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Coronavirus Pandemic : Should congregational prayers in mosques be stopped?

MenInG

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Very sensitive topic as it brings into play whole idea of faith etc.

But, I have read some scholarly opinion which says people should not go to Juma if they feel they are in danger of being exposed to the virus.

In the middle-east Govts have instructed Khutbas to be reduced to 10 mins or so.
 
Yes, should avoid mass gatherings including prayers as much as possible.
 
Jihad ... Equates struggle. I don't agree with this. Wear gloves , masks, hazmat suits but don't cancel Juna. I would recommend not using Wudu facilities or toilets in mosques ..

This will perhaps be the most testing Ramadan ever. God help us.
 
In Pakistan all those cities and areas where there have been confirmed cases jummah prayers and large gathering places need to be closed. You can't tell the whole country to stop cuz then most people would probably won't listen and take it seriously.

PSL matches need to stop now or at least no crowds allowed.
 
Jihad ... Equates struggle. I don't agree with this. Wear gloves , masks, hazmat suits but don't cancel Juna. I would recommend not using Wudu facilities or toilets in mosques ..

This will perhaps be the most testing Ramadan ever. God help us.

No it doesn't. Not in this sense. Think of the elderly. This is a death sentence for anyone with previous underlying conditions. The death told is the highest amongst people over 50 for this reason.

There is no way to control this if we don't stop public gathering. And we don't have the system to deal with a mass outbreak here in Pakistan.

Gloves, masks (apart from a few special ones) don't protect against the virus and you are making things difficult by buying them, for people who actually need them, first responders and doctors and nurses, in dealing with COVID-19 cases or in general. Wear a mask only if you have the symptoms to protect others. Don't get one just because.
 
Is that even a question? All mass congregations should be banned. Banning Jummah prayers will be tough as a lot of Muslims have this mindset that they won’t have to take any precautions and “Jo Allah ki Merzi.”
 
Cancelling Juma will result in riots in Pakistan.
 
Yes. Touching of face, shaking hands and unclean surfaces means the virus is easily transmittable.

Congregations see a lot of over 65 attendees too, usually with underlying long-term health conditions, and they are at a higher risk.
 
I am currently having flu-like symptoms and I am planning to go for testing soon. Should I skip Jummah and pray regular Duhr? I don't have N95 mask and my local stores ran out of stock.
 
I am currently having flu-like symptoms and I am planning to go for testing soon. Should I skip Jummah and pray regular Duhr? I don't have N95 mask and my local stores ran out of stock.

If you have flu like symptoms and don’t have a mask, you don’t want to risk the older people out there praying. Even if you are going out for testing take a kerchief fold it with a kitchen towel (paper) inside it and cover your nose and mouth.
 
I am currently having flu-like symptoms and I am planning to go for testing soon. Should I skip Jummah and pray regular Duhr? I don't have N95 mask and my local stores ran out of stock.

The Jumma issue is very sensitive one.
I think ultimately the decision power rests with the individual himself.
However, I will quote a hadith here, describing what Prophet (SAW) said wrt Ka'aba :

Abdulla bin Umar said - I saw the Prophet (SAW) doing tawwaf around the Ka'aba saying "How sweet/ good are you and how sweet is your scent. How great are you and how great is your sanctity. By the One who the soul of Mohammad is in His Hand the sanctity of a believer is greater with Allah than your sanctity" (Ibn Maja)
 
Yes, jummah should be postponed. In fact mosques should be idefinitely closed especially in countries like Pakistan because these are places where hundreds of people assemble 5 times a day every single day and is literally a petridish for corona right now.
 
I am currently having flu-like symptoms and I am planning to go for testing soon. Should I skip Jummah and pray regular Duhr? I don't have N95 mask and my local stores ran out of stock.

Please skip it and call the helpline number and go for testing. Wear just any mask then if not N95. I think if you call the helpline number (different for ontario and other provinces) you can raise the mask issue with them.
 
Cancelling Juma will result in riots in Pakistan.

There needs to be public announcements from all the mosque loudspeakers, and on tv to bring awareness if that is the case. Public awareness should be raised, and to be honest, most people knew about it pretty early on, there was talk about it in January in Pakistan when the first case broke in China.
 
Very sensitive topic as it brings into play whole idea of faith etc.

But, I have read some scholarly opinion which says people should not go to Juma if they feel they are in danger of being exposed to the virus.

In the middle-east Govts have instructed Khutbas to be reduced to 10 mins or so.

If it has to come to that..then yes. It’s common sense. Not just Jumma prayer though. All namaaz.
 
Very well put together as to why large congregation should be temporary stopped.
Preservation of life should be top priority.
I hope, an Imam or Government official can explain to the people of Pakistan.


ADAMS Center
COVID-19 and Religious Obligations
Message from the Imam

Jumma Closing for ADAMS Center Community
Dear Members of the ADAMS Community,

I pray this message reaches you in best of imaan and health. As you know, over the last few days, our community and nation have been experiencing a trying time. While emotions during this period will run high, it is important to take some time to reflect on the circumstance and make the right decision for the health and safety of the entire community. Accordingly, I would like to build our decisions on an important hadith of the Messenger of Allah, peace and blessings of Allah be upon him, when he said:
"‏ لاَ ضَرَرَ وَلاَ ضِرَارَ ‏"
““There should be neither harm nor reciprocating harm.” (Ibn Majah)

By this tradition, we learn that it is not permissible to knowingly inflict harm on another person. My dear brothers and sisters, we are in a circumstance where, if we were to hold jumu’a today, we would be knowingly inflicting harm on one another. It is obligatory to consider how our actions will affect all those around us. Even if we are perfectly healthy, we must not take the risk of acquiring the virus and passing it along to our family, elderly, and other high-risk individuals. We must remember that one of the objectives of Islamic law is to protect life.

Therefore, ADAMS is cancelling Jumu’a for at least the next two weeks; and, given the circumstance of the epidemic in northern Virginia, Jumu’a is not obligatory on anyone. Indeed, if you went to pray Jumu’a, you could be doing greater harm to the community, and that is impermissible.

While we are not gathering for Jumu’a, it is important that we do not lapse in our salah and adhkaar. Indeed, moments like these should draw us closer to Allah SWT. I recommend that we all start personal adhkaar as well as recitations of surat Yasin and ask for the mercy of Allah SWT. We must find strength not just in preparation and information, but rather in spiritual strength of knowing that Allah SWT is the master of all fates and by connecting with Him.

