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Jakarta: Muslims began marking Ramadan with communal prayers Tuesday in a socially distanced contrast to the empty mosques of a year ago when Islam's holiest month coincided with the start of the coronavirus pandemic.
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Palestinians gather in a square by a giant lantern as they watch fireworks lighting the sky after sunset on April 12, 2021 as people celebrate start of the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan.
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Last year, authorities shuttered all mosques and clerics issued a fatwa, or edict, urging Muslims to pray at home over the holy month rather than congregate in crowded spaces and risk spreading the virus.
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Muslim women offer prayers on the first night of Ramadan at the Osmanagic mosque in Podgorica.
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Women offer their prayers at the Eyup Sultan Mosque, in Istanbul
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People shop from a stall selling Ramadan lanterns along a main street in the in the northern suburb of Shubra of Egypt's capital Cairo.
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Thai Muslim women receive packages of food. | Muslims this year are expecting a virus resurgence but all mosques will be continuing to adhere to social distancing and other precautions, which will significantly reduce crowds, said Nasaruddin Umar, imam of Jakarta's Istiqlal grand mosque.
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Muslims pray as they practice social distancing at Chicago's Muslim Community Center | Iftar occurs at sunset, the time Muslims break their fast and usually the prime time for people to have dinner together with friends and family members before the night prayer.
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Volunteers hand out toys to children during a celebration hosted by a local cultural NGO in the old town of Iraq's northern city of Mosul on April 13, 2021 on the first night of the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan.
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Muslim women offer prayers on the first night of Ramadan at the Istiqlal grand mosque in Jakarta
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