Thousands have attended huge Eid celebrations in Small Heath Park, Birmingham. 

Prayers are normally said in mosques but in recent years with Eid falling in the summer organisers have held morning prayers in public parks.

A record-breaking 140,000 Muslims gathered to mark the end of Ramadan in Small Heath Park.

Celebrate Eid has witnessed a more than 10-fold increase in attendee numbers, from the 12,000 people who ushered in the first celebration back in 2011.

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Joe Giddens/PA Wire

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Worshippers of all ages came together for morning prayers on Friday, before enjoying festivities including fairground rides, miniature golf and laser clay pigeon shooting.

Food and drink from local stalls was also on offer, and organisers from Green Lane Masjid and Community Centre heralded the event's continuing success and growing popularity.

A spokesman for the organisation said: "This celebration is one of the most important in the Islamic religious calendar and it's an opportunity for us all to come together in peace and unity.

"We're all overwhelmed that so many people from different faiths and from across the world have travelled to Birmingham for this year's Celebrate Eid.

"We've been working for months with five local mosques and our charity partner Human Appeal to organise the community for a memorable day of prayer, games and fun."

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Ramadan is also a time for charitable giving, and the mosque and community centre said it had raised more than £1 million for the Saving Syria Project.

More than 200 volunteers are helping to clear up the park, once the festivities have concluded.

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