While we will not be conducting regular Jumu’a, we will be moving all our classes and scheduled programming online. I highly recommend that everyone take advantage of this opportunity, as connecting with Allah SWT during this time is very important for our spiritual and emotional health.

The people of wisdom and faith also reflect in moments like these in the signs of Allah. Even a thing as distasteful as a virus can be a sign of Allah, as it is from His creations. A creation so small that we cannot see, so insignificant that they were almost entirely unknown, can bring entire nations to a standstill and disrupt entire economies. The richest and most powerful is no less human in his vulnerability than the most destitute. The black, the white, the Hispanic, the desi, the Arab – they are all the same for its purposes.

The fear for our health and the health of our loved ones strips us of our pretenses. We are humbled completely, brought to face the sudden reality of our powerlessness before the smallest force of nature. This is the nature of the human. He overestimates his power and thinks he has control over that which he does not, until he is reminded by Allah. As Allah SWT says in the Qur’an: “But when the earth has taken on its finest appearance, and adorns itself, and its people think they have power over it, then the fate We commanded comes to it, by night or by day, and We reduce it to stubble, as if it had not flourished just the day before.” (10:24)

During this time, however, we must also think about how to take the virtues that Islam preaches and put them into practice. One of the greatest virtues in Islam is that of thinking about others, especially those less fortunate than oneself. The messenger of Allah, peace and blessings of Allah be upon him said, “creation are the dependents of Allah, and the most beloved of them to Him are the most beneficial to his dependents.”

In this difficult moment, after you have secured yourself and your family, take time to think about others as well. If you are not in a high-risk category, such as an elderly person or someone with chronic diseases, think about volunteering your time or donating to relief efforts. In the next few days, ADAMS will be communicating ways you can be of service to the larger community. This is especially true for the homeless and under-privileged in society – especially as schools and other social service networks close. Reach out to NGOs and governmental organizations and find out how you can be part of the solution for making up for the governmental funding that was supporting families that depended on the school system for food and day-care.

In the end, we must have firm belief in Allah SWT, who tells us in the Qur’an that he will test us in this life: “And We will surely test you with something of fear and hunger and a loss of wealth and lives and fruits, but give good tidings to the patient: Who, when disaster strikes them, say, ‘Indeed we belong to Allah, and indeed to Him we will return.’” (2:155-156) We seek help from Allah SWT, relying on Him entirely, but still taking the means he has created, such as:
Adhering to the guidelines of doctors and experts
Making dua for the sick
We always believe, however, that our end-goal is the aakhira, where is our final destination and our final reward. May Allah SWT bless you all, keep us all safe, and deliver us all together as one family, community, and nation.

Sincerely Yours,
The Office of the Imam at the ADAMS Center
 
I am currently having flu-like symptoms and I am planning to go for testing soon. Should I skip Jummah and pray regular Duhr? I don't have N95 mask and my local stores ran out of stock.

Even if you have a mask, you should not be in large gathering and putting others at risk.
 
I am currently having flu-like symptoms and I am planning to go for testing soon. Should I skip Jummah and pray regular Duhr? I don't have N95 mask and my local stores ran out of stock.

In sha Allah its just a flu and you will fully recover.
 
The mosques here in Oslo followed the advices of health authorities and didn’t arrange Friday prayers. And when you see that performing Tawaf was restricted it might have made the decisions a bit easier for other Mosques.
 
Jummah stopped in Italy

Pakistan has 21 cases only, and none of human to human transmission. What valid reason is there for cancelling Jummah there?
 
Jummah stopped in Italy

Pakistan has 21 cases only, and none of human to human transmission. What valid reason is there for cancelling Jummah there?

Depends if you believe that number is correct. Even in Britain lots of cases are still undetected as the symptoms don't necessarily show straight away.
 
I am currently having flu-like symptoms and I am planning to go for testing soon. Should I skip Jummah and pray regular Duhr? I don't have N95 mask and my local stores ran out of stock.

Yes. Get a normal mask then, but try to stay away from people and follow the recommended coughing protocol i.e use your arm to cover your mouth/nose.
 
Depends if you believe that number is correct. Even in Britain lots of cases are still undetected as the symptoms don't necessarily show straight away.

I do believe it though, for many reasons. Pakistan governments couldn't hide Dengue, etc, so why would it be able to hide Covid? And if the answer is because it's not killing anyone, then Pakistan will get herd immunity anyway
 
Jummah stopped in Italy

Pakistan has 21 cases only, and none of human to human transmission. What valid reason is there for cancelling Jummah there?

Reason: hinder social contact as much as possible.

First of all it's best to be proactive and to take drastic measures before things get out of hand. With coronavirus especially we are looking in the past because a person with the virus won't feel ill for first 5-14 days of infection while at same time spreading the virus. Almost all the countries right now are trying to catch up including Pakistan. The virus is deceptive and spreads silently before anyone realizes.

Secondly, it is very likely that more people than 21 are carrying the virus. Most of them just haven't gone to a doctor or been diagnosed yet. The number 21 only represents those patients who actually went to a doctor and also got tested for corona. Since initially the symptoms are fever and cough most people are going to see it as a usual flu and carry on with life as usual, it's only when the symptoms get worse they might go see a doctor.

Lastly, large portion of the society does not have access to proper medical facility and those facilities most likely don't have the test kit to check for the virus. Hence making it difficult to ***** the proper number.
 
Jummah stopped in Italy

Pakistan has 21 cases only, and none of human to human transmission. What valid reason is there for cancelling Jummah there?

It's not 21, the number is higher. We have a very poor system which makes the cariers very hard to identity and isolate. It's bound to be higher.

Why do you think, they have closed down everything on the whole country? It's a good move though and they need to enforce this on every gathering that includes prayers especially Jumma.

Also we just recorded our first official has of local transmission yesterday. More will follow soon. Give the trend shown by the virus, we are three to peak infection, expect cases to increase exponentially over the next week or so.
 
I do believe it though, for many reasons. Pakistan governments couldn't hide Dengue, etc, so why would it be able to hide Covid? And if the answer is because it's not killing anyone, then Pakistan will get herd immunity anyway

Government isn't hiding the numbers, the government does not have them.

