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Eid Milad Trivia Questions

How much do you really know about Eid Milad? Below are 8 true or false statements. Click each one to reveal the answer and explanation.

1.

In some countries, Eid Milad un-Nabi features large decorative light displays and community feasts.

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Easy
✓ TRUE

In places like Pakistan and India, streets are lit up, and families gather for special meals and charitable acts.

2.

Eid Milad un-Nabi is also known as Mawlid and involves public processions, poetry, and sweets.

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Easy
✓ TRUE

Mawlid celebrations often include parades, reciting poems praising the Prophet, and distributing food like sweet porridge.

3.

Eid Milad un-Nabi is a public holiday in every Muslim-majority country.

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Medium
✗ FALSE

It is not a holiday in Saudi Arabia or Qatar, for example, due to differing theological views on celebrating the Prophet's birth.

4.

Eid Milad un-Nabi celebrates the Prophet Muhammad's birthday on the same date every year.

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Medium
✗ FALSE

It follows the Islamic lunar calendar, so the date shifts about 11 days earlier each year on the Gregorian calendar.

5.

Many Muslims do not celebrate Eid Milad un-Nabi, considering it a religious innovation.

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Medium
✓ TRUE

Salafi and some Sunni scholars reject the celebration as bid'ah (innovation), while Sufis and others embrace it widely.

6.

Some Christians and Jews also observe Eid Milad un-Nabi as a sign of interfaith solidarity.

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Hard
✗ FALSE

There is no widespread Christian or Jewish observance; this is a plausible but false claim designed to sound inclusive.

7.

The earliest recorded celebration of the Prophet Muhammad's birthday dates back to the 12th century.

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Hard
✓ TRUE

It began around the 1100s under the Fatimid dynasty in Egypt, centuries after the Prophet's death in 632 CE.

8.

The exact date of the Prophet Muhammad's birth is universally agreed upon by all Islamic scholars.

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Hard
✗ FALSE

Historians debate whether he was born on the 12th or 17th of Rabi' al-Awwal, and some even dispute the year.

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