So Ramadan is upon us once again, less than a month to go! Each year we find a lot of websites declaring the start date for Ramadan based on calculations and estimates which they fail to declare. This leads people onto believe the start date of Ramadan has been set and decided upon when it is not the case. A lot of people are forgetting the tradition and sunnah taught by our prophet Muhammed (pbuh).
Allah's Messenger (pbuh) said:
'Whenever you sight the new moon observe fast, and when you sight it break it and if the sky is cloudy for you, then observe fast for thirty days.'
Even if we do have an estimate for Ramadan, it needs to be made clear that it is only an estimate before writing it in stone.
Ramadan 2011 is expected to start on either Sunday 31st of July or Monday 1st of August 2011 depending on the sighting of the new moon.
Please keep revisiting us in the coming weeks for when we will announce the start of Ramadan 2011.
For more information see Ramadan Timetable 2011


As I sit in my warm room.. looking out of the frozen window.. smelling coffee in the air.. listening to the sound of silence, my mind wanders. Miles away from this part of the world, far south, below the equator, to the country where I always wanted to be. I love Egypt for its ancient history. For the pyramids and mysterious stories. For the Nile and for Sahara. For Suez canal.
Egypt has sent around 800 soldiers to the Sinai Peninsula in response to the popular demonstrations demanding the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak. Israel gave its consent for the deployment following an official request from the Egyptian government. The troops are concentrated around the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh in southern Sinai. The whole peninsula has been an almost totally demilitarised zone since the 1979 peace treaty was signed between Egypt and Israel.
If you've been watching any coverage of the Egyptian protests, you've no doubt seen the tear gas plumes as canisters are shot at protestors—often to be picked up and hurled back moments later. Many of those tear gas containers falling on the bridges and streets of Cairo aren't local products, however; they come from Jamestown, Pennsylvania, home of