Dengue symptoms appear quicker and are somewhat unique to dengue. Coronavirus initially has the same symptoms as a common flu hence people would tend to take it lightly and not rush to a doctor. Additionally current type of coronavirus is a new virus hence the medical tests to diagnose it are new, limited and not available nationwide. Dengue on the other hand has been around since decades and is a typical disease in the tropics hence the local doctors are familiar with it and can quickly diagnose it.

We all need to take this seriously and tell our family members back home to do the same.
 
Talked with our Molvi today and he said it is absolutely permitted in Islam, if govt/administration decides to ban Jumah congregation in order to stop the pandemic from spreading, gave various references from Hadees and also said a similar kind/level of epidemic had spread in Syria during the Khilafat of Hazrat Umar and talked about various steps taken at that time, which included asking people who hadn't contacted it to move to outskirts of Syria (within Syria, in jungles, mountains etc) and people who were effected by it were asked not to leave from the epicenter.
 
In places where they've not officially been stopped, a lot of worshippers will probably choose to stay away anyway. For the time being, my local Masjid is advising the elders to pray at home while still continuing Juma congregations on a limited basis, ie shortened khutbas etc.
 
It's not 21, the number is higher. We have a very poor system which makes the cariers very hard to identity and isolate. It's bound to be higher.

Why do you think, they have closed down everything on the whole country? It's a good move though and they need to enforce this on every gathering that includes prayers especially Jumma.

Also we just recorded our first official has of local transmission yesterday. More will follow soon. Give the trend shown by the virus, we are three to peak infection, expect cases to increase exponentially over the next week or so.

Because they know that our Health department is a joke, so better to prevent this from spreading rather than situation getting out of control later on. And as the poster mentioned above, they can't hide this stuff, it's probably they don't know about it themselves either. 700 people died yesterday in Italy and there are thousands of new cases coming through every day in Europe, let's be honest here, Pakistan is incapable of managing this kind of stuff, so it's better they lockdown the state rather than waiting for it to get out of control.


There's still some good news though, 3 patients have recovered from the official figure of 21 who have tested +ve. So that brings down official numbers to 18.
 
It's not 21, the number is higher. We have a very poor system which makes the cariers very hard to identity and isolate. It's bound to be higher.

Why do you think, they have closed down everything on the whole country? It's a good move though and they need to enforce this on every gathering that includes prayers especially Jumma.

Also we just recorded our first official has of local transmission yesterday. More will follow soon. Give the trend shown by the virus, we are three to peak infection, expect cases to increase exponentially over the next week or so.

Government isn't hiding the numbers, the government does not have them.

Dengue symptoms appear quicker and are somewhat unique to dengue. Coronavirus initially has the same symptoms as a common flu hence people would tend to take it lightly and not rush to a doctor. Additionally current type of coronavirus is a new virus hence the medical tests to diagnose it are new, limited and not available nationwide. Dengue on the other hand has been around since decades and is a typical disease in the tropics hence the local doctors are familiar with it and can quickly diagnose it.

We all need to take this seriously and tell our family members back home to do the same.

Around 20% of people need intensive care in a hospital. It's not just a flu.....

You can't hide breathing problems that disrupt daily activities.
 
First of all, my first time on time pass, usually I just go to the cricket section. Nice to see discussions on different things besides cricket here.

A bit of background about me, I am born and raised in the US. But I went to Karachi to study shariah/Islamic law. I graduate as a Mufti from Darul Uloom Karachi (largest madrasa in Pakistan), and have been an Imam in the United States for the past 10 years. I studied under Mufti Taqi Usmani, for 4 years personally.

Regarding jumuah being cancelled, there is no clear cut answer to this. Each city, and each neighborhood is different based the the confirmed cases, the high risk, what health officials in the area say, local laws, etc. In the US, most masjids are cancelling since age is over 65 and also because local govt is banning large gatherings.

As for Pakistan, each city and neighborhood is different, and instructions will have to be taken from the govt and medical experts in infectious diseases. But for a simple answer, Mufti Taqi Saheb states that no large gatherings or jumuahs in large Masjids (like Gulshan Iqbal, Masjid Bilal in defense, etc.), rather each mahallah should have its own small jumuah with no elderly and children. This is of course for the educated and law abiding citizens.
 
Around 20% of people need intensive care in a hospital. It's not just a flu.....

You can't hide breathing problems that disrupt daily activities.

The intensive care is required once the disease has advanced and isn't the intial symptom. It is required when the virus has infested the lungs heavily and is destroying it. This can take up to 20 days after first symptoms appear. The disease recently entered Pakistan hence it will take time for it to show it's real affect.

Anyhow even if we say the real number is close to 21 then that's good news and still the measurements taken by the government are necessary and to be applauded.

Social distancing is required the more it can be encouraged the better. This will give the authorities time and only after a proper analysis and testing can you say the disease is affecting Pakistan less severely and a herd immunity is possible until then it's wild guessing void of any real proof.
 
First of all, my first time on time pass, usually I just go to the cricket section. Nice to see discussions on different things besides cricket here.

A bit of background about me, I am born and raised in the US. But I went to Karachi to study shariah/Islamic law. I graduate as a Mufti from Darul Uloom Karachi (largest madrasa in Pakistan), and have been an Imam in the United States for the past 10 years. I studied under Mufti Taqi Usmani, for 4 years personally.

Regarding jumuah being cancelled, there is no clear cut answer to this. Each city, and each neighborhood is different based the the confirmed cases, the high risk, what health officials in the area say, local laws, etc. In the US, most masjids are cancelling since age is over 65 and also because local govt is banning large gatherings.

As for Pakistan, each city and neighborhood is different, and instructions will have to be taken from the govt and medical experts in infectious diseases. But for a simple answer, Mufti Taqi Saheb states that no large gatherings or jumuahs in large Masjids (like Gulshan Iqbal, Masjid Bilal in defense, etc.), rather each mahallah should have its own small jumuah with no elderly and children. This is of course for the educated and law abiding citizens.

Many mosques around the world have 5 times daily large congregations.

I think it would make more sense to test peoples temprature outside before allowing them inside. Public gatherings are not banned in the UK atm.

