Sunday, 9 December 2007
Fisham is having a break
I am very sorry for the unwilling silence at the blog.
I will be back in January 2008 with new stuff insha'Allah. Please, if you do you have stuff to publish, do not hesitate to email me.
Take care and Blessed Eid and Merry Christmas!
Saturday, 3 November 2007
Fil Quds - Into Jerusalem
مررنا على دار الحبيب فردنا
عن الدار قانون الأعادي وسورها
فقلت لنفسي ربما هي نعمة
فماذا ترى في القدس حين تزورها
ترى كل ما لا تستطيع احتماله
إذا ما بدت من جانب الدرب دورها
وما كل نفس حين تلقى حبيبها
تسر ولا كل الغياب يضيرها
فإن سرها قبل الفراق لقاؤه
فليس بمأمون عليها سرورها
متى تبصرِ القدس العتيقة مرة
فسوف تراها العين حيث تديرها
...
Saturday, 13 October 2007
Blessed Eid!
A vender in the old city of Nablus sells sweets in preparation for Eid Al-Fitr, the celebration marking the end of Ramadan. (Rami Swidan, Maan Images)
A Palestinian merchant sells fruit in a market in the Gaza Strip, as Muslims prepare to celebrate the end of the holy month of Ramadan. (Eman Mohammed, Maan Images)
Thursday, 27 September 2007
Ramadan-feelings from Betlehem
The entrance of Ramadan has brought a lot of wonderful blessings to the beautiful city of Betlehem.
People are so busy up with prayers and doing good to please God. Every evening, me and family, go for taraweeh-prayer in the mosque nearby.
But this year praying in this mosque has got a new taste. The mosque is filled up with praying people that kids and young boys have to pray outside at the street. Seeing people smiling, exited to catch up the taraweeh prayer in the mosque makes me so glad and gives me harmonious feelings. There is a spiritual competition during Ramadan, where everybody compites to act good towards people and to please Allah.
A Palestinian girl holds a Ramadan lantern at a celebration of the Islamic holy month. (Wissam Nassar, Maan Images)
Unfortunately this same glad feeling can not be found at my university. Only first day of Ramadan we enjoyed the ramadan-decorations and the dates that we were given at the entrance of the university. But nowdays you can't find anything that reminds you of Ramadan. It is sadly since the whole city is celebrating Ramadan and a lot of the university's students are muslims.
I comfort myself although with the ramadan-greetings from my university.
Thursday, 20 September 2007
Qatayef (Ramadan pancakes)
The photo was taken by Nada at A blogger from Gaza
Qatayef are pancakes filled with either cheese or nuts and thereafter fried in oil. Then they are dropped in cold sugar syrup for a final touch. Qatayef is a very special delight that can't be resisted!
Enjoy Qatayef by using this very easy receipe >>
Ingredients pancake:
1 cup of flour
1 cup of semolina (sameed)
2 and 1/4 cups of warm water
1 teaspoon of instant baking yeast
1 teaspoon sugar
Pinch of salt
Pour all the ingredients into a bowl and mix in a blender. Cover the bowl with a cloth and leave it to rest for 15-30 minutes. Prepare a pancake pan, and heat it till it is really hot. Start pouring the mixture into the hot pan just like pancakes, but in smaller sizes, and don't flip it on the other side!
Just leave it till it’s done. You will know that when the top shoulder is full of air holes and the bottom side is colored goldenbrown. Cook all the batter in this way and cover the pancakes so that they do not dry out.
Fill the pancakes it the way you wish; Fill it with either cheese and sugar or walnuts and cinnamon and sugar. Close by folding over and seal by pressing the edges.
Bake the half-moon shaped Qatayef on a greased tray in a preheated (250 C ) oven for a bout 30 minutes, turning once, till golden. Dip hot Qatayef pancakes into room temperature pre-pared sugar syrup for few seconds and serve hot. The sugar syrup is made of 3 cup sugar and 1 cup water and some juice of lemon.
Monday, 17 September 2007
Ramadan photos from Jerusalem
Photographer: Ameer Qaimari
Saturday, 15 September 2007
Blessed Ramadan
Ramadan has finally arrived to overhelm us with joy and blessings.
During the entrance of Ramadan I sense a spiritual calmness mixed with peaceful harmony. The play of sunlight escapes my mind free to Jerusalem wandering and touching every holy stone in it. I can still smell the blessed soil and the sound of the beautiful azaan can still be heard.
Ramadan is not only about fasting, it is mostly about showing one's solidarity with the oppressed and the poor ones. It is also about self-discipline and to scrub all your sins and to start over with people around you. It is about to begin a new start.
May this Ramadan become a new start for everybody. A start filled with love, respect, peace, kindness and tolerance! And may Allah (SWT) wash our hearts from hatred, envy and ill wills.
Blessed Ramadan!