Minneapolis allows all five Muslim daily prayer calls

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Photo for illustration purposes only.

WASHINGTON: Minneapolis has become the first major United States (US) city to allow all five Muslim calls to prayer, or adhans, to be played on loudspeakers, Anadolu Agency (AA) reported. 

The Minneapolis City Council voted unanimously Thursday night (12-0) to allow the adhan to be played from mosques despite current noise ordinances. 

The Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Muslim advocacy group, said the decision is a historic victory for religious freedom and pluralism. 

“We thank the members of the Minneapolis City Council for setting this great example, and we urge other cities to follow it,” CAIR’s state director Jaylani Hussein said in a statement welcoming the decision. 

CAIR had urged the council to approve the measure. Observant Muslims pray five times a day and are alerted to prayer times by a muezzin who issues the adhan at daybreak, at noon, in mid-afternoon, at dusk, and again later at night.

The speaker often sings “Allahu Akbar,” or “God is great,” in Arabic. 

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Minneapolis last year limited the times the adhan could be recited and the sound levels at which it could be played, according to CBS News.

Mosques will now be allowed to issue the adhan from 3.30am until 11pm. City Mayor Jacob Frey is expected to sign the measure into law within a week, according to the Minneapolis Star-Tribune newspaper. – BERNAMA-ANADOLU

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