But restrictions on Jummah or cancel also makes sense.
 
Yes temp cancel all public gatherings, which includes church mass, jumma prayers etc...
 
Many mosques around the world have 5 times daily large congregations.

I think it would make more sense to test peoples temprature outside before allowing them inside. Public gatherings are not banned in the UK atm.

But restrictions on Jummah or cancel also makes sense.

asymptomatic transmission
 
Friday Prayers during the Coronavirus Pandemic

In its 24th emergency session held in Riyadh on Wednesday, 16/7/1441, the Committee of Major Scholars reviewed what was presented to it regarding the permissibility of refraining from attending the congregational and Jum’ah (Friday) prayers in the case of a spreading plague, or for fear of it spreading. By studying the Islamic legislated texts, their objectives, principles and the opinions of the scholars regarding this issue, the Committee of Major Scholars will clarify the following:

Firstly: It is prohibited for a person who has been afflicted [with a plague] to attend the Jum’ah and congregational prayers due to the statement of the Messenger ﷺ:

"The ill should not mix with the healthy" (Collected by both Bukhari and Muslim)

And his statement ﷺ:

"If you hear that a plague has befallen an area, do not enter it, and if it befalls an area you are in, do not leave!" (Collected by both Bukhari and Muslim)

Secondly: Whoever has been directed to be quarantined by the relevant authorities is obligated to abide by it. This person must not attend the congregational prayers and the Jum’ah and pray at home or where he/she is quarantined. This is due to a narration by al-Shareed ibn Suwayd ath-Thaqafi, may Allah be pleased with him who said:

"In the delegation of Thaqeef was a man who suffered from leprosy, so the Prophet ﷺ sent a message to him saying; return for we have accepted you allegiance." (Collected by Muslim)

Thirdly: Whoever fears that they would be harmed, or that they would harm others is permitted to forego the congregational prayers and the Jum’ah due to the saying of the Prophet ﷺ:

"One must not cause harm to himself, or to others." (Collected by ibn Majah.)

In all that has been previously mentioned [of not attending the Friday prayers], this person must pray Dhuhr, four Rak’at [in place of it].

The Committee of Major scholars also advises everyone to adhere to all directions issued by the relevant authorities, as it advises everyone to have Taqwah of Allah, and turn to Him by supplicating with humility, to lift this calamity.

Allah the Elevated said:

"And if Allah should touch you with adversity, no one can remove it except Him; and if He intends good for you, no one can prevent His favor. He causes it to reach whom He wills of His servants. And He is the Forgiving, the Merciful"

And he, the Mighty and Majestic said:

"And your Lord said; call upon me and I will respond to you."

And may the Salat and Salam be upon our prophet Muhammad, his family and companions.

https://subulassalaam.com/articles/...pTRyEjAKdYPy28yL-ZPVBawP0KLUxsjZhF9Vy-jSbI56g
 
Depends if you believe that number is correct. Even in Britain lots of cases are still undetected as the symptoms don't necessarily show straight away.

Wife of Canadian Prime Minister got the virus from Britain.
 
The Pakistani government should be disinfecting every single mosque in every single city, town and village in the country like this

This pic is from Indonesia.

Virus_Outbreak_Indonesia_09562-1.jpg
 
They have already been closed in Toronto, there was no Friday prayer today. Good decision.
 
The Pakistani government should be disinfecting every single mosque in every single city, town and village in the country like this

This pic is from Indonesia.

Virus_Outbreak_Indonesia_09562-1.jpg

Hopefully not, would be a waste of resources. The virus in Pakistan didn't spread from mosques. Virus is known to die outside human body on it's own. Max 9 days on metal surfaces.
 
They have already been closed in Toronto, there was no Friday prayer today. Good decision.

not really, Friday prayers were performed in various mosques, but I know one mosque IIT which cancelled it
 
Thousands of Muslim worshipers gathered in Raiwind for a five-day publicity meeting, ignoring the government’s precautionary measures to prevent the Coronavirus outbreak. Events like this can spread the coronavirus further. Organizers of this annual big gathering announced Thursday that the Coronavirus spread had been reduced due to heavy rain.

Tablighi Jamaat literally the Outreach Society or the Society for Spreading Faith, is a non-political global missionary movement that focuses on urging Muslims to return to practicing Islam as practiced during the lifetime of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, and particularly in matters of ritual, dress, and personal behavior.

About 200,000 people from all over the country had gathered at camps near Lahore for the five-day gathering on Wednesday. “Most people have returned to their homes, but thousands are still here,” Ehsanullah, an organizer of the Raiwand gathering said. Several countries have issued guidelines for holding and attending large public gatherings in the wake of emergency calls to reduce the spread of the virus. Some countries, such as France and Italy, have also banned them completely.

The federal government in Pakistan has not yet implemented nationwide measures to control the potential outbreak. All the provincial governments of the country are operating on their own. So the organizers of the religious gathering could have ignored the government’s directive to postpone the event. According to Ehsanullah, “the government asked us to cancel the gathering because of the Coronavirus but our elders and administrators decided that the meeting would continue as planned.”

The annual gathering for Raiwind has been going on for five decades. It was started by religious scholars and during this gathering, special attention is given to the propagation of Islamic teachings. Millions of visitors from all over the country live in the camps during the gathering.

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), also known as 2019-nCoV acute respiratory disease (2019-nCoV ARD), and novel coronavirus pneumonia (NCP) is a viral respiratory disease caused by the 2019 novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2). It was first detected during the 2019–20 Wuhan coronavirus outbreak.

Elsewhere, schools in three of Pakistan’s four provinces are closed until the end of March and authorities are screening travelers coming from overseas. Three more Coronavirus cases have been reported in Pakistan after which the number of confirmed persons has increased to 21 in the country. Healthcare facilities are also considered to be extremely poor in a country with a population of over 20 million.

According to Health Department officials, one of the new cases is from Hyderabad and one from Karachi while the number of Coronavirus affected persons has increased to 15 in Sindh. The number of certified Corona patients has reached 14 in Karachi, out of which 2 have returned home. According to authorities, the first case has been reported in Hyderabad, the affected person has come to Pakistan from Doha, Qatar, via Syria, while the second person has come from Dubai, United Arab Emirates, via Karachi.

