the Grand Mosque of introduces an invocation for the country after the Friday sermon

the Grand Mosque of introduces an invocation for the country after the Friday sermon
the Grand Mosque of Paris introduces an invocation for the country after the Friday sermon

The rector sent a letter to the 150 imams affiliated with the Great Mosque, the rector asks them to “introduce invocations in Arabic and French at the end of the sermon every Friday”

The rector of the Grand Mosque of Chems-eddine Hafiz asked his imams to now include an invocation for at the end of their Friday sermons.

In a letter sent Thursday, January 9 to the 150 imams affiliated with the Great Mosque, the rector asks them to “introduce invocations in Arabic and French at the end of the sermon each Friday.” He emphasizes paying “particular attention to the execution of this request”.

The proposed invocation is “Oh Allah, preserve France, its people and the institutions of the Republic. Make France a prosperous, secure and peaceful country, where the national community, in its diversity, its different religions, its convictions and his beliefs, coexist in security and peace.

This approach is part of “the implementation of the adaptation of Muslim religious discourse in French society initiated by the Grand Mosque of Paris”, specifies the rector.

A “prayer for the Republic” in the synagogues

The letter recalls that certain imams had begun to introduce an invocation for France after the assassination of Professor Samuel Paty in 2020 and others after October 7, 2023, the date of the bloody attacks by Hamas against Israel.

Other religions have already been planning a prayer for France “for many years”, adds the letter.

In synagogues, therefore, a “prayer for the Republic” is pronounced on Saturday mornings and holidays, before or after the reading of the Torah, as well as on the occasion of official ceremonies.

France

-

-

PREV Suspending pension reform “without offering the slightest funding avenue” would be “irresponsible”, believes Laurent Wauquiez
NEXT 1,105 participants in the 7th edition