Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
International

Germany Opens Its First Liberal Mosque In Berlin; Men-Women, Shia-Sunni Can Pray Together

IANS, 16 Jun, 2017 10:54 PM
    Seyran Ates’ vision of a liberal mosque where all Muslims can pray together women and men, Sunni and Shia, straight and gay turned into reality Friday as dozens of people came together in Berlin to inaugurate a new house of prayer.
     
    Ates, a well-known women’s right activist and lawyer, preached in front of the crowd which filled the mosque. A female imam from the United States, Ani Zonneveld, called for prayer as the faithful kneeled behind her in rows, all turned in the direction of Mecca.
     
    “I couldn’t be more euphoric, it’s a dream come true,” Ates, the 54-year-old daughter of Turkish guest workers in Germany, told The Associated Press this week with a smile.
     
    Ates fought for eight years to establish a place of prayer where progressive Muslims in Germany can leave religious conflicts behind and focus on their shared Islamic values. The mosque is the first of its kind in Germany, she said.
     
    “This project was long overdue,” Ates said. “There’s so much Islamist terror and so much evilness happening in the name of my religion ... it’s important that we, the modern and liberal Muslims, also show our faces in public.”
     
    The mosque is named Ibn-Rushd-Goethe-Mosque, combining the names of medieval Andalusian philosopher Ibn Rushd and German writer Johann Wolfgang Goethe. It is located on a busy shopping street in the immigrant neighborhood of Moabit, which is dotted with Indian and Vietnamese restaurants and Middle Eastern cafes.
     
     
    Visitors looking for a minaret or trying to follow the call of the muezzin will search in vain. For now, the mosque occupies a big room on the third floor of an old red brick Lutheran church.
     
    “To get started, we’ve rented this room for one year,” Ates said.
     
    More than 4 million Muslims live in Germany, the majority from Turkey but also from the Balkans, the Middle East and Northern Africa.
     
    Most started coming to Germany in the 1960s as workers to help rebuild the economy after World War II. While it was Germany’s intention to send them home after a few years, many stayed and brought over their families. Germany has also taken in more than a million refugees since 2015, most of them Muslims from war-torn countries such as Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan.
     
    Relations between the country’s majority Christian population and the Muslim minority traditionally have been complicated. They have been strained by several terror attacks in Germany by Muslims in the name of the extremist Islamic State group. Raids and bans of radical Muslim associations and arrests of extremist suspects have become commonplace.
     
     
    Ates said the new mosque will be a place of liberalism where everyone is welcome and equal. Women don’t have to wear headscarves, can preach as imams and call the faithful to prayer just like men.
     
    “There won’t be any hate preaching against democracy here,” Ates said. Instead, followers can express doubt about their beliefs and approach their religion with sense and reason instead of blind devotion, she said.
     
    Ates, who was shot and almost died while working as a counselor for Turkish women in 1984 and was attacked by an enraged husband, waved aside any potential worries about threats or criticism from more conservative Muslims.
     
    “I’ve received a few messages via social media, mostly full of expletives,” she said. “But 95 percent of the feedback has been beautiful and positive.”
     
    Turks, Kurds and Arabs alike have donated money, businesspeople have called to offer help with creating signage and advertisements and several Middle Eastern restaurants were delivering free food for the iftar, the breaking of the Ramadan fast on Friday night, she said.
     
    Ates’ sister brought 30 prayer rugs from Istanbul a few weeks ago, and an Indonesian interior architect has offered her services to refurbish the 90-square-meter (970-square- foot) room.
     
    For the future, she and the seven colleagues who supported her project from the beginning, dream of building a real mosque with several prayer rooms for believers of all the different Islamic sects as well as an academy devoted to the education of liberal imams, male and female.
     
    Beyond that, Ates is already working on her next big project.
     
    “I will start studying Islamic theology and Arabic in Berlin this fall,” she said. “I want to become an imam myself.”

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-Origin Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan's Sacking Triggers Civil War In S Africa's Ruling ANC

    Indian-Origin Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan's Sacking Triggers Civil War In S Africa's Ruling ANC
    The sacking of South Africa’s respected Indian-origin Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan in a Cabinet purge pitched the ruling ANC party into chaos on Friday, creating one of its biggest tests since leading the fight against apartheid.

    Indian-Origin Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan's Sacking Triggers Civil War In S Africa's Ruling ANC

    Bangladeshi Girl's Head Shaved For Failing To Wear Headscarf

    Bangladeshi Girl's Head Shaved For Failing To Wear Headscarf
    A Bangladeshi schoolgirl's head teacher reported her family to police in Italy when the teen's mother allegedly shaved off her hair after she refused to wear the Islamic headscarf, local daily Il Resto del Carlino reported on Friday.

    Bangladeshi Girl's Head Shaved For Failing To Wear Headscarf

    'Not Today,' She Shouted As She Fought Off Attacker In Public Bathroom

    'Not Today,' She Shouted As She Fought Off Attacker In Public Bathroom
    A Seattle woman who became a folk hero by fighting off a man who attempted to rape her in a public bathroom has sparked a boom in women's self-defence classes, making a meme out of the war cry she used in battle: "Not today!" followed by an expletive.

    'Not Today,' She Shouted As She Fought Off Attacker In Public Bathroom

    Nikki Haley Claims Het Mother Denied Judgeship In India For Being Woman

    Nikki Haley Claims Het Mother Denied Judgeship In India For Being Woman
    Nikki Haley, the US Permanent Representative to the UN, has claimed that her mother was not allowed to be a judge in India because she was a woman, while in fact women have been judges in the country since at least 1937.

    Nikki Haley Claims Het Mother Denied Judgeship In India For Being Woman

    Convert To Islam To Avoid Conviction: Pakistani Prosecutor To Christians

    Convert To Islam To Avoid Conviction: Pakistani Prosecutor To Christians
    A senior Pakistani prosecutor has been accused of blackmailing dozens of Christians after he allegedly asked them to embrace Islam to avoid conviction in the killing of two Muslims in mass violence two years ago.

    Convert To Islam To Avoid Conviction: Pakistani Prosecutor To Christians

    Nikki Haley Open To Ideas On Expanding UN Security Council

    Nikki Haley Open To Ideas On Expanding UN Security Council
    US Permanent Representative Nikki Haley has said she is open to ideas on adding permanent members to the UN Security Council but did not made a categorical endorsement of India's bid for one of the permanent seats.

    Nikki Haley Open To Ideas On Expanding UN Security Council