Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Tripoli celebrates first post-Gaddafi Eid
Tripoli celebrates first post-Gaddafi Eid
Dec 26, 2025 10:07 PM

  Libyans in Tripoli's seaside Martyrs Square have marked the first post-Muammar Gaddafi celebration of Eid al-Fitr, coming out in huge numbers to revel in newly gained independence.

  At dawn, thousands of men and about 200 women gathered on huge green carpets to make the special dawn prayer, intoning praise for God before the old stone walls where Gaddafi had made some of his defiant speeches just months before.

  Cranes loomed over some of the supplicants. Journalists have been told that they were brought in to support an enormous poster of Gaddafi. The portrait, reportedly what would have been the largest image of a head of state ever produced, was meant for the 42nd anniversary of Gaddafi's time in power, which is Thursday.

  After the prayer, the square emptied, but families continued to circle its expanse in their cars, honking and waving their hands in victory signs.

  Fighters maintained positions at intersections around the square, receiving praise from civilians and firing their guns in the air.

  Women, rarely seen during the Libyan conflict, joined the celebrations. One waved the revolution flag and flashed the victory sign to a photographer, while her friend hid her face.

  In the shade of a colonnade on the square's eastern edge, where a crowd had gathered, Mohammed Hamadi held his 18-month-old daughter Rawya.

  Hamadi, a 30-year-old Tripolitanian, wore a fresh white jalabiya and traditional embroidered vest. His wife had stayed home, but Hamadi had brought Rawya to see the celebration.

  "It's good, very good," he said.

  Lingering concerns

  On the southern side of the square, a middle-aged woman in a brown hijab walked away from the activity, smiling.

  Down a narrow alley, a man led his daughter home. Others sat quietly in plastic chairs, enjoying the end of Ramadan's daytime fasting with small cups of tea and coffee.

  Nearby, three men laughed at a row of cartoons and humorously edited images of Gaddafi that had been plastered to a building’s support column. One image showed the revolution flag waving; beneath it, another depicted Gaddafi as if he were bald.

  Next to a table where vendors sold revolutionary trinkets and gear, two boys played table football in the shade of a colonnade as their friend watched.

  Celebratory fire from high-caliber assault rifles echoed from hundreds of meters away on the other side of the square, and the hum of passing bullets could be heard overheard.

  The crowd gathered around the trinket table didn't seem to care as they pressed in around the assortment of revolutionary items. The vendors sold floppy hats (10 dinars), revolution-colored nylon prayer mats (5 dinars), pins showing Libya and the peace sign in revolution colors (3 dinars) and "I love Libya" balloons (3 dinars).

  To the side, a neatly dressed man in sunglasses, khaki trousers and a powder-blue shirt watched with amusement. He said he was a Croatian who had been living and doing business for a construction company in Libya for 18 months.

  "Everything will be much better than before. It’s all open now," he said, clasping his hands behind his back as he walked.

  Then he reconsidered, pondering out loud about the role corruption, endemic to Gaddafi's regime, might play as the National Transitional Council takes over.

  "All Arab countries have this problem," he said. "After the revolution, I think it's going to be the same, the mentality. After 10 days, look what's happened: nothing, there's no water."

  The man, who declined to be named, said he would stay for a few more days to observe, then go on vacation. He said he would be thinking about continuing to do business in Libya.

  'Where is Abu Shafshoufa?'

  Sitting atop a revolution pick-up truck that had been armed with a heavy machine gun protected by a rounded shield of metal, 31-year-old Khaled Bakeer said he had returned to Benghazi from his job in Canada shortly after the uprising began.

  He travelled to Misrata, fought for three months and arrived with his brigade in Tripoli last Saturday.

  "On Friday, we had a big fight in Zlitan," said Bakeer, as two bullet necklaces dangled in front of his chest. "Now I feel freedom. It's like we got everything. We got Tripoli, soon we will get Gaddafi and his sons. Gaddafi is a terrorist.”

  Bakeer said he was "80 per cent" sure Gaddafi was hiding in the southern stronghold of Sabha. He wouldn’t risk fleeing to Sirte or Bani Walid, which are close to revolution forces, Bakeer said.

  Bakeer's brother-in-law, 54-year-old Mohammed el-Naas, drove up in a truck with his wife and children. He had lived in Canada until he moved back to Libya to work for Petrol Canada three years ago.

  Getting Gaddafi, he said, would be an important assurance that the uprising had been victorious.

