Most of the Islamic hearders raise them and either donate or sell them to be sacrificed.
It is not only one type. You can choose one of these: Sheep, goat, cow, bull, young bull, buffalo, calf, heifer, camel.
There is no real similarity; one is an Islamic Holiday and the other is a Christian Holy Book. The only tangential connections are that a sheep is slaughtered in almost every large family, similar to how sheep were slaughtered in the Temple in Jerusalem and that Eid al-Adha commemorates Abraham's sacrifice of Ishmael which parallels the Biblical account of Abraham's sacrifice of Isaac.
he didn't sacrifice 2 sheep, he sacrificed 1 sheep and 1 child
Of course not according to the islamic teachers they say that it is haram to sacrifice chicken on Eid-Al-Adha. It should be camel. goat/sheep, or cow/buffalo
what i understand is.it is in memory of Prophet Abraham (pbuh) Sacrifice
There are two Islamic holidays: 1. Eid al-Fitr, or the Feast of Breaking the Fast, which takes place the first day of the month that follows the fasting month, Ramadan. 2. Eid al-Adha, or the Feast of the Sacrifice, which takes place during the Hajj. Eid al-Adha celebrates God's mercy to Prophet Abraham, when God told him that he did not have to sacrifice his son, but could sacrifice a sheep instead. There are two Islamic holidays: 1. Eid al-Fitr, or the Feast of Breaking the Fast, which takes place the first day of the month that follows the fasting month, Ramadan. 2. Eid al-Adha, or the Feast of the Sacrifice, which takes place during the Hajj. Eid al-Adha celebrates God's mercy to Prophet Abraham, when God told him that he did not have to sacrifice his son, but could sacrifice a sheep instead.
sheep and flesh.
Sheep, cow, goat, and Buffalo can be offered as ritual sacrifice in Islam.
it supplies some people with food, money because their horns are sold
goat,cow,camel or sheep
It depends on what kind of animal you have decided to sacrifice. It differs for goat, sheep, cow or camel etc. Sacrifice according to your pocket capacity.
Because in the Old Testament, a lamb was a sacrifice for sin. Now, Jesus is a sacrifice for our sin.