IT used to be a tradition amongst some Muslim countries to announce the eve of Ramazan with the firing of a cannon. In Pakistan, that has been replaced by a salvo fired by ignitable ministers, with an equally noisy retort from the Ruet-e-Hilal Committee.
This year proved no different. In the run-up to the holy month of Ramazan, Mr Fawad Chaudhry (federal minister of science & technology) decided to muster the resources of his ministry to challenge again Mufti Muneeb-ur-Rehman, chairman of the Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee. Stronger ministers than Mr Chaudhry â once, even the National Assembly â have tried to dislodge the myopic 75-year-old maulana from his sinecure, without success. He has proved as tenacious as Janet Fisherâs limpet, attached to âanything, anyone who showed [him] the least attentionâ.
Before the advent of this Ramazan, the minister took on the chairman but retreated after the maulana declared the first fast a day later than the minister wanted. The minister bided his time throughout Ramazan and then in its final days, he reopened the debate. He used the media (he was not minister of information & broadcasting for nothing) to present charts and calculations that would have made Galileo proud. The chairman, contemptuous of such unverified data, remained obdurate. He stood his ground, waiting for his own moon to appear.
The notification of the sighting of any Eid moon, by government order, is the responsibility of the Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee, a department of the Ministry of Religious Affairs and Interfaith Harmony. The committee is expected to rely on information provided from various sources â including 150 observatories of Pakistanâs Meteorological Department (spread throughout Pakistan) and evidence of sighting by responsible citizens anywhere in Pakistan. For some arcane reason, the central committee chooses to sight the moon itself, peering through high-tech telescopes from the windswept roof of a commercial bank in Karachi.
The chairman stood his ground, waiting for his own moon to appear.
There is no legal requirement for the committee to meet in Karachi. Any hill top with clear skies would do. That would be cheaper than flying committee members to Karachi and accommodating them in what the chairman quaintly described in an interview as a ânon-star hotelâ. The chairman also asserted that âPakistanâs moon sighting system is best in the world as it incorporates scientific and religious methods, resulting in best outcome [.] We seek help of the scientist to ascertain the chances of sighting the moon and use this information for cross-questioning the witnesses of moon sighting so that we could check the authenticity of testimonyâ. If such a rigorous system of audit is in place, then why did the Ruet-e-Hilal Committee this year spend the evening of May 23 dillydallying, even after receiving reports that the moon had been sighted elsewhere in Pakistan?
At 9.50 pm that day, a message appeared on the committeeâs website. It read: âPlease Wait For Announcement Within Few Minutes. Clearfaction A Statement Uploaded Before Was A Mistake By One Of Admin Heâs Was Preparing Both Type Of Statement Regarding Moon Sighted Or Not Sighted But Mistakenly It Goes Published We Are Extremely Sorry For That.â
Half an hour later, at 10.21 pm, another message appeared on the same website: âMufti Muneeb Rehman, according to the announcement of the chairman central sighting crescent committee, the moon of shawwal 1441 Hijri has been seen in Pakistan today. So tomorrow on Sunday, there will be Eid ul-Fitr in Pakistan on SunÂday. Happy Eid to all of you.â With it, this cheery addendum: âThe Ministry of religious affairs and International AffÂairs and international A very happy birthday. Notification will be uploaded.â
The committee claims it took its final decision âafter receiving authentic testimonies from BaloÂchistanâs Chaman and Pasni areasâ. Interestingly, the minister of science & technology a few days earlier had told the press that âthe Shawwal moon would be visible on 23rd May evening betÂween 7.36pm and 8.15pm in Badin, Thatta and Pasniâ. Why then did the Ruet-e-Hilal Committee need to wait until 10.21 pm to confirm that the moon had revealed itself two hours earlier at Pasni? Could it be that the chairman did not want the âinterferingâ minister to be given credit for announcing Eid? Or had there been a last-minute, impatient intervention by forces that hover between government and God?
Holiday plans this summer across the world have been thrown into disarray by Covid-19. For disrupting the Eid holidays within Pakistan, the Ruet-e-Hilal Committee has only itself to blame, yet again. Little wonder that we will never, the exhortations of our prime minister notwithstanding, be a dependable tourist destination.
In 1984, his fellow cricketer Sir Ian Botham, after suffering fixtures in Pakistan, described it as âthe kind of place to send your mother-in-law for a monthâ. Add an extra fortnight for quarantine.
The writer is an author.
Published in Dawn, May 28th, 2020







