Turkey celebrates Ramadan Feast as month-long fasts end

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Muslims in Turkey along with other Muslim populations around the world are preparing to celebrate the Ramadan Feast on July 17, as the day marks the beginning of a three-day holy period in Islam as well as the end of a 30-day fast during the holy month of Ramadan.

All three days of the Ramadan Feast, from July 17 to July 19 this year, are national holidays in Turkey, while the status of Ramadan Feast Eve, which falls on July 16 this year, as a holiday remains unclear.

All public and private employees are off duty during the feast although street sellers, shops and a number of businesses remain at work, as people tend to shop more to buy gifts for their family, friends and relatives. 

Most Muslims have fasted during Ramadan, eating only between sunset and sunrise, when there is no sunlight, which is considered a religious duty and essential in the Islamic faith.

During the holy month, also, municipalities across Turkey have held mass iftar dinners, a daily fast-breaking meal joined by those who break their fast after sunset.

Most recently, thousands of Muslims and Christians in Turkey gathered for an iftar dinner on July 15 in Gökçeada, an Aegean island district in the northwestern province of Çanakkale, state-run Anadolu Agency reported.

The iftar dinner organized by the Gökçeada District Municipality was attended by around 3,000 people, who enjoyed a concert and a performance by Soufi whirling dervishes.

Gökçeada District Mayor Muhittin Gürel said Gökçeada was a place where different cultures live together. "It is not a unity that can only be seen at tonight's iftar, but in all times of societal life on the island," he said.

As July 17 marks the first day of the feast, Turkish political leaders...

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