How do you face Mecca orbiting in Space?




I'm always interested in posing silly questions but got out done by a student today asking how do you know which direction to pray in space if you are a muslim?. I didn't realise we had a problem with this for Muslim astronauts and if it was, surely they would be saying something. Anyway I was convinced it just was a case of some onboard computer jiggery pokery that would tell them when and which direction to face to pray (despite being in orbit and having to be tied into a praying position due to lack of gravity). Then to confirm this I had a surf on the glorious net.

Computer will tell Muslim astronaut how to pray in space

Malaysian scientists and religious scholars are trying to determine how Muslims should behave in space, as the predominantly Islamic country prepares to dispatch its first astronaut next year.

More than 150 delegates attended a seminar to consider how to pray in space given the difficulties of locating Mecca and holding the prayer position in zero gravity; as well as other questions such as halal food and washing.

"It's as important as sending the astronaut," said Mustafa Din bin Subari, deputy director of Angkasa, Malaysia's space agency. "We want to stress that being a Muslim does not restrict you from doing anything."

The application of a religion founded in the 7th century Arabian desert to space travel in the 21st century is complex. The International Space Station (ISS) moves at almost 17,000 mph, so the relative position of Mecca is constantly shifting. With 16 orbits a day, and the timing of five daily prayers determined in relation to sunrise and sunset, devout Muslim astronauts could find themselves intoning their chants 80 times in 24 hours.

"This is not possible," said Mohamad Sa'ari Mohamad Isa, of the National Technical University College of Malaysia at the meeting in Bangi, near Kuala Lumpur. The electronics lecturer has helped to develop a computer programme called Muslims in Space to determine when prayers should be made.

The Malaysian government is planning to send one of its citizens on a Russian-led mission to the ISS in October 2007. Three of the final four candidates for the trip are Muslim men, the other a Hindu woman, who were selected from 30,000 applicants. The only known Muslim to travel into space before is a Saudi prince, on Nasa's space shuttle in 1985.

Delegates to the conference, which ended on Tuesday, were also reminded that scientific progress used to be most advanced in the Islamic world, which gave the West algebra, the zero and Arabic numerals. It was a failure of individuals and leaders, rather than the religion, according to Syed Kamarulzaman Syed Kabeer, vice-president of the Islamic Astronomers' Association of Malaysia, that led to Islamic peoples giving up their lead.

Makes you think every one asks silly posers all the time...

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