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“It is a very different Ramadan”: how the coronavirus has altered rituals in Australia

Mufti Zeeyad Ravat is an Islamic scholar, an authority on the daily practice of Islam. His path to Australia was tortuous, from his birthplace in Johannesburg, South Africa, to India, Syria (where he studied Arabic), Brazil, Brisbane, and Melbourne. In March of last year, he traveled to New Zealand to lead a prayer service in Christchurch after 50 worshipers in a mosque were killed.

Ravat, 39, is a lot of energy, his arms flailing to make a point, one leg under him in a recliner at his home in Dandenong, in southeast Melbourne. The everyday noise of family life (he is married and has five children) makes his way from the next room explaining how important Ramadan is and how the coronavirus pandemic has altered its rituals.



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