Custom: It usually lasts for three days. From the dawn of the first day, every household got up early to clean the toilets indoors and outdoors, inside and outside the hospital and in the roadway, giving people a clean, comfortable and pleasant feeling. Adult Hui Muslims should take a bath by themselves. Men, women and children all put on their favorite clothes, and the children also washed their faces and combed their hair. Mosques where Muslims meet should also be renovated and cleaned before the festival. In some places, in order to celebrate Eid al-Fitr, huge banners and colored lights were specially hung. At about eight o'clock in the morning (some places will ring bells, and some places will say "Follow Two" three times), Muslim people will gather in mosques, southeast, northwest and so on from all directions, carrying small blankets or small prayer blankets. In some places, because there were too many Muslims attending the ceremony (as many as 10,000 people), the mosque could not accommodate it, so another flat, spacious and clean venue was chosen as the venue. When the imam announced the start of the ceremony, the masses put down blankets or carpets, took off their shoes and bowed to the direction of the Kaaba in the ancient temple of Mecca, completing the worship of fate.
The main etiquette are:
1, busy eating one thing. Muslims were busy eating at the ceremony that morning (dates are the best) to express their gratitude to God for fasting.
Step 2 brush your teeth.
3, after the morning ceremony, do a big net, meaning to bathe the whole body on Eid al-Fitr. According to legend, Mu Sheng once laid a net in two "Erd".
4. Incense or perfume. That is, use incense on clothes and body.
5. Wear the best clothes. If you don't have new clothes, choose the cleanest clothes at home.
6. Pay the donation for iftar. According to the family size, Muslims give each person 2.5 Jin of wheat, which can be converted into cash for poverty alleviation or given to mosques. Muslims in some parts of China call it "Mai Qian", which means giving alms before attending the ceremony. This charity event was held in October of the second year of the Islamic calendar (623).