MANILA: Manila’s Filipino Muslim community gathered at one of the capital region’s largest parks on Monday for Eid Al-Fitr prayers, followed by family picnics to mark the end of Ramadan.
In the predominantly Catholic Philippines, Muslims make up around 10 percent of the country’s population of over 120 million.
While most of them live on the island of Mindanao and the Sulu archipelago in the country’s south, Manila is also home to more than 173,000 Filipino Muslims.
President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. last month declared April 1 a national holiday for the first of the two main holidays observed in Islam.
But like many others across the Islamic world, Filipino Muslims upheld the tradition of morning Eid prayers on Monday, with 15,000 people gathering at the Quezon Memorial Circle.
“Eid Al-Fitr is a huge celebration among the Muslim community, especially here in the Philippines, and the culmination of the sacrifice that we had for the holy month of Ramadan,” Aleem Guiapal, a government official who is originally from Cotabato City, told Arab News.
“What makes Eid Al-Fitr special is the level of spirituality that we achieved for almost 30 days.”
Families were central to the occasion, and many took their young children along to share meals and play at the park in Metro Manila.
“We consider Eid Al-Fitr as a family day and, at the same time, a day to celebrate the ending of the month of Ramadan,” Lucman bin Usman said.
“We came here so that the children can play and also to really feel the Eid spirit and also the festivities.”
For Aida Villegas, who is originally from Zamboanga, the morning visit to the park was only the beginning of Eid festivities.
“Everyone is (welcome) to come here, and there’s a playground. So, it’s a really good spot for the families, and then there’s a bazaar,” she said, referring to a halal bazaar of food and clothes organized by the local government.
“Families come here during Eid to pray, eat, play, shop and then we go back home, and we do house to house. It doesn’t end here.”