The first case of Coronavirus was also revealed in Quetta after 12-year-old Ali Raza, who was undergoing treatment at Fatima Jinnah Hospital in Quetta, was also confirmed. According to the medical superintendent of the hospital (MS), the infected child had arrived in Quetta from the Pakistan-Iran border area of ​​Quetta with the parents, but no deadly virus was confirmed in the child’s parents.

After the rise of the Coronavirus cases, the Health Department has recommended that the ban on public gatherings in Karachi and the educational institution be closed for a longer period. The Sindh Health Department, headed by the Provincial Minister of Health, attended the meeting of the Pakistan Cricket Board. The situation was considered after the increase in the number of Coronavirus cases and some important decisions were taken.

https://communalnews.com/millions-gather-in-pakistan-despite-coronavirus-threat/
 
Just now for fajr, guy next to me openly sneezed and didn't even bother to cover his mouth. At least 1 other was coughing with a runny nose. So I'm guessing the virus will spread fast in mosques if people continue to be careless
 
Just now for fajr, guy next to me openly sneezed and didn't even bother to cover his mouth. At least 1 other was coughing with a runny nose. So I'm guessing the virus will spread fast in mosques if people continue to be careless

You are being careless yourself putting yourself in close proximity with people who may be careless or ignorant.
 
I have heard of reports from Kuwait where the traditional call to prayer has been changed as it was done in the times of the prophet PBUH

Capture.JPG
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This is extraordinary, from Kuwait. The Muslim call to prayer contains the line Hayya ala al-Salah (come to prayer), imploring people to come to the mosque. Now, because of coronavirus, the muadhin (caller) says al-Salatu fi buyutikum (pray in your homes). Never heard that before <a href="https://t.co/gSkzI6HHy6">pic.twitter.com/gSkzI6HHy6</a></p>— Shiraz Maher (@ShirazMaher) <a href="https://twitter.com/ShirazMaher/status/1238750439023222785?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 14, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This is extraordinary, from Kuwait. The Muslim call to prayer contains the line Hayya ala al-Salah (come to prayer), imploring people to come to the mosque. Now, because of coronavirus, the muadhin (caller) says al-Salatu fi buyutikum (pray in your homes). Never heard that before <a href="https://t.co/gSkzI6HHy6">pic.twitter.com/gSkzI6HHy6</a></p>— Shiraz Maher (@ShirazMaher) <a href="https://twitter.com/ShirazMaher/status/1238750439023222785?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 14, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Wow! I have never heard anything like this before. But, I guess they have a very good reason.
 
Azhar scholars allow suspending Friday and congregation prayers

Al-Azhar’s Senior Scholars Authority, headed by Azhar Grand Sheikh Ahmed Al-Tayeb, on Sunday allowed the suspension of Friday prayers and congregation prayers as part of measures against the novel coronavirus.

A statement from the authority said that health reports show the virus is spreading fast and has become a pandemic, with the virus’s danger being that it can spread so easily and quickly even while a carrier shows no symptoms.

The top priority of Islamic Sharia, it said, is to protect people and maintain their heath.

“Out of its responsibility, the Senior Scholars Authority informs officials all over the world, that it is permissible to suspend Friday prayers and prayer in congregation in all countries for fear of spreading the virus,” the statement said.

The authority added that it is obligatory for patients and the elderly to stay at home, follow the precautionary measures announced by competent authorities in each country, and not go to any mass gathering prayers such as those on Friday.

In the event of suspended prayers and congregations the adhan (call to prayer) must still continue, the authority said, with worshippers called on to pray at home.

All citizens must adhere to the guidelines and instructions issued by health authorities to limit the spread of the virus, the statement stressed, further warning that information must be taken from trusted sources to avoid harmful rumors.

https://www.egyptindependent.com/azhar-scholars-allow-suspending-friday-and-congregation-prayers/
 
The Muslim Council of Great Britain has advised all mosques to suspend all prayer gatherings with immediate effect.

The move will come into force straight away in response to Government guidance to avoid gatherings, particularly involving vulnerable and older people.

Haji Najib Bhudal, trustee at Central Mosque, one of the biggest in Europe, will suspend prayer gatherings with immediate effect.

“It is difficult but we have to follow the guidance to keep people safe.”

Thousands of people traditionally gather at the city’s mosques on Friday afternoons to join in communal worship. It is a crucial component of the faith.

Worshippers are instead guided to pray at home.

The spread of Covid-19 is also impacting on madrasahs and Islamic centres which provide education and Qu’ranic studies.

The Central Mosque’s foodbank, which provides support for poorer families twice a week, is also facing a crisis because of lack of supplies. It has appealed for donations to help it keep going in the weeks ahead.

The Muslim Council of Britain says it has taken into account views from sources including::

* The UK’s Chief Scientific Advisers, who have called for extraordinary social distancing measures.

* The British Islamic Medical Association, representing Muslim medical and health professionals, who bring together a knowledge of communities as well as medical expertise, and who have said it is “unsafe and harmful to continue business as usual, or even with significant adjustments”.

* Many Muslim scholars, consulted through groups such as the British Board of Scholars and Imams, as well as a number of institutions and international bodies, believe that the individual obligation to perform Friday prayers in mosque congregations be temporarily lifted.

Harun Khan, Secretary General of the Muslim Council of Britain, stated: “Muslim communities up and down the country, like others, have been carefully considering how best to continue with our regular social and religious activities, whilst trying to minimise the spread of the coronavirus.

"With the increasing rate of transmission and the number of deaths, medical and scholarly advice all points towards the limitation of social contact as the key towards reducing the spread."

He added: “We all have a public duty to protect one another from harm, and it is evident the most effective way to do this now is to avoid social contact as much as possible. This includes all walks of life, whether social, work or the mosque.

One of the coronavirus (COVID-19) testing kits, containing sterile swabs, which have been put together by Public Health Wales and will be posted out to patients for remote testing.

“This leaves members of our society who are vulnerable and socially isolated at risk. Now is the time for British communities to come together to support one another, and work with friends, family and neighbours to ensure no one is left behind.

“Whether it be at the mosques (particularly Friday prayers) which draw crowds including the elderly, vulnerable and those at high risk, weddings, social events or simple day-to-day activities, it is imperative that this extraordinary step is taken to ensure the safety and wellbeing of our communities, and our country as a whole.

