The Mother and the Moon
When I was young I would sit out on the front porch of our house at night with my mother, God rest her soul and have mercy on her, which faced east and some times we would see the moon very close to a star. I would ask my mother about it and she would tell me that that star was the moon’s mother and when the moon was close to it, the moon was visiting its mother. That story always made me feel close to my mother. I still recall those days whenever I see the moon close to a prominent star in the sky.
Two mornings ago, I stepped out of my front door, which faces south, and I looked towards the east to estimate how many more days we had left in Ramadan by gauging the size of the crescent moon. To my surprise it was very close to Venus, the start shown above. The sky was getting light and I was moved to photograph this pair as they visited each other in the morning sky.
I happend to look to the south and also saw the constellaton Orion, or Musa according to the Muslim Astronomers naming, and its distinctive belt of three stars that I grew up know as The Three Sisters, again named by my mother.
It has always amazed me how universal the stars are and at the same time how ‘culturalized’ they are at the same time. Growing up I knew Venus as the Mother of the Moon, and the Belt of Orion as the Three Sisters. Every cultural or civilization has named the stars by different names and some have crossed over to other cultures. Of the 57 navigational stars some 18 of them still have Arab names give by the Muslim Astronomers during the Golden Age of Islam. The list of these stars can be found on Wikipedia at this link.
In a few days the month of Ramadan will have passed and the new crescent moon will make its appearance in the western sky after sunset. And even though time keeps moving on, the stars, moon and sun will still be there to help us keep track of time and grow richer as they bridge the gaps of culture and the ages.
Did you have any special names for the stars when you were growing up? I’d love to hear what they were.
Dick Berry on 18 Sep 2009 at 5:43 am #
Youssef,
Came across your website after finding it on Alltop. You work is superb and you definitely have an eye for what it takes to make it all come together. I have spent most of my years behind the camera producing images for commercial advertising. Now I am embarking on a new journey to produce landscape images that I hope someday people will find good enough to hang in their own homes. Shooting large format is in a class by itself and it shows in your work. I will add your name and link to my blog because I feel your work and yourself have an important message for all to see and read about.
Dick Berry
Youssef Ismail on 18 Sep 2009 at 9:10 am #
Thanks Dick. I am glad that my work has been an inspiration.
Dick Berry on 18 Sep 2009 at 1:53 pm #
Thanks Youssef-Your blog address has been added to my list of shooters and blogs. Take care!
Rhodora Online on 19 Sep 2009 at 10:26 pm #
JazakAllah for the beautiful pictures. Some five years ago, there was a rare occasion when venus was so close to the Crescent Moon and so positioned almost in its lap thattogether they looked like the Noon of Arabic language. It must have been seen all over the world. I was coming back from my job and I was able to follow it from the side window of my transport vehicle for more than half an hour. Beautiful sight.
Thanks for your appreciative comments on my blog. Do keep visiting. and Eid Mubarak to you and your family.
Youssef Ismail on 19 Sep 2009 at 11:27 pm #
I have been waiting for the Moon and Venus to be that close here in the U.S. for a long time. I do want a photo of that event.
Asif Zardari on 16 Nov 2009 at 1:14 pm #
your post made me cry i remember my mother.