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    Back to Greater LA

    Greater LA

    After a day of fasting, LA’s muslims gather and break bread for Iftar

    It sounds like a typical weeknight at the home of Jihad Turk and Anjum Mir.

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    Person smiling broadly wearing glasses and plaid shirt against ivy-covered wall background.By Steve Chiotakis • May 30, 2019 • 2 min read

    It sounds like a typical weeknight at the home of Jihad Turk and Anjum Mir.

    The couple have braved rush hour and returned to their West Los Angeles home from work; Mir is an early childhood educator. Turk, an academic.

    Two of their four children pour out of the family minivan, school backpacks and violin cases in-hand. Then, there is the usual squabbling about dinner: who is going to pick up what and how long to cook the salmon.

    For many Angelenos, this sounds familiar. But the difference this evening is that Turk, Mir and their family have not eaten for almost 15 hours.

    “This is what our religion is all about,” says Turk, who is the President of Bayan Claremont, an Islamic graduate school outside of Los Angeles. “To feel that empathy for those who are hungry… and to deal with the challenges of life even while you're maybe grumpy, tired, exhausted and lacking some blood sugar.”

    The Muslim holiday of Ramadan is in its last week. For many of the estimated 500,000 Muslims in Southern California, this means an end to nearly four weeks of fasting.

    But celebrating one’s faith in a city that is seemingly apathetic to the challenges that fasting presents is not always easy.

    “Growing up it was very different because most of our mothers in our community were all stay-at-home moms,” Mir says, as she sautées green beans for more than a dozen people. “So it was inconceivable that you would be preparing a meal while your guests were there.”

    However, her experience is different.

    “I am wearing my work clothes. Somewhere on here, I have like dough and honey butter and bread, which my students were eating today in my class. And I stopped at three different places on the way home and I called Jihad and said pick up this, this, and this… it's very different.”

    When all of their guests arrive, and the sun sets, Turk taps one of his colleagues to deliver the call to prayer.

    The whole home - men, women and the older children - gathers to pray.

    “I particularly look forward to Ramadan because as someone whose name is Jihad I'm a little bit of a walking teaching moment,” says Turk. “I would say for the spiritual life of the Muslim, this is the juice. This is what our religion is all about.”

    After prayer, it is time to finally break the fast. Huge pieces of salmon, green beans and salad, grape leaves, both vegetarian and not, and a big portion of mujadara, a Middle Eastern dish of rice and lentils make the rounds.

    And then there is dessert: baklava, fresh fruit and a big fruit tart.

    As the evening winds down, the wives gather in the living room to chat; the husbands in the dining room over cups of tea.

    For Turk, he says, this is his favorite time of year.

    “Ramadan is finally a chance throughout the year where the focus is not on some conflict or controversy but on the aspect of religion that is most meaningful to us,” he says. “You know, just that connection to God and trying to be a better person.”

    • Person smiling broadly wearing glasses and plaid shirt against ivy-covered wall background.

      Steve Chiotakis

      Afternoon News Anchor

    • KCRW placeholder

      Christian Bordal

      Managing Producer, Greater LA

    • https://images.ctfassets.net/2658fe8gbo8o/AvYox6VuEgcxpd20Xo9d3/769bca4fbf97bf022190f4813812c1e2/new-default.jpg?h=250

      Kathryn Barnes

      Producer, Reporter

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      Benjamin Gottlieb

      Reporter, Fill-in Host

      CultureFood & Drink
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