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'''Mawlid''', '''Mawlid an-Nabi''' or '''Milad un-Nabi''' ({{lang-ar|مولد، مولد النبي}} ]: मिलड, ]: مِیلاد) is the celebration of the ] of ], the final prophet of Islam; also known as "The ]". '''Mawlid''', '''Mawlid an-Nabi''' or '''Milad un-Nabi''' ({{lang-ar|مولد، مولد النبي}} ]: मिलड, ]: مِیلاد) is the celebration of the ] of ], the final prophet of Islam; also known as "The ]".


]s and most ]s celebrate the Mawlid; processions are held, homes or mosques are decorated, charity and food is distributed, stories about the life of Prophet Muhammad are narrated, ] and poems are recited by children. On ], it is celebrated with majestic performances by a ]. ]s and some ]s celebrate the Mawlid; processions are held, homes or mosques are decorated, charity and food is distributed, stories about the life of Prophet Muhammad are narrated, ] and poems are recited by children. On ], it is celebrated with majestic performances by a ].


]s celebrate it on the 12th of ]. ]s celebrate this day on the 17th of Rabi'-ul-Awwal, coinciding with the birth date of the sixth ], ]. ]s/]s, do not celebrate at all as they consider it to be a ] against Islam. ]s celebrate it on the 12th of ]. ]s celebrate this day on the 17th of Rabi'-ul-Awwal, coinciding with the birth date of the sixth ], ]. ]s/]s, do not celebrate at all as they consider it to be a ] against Islam.

Revision as of 17:18, 29 March 2007

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Mawlid, Mawlid an-Nabi or Milad un-Nabi (Template:Lang-ar Hindi: मिलड, Urdu: مِیلاد) is the celebration of the birthday of Muhammad, the final prophet of Islam; also known as "The Seal of the Prophets".

Shi'a Muslims and some Sunni Muslims celebrate the Mawlid; processions are held, homes or mosques are decorated, charity and food is distributed, stories about the life of Prophet Muhammad are narrated, dhikr and poems are recited by children. On Java, it is celebrated with majestic performances by a Gamelan Sekaten.

Sunni Muslims celebrate it on the 12th of Rabi'-ul-Awwal. Shi'a Muslims celebrate this day on the 17th of Rabi'-ul-Awwal, coinciding with the birth date of the sixth Imam, Ja'far al-Sadiq. Wahhabis/Salafis, do not celebrate at all as they consider it to be a Bidah against Islam.


Terms used for The Birth of Muhammad :

Mawlid an-Nabi - (The Birth of the Prophet - Arabic), Milaad-un-Nabi - (The Birth of the Prophet - Arabic/Urdu), Mevlid Serif - (The Blessed Birth - Turkish), Maulood Shareef -(The Blessed Birth - Urdu/Persian), Eid al-Mawlid an-Nabawi - (Festival of the birth of the Prophet - Arabic), Eid-e-Milaad-un-Nabi - (Festival of the birth of the Prophet - Urdu), Mawlid En-Nabaoui -(Algerian, North Africa ), Yaum an-Nabi - (The Day of the Prophet- Arabic), Mawalid Plural for mawlid - Arabic). All the above derived from the arabic root w-l-d (waw,laam,daal) meaning to give birth, make, create (walid, maulûd).

Mawlid in the Gregorian Calendar

Because the day that Mawlid is celebrated on is based on the Islamic calendar, the date on the Western calendar (the Gregorian calendar) varies from year to year due to differences between the two calendars, since the Islamic calendar is a lunar calendar and the Gregorian calendar is a solar calendar. Furthermore, the method used to determine when each Islamic month begins varies from country to country. (For details, please see Islamic calendar.) All future dates listed below are only estimates:

Dates for Mawlid, 2007-2013
Gregorian Year 12th of Rabi'-ul-Awwal
(Sunni)
17th of Rabi'-ul-Awwal
(Shi'a)
2007 March 31 April 5
2008 March 20 March 25
2009 March 9 March 14
2010 February 26 March 3
2011 February 15 February 20
2012 February 4 February 9
2013 January 24 January 29

See also

Against Mawlid

For Mawlid

Islamic holidays and observances
The two Eids
Other holidays and observances
Category: