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Ramadan volunteers to give food to students

Ramadan volunteers to give food to students

Yahoo25-02-2025

Volunteers will give out hundreds of food parcels to hungry students during Ramadan.
Businessman Imran Bahar handed out more than 100 packages a day in Middlesbrough when he did the same thing last year, saying: "You can see in their eyes that [students] are struggling."
The National Union of Students (NUS) said students "clearly need more money in their pockets" and that the number of students using food banks had doubled to 14%.
The Department of Education said it was taking steps to offer more financial support to students.
Mr Bahar said students in Middlesbrough town centre, especially those from other countries and poor backgrounds, were struggling to find work and to eat.
"It's difficult for them to even find a job, there aren't enough jobs here," he said.
He and his 11-year-old daughter Zaira handed out meals for three days a week during the religious period last year, and often gave out between 100 and120 packs a day.
Mr Bahar said they had "massive queues" last year.
"It kind of humbles you," he said, adding: "It shows how important food actually is."
Ramadan is expected to begin on 28 February and will end on 30 March.
What are Eid al-Fitr and Ramadan and how do Muslims mark them?
NUS President Amira Campbell said students from working class and low-income backgrounds were "more likely to be going hungry and skipping meals".
She said international students were only allowed to work a maximum of 20 hours a week and received no maintenance support from the government.
Student money expert at Save the Student Tom Allingham said no single institution could solve the problem.
Its latest survey found 9% of respondents had used a food bank in the last 12 months.
Mr Allingham said: "While this was down on the previous year, it's still far too high, and yet another indicator that the cost of living crisis is lingering on for students."
Teesside University, whose main campus is in Middlesbrough, said it was actually seeing a decrease in the number of students accessing its existing support there and in the community.
A university spokesperson said: "We recognise that across all sectors of society the cost of living crisis is having an impact, and applaud any efforts to help disadvantaged people and support community cohesion."
A Department for Education spokesperson said the government would "fix the foundations of higher education to deliver change for students".
They said maximum loans would be increased in line with inflation to support students with living costs.
Follow BBC Tees on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.
What is Eid al-Fitr and how do Muslims celebrate it?
Students cut back on food as cost of living soars
National Union of Students
Save The Student
Teesside University

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Family of young couple killed in Air India crash speak of their loss
Family of young couple killed in Air India crash speak of their loss

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Family of young couple killed in Air India crash speak of their loss

The family of a couple who died with their daughter in the Air India plane crash have spoken of the comfort they take from them dying together. Zaheera Nanabawa said Akeel Nanabawa, his wife Hannaa Vorajee and their four-year-old daughter Sara Nanabawa would be missed 'tremendously'. Mr Nanabawa ran a recruitment firm while his wife volunteered at a local Islamic school in Gloucester where they lived. Speaking with other family members, Ms Nanabawa said her cousin was the 'glue' that held their family together. 'We'd often have fun at games nights and even when the older ones of us were not there Akeel would make a lot of efforts to engage with the young people in the family,' she said. 'They were away as part of their trip to Singapore and Malaysia, before they went to India, and we had two family events and we all really missed them there. 'We could kind of feel the lack of their presence. 'This whole news is absolutely shocking and devastating for us, and it will leave a hole within our family, but we are together and with each other where we can kind of console each other. 'They were so young in terms of their age and they were lifted together. They are going to be sorely, sorely missed. 'But we feel that their legacy is really going to live on.' Ms Nanabawa thanked the many people who had offered messages of condolences since the news of Thursday's Air India crash. 'As Muslims we pray a lot and we were thinking about what type of prayers they made,' she said. 'That they were lifted together from this realm at the same time, there is a lot of comfort in that. 'We are going to miss them tremendously but hopefully they're together. 'That does give us a lot of peace because they were so closely knit together as a family. 'If Akeel had survived or one of the others had survived without the others it would have been devastating. 'We do feel that there is a peace with them being lifted together.' Ms Nanabawa spoke of the couple's generosity with their time and would help anyone in need. 'Akeel would give his heart out to anybody at any time for anything,' she said. 'If you wanted something he would be there. He would constantly be just trying to give you things, whether it be a phone number to somebody that can help you with your car or dentist abroad. 'We believe this is part of their giving in this world and may they recoup in the hereafter.' She added: 'We're all just absolutely totally in shock. 'But seeing people coming to the family home, seeing the messages of condolences, finding out the things that we didn't even know that they were involved in that they were doing, we hope will continue to bring them benefit. 'As a family and as a community we've been inundated with lots and lots and lots of messages. 'We know the impact of this is going to be far-reaching and far wide and we thank the wider community for their messages of support. 'It's an opportunity for people to look at their own lives and reflect and just think about the wide meaning of life.'

