Ramadan
Prophet Stories
MIST & Competitions
Mosques & Community
Fun & Random
100

100: The month in which Muslims fast from dawn to sunset.

  • Answer: What is Ramadan?

100

100: Prophet who built a big boat to survive a flood.

  • Answer: Who is Noah?

100

100: The annual event where Muslim youth perform competitions.

  • Answer: What is MIST?


100

100: The place where Muslims gather to pray.

  • Answer: What is a mosque?


100

100: A fruit traditionally eaten to break the fast.

  • Answer: What is a date?


200

200: The pre-dawn meal eaten before fasting begins.

  • Answer: What is suhoor?


200

200: Prophet swallowed by a giant fish or whale.

  • Answer: Who is Jonah?


200

200: Competition where participants memorize and recite passages from the Qur’an.

  • Answer: What is Quran memorization?


200

200: Weekly gathering Muslims attend to pray together on Fridays.

  • Answer: What is Jummah prayer?


200

200: The person who usually wakes kids up for suhoor.

  • Answer: Who is mom or dad?


300

300: The meal eaten at sunset to break the fast.

  • Answer: What is iftar?

300

300: Prophet known for his honesty as a young man.

  • Answer: Who is Muhammad?


300

300: Competition where participants perform short acting scenes.

  • Answer: What is skits or acting?


300

300: Charity given to help others.

  • Answer: What is zakat?


300

300: The food you secretly eat before iftar because you’re starving.

  • Answer: What is a snack?


400

400: A special night near the end of Ramadan believed to be very powerful for worship.

  • Answer: What is Laylatul Qadr?


400

400: Prophet famous for patience when his people disobeyed him.

  • Answer: Who is Job?


400

400: A competition focused on giving a speech about your opinion or life story.

  • Answer: What is public speaking?


400

400: Night prayer during Ramadan that is optional but highly encouraged.

  • Answer: What is taraweeh?


400

400: The thing you do after fasting all day that everyone looks forward to.

  • Answer: What is eating iftar?