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On 15 December 2015 anti-Islam blogger Pamela Geller published an article titled Muslim World Marks December 24 as MUHAMMAD's birthday, tweeting: As is often the case with Geller's articles, the piece was made up of two lines written by her, followed by an article aggregated from another source. Under the category Advancing Islamic Lies, Geller wrote: Beneath it was reproduced the entire text of a 13 December 2015 Emirates 24/7 article titled December 24 is UAE Public Holiday to Mark Prophet's Birthday, the relevant portion of which reported: Geller's assertion that [n]othing is sacred and that [e]verything non-Islamic must be co-opted, falsified, erased with respect to the celebration of the Prophet Mohammed's birth was bizarre, given that the article she reproduced in its entirety clearly originated with and described a public holiday in the United Arab Emirates. The UAE is a majority Muslim country, where fully 76 percent of the citizens follow Islam while only 9 percent identify as Christian. That distinction appeared lost on a large number of people sharing the article and subsequent reproductions of it on social media. Many seemed to believe that the UAE's declaration in some way disrupted American Christmas festivities, while others ordered Muslims to do so in your own country where you came from. Social media users appeared to interpret the claim presented by Geller to mean that the celebration was a direct analog to Christmas: that just as Christians celebrated Jesus Christ's birth on the fixed date of 25 December, so too would Muslims now (the sudden change clearly being a Muslim encroachment on Christian turf.) Malaysia's public holidays web site lists the dates of the commemoration of the prophet's birthday this year and next year as 24 December 2015 and 12 December 2016, explaining that: The web site timeanddate.com describes annual scheduling of the holiday in a more American context (and separately in a global one): Bear in mind that the 12th or 17th day of the Islamic month doesn't indicate that such a celebration would fall on the 12th or 17th day of the month by the Gregorian calendar used by most of the Western world. Islamic dates are based on a lunar calendar and therefore move around from year to year with respect to the solar-based Gregorian calendar. Therefore, an Islamic holiday that coincides with 12 December on the Gregorian calendar will not always fall on that date; the following year that holiday will likely fall somewhere between 30 November and 2 December. Timeanddate.com provides a list of the dates on which the observance of the prophet's birthday fell between 2010 and 2020, also noting that: The dates for that ten-year range were provided as follows: Some versions of the co-opted Christmas rumor held that the observance used to be held in late winter or early spring, which again reflects an ignorance of that fact that Islam uses a lunar-based calendar, and therefore their dates move around from year to year as charted by the Gregorian calendar. Essentially, all that has occurred is that in 2015 the prophet Muhammad's birthday happens to coincide with 23 December on the Gregorian calendar, and in some places local government had postponed celebration of that event until the following day, which happens to coincide with Christmas Eve. No attempt has been made by Muslims to permanently co-opt Christmas dates for the celebration of the birthday of one of the most important figures in their religion. Observance of the prophet's birthday holiday is far from universal, even in predominantly Muslim countries, and the Islamic Supreme Council of America describes it as a spiritual and social occasion for the Muslims who are so inclined to celebrate it: A 2 January 2015 article published by On Being examines the disparity between Muslims who observe or celebrate the holiday and those who don't. The concluding paragraphs of that article noted that the observance in 2015 would fall close to Christmas (further indicating Muslims didn't just decide in 2015 to co-opt the Christian holiday): A very rudimentary primer on the workings of the Islamic calendar handily explains that the Islamic Calendar has twelve months but, unlike Western calendars, has only 354 days. The mathematically-inclined might notice that in the list of days on which the observance has historically fallen, it has fluctuated by roughly eleven days from year to year. As calendar information documents, the assertion that Muslims worldwide have suddenly decided to steal Christmas from Christians is absurd. Anyone could look up the dates on which the observance of the Prophet Mohammed's birth has fallen throughout the years and see that they fluctuate due to the structure of the Islamic calendar and are clearly unrelated to anything Christians happen to be doing. Whether the claim spread through ignorance of this freely available information or willful misrepresentations of it is unclear, but the proximity of the observance of the birth of the Prophet Mohammed to Christmas in 2015 is neither a surprise, a new thing, nor a decision made by the Muslim world to aggravate Christians. In 2015, Geller similarly falsely reported Muslims had canceled the 4th of July and attempted to ban the national anthem. She also advanced a falsehood maintaining that large chain stores were implementing Sharia-friendly checkout lines.
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