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Here's What Muslims All Over The World Eat To Break The Ramadan Fast

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Ramadan is the ninth month of the Islamic calendar, and one of its most sacred. During this 29-30 day period, all adult Muslims refrain from eating and drinking while the sun is out. Observers do, however, have a large meal before sunrise and after sunset. With Ramadan ending tomorrow, Reuters photographers around the world asked followers to show them their favorite dishes to eat when breaking the daytime fast.

Hussain Hawi Warid, 55, from Baghdad, likes to eat a traditional Iraqi meal of vegetables and vine leaves stuffed with meat, rice, and tomatoes, known as Dolma.ramadan fast breakMevlida Mrgic, 66, from the central Bosnian town of Zenica, enjoys Dolma as well.ramadan fast breakPatema Youssef, 22, is Uighur, a largely Muslim ethnic group living in eastern and central Asia. Here, she holds a dish of Xinjiang noodles as she poses in her home in Shanghai.Ramadan break fastMohammad Kabir, 64, from Kabul, breaks his fast by eating shorba, an Afghan soup made from beef or lamb, served with potatoes and bread.ramadan break fastGrilled fish is a favorite day's end meal for Hamed Mahmoud, 30, of Alexandria, Egypt.Ramadan Break FastWhile waiting for sundown, Sara Naqvi, 36, from New Delhi prepares her favourite Iftar meal, puri-cholea, a dish with deep fried bread and spicy chickpeas.ramadan break fastIn Russia's Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk, Tatar woman Zelfira Mansurova, holds a jerked goose, her chosen Ramadan dish.Ramadan Break fastBrongkos, a Javanese dish made from oxtail, tofu, and red bean, is the favorite dish of Srikandi Hakim, 69, from Jakarta.Ramadan break fast

SEE ALSO: This Photo Of The End Of Ramadan In Iraq Is Simply Stunning

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