Iftar in Antalya on 24 Şubat: on sekiz elli üçte Evening Call Sets the Pace
Antalya residents feel the immediate effect of tonight's timetable: with iftar fixed at on sekiz elli üçte on 24 Şubat Salı, daily rhythms in homes, markets and mosques compress toward a single shared minute. The official imsakiye published by Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı places this citywide pause at that exact moment and notes a one-minute change from yesterday, which nudges routines for thousands across the province.
Iftar impact: who shifts plans and why the minute matters
Here's the part that matters: a precise evening call concentrates activity. Families planning communal meals, vendors timing fresh bread and produce, and transport and prayer timetables all adapt to the on sekiz elli üçte signal. The change is small numerically but meaningful practically—preparations that start earlier in the evening are now squeezed or advanced by that single-minute difference from the previous day.
Event details and official schedule
On 24 Şubat Salı Antalya marks Ramazan ayının altıncı günü. The official imsakiye was published by Diyanet İşleri Başkanlığı and states that akşam ezanı will be read at on sekiz elli üçte, the moment when oruçlar açılacak. The imsakiye also lists yatsı namazı vakti as yirmi sıfır yedi. The published schedule highlights that Antalya’s iftar time for today differs by one minute compared with yesterday's time.
Evening worship and community movements
After iftar at on sekiz elli üçte, the nightly pattern in Antalya continues into teravih prayer. The imsakiye indicates that following the iftar moment and a short rest, worshippers will head to mosques for the teravih program; yatsı time is yirmi sıfır yedi. Across the city—from busy urban streets to quieter villages—this sequence is described as the rhythm for tonight’s observance.
Snapshot timeline
- 24 Şubat Salı — Ramazan ayının altıncı günü in Antalya.
- Iftar: on sekiz elli üçte; akşam ezanı is the signal when oruçlar açılacak.
- Yatsı namazı vakti: yirmi sıfır yedi.
- Schedule note: a one-minute change from yesterday’s time was recorded in the official imsakiye.
- Practical note: the original page included a notice that a link would redirect to a site outside the publisher.
The final line in that mini timeline: these listed moments frame tonight’s communal flow and set expectations for how neighborhoods will fill and then quieten.
Local mood and closing signals
Antalya’s streets—described as moving from historical neighborhoods to modern districts—are framed as waiting for the shared hush that falls at on sekiz elli üçte. The coverage highlights that thousands across the province are counting down to that instant, and that the iftar hour is the most anticipated pause of the day. It’s easy to overlook, but even a single-minute shift can ripple through meal prep and mosque schedules across a city tallying its sixth consecutive evening of observance.
The real question now is how local routines adjust if small daily shifts continue; tonight’s one-minute variance is the immediate tweak, and similar slight changes in the official imsakiye would confirm a pattern of gradual daily movement in prayer and mealtime coordination.