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Declining Eid travel and spending in Indonesia and discrimination in India dampen holiday spirit

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Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Muslims perform Eid al-Fitr prayer marking the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan on a street in Jakarta, Indonesia, Monday, March 31, 2025. (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim)

JAKARTA โ€“ The usual festive mood of Eid al-Fitr holiday to mark the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan has been subdued in Indonesia this year as people grapple with soaring prices for food, clothing and essential goods.

Consumer spending ahead of the biggest religious holiday for Muslims, which was celebrated on Sunday in Indonesia, has declined compared to the previous year, with a predicted slowdown in cash circulation due to fewer travelers.

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Each year in Indonesia, nearly three-quarters of the population of the worldโ€™s most populous Muslim-majority country travel for the annual homecoming known locally as โ€œmudikโ€ that is always welcomed with excitement.

People pour out of major cities to return to villages to celebrate the holiday with prayers, feasts and family gatherings. Flights are overbooked and anxious relatives weighed down with boxes of gifts form long lines at bus and train stations for the journey

But this year the Transportation Ministry said Eid travelers reached 146 million people, a 24% drop from last yearโ€™s 194 million travelers.

The Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry projects that money circulation during Eid will reach 137.97 trillion rupiah ($8.33 billion), down from 157.3 trillion last year. The weakening purchasing power is also reflected in Bank Indonesiaโ€™s Consumer Confidence Index which dipped to 126.4 in February from 127.2 in January.

Bhima Yudistira, executive director of the Center for Economic and Law Studies, or Celios, said those trends indicate the economy is under strain, driven by economic hardship, coupled with currency depreciation and mass layoffs in manufacturing.

โ€œThese have weakened both corporate earnings and workersโ€™ incomes that suppress consumer spending,โ€ Yudistira said, adding he โ€œexpects a less vibrant festive season.โ€

He said the festive spirit has been stifled by harsh economic realities, as soaring prices and dwindling incomes force residents to prioritize survival over celebration.

Traditionally household consumption is a key driver of Indonesiaโ€™s GDP. It contributed over 50% to the economy last year, helping push annual growth to 5.11%. However, consumer spending in 2025 is expected to be more subdued, Yudistira said.

Despite the downturn, the government remains optimistic that the Ramadan and Eid momentum will support economic growth in the first quarter of 2025.

โ€œEid usually boosts the economy through increased spending,โ€ Chief Economic Affairs Minister Airlangga Hartarto said ahead of the Islamic holiday.

The government recently introduced incentives to stimulate economic activity, including airfare and toll road fee discounts, nationwide online shopping events, direct cash assistance for 16 million households, electricity bill reductions for low-consumption customers, and tax exemptions for labor-intensive sectors.

โ€œWith these programs in place, the government hopes to sustain consumer spending and support economic stability,โ€ Hartarto said.

The situation has also affected Endang Trisilowati, a mother of four, who said her family had to scale down their festivities budget.

โ€œHonestly, the economic hardship is affecting us,โ€ Trisilowati said. She described how she used to cook different dishes every Eid and invite neighbors, but now she can only afford a simple meal for her family.

โ€œMany have resorted to just finding a way to eat on that festivity, but the spirit is low,โ€ she said.

Muslims in India grapple with discrimination

In India, Muslims are marking the celebration of Eid with special prayers, family gatherings and festive meals.

The holiday comes as the minority community faces vilification by hardline Hindu nationalists. Muslim groups are also protesting against a proposal by Prime Minister Narendra Modiโ€™s government to change laws governing Muslim land endowments.

The government says it wants to weed out corruption and mismanagement in hundreds of thousands of Muslim land endowments. But Muslim groups say the proposal pending approval in Indiaโ€™s parliament is discriminatory.

Muslims, who comprise 14% of Indiaโ€™s 1.4 billion population, are the largest minority group in the Hindu-majority nation.

Modiโ€™s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party launched a nationwide initiative called โ€œSaugat-e-Modi,โ€ or โ€œModiโ€™s gift,โ€ during Ramadan that is expected to provide food and clothes to over 3 million underprivileged Muslims to celebrate Eid.

In New Delhi, thousands assembled in the Jama Masjid, one of the countryโ€™s largest mosques, to offer Eid prayers. Families came together early Monday morning and many people shared hugs and wishes.

โ€œThis is a day of giving and receiving love. Even if you meet an enemy, meet them with love today,โ€ said 18-year-old student Mohammed Nooruddin.

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Associated Press writers Aijaz Hussain in Srinagar and Rishi Lekhi in New Delhi, India, contributed to this report.


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