| Home | News| Living in China| MMS | SMS | About us | Contact us|
   
 Language Tips > VOA Normal speed news

Egyptians criticize government's decision to unify call to prayer in Cairo
Ursula Lindsey

 

Egyptians criticize government's decision to unify call to prayer in Cairo Listen to this story

The Egyptian government has announced plans to unify the call to prayer that is broadcast from thousands of different loudspeakers in the country's capital. The idea has been criticized by some as governmental interference in religion.

The minister of Religious Endowments, Mahmoud Hamdi Zaqzouq, announced the plans to synchronize the call to prayer using a wireless network. The minister said every day he receives complaints about the excessive noise from loud speakers.

The call to prayer, a Muslim tradition dating back to the seventh century, is broadcast five times a day through loudspeakers from theminaretsof Cairo's 4,000 or so mosques. Different mosques often make their calls a few minutes apart.

Ingy Ghannam, the news editor of the popular IslamOnline site, says the measure to synchronize the calls will diminish the importance ofimams, who lead the prayers at mosques, and ofmuezzin, who make the call to prayer.

"This will totally diminish the role of the imam, or the muezzin of the mosque. It won't be his decision. It won't be his voice. It's going to be a higher authority," she said.

The government-appointed GrandMufti, Ali Gomaa, issued a statement on Saturday saying it was religiously legitimate to unify the call. But opposition papers and people writing on Islamic Web sites criticized the initiative as un-Islamic, and suggested that the government had plans to ban the dawn prayer, the earliest of the day's five prayers.

Ms. Ghannam says those who are suspicious of the proposal perceive it as driven by what they see as Western pressure to exert more control over Islamic institutions and practices.

"In other Arab countries, like in Tunisia for example, you go to the mosque with an ID [identification]. You have to have an ID to go into a mosque," she said. "I mean, putting restrictions of mosques, on activities in mosques, this is what people are fearing. That this is only one step ahead of changing the whole religious aspect of Egypt, or controlling people who go to mosques."

Ms. Ghannam said an alternative to the synchronized calls could be having muezzin stop using loudspeakers.

Vocabulary:
 

minaret: a tall, slender tower on a mosque, having one or more projecting balconies from which a muezzin summons the people to prayer(伊斯兰教寺院的尖塔)

imam: in law and theology, the caliph who is successor to Mohammed as the lawful supreme leader of the Islamic community(阿訇,教长)

muezzin: the crier who calls the faithful to prayer five times a day(宣礼员,一天五次召唤信徒祷告的人)

mufti: a Moslem scholar who interprets the sharia(解释伊斯兰教义的伊斯兰学者)

 
Go to Other Sections
Story Tools
 
Copyright by chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved

版权声明:未经中国日报网站许可,任何人不得复制本栏目内容。如需转载请与本网站联系。
None of this material may be used for any commercial or public use. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.