Ramadan is not a month to be celebrated , all Muslims around the world fast in Ramadan.
The countries who celebrate Eid-El-Futur ( which is the end of Ramadan ) are:
-Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Syria ,Egypt and all of the other Arabic countries.
- In addition to Malaysia and some other Islamic Countries.
-Iran
Anywhere there are Muslims, which is pretty much every country in the world.
In countries where Muslims are in the majority it is a public holiday, in other countries Muslims tend to observe it privately.
Every single country with Muslims. Eid is a religious holiday, it has nothing to do with the countries
All Muslims irrelevant in which country in the world.
it can be celebrated anywhere
Ramadan does not celebrate countries; it is not a commemoration of national victories or similar. It is an Islamic fast-month for Muslims to self-purify before God. All Muslim-majority countries have schedule alterations so that their citizenry can observe the Ramadan fasts.
Yes. Even Islam-derived religions like Druze, Baha'i, and Sikhism do not celebrate Ramadan. If a person considers Ahmadis to be non-Muslims, then the answer changes to No since Ahmadis do observe Ramadan. However, there is much controversy over whether Ahmadis are or are not Muslims by different people.
Ramadan is the 9th month in the Islam Lunar calendar that is called Hijra Calendar.
Muslims celebrate "Eid al-Fitr" after the completion of Ramadan. This is the first day after Ramadan. On this day Muslims stop their fasting.
Islam
Yep, Muslims celebrate Ramadan. You got the spelling wrong though.
Muslims celebrate Ramadan and Hajj
celebrate Eid
No, Ramadan is celebrated by Muslims; those who believe in the religion of Islam.
Ramadan is a festival to celebrate the finishing of prophet Muhammad. Muslims have a feast to show their appreciation.
Yes; in August.
June 2nd