EID is an annual Islamic festival.Eid means "feast." There are several feast days in the Islamic calendar.
Mecca
The number of feast days in a calendar year depends on the religious tradition or cultural practices being followed. For example, in Catholicism, there are many feast days, including those dedicated to saints, liturgical celebrations, and holy days of obligation. In other religious traditions or cultures, the number of feast days may vary.
Most religious festivals take place on religious feast days. The day before a religious feast day is known as a "vigil" or watching. Vigils are days of fast and penance in order that the faithful may root out vice in themselves and gain the necessary disposition and virtues to celebrate the feast day in a virtuous spirit.
The list of religious occasions is much too long the list here. Each religion has its own holidays and feast days.
There are two Muslim feasts: Eid-al-Adha, the Feast of the Sacrifice, which is celebrated during the Hajj, and Eid-al-Fitr, the Feast of Breaking the Fast, which comes immediately after the end of Ramadan.
Okay, Hajj is pilgramige- it's when the Muslims make a pilgrimage to Mecca. Everyone usually does it in the last month of the Islamic year. In the first 10 days.
What religious conditions prevailed in the days before islam
The Islamic calendar month only has 28 days, where as the Georgian calendar month varies between 28 and 31 days (depending on the month). This means that the Islamic calendar is shorter than the Georgian calendar by approximately 11 days every year. For this reason Islamic religious evens such as the Holy month of Ramadan, migrate forward each year by about 11 days. Christian religious events tend to remain on the same day of the Georgian calendar each year (or within a few days).
Eid Al-Kebir is and Arabic word that means the Grand Feast. This feast is coinciding with the Hajj (Pilgrimage) days (the 9th of month Thu Al-Hajja in Islamic Calendar plus the three or four following days) and is celebrated by all Muslims
A religious year can have varying numbers of days depending on the specific religion. For example, the Islamic year has 354 or 355 days, the Hebrew year can have 353, 354, or 355 days, and the Hindu religious year is based on lunar cycles and can have 354 or 355 days.
The religious calendar that is commonly used to keep track of religious days varies depending on the specific religion. For example, the Jewish calendar is used to determine religious days in Judaism, while the Islamic calendar is used in Islam. These calendars are based on lunar cycles and differ from the Gregorian calendar used in everyday life.