
A Malaysian doctor who will spend the last days of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in space has vowed to follow the rituals of his faith even as he hurtles around Earth at 17,000 mph.
Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor lifted off Wednesday in a Soyuz spacecraft from Kazakhstan, en route to the international space station where he will spend about 10 days.
The spacecraft — which also carried an American and a Russian — will take two days to reach the station, a period coinciding with the last days of Ramadan, the month when Muslims fast from dawn to dusk. Sheikh Muszaphar has said he will fast and pray in space, even though clerics said he could delay the fast.
"I am not sure how it would be done but I will share my experiences (with) all the Muslims all over the world when I get back," the 35-year-old Sheikh Muszaphar wrote in his Web journal. "After all, Islam is a way of life and I am quite sure I would not face much difficulties."
Sheikh Muszaphar is taking vacuum-packed Malaysian food, including skewered chicken, banana rolls, fermented soybean cakes and ginger jelly to mark the end of Ramadan.
A bachelor who has become a national heartthrob, the orthopedic surgeon will not be the first Muslim in space — Saudi Prince Sultan bin Salman joined the crew of the shuttle Discovery in 1985 and there have been several others since.
Still, the mission initially presented a dilemma about fulfilling religious duties such as fasting, kneeling for prayers in zero gravity or facing Mecca to pray.
After all, praying five times daily on a craft that goes around Earth 16 times a day would have meant praying 80 times in 24 hours. Also, it is virtually impossible to face Mecca continuously in a craft traveling at such high speed.
Muslims are required to wash their hands, feet, face and hair before prayers — a luxury on the Soyuz where water is so precious that even sweat and urine are recycled.
To get around these problems, 150 Malaysian scholars, scientists, and astronauts brainstormed and published an 18-page booklet of guidelines for Muslim astronauts.
If he follows the guidelines, Sheikh Muszaphar can forgo fasting in space and make up for it when he returns to Earth. He can pray three times a day instead of five, facing any direction, and he can do without the ritual washing.
On Tuesday, Sheikh Muszaphar told reporters his trip will be an inspiration for his Southeast Asian homeland as well as to other Muslims worldwide.
"It's a small step for me, but a great leap for the Malaysian people," he said, rephrasing Neil Armstrong's words after the 1969 moon landing.
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It's enough to make one want to weep uncontrollably for the misguided priorities of mankind as a whole.
Well, anything to fulfill the purpose of religion: to be and to make others miserable.
It's so glaringly obvious to me that Allah doesn't exist and neither does the Christian one, that I sometimes wonder how what is so obvious to me manages to escape millions of others who live their lives enslaved in religion trying to please beings who plainly do not exist. The answer, of course, is religious brainwashing and indoctrination, religious fear, and people being exposed to years of strong encouragement from the pulpit NOT to use the brains that their god allegedly gave them. It's a state of affairs that is tragically sad - not just for the deluded believers, but for all of mankind...
A small rectal bomb should do the trick. Set to go ff when he farts.
What could be a better terrorist attack than blowing up the space station?
fjell
Who knows what exceptions will come next? Perhaps instead of suicide bombers that kill others while blowing themselves to smithereens, they'll just start blowing each other. ;)
I would have thought that Allah, in his all-knowingness would have already written how to pray to him while Mecca is flying past below. If he'd told Mohammad to write about the exact speed that it would take to keep a vessel in orbit, and the exact things a person had to do in space, then it would be easier on all of us, huh. Is it that the almighty Allah didn't have the foresight to see humans venturing into space?
By the way, the idea of facing Mecca, even on earth is silly, and people don't face Mecca at all. They face the direction of Mecca (southeast, etc) but in reality, if they're on the other side of the world, they would have to face right into the ground to truly be facing Mecca, because the world isn't flat.
fjell
Steely Dan said it best, "Any world that I'm welcome to is better than the one I come from."
Surely, Carl Sagan is turning in his grave.
fjell
If a person is still hung up on obsessive-compulsive religious rituals, then that person is obviously not qualified to go to outer space. Period.
With all the problems facing the world today, having 150 scholars, scientists, and astronauts waste their time and energy to get 18 pages that pretty much modify "sacred" laws specifically for Muslims in space is downright ludicrous. Anyone who honestly thinks that there is a god somewhere and is immature enough to offer him his divine ego trip five times a day by sticking his butt in the air isn't qualified to go into outer space.
Its like all they have learnt they have just memorized without understanding it or analysing it.
This applies to university degrees and general knowledge and their religious texts.
They simply don't use their brains to question and reason but blindly accept writtings of ignorant, blabbering, raving lunatics and take it as 'god's writings'...
Frankly, I think of muslims as the WORST religion/cult as it is a movement which seeks to control every aspect of their idiot followers, from how to shit to how to think.
All muslims should live in their own planet, Planet Islam, and leave us non-religious free to be.