By
Aboul-Maaty Zaki, IOL Correspondent
CZECH,
June 5 (IslamOnline) - Following much efforts by Muslim laypeople and
diplomats in the Check republic to get the government’s approval to
build two mosques, they were shocked by the conditioned approval which
provided the mosques should neither have their indivisible towers nor
should they sound any calls for prayers.
“Muslims
have been collecting signatures and have tried all means to pressure the
government to allow them to build a mosque,” said Moneeb Hassan
El-Rawy, board chairman of the Islamic Waqf association in
Moravia.
The
government finally approved, but ruled that the mosque should not have a
minaret (tower from which the calls for prayers [Azan] are made)
and no microphones should be used to voice the calls for prayers.
The
government also demanded that no sound whatsoever should be heard from
the mosque, be it the weekly Friday sermon or any other.
“We
accepted these conditions and the first mosque in the Czech republic was
inaugurated in July 1998 in a ceremony attended by diplomats and
officials from the Czech government,” El-Rawy said, adding that the
second mosque was built in the capital Prague and was inaugurated in
1999.
El-Rawy
explained that due to the lack of communication between Muslims in
different towns in Czech, many of them unfortunately do not know about
these two mosques. Immigrants in Czech are mostly Muslims who number
around 10,000.
“Islam
is not an official religion in the Czech constitution, and we are trying
to, with the support of Muslim diplomats, to find a way to get some
rights,” he added.
Concerning
the issue of not allowing the Friday sermon and the call for prayers to
be transmitted through microphones, El-Rawy said it wasn’t a
one-of-a-kind procedure, since the government had previously prohibited
church bells when Czechs complained about the noise they made.
The
rest of towns have special rooms for prayers, especially on Friday,
though the September 11 attacks have led many of them to be closed down,
he said.
An
annual five-day conference attended by around 150 Czech Muslims is a
good opportunity to listen to lectures by Muslim scientists who answer
all the questions Muslim youth have, he added.
As
for Hijab (women’s headscarf), El-Rawy said that there are only
40 Muslim women in Czech cover their hair.
“We
are trying to spread out the principles of Islam through voluntary and
personal efforts, especially that Islam was introduced in Czech only
after World War II.”
Abou
Derar Omar, Imam of the capital mosque, told IslamOnline that around 400
to 500 Muslims come for the weekly Friday prayer in the mosque, which
remains open all day long for people who want to perform the five daily
five prayers, learn Arabic, read translations of some Islamic books, or
just know more about Islam.
These
activities take place more often during the holy month of Ramadan, when Taraweeh
prayers are held each night and people are allowed to live in
seclusion for a while and spend as many hours as they wish within the
confines of the mosque, praying and reading Qur’an, he added