۷ اردیبهشت ۱۴۰۳ |۱۷ شوال ۱۴۴۵ | Apr 26, 2024
India Court Overrules Ban on Islamic Call to Prayer

Ruling that the Adhan was an integral part of the Islamic religion, the Allahabad High Court urged authorities against hindering its practice under the pretext of COVID-19 guideline violations.

Hawzah News Agency - (Allahabad - India) - A court in northern India on Friday allowed Mosques to ban the Islamic call to prayer, known as the Adhan, determining that it did not violate lockdown rules.

Ruling that the Adhan was an integral part of the Islamic religion, the Allahabad High Court urged authorities against hindering its practice under the pretext of COVID-19 guideline violations.

The Adhan is recited by attendants called Muezzins, usually from a minaret adjoining a mosque and often with loudspeakers to ensure it is heard by Muslims in its vicinity.

However, the court only allowed muezzins to call the Adhan without using loudspeakers, holding that amplifying devices were not protected under the country's constitution.

The court was responding to Public Interest Litigations (PIL) and letter petitions challenging an order by the local Ghazipur district administration restricting the Adhan during the COVID-19 lockdown.

Former Union Law Minister Salman Khurshid, Advocate S Wasim A Qadri and Member of Parliament Afzal Ansari had approached the court seeking permission for the Adhan via loudspeakers.

Muslim clerics welcomed the court's decision, but may approach a higher court for permission to use loudspeakers.

"The court has said that there will be no ban on the recitation of Adhan. We will take further course of action after receiving a copy of the order. However, we welcome the decision of the court," said Mufti Sharif Ahmed, a Muslim cleric in Ghazipur.

Another cleric in the nearby city of Kanpur, Hafiz Shah Mohammed, said: "The court has accepted the fact that the Adhan is an integral part of the Islamic religion and so the district administration should not ban it."

"The district administration in other places also should not try to ban this Islamic practice because of political reasons," he added.

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