"The MCB is confident that the Muslim community will undertake the difficult measures needed in such unprecedented times and put our trust in Allah.”

https://www.birminghammail.co.uk/ne...prayers-cancelled-birmingham-central-17938454
 
Saudi Arabia suspends prayers at mosques to stop spread of coronavirus

Saudi Arabia is suspending all Friday and other main prayer congregations at mosques across the Kingdom as part of efforts to stop the spread of the coronavirus, according to Saudi Press Agency reports.

The only prayers permitted to continue outside the home will be at the two Holy mosques in Makkah and Madina, according to SPA's report.
 
Britain’s Muslims are amongst the hardest hit by the Covid-19 pandemic – senior NHS officials have told me that up to a quarter of British people who have died from the disease caused by the virus have been elderly Muslims.

To those inside Muslim communities like me, this is shocking but not surprising. Muslims are particularly vulnerable to the virus and it needs to be recognised more broadly before it is too late. If Muslims feel let down, excluded or forgotten by the government response, there will be repercussions that last longer than the outbreak.

Many Muslims live in extended families, often, like my household, with three generations under one roof. This means there are a higher number of carriers who can (and often will) infect an elderly relative. An older person cannot effectively self-isolate when they are living in close quarters with their children, grand-children and perhaps even extended family.

We are all social creatures, but maybe Muslims are more social than most. We eat together – often from one plate, sharing utensils and side dishes. For many Muslims, social intimacy like handshakes and hugs are so hardwired into their behaviour that the week-old invention of “social distancing” is both alien and absurd to them.

This is particularly the case in Britain’s 1600 Mosques (there are 130 just in my home town of Bradford). Islam is a collective religion, and although prominent British Muslim organisations like the Muslim Council of Britain have – in line with Muslim-majority countries like Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Egypt – instructed Muslims to pray at home, many of the UK’s mosques are likely to remain open. Thankfully most mosques have heeded the advice, but the prayer spaces that are still open may have even more people packed into them than usual, increasing the risk.

During Friday prayers (attendance at which is, under normal circumstances, an obligation for most Muslims), the close proximity of worshippers makes the spread of coronavirus a near certainty. We know this from events in the Muslim world: Malaysia’s spread of Covid-19 has been traced back to a single religious gathering at a Mosque, which allowed the virus to spread not only across that country, but to six others.

All this makes coronavirus particularly troubling in Muslim communities, some of which are, like Bradford, in the most deprived areas of the country, with poor health outcomes to match.

The niche ethnic supermarkets and halal butchers that many Muslims depend on for essential goods have less reliable supply chains than the big supermarkets, forcing many local Muslim grocers to significantly increase their prices. This is despite their customers being some of the poorest people in Britain.

And in pockets of Muslim communities, there is mistrust – or simple unawareness – of government advice. The official NHS website on the coronavirus, which has been prominently plugged during the prime minister’s daily press conferences, is available only in English.

This leaves many minorities whose English is not proficient enough to fully understand medical terms like “quarantine” and “pandemic” reliant on foreign or social media sources for their information.

Blogs, TikTok and YouTubers in Asia should not be a primary resource for Brits at a time of national crisis – their own government should be.

This is particularly the case for refugees, asylum seekers and recent arrivals including asylum seeker children in care, who are likely to have a lower than average level of English proficiency. They are also more likely to be already suffering trauma or mental health issues, which a near or total lock-down may take from bad to worse.

This trauma is going to spread through Muslim communities as the crisis develops. A ban on gatherings of more than 100 people is essentially a ban on Muslim funerals – I have never been to one with fewer than 300 attendees.

Many Muslims are anxious that without swift action, they will find their parents and grandparents dying in larger and larger numbers, and they won’t even be able to bury them properly. And this is during a time when the religious gatherings that would help them process and grieve will be stopped.

The coronavirus bailout is still minuscule compared to the funding made available during the financial crisis. Surely human lives are more important than bank balance sheets? Support should be made available for local authorities, charities and volunteers across the country to provide the food, supplies and companionship that the most vulnerable need.

Co-ordinated in my locality through an easily available app, the logistical effort behind this rollout is huge: We need everything from interpreters to therapists to expedited DBS checks. I have no doubt that Muslim communities will play their part, but they must be supported by their government.

Hygiene, health and responsibility to one’s neighbours is hardwired into Islamic culture. This includes the responsibility to not infect the neighbours with a fatal disease. But we can only use those values to keep all our fellow Brits safe if we self-mobilise, at the same time as we self-isolate.

https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/coronavirus-muslim-mosque-closure-prayer-nhs-a9411936.html
 
Rightly the Committee of the biggest mosque, and the one I would attend, in my city has decided that congregational prayers are suspended after tonights Isha prayers. Islamic classes, funeral prayers, khatums etc are also suspended until further notice
 
could have jumma if all the participants have good face masks and gloves
 
Jummah has been suspended until further notice at my local mosque (one of the largest mosques in Toronto). Not just Jummah but also daily prayers.
 
Don’t let your strong emotions regarding fulfilling religious obligations cloud your judgment. These are unique and testing times. Allah will not hold you guilty of not praying in Jamaat when you are looking after the well being of your fellow Muslims especially the elderly. Most of the Muslim world is not equipped to tackle the spread of this disease by providing gloves, masks, other protective gear at the mosques. When you go into sajda, the entire surface can be easily contaminated and it is not easy to sterolize the entire prayer area.

Allah has given us Aqal as well. Please use it. Do it for your fellow Muslims and the elderly. Practice caution!
 
Jerusalem Friday prayers sees smaller crowds amid partial coronavirus lockdown

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Palestinian worshippers scuffled with Israeli police in East Jerusalem on Friday as crowds headed to Al-Aqsa Mosque to pray, amid a partial lockdown imposed to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

Police in riot gear and wearing face masks put barricades up outside Damascus Gate and other entrances to the walled Old City ahead of Friday noon prayers, and checked identity papers to limit the numbers attending.

The crowds were much lower than usual, witnesses said, with only a few hundred in attendance. Some who were refused access prayed in the rain-sodden streets outside the walls, and there were light scuffles as police used tear gas and horses to disperse a crowd.

Al-Aqsa Mosque and the adjacent Dome of the Rock were closed by Muslim authorities last week, in a move to protect worshippers at Islam’s third holiest site.