Unrelated images shared with false claims of deadly Mauritanian plane crash heading to Mecca
Unrelated images shared with false claims of deadly Mauritanian plane crash heading to Mecca

Yahoo

time12-06-2025

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Unrelated images shared with false claims of deadly Mauritanian plane crash heading to Mecca

'A plane carrying Mauritanian hajj pilgrims crashed on their way to the holy city of Mecca. More than 210 hajj pilgrims were martyred,' reads part of a text overlay published on a TikTok post on May 28, 2025. The caption of the post, shared more than 1,300 times, includes the hashtag '#airplanecrashmauritania'. The video contains two static images of burning planes on a runway, edited with a motion filter and Arabic music playing in the background. Similar claims were published elsewhere on Facebook here and here. Millions of Muslims make the once-in-a-lifetime pilgrimage each year to the site believed to be the birthplace of the prophet Mohammed (archived here). However, posts claiming the images of a burning plane show a Mauritanian air disaster involving Muslims on their way to Mecca in June 2025 are false. Search results showed that the image has been previously linked to reports of different airline disasters. Two online publications dating from 2022 (archived here) and 2024 (archived here) also previously used the photograph to illustrate two separate incidents. The first occurred when a Nigerian air-force plane crashed in April 2022, killing the two pilots on board (archived here). The second incident, reported by the BBC in December 2023, wasn't a crash at all, but involved a NAF plane that apparently mistakenly fired at worshippers in a mosque in Kaduna, northwestern Nigeria, leaving some 85 people dead (archived here). However, reverse image searches revealed that the photo was published by aviation website Airliners, on May 10, 2007 (archived here) and showed a Russian-made Ilyushin Il-76td military cargo plane fire that occurred at Pointe-Noire Agostino Neto Airport, in the southwest of the Republic of the Congo. 'The Il-76 freighter caught fire on the ground while it was being loaded in preparation for a flight to Brazzaville (BZV),' reads the photo caption. The markings on the nose of the plane in the TikTok post clearly match those in the original image. Various articles in local news outlets from 2007 corroborate the date and location of this incident, stating that there were no casualties (archived here and here). Additional images of the event found on online forum Flightstory (archived here) were used alongside a Google Earth search to pinpoint the location of the fire, placing it next to an air-traffic control tower seen in a photograph taken outside the airport. The spot where the plane burnt – located behind the control tower – is still visible on Google satellite imagery taken in 2018 (seen here). Reverse image searches for the second image in the TikTok video led to an AFP report published on France 24 about a South Korean passenger plane that crashed in December 2024, killing 179 people (archived here). Featured in the AFP article is a photograph showing the damage to the plane. The caption in AFP's archives reads: 'Firefighters and recovery teams work at the scene where a Jeju Air Boeing 737-800 series aircraft crashed and burst into flames at Muan International Airport in Muan, some 288 kilometres southwest of Seoul on December 30, 2024.' The photo used in the false claim appears to have been altered to remove the South Korean flag, which is clearly visible on the side of the aircraft in the AFP photograph. AFP Fact Check did not find any credible reports on a recent Mauritanian plane crash. However, Mauritania's state-run news outlet published a statement confirming that all hajj pilgrims arrived safely on June 4, 2025 (archived here). Additionally, Mauritanian Airlines dismissed all claims of a crash in a statement published on Facebook on May 27, 2025 (archived here). 'Some foreign social media pages have circulated malicious rumors about a plane carrying Mauritanian pilgrims crashing off the Red Sea. These reports are completely unfounded,' reads the statement in Arabic. 'Mauritania Airlines confirms that all Mauritanian pilgrims have arrived safely and securely in the Holy Land, thank God, and no accidents have been reported related to the flights organized in this context.' AFP Fact Check has previously debunked other images relating to this claim here and here.

Islam Is World's Fastest-Growing Religion
Islam Is World's Fastest-Growing Religion

