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Damascus: Ramadan Drummers Defiant as Tradition Wanes

Ramadan drummers who awaken the faithful for their pre-dawn meal are holding on in Damascus, despite hardship, according to Asharq al-Awsat.
Syria: Ramadan Drummers Defiant as Tradition Wanes
Damascus: Ramadan Drummers Defiant as Tradition Wanes

Ramadan drummers who awaken the faithful for their pre-dawn meal are dying out across the Muslim world but the tradition lives on in Syria’s capital Damascus despite the growing reliance on smartphones.

Around one hour before the call to prayer rings out at dawn, Ramadan drummers, known as Musaharati, walk through narrow streets to wake the faithful.

They include Hasan al-Rashi, 60, one of the 30 Musaharati left in Damascus.

His voice breaks the nighttime silence in the capital’s Old City, as he sings and pounds his drum.

Read Also: Recap: Syria’s Difficult Ramadan

“Despite the advent of smartphones and other technologies, people still like to wake up to the voice of the Musaharati,” Rashi told AFP.

“The Musaharati is a part of the customs and traditions of the people of Damascus during the month of Ramadan,” he added.

“It is a heritage that we will not leave behind.”

While performing his Musaharati task, Rashi carries a bamboo cane in one hand and a drum made of goatskin in the other.

He walks quickly from home to home, using his stick to tap on the doors of families who have asked for his services.

“Wake up for Suhur (pre-dawn meal), Ramadan has come to visit you,” Rashi sings.

Although they do receive gifts, the Musaharati don’t usually expect financial rewards.

They sometimes carry bags or straw baskets to store food and other gifts that are given to them.

For Rashi, it’s not about the freebies.

“We feel joy when we go out every day,” he said.

“Some children follow us sometimes and ask to beat the drum,” Rashi added.

Ahead of the call to prayer, Sharif Resho asks one of his neighbors for a glass of water before the start of his fast.

The 51-year-old Musaharati usually accompanies Rashi every night, also beating his drum and singing.

“My equipment is simple, it is my voice, my drum, and my stick,” he said.

Resh, whose father was also a Ramadan drummer, has carried out Musaharati duties for nearly a quarter of a century.

Syria’s more than decade-long war and the coronavirus pandemic did not stop him from carrying on, he said.

“I will keep waking people up for Suhur as long as I have a voice in my throat,” Resho told AFP. 

“It is a duty I inherited from my father, that I will pass on to my son.”

 

This article was edited by The Syrian Observer. The Syrian Observer has not verified the content of this story. Responsibility for the information and views set out in this article lies entirely with the author.

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