But the clerics permitted prayers on the huge open area around the two shrines, which sit atop the sacred compound known to Muslims worldwide as al-Haram al-Sharif, or The Noble Sanctuary, and to Jews as Har ha-Bayit, or Temple Mount.

However on Thursday Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tightened a national stay-at-home policy, saying police would enforce restrictions. The guidelines said that no more than 10 people should gather in one place.

Superintendent Micky Rosenfeld, a police spokesman, said health measures were being taken in all neighborhoods, including the Old City.

“With the ongoing spread of the coronavirus it is critical not to have public gatherings and absolutely necessary to keep at a distance of at least 2 meters from one another,” he said.

The Israeli government has threatened to impose lockdown orders unless people observed the instructions - pointing a finger at Israel’s Arab minority and ultra-Orthodox Jewish community.

Israel’s Chief Rabbinate said earlier this month that Jewish worshippers should not come to the Western Wall or gather en masse there. The wall, built by Herod the Great, is a sacred place of prayer for Jews.

Some turned up to pray on Friday, but the area was much quieter than usual, like much of the city center that is normally crowded with tourists.

Israeli authorities say 705 people have tested positive for coronavirus. Of them, 10 are in serious condition.

Palestinian officials say there have been 48 cases detected in the West Bank, 17 of whom have recovered.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...id-partial-coronavirus-lockdown-idUSKBN2171S5
 
Yep, sadly the Masjids in my area have suspended Jummah prayers as well as all activities. I guess similar scenario across the UK.
 
What is pathetic about it? People are dying, do you realize it? Why can't we pray discreetly at our own homes? Why the need for mass gatherings now?

Let’s live first and then pray.

Do yourself a favour brother, just live and don’t pray.
 
Let’s live first and then pray.

Do yourself a favour brother, just live and don’t pray.

You are just misinterpreting me. The need of the hour is social distancing. I'm not asking anyone not to pray. But let's not do that in public. It is just basic common sense. I'm no way against the religion or praying. I'm a practicing Muslim but I'm just saying what needs to be said right now.
 
This is the first time in my life I have seen Jummah being canceled. It feels weird actually.

It shows how relatively stable our world was over the past few years (despite wars and everything).
 
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JAKARTA/ISTANBUL/MOGADISHU (Reuters) - The coronavirus stopped communal Muslim prayers for the first time in living memory in many mosques from Indonesia to Morocco on Friday, but in some places believers have defied medical advice to join together in worship.

In Islam’s holiest sanctuary in Mecca, the usually crowded courtyard around the Kaaba in the Grand Mosque, towards which all Muslims pray, was silent and empty.

At Riyadh’s massive al-Rajhi mosque, only the imam, the muezzin who sings the call to prayer, and other staff were praying inside instead of the thousands who normally attend.

“This feeling is indescribable ... the minarets are crying. The mosques were once full of worshippers,” said the muezzin, Nasser Mohammed, weeping.

The Blue Mosque of Istanbul, with its pencil minarets and cascading domes, Jerusalem’s Dome of the Rock under its gilt roof, and the massive Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca with its ornate square minaret had all shut their doors.

But in Karachi, Pakistan’s biggest city, mosques were crowded as a cleric told his congregation via loudspeaker: “We are not too weak to let this one virus empty our mosques.”

Elsewhere, Muslims flocked to mosques from Cairo to Mogadishu, whatever the risks.

“I am not telling you to reject the preventative measures, but there is too much exaggeration of coronavirus,” Sheikh Abdi Hayi in Mogadishu said in his sermon, as people prayed on the street, unable to join the throng within.

Prayer is one of the “five pillars” of Islam, performed five times a day by the devout, but enjoined as a communal activity only at noon on Fridays.

But as the pandemic spread, some governments suspended communal prayers or closed mosques entirely, leaving many of the world’s 1.6 billion Muslims to pray at home, at work, in parks or in the street.

A religious gathering in Malaysia last month, attended by 16,000 people, generated 670 coronavirus cases in four countries in southeast Asia. Weekly prayers were later called off in Malaysia

Crowded shrines in Iran, drawing pilgrims from that country and Shi’ites from other nations, helped accelerate the spread of one of the largest outbreaks of the coronavirus so far.

Many Muslims in the Indonesian capital Jakarta prayed at home, and Southeast Asia’s biggest mosque, the Istiqlal, stopped prayers.

Its imam, Nasaruddin Umar, cited an edict from the country’s clerical council. “There’s enough of a reason to avoid such religious gatherings,” he told a news conference.

However, elsewhere in the world’s most populous Muslim country, people crowded into their mosques.

“Allah is protecting those who abide by their obligations,” said Aswin Jusar, 76, in the town of Depok, south of Jakarta, as he prepared to attend Friday prayers despite a call from the mayor for religious activities to be suspended.

Outside the Fatih Mosque in Istanbul, named for the 15th century Ottoman sultan who captured the city from the Byzantine empire, 85-year-old Mustafa Emin Ozbakan stood bereft.

He has been praying there since 1941. “I’m not running away from corona. Even if I ran, if death is in your destiny, you can have a traffic accident or die some other way,” he said.

In Cairo, where mosques stayed open, religious authorities urged imams to shorten sermons and prayers and said the faithful should perform their ritual ablutions at home.

But Mohamed Mosleh, a 31-year-old praying at the al-Azhar mosque, said he was not concerned.

“Why should I be afraid to go out, shop, work, pray or go anywhere else? But only after taking precautions, taking care of my hygiene, and all those rules that Islam dictates,” he said.

But from Morocco to Libya, governments have shut mosques, a step never before taken even in times of war or revolution.

Some mosques broadcast an altered version of the call to prayer, exhorting the faithful to stay at home.

An Algerian expert in Islamic law, Mohamed Mouloudi, said it was the right decision: “Islam promotes life, not death.”

In Jerusalem, where the Dome of the Rock and the neighboring al-Aqsa have closed, clerics allowed prayer in the sacred compound that contains the two mosques. Some worshippers scuffled with Israeli police, who tried to limit the numbers.

In Syria, already stricken by war, the Ummayad Mosque in Damascus closed for the first recorded time in over a thousand years.

