Tamer
Abu el-Enein, IOL Correspondent
GENEVA,
November 5 (IslamOnline) - Muslims in Switzerland launched fruitful
cooperation between them to determine the beginning of the Muslims'
holy fasting month of Ramadan.
In
the past, members of each Islamic community used to follow the start
of the holy month in their original countries.
The
Turkish and Albanian communities, that form the majority of Muslims in
Switzerland, were the only ones who did not rely on the eye-sighting
of the crescent and used to only follow the instructions of the waqfs
ministry on determining the beginning of Ramadan and Eid Ul-Adha.
Arabs,
especially Middle Easterners, always sought the outcome of the
crescent eye-sighting in Islamic countries, especially in Saudi
Arabia, through Islamic cultural bodies in Geneva.
Swiss
media always ridiculed Muslims over failure to agree on the beginning
and end of Ramadan, dismissing this failure as evidence of disparities
among Muslims living in one country.
With
the passage of time, the fruits of cooperation between the federation
of Islamic centers and societies and the union of Muslims in
Switzerland became self-evident.
All
these centers agree on announcing the beginning of Ramadan by linking
astronomical information and the eye-sighting in different Islamic
countries, particularly in Saudi Arabia.
Arab,
Albanian and Turkish mosques, outside the control of Ankara, abide by
this agreement.
A
slim minority of low-cultured people insist on starting Ramadan and
Eid Ul-Adha according to the agenda of their countries of origin.
This
year, Muslims in Switzerland will observe their fasting amidst tense
circumstances where they are facing an unprecedented media campaign
and challenges from the authorities.
Last
month, the education authorities in Geneva suspended Hani Saed Ramadan
el-Bouti, a grandchild of Hassan el-Bana, from his work as a teacher,
with an intention to fire him.
Bouti
was being punished for an article in the French newspaper Le Monde in
which he defended the Islamic shariaa.
The
education authorities argued that his defense of the shariaa ran
counter to his work as a teacher.
In
southeast Switzerland, the authorities denied a Macedonian imam a
permit to offer religious sermons to 5000 Muslims.
Arguing
that he received his education in Al Madina Al Monawara, the Swiss
authorities immediately categorized him a fundamentalist seeking to
spread Wahabi teachings in Switzerland.
The
two decisions follow hot on each other, that Muslims in Switzerland
stood dumb-founded unable to react