Muslims in Berlin Get Their First Mosque
Geraldine Schwarz, Agence France Presse
BERLIN, 8 December 2003 — The German capital’s first mosque
has just opened and there are plans for a dozen more.
Watching the unmistakable twin minarets, the domed roof and
the marble staircase toward a heavy door, behind which the
faithful kneel in midday prayers under the vaulted ceiling,
one would think it could be Cairo, or Beirut or Damascus,
or one of a thousand other cities and towns dotted across
the Middle East and around the world.
It isn’t. This is Berlin.
The city already boasts more than 70 places of prayer for
Muslims, but not until the Pehitlik opened on Columbiadamm,
a non-descript street in southern Berlin, has it had a
mosque.
“It’s good to have a representative place,” said Recep
Turkogu, a member of the Turkish-Islamic Union for the
Office of Religion (DITIB) which supervises 600 of the
2,200 Muslim prayer centers in Germany.
There are some 3.4 million Muslims in Germany, including
220,000 in Berlin. An estimated two thirds are of Turkish
origin.
Countrywide the Muslim community has 77 mosques. In Berlin,
up to now, the prayers have been organized in apartments,
halls and courtyards.
“We chose to stay in Germany,” said Recep, who moved here
34 years ago, “so we want convenient places to pray. We
will show extremists the door.”
Old habits die hard for some, though.
“Normally we pray in a flat,” said three Turks arriving for
midday prayers at the Pehitlik mosque. “Praying here is a
chance to socialize, but we prefer to pray at our homes.”
The building on the Columbiadamm has excited little
controversy, apart from a dispute over the size of the
minarets.
However, news of a dozen similar plans to build mosques or
Islamic centers in Berlin, notably in the Turkish-dominated
areas of Kreuzberg and Neukoelln, have raised concerns.
“Generally, people think that, Islam being embedded in this
districts, it’s legitimate that there are representative
buildings,” said Guenther Piening, a Berlin city official
responsible for matters of racial integration.
“But they fear mosques will encourage a radicalization that
would threaten the liberal atmosphere of those districts.”
Another concern since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks is that
some mosques could serve as recruiting centers for
extremists.
Neukoelln’s conservative Mayor Heinz Buschkowsky said the
best way to ease concerns was to ensure transparency,
notably on how a project is financed, as well as ensuring
the building fitted into the local environment.
Buschkowsky is battling against a plan by a little-known
group, Inssan. It was set up two years ago and has only 40
members, yet has submitted proposals for what would be one
of the biggest Islamic centers in Germany, complete with
cafe, creche and library as well as a prayer room.
The mayor is concerned about Inssan’s credibility and
source of funds, and says it was a mistake to grant it
provisional planning permission.
But neither Piening nor Buschkowsky sees the spate of
projects as a sign of any “reawakening” of Islam, more a
consequence of its growing naturalization into German life,
fueled by competition between rival Islamic groups. To
oppose that trend, as some worried residents are doing in
places such as Kassel, central Germany, is “idiotic,”
Buschkowsky said, “as if people wanted to go on a Christian
Crusade again.”
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