Buthaina, 44, who had prayed there for years, felt as if she had lost her home. “I don’t want to leave. I just want to sit here a bit,” she said after praying outside.

In Nairobi, Kenya’s biggest mosque was also closed.

“We, as Muslims pray to God to help us overcome this disaster because as you can see, we are praying on the verandas, all the mosques are closed,” said worshipper Abdalla Hakim.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-prayers-bring-coronavirus-risk-idUSKBN21725C
 
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Muslim communities around the world are shuttering their mosques to friday prayers to prevent the spread of Covid19. Pakistan is defiant. Here’s our latest on that for ⁦<a href="https://twitter.com/NPR?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@NPR</a>⁩<a href="https://t.co/dSMVALeiPt">https://t.co/dSMVALeiPt</a> <a href="https://t.co/dSMVALeiPt">https://t.co/dSMVALeiPt</a></p>— Diaa Hadid ضياء حديد (@diaahadid) <a href="https://twitter.com/diaahadid/status/1241314606217396225?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 21, 2020</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Friday prayer at home for most but some risk infection at mosques

The coronavirus stopped communal Muslim prayers for the first time in living memory in many mosques from Indonesia to Morocco on Friday, but in some places, believers defied medical advice to join together in worship.

In Islam's holiest sanctuary in Mecca, the usually crowded courtyard around the Kaaba in the Grand Mosque, towards which all Muslims pray, was silent and empty.

At Riyadh's Al Rajhi Grand Mosque, only the imam, the muezzin who sings the call to prayer, and other staff were praying inside instead of the thousands who normally attend.

"This feeling is indescribable ... the minarets are crying. The mosques were once full of worshippers," said the muezzin, Nasser Mohammed, weeping.

The Blue Mosque of Istanbul, with its pencil minarets and cascading domes, Jerusalem's Dome of the Rock under its gilt roof, and the huge Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca with its ornate square minaret had all shut their doors.

But in Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city, mosques were crowded as a religious scholar told his congregation via loudspeaker: "We are not too weak to let this one virus empty our mosques."

Elsewhere, Muslims flocked to mosques from Cairo to Mogadishu, whatever the risks.

"I am not telling you to reject the preventive measures, but there is too much exaggeration of coronavirus," Sheikh Abdi Hayi in Mogadishu said in his sermon, as people prayed on the street, unable to join the throng within.

Prayer is one of the "five pillars" of Islam, performed five times a day by the devout, but enjoined as a communal activity only at noon on Fridays.

But as the pandemic spread, some governments suspended communal prayers or closed mosques entirely, leaving many of the world's 1.6 billion Muslims to pray at home, at work, in parks or in the street.

A religious gathering in Malaysia last month, attended by 16,000 people, generated 670 cases of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, in four countries in Southeast Asia. Weekly prayers were later called off in Malaysia.

Crowded shrines in Iran, drawing pilgrims from that country and Shia Muslims from other nations, helped accelerate the spread of one of the largest outbreaks of the coronavirus so far.

'I'm not running away from corona'

Many Muslims in the Indonesian capital Jakarta prayed at home, and Southeast Asia's biggest mosque, the Istiqlal, stopped prayers.

Its imam, Nasaruddin Umar, cited an edict from the country's clerical council. "There's enough of a reason to avoid such religious gatherings," he told a news conference.

Outside the Fatih Mosque in Istanbul, named after the 15th century Ottoman sultan who captured the city from the Byzantine empire, 85-year-old Mustafa Emin Ozbakan stood bereft.

He has been praying there since 1941. "I'm not running away from corona. Even if I ran, if death is in your destiny, you can have a traffic accident or die some other way," he said.

'Islam promotes life, not death'

In Cairo, where mosques stayed open, religious authorities urged imams to shorten sermons and prayers and said the faithful should perform their ritual ablutions at home.

But Mohamed Mosleh, a 31-year-old praying at the Al-Azhar Mosque, said he was not concerned.

"Why should I be afraid to go out, shop, work, pray or go anywhere else? But only after taking precautions, taking care of my hygiene, and all those rules that Islam dictates," he said.

But from Morocco to Libya, governments have shut mosques, a step never taken before even in times of war or revolution.

Some mosques broadcast an altered version of the call to prayer, exhorting the faithful to stay at home.

An Algerian expert in Islamic law, Mohamed Mouloudi, said it was the right decision: "Islam promotes life, not death."

In Jerusalem, where the Dome of the Rock and the neighbouring al-Aqsa have closed, scholars allowed prayer in the sacred compound that contains the two mosques. Some worshippers scuffled with Israeli police, who tried to limit the numbers.

In Syria, already stricken by war, the Ummayad Mosque in Damascus closed for the first recorded time in more than 1,000 years.

Buthaina, 44, who had prayed there for years, felt as if she had lost her home. "I don't want to leave. I just want to sit here a bit," she said after praying outside.

In Nairobi, Kenya's biggest mosque was also closed.

"We, as Muslims pray to God to help us overcome this disaster because as you can see, we are praying on the verandas, all the mosques are closed," said worshipper Abdalla Hakim

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...e-risk-infection-mosques-200320152315576.html
 
Definitely should be cancelled, especially because a large proportion of jummah attendees are older people. This shouldn't even be controversial- all public gatherings should be stopped.
 
Unfortunately the need of the hour dictates suspension of all group prayers All the informed and educated scholars agree Life is sacred and whatever needs to be done to slow the spread of the virus and minimise death should be done including ceasing all group prayers esp friday prayers
 
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Muslim prayers at Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa Mosque compound will be suspended starting Monday and until further notice in an effort to prevent the spread of coronavirus, religious officials said on Sunday.

“It was decided to suspend the arrival of worshippers to prayers through all the gates to Al-Aqsa mosque starting Monday,” said a statement issued by the Jordanian Ministry of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs.

Contacted by Reuters, the Palestinian director of the mosque, Sheikh Omar Kisawni, confirmed the decision. It is the third holiest site in Islam, after Mecca and Medina.

Earlier this month clerics closed the doors of Al-Aqsa Mosque and the adjoining Dome of the Rock, but allowed worshippers to gather outside in the open areas of the Old City compound known to Muslims as al-Haram al-Sharif (Noble Sanctuary) and to Jews as the Temple Mount.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ue-compound-suspended-statement-idUSKBN2190YJ
 
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