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Dozens hospitalized in Qatar after overeating during Ramadan

Anees

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Dozens hospitalized in Qatar after overeating during Ramadan

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Dozens of people suffering from abdominal pain were admitted on Wednesday to hospitals in Qatar after overeating on the first night of Ramadan, the Arabian Business website reported Thursday.
“Most of the cases at the emergency room during Ramadan are gastritis. We see 10 to 15 cases of overeating every day,” a medical staff member at al-Ahli Hospital told the Arabian Business website.
The Doha hospital was in a state of emergency last year when 100 patients were admitted in the first night of Ramadan; most of them suffering from abdominal pain, dehydration or kidney problems, according to the website.
In 2011, the Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC)’s emergency department recorded 7,700 of Ramadan-linked cases of illness, the report said.
Qatar has among the greatest prevalence of obesity and diabetes in the world, The New York Times cited health experts as saying.
The small oil-rich Gulf state ranked sixth globally for prevalence of obesity and had the highest rate of obesity among boys in the Middle East and North African region.
By 2015, it is predicted that 73 percent of women and 69 percent of men will be obese in Qatar.

http://english.alarabiya.net/en/variety/2013/07/11/Dozens-hospitalized-in-Qatar-after-overeating-during-Ramadan-.html
 
Sigh @ Yahood-al-Khaleej.

The concept of Ramadan is to weaken the body, and to resist desire.

What is the use of resisting them during the day, while going overboard fulfilling them during the night ?
 
khaleejis sleep during the day and eat a horse at maghrib.

Define the word "Khaleeji" will you?

Me and many other Arabs have had this debate with ignorant non-Arabs many times. The only so-called "Gulf Arabs" are those living in Kuwait, PARTS of the Eastern Province in KSA, Qatar, Bahrain and PARTS of UAE and Northern Oman. Nothing else. Some also include the most Southern part of Iraq due to similarity in dialect, geography, weather, some cultural things such as music, traditions etc. But even those regions are different from each other.

BTW, what kind of generalization is that? There were only 100 cases last year out of over 1 million people in Qatar who fasted. Obesity is a problem in some of those smaller and very rich countries like everywhere else in the world (nearly).

Eating lavishly during Ramadan is indeed not in the spirit of this holy month. I made a thread about this that nobody commented on.

Tariq A. Al-Maeena

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How does Ramadan in this country appear to a female expatriate who is a first-time visitor from a Nordic country and who had no inkling of what the essence of Ramadan was until she set foot on this soil? Layla, a Finnish national and the author of the blog Blue Abaya, shares her story:

"Most non-Muslims know this month as the time when Muslims abstain from food and drink during the daylight hours. Before I came to Saudi Arabia, admittedly, just like most non-Muslims living in Western countries, I was pretty ignorant about Ramadan. I knew that this was the month when Muslims fasted from sunrise to sunset, but that was pretty much it. I had heard people saying 'them Mohammedans can eat only at night and need to fast only part of the day because they couldn't handle a week in a row' and other such nonsense. I remember wondering, what was the real reason behind the Muslim fast, but never bothered to find out the answer. That is, until I came to the Kingdom.

"During my first Ramadan here, I became very curious to find out more about this month as it all suddenly became much more of a reality to me. To my surprise, as Ramadan drew closer, my expat friends grew grumpier. 'I hate Ramadan!' 'Everything is closed, nobody is working' 'Muslims skip work and leave all the work for us to do' 'Whatever you do, don't stay in Saudi Arabia for Ramadan, it's just crazy.' 'They will arrest you if they see you drinking water during the day', etc, etc, etc. I did not hear a single positive comment about Ramadan. So naturally, I was somewhat wary of what Ramadan would bring and started to dread the beginning of it along with all the other expats.

"So Ramadan rolled along and the entire hospital where I worked turned upside down. Patients ate at the strangest hours, visitors came and went in the middle of the night, the working hours of Muslims were cut, some Muslim employees would disappear in the middle of shifts, medicine regimes had to be changed and fasting patients could not even be administered intravenous medicines during daytime. It was all very confusing.

