of social pressure which seems mean to resist. Ramadan mubarak. Eid mubarak. Until now, there’s been a group of Muslims, and a network of mosques, which insist on waiting for a reliable sighting to declare the new month. Originally they relied on sightings from easterly countries; more recently, they have moved towards sighting it here. Sometimes the two camps start or finish the same day, but usually not. As I recall, the last time this happened was 2007, when Ramadan coincided with September and everyone started and finished the same day. Broken clocks tell the right time twice a day.
This year, however, Wifaq al-Ulama, a Deobandi body, announced that the moon had been sighted last Friday evening, and thus Ramadan began last Saturday. We first learned of this when Croydon mosque in south London announced that Ramadan had begun; it took a couple of hours for the organisations to clarify why. It seems one of their sighting experts had travelled from his home in Bolton near Manchester to Hope Cove in Devon (not Cornwall as they claimed), some 300 miles further south, and there saw it in his binoculars. They posted a video of him standing in front of his binoculars (mounted on a tripod) and exclaiming “W’Allahi I saw it!”. When questioned about why a sighting only available through binoculars was valid all of a sudden, they informed us they had received a “new fatwa” from Darul-Uloom Karachi, which (or an English translation of which) a related group called ICOUK posted on their website. The questions were not included in this posting; when asking a question of a mufti, one is required to state the relevant facts as the answer might be different otherwise, and the facts here include that the UK’s Muslim community is not a purely Hanafi community but a mixed-madhhab community which, apart from those who simply followed the Saudi announcements, had settled on a method of sighting the moon with the naked eye and sharing the sightings. Wifaq al-Ulama and ICOUK now tell us that they aligned with this position previously because of partial reliance on the Moroccan moonsighting establishment which relies on naked-eye sightings in accordance with the Maliki madhhab; they are Hanafis, and their fiqh accepts sightings through optical aids. However, some of the Muslims in the UK, both converts and migrants from Africa and descendants of both, also follow Maliki fiqh. There are also people such as Somalis and some Arabs who are Shafi’i. This is a mixed community and always has been.
A major criticism of those who insist on traditional moon-sighting methods is that we are causing dissension, or fitnah; yet in the past ten years or so, much of the Muslim community had settled on reliable easterly sightings and then more recently on local naked-eye sightings. There really was no fitnah. In any case, the Prophet (sall’ Allahu ‘alaihi wa sallam) said in a hadith narrated by Abdullah bin Umar (radhi Allahu ‘anhu), “Allah will not let my Ummah unite on misguidance”, so a group of Muslims calling for a return to the Sunnah cannot be called fitnah unless they use undue force or disrupt Muslims celebrating Eid or whatever; Allah knows best. Much as it is not a fitnah for people to call for Muslims to revive any other Sunnah as long as we refrain from using derogatory language about people slow to respond, especially when they are not things that are compulsory, or things where there is disagreement on whether they are or not. For example, while encouraging the wearing of niqab, we don’t abuse women who refuse to wear it, or their husbands, as I have seen people do. I have seen a few unacceptable comments under the announcements on Facebook by ICOUK and Wifaq al-Ulama, suggesting they had “gone rogue” or been ‘bought’ by the Saudis, but for the most part those of us advocating sticking to the Sunnah on this matter have shown good manners and patience. But it’s a mystery why reviving this particular Sunnah is so controversial; maybe because it’s not as convenient in modern times as a fixed calendar. But Islam has never used fixed calendars.
Over the years I’ve developed a lot of respect for the Deobandis; they maintain some of the best Islamic teaching institutes in the western world and they have stood firm on the Sunnah over the years, including outward aspects of the Sunnah such as the beard, turban and hijab. Sometimes they are too harsh, with the result that ordinary Muslims think ill of other Muslims who have never heard of their scholars, but nonetheless, as a result of their initiatives we have access to reliable sources of halal meat and there are places in British towns and cities where people are unafraid to dress according to Islam. Still, their action last weekend let the community down; they acted as if they were the community rather than being part of one, and threw a long-standing effort to revive the Sunnah into disarray.
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