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In the second season, Ramy delves further into his spiritual journey, finding a new Muslim community and embracing a deeper commitment to his faith.
can we just pray together?
yes. mexicans can go to heaven
masr um el dunya… and it always will be. but america is what I need right now. you'll see, baba. inshallah.
do not go to a magic show. david blaine is straight up jinn.
Pray two rakat for Ruther Bader Ginsburg.
the shower keeps getting clogged. my feet are just sitting in a puddle of my sweaty body water... you ever feel that? like, you took a shower, but you feel like you still gotta wash your feet?
You dress like a skateboarder - but you don't know how to skateboard?
He told you about little Omar. stop acting like you didn't know. now you gotta explain this dog to your parents?? it's haraam. you're just - haraam.
Hey i'm starting to think those guys at Verizon had a point.
Bro...You want real love? commit to the right person. take the bay'ah.
In the third season, Ramy's family is forced to confront having lived a life dedicated to worldly concerns - and in some cases, lies - while Ramy all but abandons his spiritual journey, instead dedicating himself to him and his uncle's diamond business.
In the second season, Ramy delves further into his spiritual journey, finding a new Muslim community and embracing a deeper commitment to his faith.
Ramy is a first generation Egyptian-American who is on a spiritual journey in his politically-divided New Jersey neighborhood. Ramy will bring a new perspective to the screen as it explores the challenges of what it's like being caught between a Muslim community that thinks life is a moral test and a millennial generation that thinks life has no consequences.