|
Alicante's Muslims May Spend Ramadan With no Mosque
 |
|
Alicante's
only mosque.
|
By
Al-Amin Andalusi, IOL Correspondent
MADRID
, September 5, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – Muslims in the Spanish city of
Alicante
are facing the bitter possibility of seeing the doors of their only
mosque shut down before or during the holy months of Ramadan.
The
problem escalated few weeks before the advent of the holy fasting month
when the City's Municipality decided to close down the mosque, in
response to complaints by the city's residents.
Muslims
of Alicante have succeeded to convince the local authorities to suspend
the closure decision, pending a court ruling on the issue.
The
suspension decision followed a meeting between Municipality officials
and the mosque's imam.
IOL
Correspondent says despite the fact that the mosque has already met all
legal and other requirements the Municipality demanded, it still faces
the likely possibility of closure over reasons described by the
officials themselves as "incomprehensible".
Tens
of thousands of Muslim migrants in the city, mostly from Moroccan and
Algerian origins, found themselves without a mosque at the beginning of
September. Following the meeting with the imam, city officials suspended
the closure pending the court ruling expected before or even during
Ramadan (October 3 or 4).
Big
Problem
 |
|
A
general view of the Spanish city of Alicante.
|
In
statements to the Spanish News Agency (EFE), an
Alicante
official said a closure notification was sent to the mosque's officials,
carrying a grace period.
But
leader of the Muslim minority in the city Najid Khadem told EFE Sunday,
September 4, that no such notification was received, adding in case any
official notice is sent to the mosque officials a lawyer would handle
the case legally.
Khadem
added that he could not understand the Municipality's decision to close
the mosque, in light of all requirements being met, except for opening
an additional emergency door due to neighbors' objections.
Alicante
Muslims now face the bitter possibility of a "Ramadan without
mosque". The
Alicante
mosque, that was opened five years ago and can take up to 500 persons,
used to work as a gathering place during Ramadan, for both religious and
cultural activities.
Awaiting
the court ruling on the complaint issued by neighbors, who accuse the
mosque of promoting "extremist ideas", Municipality officials
say they are now looking for a venue to establish a new mosque not to
prevent thousands of Alicante Muslims from observing their religious
rituals.
A
local Spanish paper quoted Sunday officials in
Alicante
as saying it was expected a big Islamic center would be built in the
city soon to serve the sizeable minority there.
The
complaining neighbors did not give any evidence or document to support
their allegations against the mosque. However, Municipality officials
have withdrawn their "verbal certificate" to the mosque
officials, paving the way for closing the mosque, according to IOL
Correspondent.
In
Spain
, places of worship do not need written permissions to be established or
to operate.
Similar
Obstacles
According
to IOL Correspondent, Alicante Muslims are not the only Muslim grouping
facing such obstacles in the European country.
Muslim
migrants in a number of Spanish cities are facing growing difficulties
in building mosques or even freely expressing their Muslim identity,
especially after the March,2004 bombings in
Madrid
that killed 191 people and was claimed by an Al-Qaeda-linked militant
group.
In
Seville
, the Great Mosque project was stopped after complaints from local
residents. The anti-mosque protests in
Seville
escalated to the degree that Spanish extremists threw a pig's head on
the construction site of the mosque, believing that would desecrate the
site and force Muslims to quit building thereon.
There
are some 600 mosques and small praying rooms across
Spain
, according to official estimates.
Alicante
is the site of the remains of a historical mosque believed to have been
built over ten centuries ago, with the early days of Islam's presence in
Spain
. The site was discovered only last year.
|