"Despite all the weird schedule changes, I could not help noticing other changes too. There was a remarkable sense of unity, cheerfulness and a feeling of high spirits among my Muslim colleagues. The patients, if possible, became even more welcoming, friendly, and hospitable. There was a sense of elation in the air that I could not quite put my finger on, but it made me even more curious.

"One day I watched all the ward clerks praying together with some nurses and doctors in the staff room where I was doing charting. I finally mustered up the confidence to ask about Ramadan, despite the fact that they were all Saudi males and I felt a little intimidated to approach them on this matter. I remember simply asking: 'Why do you fast during Ramadan?'

"I was blown away by the reply. Looking back, the way one of the men explained it to me in such a nice and respectable way was commendable, despite my seemingly super ignorant question.

"He said: 'We fast to remember all those people who cannot eat and drink daily. We fast to feel their suffering, to remind ourselves of how blessed we are to have food and water. We fast to feel those same pangs of hunger that our poor sisters and brothers feel daily around the world. We fast to become more generous, to practice self-discipline and to strive to become better Muslims and people.'


"His words had a profound impact on me. Somehow I had failed to see the true meaning of the fast. I started to look at it from an entirely different perspective. I came to realize that in reality, Ramadan is so much more than just abstaining from food and drink during the daylight hours. Basically, Muslims are supposed to abstain from all harmful acts as much as possible and concentrate on becoming better Muslims. Everyone can set their own goals for Ramadan according to their life situation and abilities. While one person struggles to quit smoking, another might set as a goal to read the entire Qur'an during Ramadan. Some might plan to pray extra prayers every day, donate to charity or memorize a new Surah from the Qur'an.

"So I learned from my Muslim colleagues that Ramadan is also about remembering our Creator, reading the Qur'an, which was sent down during the month of Ramadan, doing good deeds (out of a sincere wish to do them, not by habit or force), being kind to others, giving out Dawah (teaching, not preaching to non-Muslims about Islam) and remembering the poor and the less fortunate. Ramadan is about being humble, modest and abstaining not only from food, but from extravagances, over-consuming, spending, and wasting food, money and resources.

"Sadly, what I see today is very disturbing in that many people in Saudi Arabia are doing the exact opposite. The true purpose has been long lost and forgotten. I see people stocking up on food and spending on groceries like crazy, and cooking and baking like there is no tomorrow. Women are spending their days in the kitchen instead of focusing on their religion; some out of their own will or perhaps out of learned habit and routine and some because of demands from their husbands and even peer pressure.

"When the time comes for iftar, people indulge in extravagant meals and then lay around all evening snacking on deep fried, highly sweetened and unhealthy foods, watching Arabic soap operas on TV, gossiping with friends and staying up all night. Many go to shopping malls which are now open until the early morning hours for mindless shopping. Some even force their kids to stay up late or wake them in the middle of the night so that the parents don't have to get up early with them! The next day they sleep until the evening until it all starts over again at sunset.

"The Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) taught Muslims by example to break the fast with simply dates and water and to eat a light meal later and to pray Taraweeh prayers, then go to sleep as one normally would, get up early for night prayers and suhoor (breakfast) and go about the day working and doing things that one would normally do.

"Let's not forget the true meaning of Ramadan, its purpose, and all the blessings of this month. Break those unhealthy and binding routines and habits. Layla."

http://www.defence.pk/forums/middle-east-africa/265164-search-true-meaning-ramadan.html
 
Define the word "Khaleeji" will you?

Me and many other Arabs have had this debate with ignorant non-Arabs many times. The only so-called "Gulf Arabs" are those living in Kuwait, PARTS of the Eastern Province in KSA, Qatar, Bahrain and PARTS of UAE and Northern Oman. Nothing else. Some also include the most Southern part of Iraq due to similarity in dialect, geography, weather, some cultural things such as music, traditions etc. But even those regions are different from each other.

