Tomorrow, Muslims and Christians worldwide will start their fasting seasons as Ramadan and Lent coincide. This rare event is expected to begin following the moon sighting today. Catholics will observe Ash Wednesday, while Muslims commence the holy month of Ramadan.
The fasting periods of Ramadan and Lent are set to commence simultaneously tomorrow, a rare occurrence that highlights interfaith connections. For Catholics, Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent, which lasts 40 days. During this time, they are prohibited from eating meat on Fridays and encouraged to abstain from luxuries and skip at least one meal per day. Savings from these abstinences will support the poor during Easter, and they are advised to increase their prayers.
Muslims will start Ramadan if the moon is sighted today, with the month expected to run from February 18 to March 19. Ramadan is one of Islam's five pillars, during which fasters refrain from eating, drinking, and indulgences from dawn until sunset, except for the elderly, very young children, pregnant women, and travelers. Scholar Mohamed Khalifa stated that the overlap of these periods reminds people of humanity, peace, mercy, and tolerance.
This is the first such coincidence in about 90 years, with the next expected in the 2050s. The U.S.-based Astronomical Applications journal explains that Ramadan shifts through the calendar every 33 years, arriving 11 days earlier each year.
In Kenyan areas with mixed Muslim and Christian populations, hotel businesses are anticipated to decline. Albert Mwaghesha, owner of Tudor Hotel in Mombasa, said, "I will have to close for a month to renovate my hotel because there will be no business." This illustrates the local economic impact of the season.