As this goes to press, it would be about the eighth day of fasting for the month of Ramadan.
Across parts of the country, the shift is quiet but noticeable. Kitchens stir earlier than usual. Evenings gather a little more intention. For many Filipino Muslims, the daily rhythm has gently realigned itself around the fast.
Ramadan, observed by Muslims worldwide, is the ninth month of the Islamic lunar calendar. During this period, adult Muslims who are able undertake fasting from dawn until sunset. The practice, known as sawm, is one of the five central acts of worship in Islam, alongside the declaration of faith, the five daily prayers, charity and the pilgrimage to Makkah.
To the unfamiliar observer, the fast is often understood simply as abstaining from food. In practice, it is more layered. The fast calls for restraint not only of appetite but also of speech, temper and impulse. It is meant to cultivate discipline, reflection and heightened awareness of one’s duties to both God and neighbor.
Each day begins before dawn with a light pre-fast meal known as suhoor, and ends at sunset with the breaking of the fast or iftar.
In the Philippines, many families quietly keep time with sunset tables published by the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration, timing their evening “breakfast,” as some jokingly call it, almost to the minute.
Even government workplaces have taken modest steps to recognize the month’s different rhythm. The Civil Service Commission has allowed flexible working arrangements for Muslim government employees during Ramadan, a quiet institutional acknowledgment that showing up fully sometimes means being permitted to show up differently.
For many observers outside the Muslim community, Ramadan fasting is often understood only in fragments. A few clarifications will help complete the picture.
Fasting is daily, not continuous for the entire month. Food and drink are permitted after sunset and before the next day’s dawn. Life continues: offices remain open, schools proceed and the familiar demands of Filipino urban life carry on, just with an adjusted cadence.
Islamic practice also provides compassionate exemptions. Those who are ill, elderly, traveling, pregnant, or breastfeeding are not required to fast if doing so would cause them harm. Women during their menstrual period are likewise exempt and may make up missed days later. The fast is intended as disciplined devotion, not hardship for its own sake.
My first memory of Ramadan goes back to when I was about eight years old. One night, or what I thought was night, I was stirred awake by activity in the kitchen. I remember my father showing my mother what he had brought home: chicken tikka from the then well-known Kashmir restaurant on Pasay Road, now Arnaiz Avenue, in Makati.
Only later did I understand that it was around four in the morning. The household was preparing for suhoor. I would not officially begin fasting until I turned 13, but that early memory stayed: the kitchen light on before sunrise, the house awake while much of the city still slept.
The close of Ramadan is marked by Eid al-Fitr, the festival that signals the end of the month-long fast. In the Philippines, it is observed as a national holiday, a measure authored by Senator Loren Legarda that reflects the country’s continuing effort to honor the diversity of its citizenry.
Moments of quiet understanding matter in proportion to how little they cost and how much they change. Not because they solve everything, but because they make shared spaces easier to inhabit. These moments are not grand gestures. But they accumulate. And in a country still learning the shape of itself, that accumulation is not nothing.
Nation-building does not always begin with sweeping reforms.
Sometimes it begins more quietly, with the simple discipline of choosing to see one another more clearly.