Newsweek

time11-06-2025

  • Newsweek

Islam Is World's Fastest-Growing Religion

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Islam grew faster than any other major religious group globally from 2010 to 2020, according to estimates released on Monday from Pew Research Center, a U.S.-based think tank. Over the period, the number of Muslims worldwide increased by 347 million compared to 122 million for Christians, with the share of the world's population that is Christian actually falling, as the gains failed to keep up with population growth. The second biggest rise was recorded by the religiously unaffiliated. Why It Matters The rapid growth of Islam reflects significant demographic shifts that are altering the global religious landscape. For Americans, understanding these trends is vital as they influence migration, international relations and social dynamics both domestically and abroad. Experts found that higher birth rates and a younger median age among Muslims drove much of this surge, helping narrow the gap between Muslims and Christians worldwide. What To Know The Pew Research Center data from the time frame showed the number of Muslims globally reaching around 2 billion, as the proportion of the world's population that was Muslim rose from 23.9 percent to 25.6 percent. Over the same time, Christians' share of the global population fell from 30.6 percent to 28.8 percent. After Islam the biggest gains were recorded by the religiously unaffiliated, which saw their total increase by 300 million to 1.9 billion, representing 24.2 percent of the global population. This was a 0.9 percent increase in their share of the global population. Muslim worshippers walk around the Kaaba, Islam's holiest shrine, at the Grand Mosque in Saudi Arabia's holy city of Mecca on June 13, 2024, ahead of the annual Hajj pilgrimage. Muslim worshippers walk around the Kaaba, Islam's holiest shrine, at the Grand Mosque in Saudi Arabia's holy city of Mecca on June 13, 2024, ahead of the annual Hajj pilgrimage. FADEL SENNA/AFP/GETTY Out of the religions surveyed, only Buddhism saw its number of global adherents fall in absolute terms, by 19 million, to 324 million people. Pew analyzed data from more than 2,700 sources spanning national censuses, demographic surveys and population registers. The study covered 201 countries or territories, accounting for nearly the entire world population. Separately, data from Pew's Religious Landscape Study found the number of religiously unaffiliated increased from 2007, or in some cases 2014, and 2023-24 in every U.S. state except South Dakota. Higher Birthrates The study found that birthrates were the main cause of the growing Muslim population, with the number of conversions to Islam roughly offset by the number of people leaving the religion. Muslim women had, on average, 2.9 children in their lifetime from 2015 to 2020, compared to 2.2 children for non-Muslim women. Conversion played a negligible role in Muslim population growth, with about 1 percent of those raised Muslim leaving the faith, offset by a similar number joining Islam. Growth stemmed nearly entirely from natural demographic trends. The median age for Muslims in 2020 was 24, which is nine years younger than the median for non-Muslims, suggesting the Muslim share of the global population will continue to increase. Global Distribution In 2020, the largest Muslim populations were in the Asia-Pacific region (1.2 billion), with smaller but quickly growing populations in the Middle East-North Africa (414 million) and sub-Saharan Africa (369 million). Countries with the most Muslims included Indonesia, Pakistan, India and Bangladesh. Islam formed a majority in 53 countries or territories worldwide. What People Are Saying Speaking to Newsweek, Professor Faisal Devji, expert in Islam at the University of Oxford, said: "Having just read the report, I see that the increase in Muslim population is largely natural, due to younger populations and so higher birthrates in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East, rather than due to any change in religious affiliation. In fact it appears that the real story here is the spectacular rise of disaffiliated or non-religious people globally, but especially in wealthy countries. At more than 24% of the global population they seem to point to the decline of formal religion as such. What we need to attend to in Islam, therefore, is not its growth so much as resilience for the time being." Professor Rumee Ahmed, expert in Islamic law at University of British Columbia, told Newsweek: "The biggest demographic story of the last decade has been sub-Saharan Africa, where the population grew by more than 70% from 2010-2020 due largely to improved health outcomes and infant mortality, and for the first time there are more Christians in sub-Saharan Africa than there are in Europe. About a third of this population is Muslim, and that coupled with a steady 15-20% population growth in Muslim-dense areas like South Asia and South-East Asia accounts for most of the growth in the Muslim population. "In many of these areas, religion is a state-defined identity marker and, unlike in most Western countries, citizens are asked to affiliate with one religious group and are registered with the state as such, with rights and responsibilities that go along with that identity. This is part of a legacy that goes back to the colonial period; the data tell us nothing about religiosity, beliefs, and practices, just how respondents identify." Ibrahim Hooper, communications director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) said: "As to the growth of the Muslim community in the United States, we have previously noted that the increase is due to a number of factors, including conversion, a higher-than-average birth rate and immigration from Muslim-majority areas." Andrew Copson, president of Humanists International, a group which promotes secularism, commented: "All over the world people are finding that religious beliefs no longer offer them good guidance on morality, meaning in life, or effective ways to understand the universe. The rising number of people declaring themselves proudly not to be religious is a natural consequence of all of this." Melina Cohen, director of strategic communications and policy engagement at American Atheists, told Newsweek: "The Nones are not a monolith, and people are religiously unaffiliated for a number of reasons. Some never left religion but were raised secularly. Others leave after experiencing religious trauma and abuse. Many more are disturbed by the politicization of churches and turned off by dogmas that promote hate and discord, finding religious teachings and traditions to be outdated and incompatible with their values." What Happens Next The Pew center projects these demographic trends will continue over coming decades, potentially changing the relative sizes of global religious populations by midcentury.

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