https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/04/23/ramadan-starts-friday-government-declares.html


*Ramadan starts Friday, government declares*


   -

   Ivany Atina Arbi

   The Jakarta Post

Jakarta   /   Thu, April 23, 2020   /   08:48 pm

*An official of the Religious Affairs Ministry's Bali office looks for the
moon using a telescope at Patra Bali Beach in Kuta, Bali, on May 15, 2018.
Observers across the archipelago studied the phases of the moon to
determine the first day of Ramadan. (Antara/Nyoman Budhiana)*


The government has announced that this year’s Ramadan will start on Friday
following a limited *isbat* (confirmation) meeting with several Islamic
organizations and other relevant parties in Jakarta on Thursday.

"After taking into account the *hisab* [astronomical calculation] and
*rukyat* [new moon observation] methods, we have determined that the first
day of Ramadan this year will fall tomorrow on Friday," Religious Affairs
Minister Fachrul Razi said.

He called on Muslims to refrain from attending religious gatherings or
performing the *tarawih* (evening Ramadan prayers) in congregations during
the COVID-19 outbreak to avoid the risk of contracting the disease.

"We also discourage *ziarah* [visiting relatives’ graves] and the Idul
Fitri *mudik* [exodus], which could potentially spread the disease," the
minister said, adding that those who fasted should pay attention to their
nutritional intake to boost their immunity.

Read also: Ramadan starts early in Maluku villages, people flock to mosques
<https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/04/23/ramadan-starts-early-in-maluku-villages-people-flock-to-mosques.html>

The government’s decision to start Ramadan on Friday was endorsed by all
major Islamic organizations, including the second-largest in the country,
Muhammadiyah, which had for years set different dates for the start of the
fasting month.

Muhammadiyah, which only uses the *hisab* method to determine when Ramadan
begins, announced in late February that the fasting month would start on
Friday, while Idul Fitri would fall on May 24.

Ramadan is expected to last for 30 days. The government will hold another
*isbat* meeting in late May to determine the date of Idul Fitri.

Various Islamic groups in Indonesia use different methods to determine the
start of Ramadan on the Islamic Hijriyah calendar, which is based on lunar
observations.

For example, the An Nazir sect in Gowa, South Sulawesi, marked Thursday as
day one of fasting after making calculations based on the highest tidal
waves.

The Tareqat Naqsabandiyah in West Sumatra also started Ramadan on Thursday,
as reported by local media outlets. It used the *hisab-munjid* method, a
mixture of mathematical and astronomical calculations.

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