BEIRUT (AP) — Normally, Lilian Jamaan would have been shopping for clothes for her daughter and buying meat and sweets in preparation for the Islamic holiday of Eid al-Fitr that marks the end of Ramadan. But now, “there’s no joy for Eid or for Ramadan or for anything,” Jamaan said by phone from a school-turned-shelter in the Lebanese city of Sidon, where she’s been displaced with her family. “Everything is difficult,” she said. READ: A look at Eid al-Fitr and how Muslims celebrate the Islamic holiday As the Islamic holy month of Ramadan draws to an end and Muslims worldwide […]... Keep on reading: In Lebanon, war and displacement mar run-up to Eid al-Fitr holiday for many