BTW, what kind of generalization is that? There were only 100 cases last year out of over 1 million people in Qatar who fasted. Obesity is a problem in some of those smaller and very rich countries like everywhere else in the world (nearly).

Eating lavishly during Ramadan is indeed not in the spirit of this holy month. I made a thread about this that nobody commented on.





http://www.defence.pk/forums/middle-east-africa/265164-search-true-meaning-ramadan.html


Gulf coast, but this is especially Qatar and Kuwait, they usually do these things.
Qoo6ys are number 1 in obesity, Qatar is doing good on that list aswell.

I have not been to this area, but from my views these 2 countries locals are arrogant/unfriendly in general.
 
Gulf coast, but this is especially Qatar and Kuwait, they usually do these things.
Qoo6ys are number 1 in obesity, Qatar is doing good on that list aswell.

I have not been to this area, but from my views these 2 countries locals are arrogant/unfriendly in general.

Ok. Fair enough. Qatar and Kuwait are quite different from each other. Just so you know.

You are now generalizing. Obesity is a problem there due to a lot of factors but there are other countries such as USA, Mexico (who in total nearly have a 500 million big population) have bigger problems with obesity.

Most local Kuwaitis originate from KSA (75%) or Iraq (25%).

I hear this from Saudis, Yemenis, Syrians, Iraqis and other Arabs but most that say this have not encountered enough of Kuwaitis or Qataris to make such a big generalization. I have not encountred enough of people from these two countries so I can't say but those I met were normal ordinary people.

Being arrogant/unfriendly is a personal trait not a trait of a whole country. It has nothing to do with being rich or poor.

Yes, obesity is a big problem in Kuwait and Qatar and I don't approve of some of their lavish spending (SOME of them are guilty of that) but again I don't know how I would behave if I had the same views or gained weight easily.

Obesity in Kuwait - World's Fattest People??? - YouTube

Also some overweight people try to change but they cannot.
 
I heard Kuwaitis have become extremely lazy, because of all the wealth.
Eat fast food, become fatty and practically dont move.

They take car everywhere, even if they want to go to a destination just 100 meters from their house.
Or something to that effect.
 
I heard Kuwaitis have become extremely lazy, because of all the wealth.
Eat fast food, become fatty and practically dont move.

They take car everywhere, even if they want to go to a destination just 100 meters from their house.
Or something to that effect.

Some of them do. Not all. But it is correct that a large segment of the society is very wealthy and thus don't do manual work that their forefathers used to do. For example as fishermen, merchants, workers etc. A life in luxury is not usually followed by hard physical work rather the opposite.

Just as having a very pale skin in the West not more than 100 years ago was a social thing that meant that you were not a poor peasant who had to work in the field all day long but was rich. Today being very pale is seen as being unhealthy, asocial etc. in the West.

It basically started after the Americans arrived in the early 1990's and their introduction of fast food chains. Also the food in all of the GCC is EXTREMELY cheap, the variety is amazing and the quality is great too. At least I can only talk for KSA and UAE. During summer where the weather is really hot (Kuwait, Southern Iraq, Eastern Province, Ahvaz etc.) are probably the most hot areas in the world during the summer also discourages rich/wealthy people to make hard work.

This video explains more of it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=29x3nPHrEis

Anyway the obesity levels are still bigger in countries like USA, Mexico and others. The first two alone have a population of 500 million while Kuwait has a little population 3.5 million or so of which half are non-nationals (immigrants).

Also Kuwait is trying to do a lot to change the obesity levels but as I see it nothing will change unless the prices on food do not drop. Because the food that is offered to all is great and extremely cheap. Even people who never believed that they could again kilograms have told that they did this in Kuwait.

Obesity is a great economical and social burden on every society so I expect Kuwait to take more drastic steps in the direction of combating obesity in the future before it gets totally out of control. If I was the ruler of Kuwait I would make the food 300% more expensive, ban some fast food chains and introduce healthy food in schools and constantly make obese people feel bad about themselves, LOL.
 

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