prayer time, an important moment for Muslims

prayer time an important moment for Muslims

PRAYER TIME. During Ramadan, prayers and fasting punctuate the days of Muslims at very specific times.

Ramadan fasting is a demanding practice for all Muslims who comply with it. For a month until the feast ofEid, the days of millions of practicing believers are punctuated by the course of the sun and the prayers associated with specific times, some of which mark the resumption and breaking of the fast each day. These appointments follow the Islamic lunar calendar and the solar clock.

But as the days lengthen by a few minutes every day until the summer solstice, prayer times and fasting times differ from one day to another, and even from one city to another, sometimes with up to an hour difference between the east of France, where the sun rises earlier, and the west where it sets later. It is therefore difficult to strictly observe all the traditions of Ramadan, in particular the five daily prayers and fasting, without a precise timetable.

Ramadan is often associated with the fast observed by practicing Muslims, but the prayers are just as important as the deprivation of food. The five daily prayers – Fajr at dawn, Dohr at noon, Asser in the afternoon, Maghreb at sunset and Ishaa at dusk – are part of the five pillars of Islam, just like the fast of the month Ramadan or the pilgrimage to Mecca. Moreover, the prayers correspond, within a few minutes, to the start and end times of the fast: Imsak and Iftar.

Imsak time to start fasting

Muslims practicing the Ramadan fast can eat in the early morning but must stop drinking and eating at the time of Imsak which marks the start of the daily fast. Imsak shifts by a few minutes each day according to sunrise, but always occurs 10 minutes before the time of “Fajr”, the first prayer of the day.

Time for Iftar and breaking the fast

The “Maghreb” prayer is also particularly scrutinized. It corresponds to the moment when the sun sets and therefore marks the time of Iftar, this moment when believers can start eating again every evening during the month of Ramadan. The meal should remain light, unlike the meal taken in the morning before starting the fast again. It is a dinner which marks the end of a day of physical and mental asceticism.

What is the 2024 Ramadan calendar with prayer times?

All prayers during the day of Ramadan follow the movement of the sun, since the time of fasting is determined by daybreak and nightfall. Muslims, following the injunctions of Ramadan, must therefore have on hand a precise calendar of prayer times, since the times change every day, due to the lengthening of the day until the summer solstice. Here are the prayer times that prevail for the month of Ramadan, for the city of Paris. Note that prayer times and fasting times differ depending on the geographical location of believers: between Marseille, Paris and Bordeaux since dawn and sunset do not occur at the same time.

DAYFAJRDOHRASSERMAGHREBICHAA
Tuesday March 11, 202405:4513:0116:1018:5320:17
Tuesday March 12, 202405:431:00 p.m.16:1118:5520:19
Wednesday March 13, 202405:411:00 p.m.16:1218:5620:20
Thursday March 14, 202405:391:00 p.m.16:1318:5820:22
Friday March 15, 202405:3612:5916:1419:0020:23
Saturday March 16, 202405:3412:5916:1519:0120:25
Sunday March 17, 202405:3212:5916:1619:0320:27
Monday March 18, 202405:3012:5916:1719:0420:28
Tuesday March 19, 202405:2812:5816:1819:0620:30
Wednesday March 20, 202405:2512:5816:1919:0720:32
Thursday March 21, 202405:2312:5816:2019:0920:33
Friday March 22, 202405:2112:5716:2019:1020:35
Saturday March 23, 202405:1812:5716:2119:1220:37
Sunday March 24, 202405:1612:5716:2219:1320:39
Monday March 25, 202405:1412:5616:2319:1520:40
Tuesday March 26, 202405:1212:5616:2419:1620:42
Wednesday March 27, 202405:0912:5616:2519:1820:44
Thursday March 28, 202405:0712:5616:2519:1920:45
Friday March 29, 202405:0412:5516:2619:2120:47
Saturday March 30, 202405:0212:5516:2719:2220:49
Sunday March 31, 202406:0013:5517:2820:2421:51
Monday April 1, 202405:5713:5417:2920:2521:53
Tuesday April 2, 202405:5513:5417:2920:2721:54
Wednesday April 3, 202405:5313:5417:3020:2821:56
Thursday April 4, 202405:5013:5417:3120:3021:58
Friday April 5, 202405:4813:5317:3120:3122:00
Saturday April 6, 202405:4513:5317:3220:3322:02
Sunday April 7, 202405:4313:5317:3320:3422:04
Monday April 8, 202405:4013:5217:3420:3622:06
Tuesday April 9, 202405:3813:5217:3420:3722:07
Wednesday April 10, 202405:3613:5217:3520:3922:09

Prayers are all important during the Muslim fasting month. Believers in fact indulge in interludes of introspection, reflection and meditation on their situation as well as relationships with others. Praying several times during the day is one of the moral injunctions of Ramadan. And these prayers truly punctuate the day:

  • Fajr (or Fejr) : the dawn prayer. This is the first obligatory prayer of the day. It marks the beginning of the ban on drinking and eating, which will last all day. It takes place after Imsak, a period during which the believer can still eat and the suhûr, “dawn meal”.
  • Dohr (or Dhuhr) : the early afternoon prayer.
  • Asser : the late afternoon prayer.
  • Maghreb : the prayer to be practiced at sunset.
  • Ichaa : the prayer which must be performed before midnight

The Chourouk prayer (or Chourouq) is an optional prayer recommended after the appearance of the sun, it takes place approximately 1h30 after the Fajr prayer.

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