  "He wants to continue hassling us and the new Arab Spring. He's not happy with this," Naas said. "Our concern now is speeding up the transition as fast as possible."

  Naas said he was pleased with the National Transitional Council.

  "Many of the old people in Gaddafi's government tried as much as they could to halt the demolition of the country. I know a few of them," he said.

  "We were fortunate to get this government within 10 days after the revolution ... otherwise these revolutionaries would have no support."

  To the left, revolution fighters were singing songs and chanting. One of the most common, heard often on the streets of Tripoli in recent days, goes: Maleshy! Shafshoufa!

  Shafshoufa refers to Gaddafi's hair. It's a word he used to describe his frizzy hairstyle and which Libyans have turned around on him. Maleshy means "I'm sorry." The chant is a mocking send-off.

  Khairy Tajouri, a 26-year-old fighter sitting on the cab of a truck, ended one chant by theatrically grabbing his head and yelling, “Where is Abu Shafshoufa?”

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A Libyan boy waves the flag of the rebellion as a mufti gives a sermon during prayers at a mosque in the town of Bin Jawad near the frontline east of Sirte.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
More than 465,000 killed in Syria, refugee group says
  More than 465,000 civilians have been killed in Syria’s six-year war, a refugee rights group said Saturday.   Abdullah Resul Demir, deputy chairman of the International Refugee Rights Organization, said the fatalities had been caused during fighting or in prison.   “The century’s most serious human rights violations have been going on...
How Israel occupies education in East Jerusalem
  The Zahwat al-Quds kindergarten and primary school's walls are decorated with colourful cartoons, while its students are dressed in grey-and-red striped uniforms.   The children's wide smiles and laughter echo through the hallways, belying their lingering anxiety after a recent Israeli raid on the school.   At the start of the school...
2nd largest mosque in Central Asia accommodates 10,000
  Khazret Sultan Mosque in Astana can accommodate up to 10,000 worshippers and stands as one of the Kazakh capital’s most unique and magnificent buildings.   Built on 27-acres of land, it is the second largest mosque after Turkmenbasy Ruhy Mosque in Turkmenistan’s capital Ashgabat and has been attracting tourists since 2012....
Syrian refugees 'at risk of being pushed to return'
  Aid agencies have warned that hundreds of thousands of Syrians are at risk of being pushed to return in 2018, despite ongoing violence in the Middle Eastern country.   The warning was issued by six humanitarian agencies amid what they called a "global anti-refugee backlash", harsher conditions in regional countries who...
An extraordinary city in the Islamic conquest: Bukhara
  The first conquest of the historical Bukhara city by the Muslims was in 674 by the governor of Khorasan, Ubeydullah Bin Ziyad. But only 30 years later, the Islamic ruling of the city was achieved. After Kuteybe Bin Muslim the new governor of Khorasan breaking the resistance of the Turkish...
1,389 civilians killed in Syria in February: Watchdog
  At least 1,389 civilians have been killed in conflicts across war-torn Syria in February 2018, according to a report published by the Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR).   The London-based rights group said in a monthly report released on Thursday that 67 percent of the victims were killed by the...
Salvaging bodies: A doctor's everyday reality in Syria
  Trauma surgeon Shazeer Majeed has worked for Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Yemen, South Sudan and Iraq. He is now working in northern Syria, a region gripped by instability, and shares his day-to-day reality of trying to keep victims of war alive.   "We usually think of the remnants of war...
Hundreds of patients await evacuation in E. Ghouta
  Hundreds of patients are awaiting evacuation from Syria's Eastern Ghouta, which is besieged by the Bashar al-Assad regime.   Many babies and children have lost their lives in the area due to hunger and lack of medicines.   Assad regime, which has intensified its siege on Eastern Ghouta in the last eight...
Entire Bedouin village faced with forced displacement
  An entire village consisting of dozens of Palestinian Bedouin families is threatened with imminent forced displacement, after Israel issued a rare evacuation order for the whole community.   Jabal al-Baba, which lies to the east of Jerusalem in the occupied West Bank, is home to more than 300 people.   "Residents are...
Raed Jarrar's detention by Israel raises alarm
  A leading human rights group has raised the alarm over an incident it fears is an indication of the Israeli authorities' growing intolerance of dissent.   Last week, Raed Jarrar, advocacy director for the Middle East and North Africa division of Amnesty International USA, was stopped at the Allenby crossing between...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved