S<Chowdhury
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The desire of the Muslim community in the western German town of Volklingen to build a small minaret on a local mosque has sparked a debate reminiscent of that in Switzerland that ended in banning minarets.
"If their building is within the rules, then nobody has the right to stop them in Germany," Christoph Gottschalk, 60, a steel trader, told The Times on Thursday, February 11.
"Some people say they are against for aesthetic reasons, which I think is a stupid argument because Volklingen is one of the ugliest towns perhaps in the whole of Europe."
But not every body agrees.
In a town meeting held on the subject in late January, a number of locals came out against the minaret plan.
Some have even described the proposed small minaret, stretching a mere eight meters (26 feet) above the roof, as an infiltration of their community.
Muslims reportedly make up 5 percent of Volklingen's 40,000-strong population.
Germany is believed to be home to nearly 4 million Muslims, including 220,000 in Berlin alone.
Turks make up an estimated two thirds of the Muslim minority.
Islam comes third in Germany after Protestant and Catholic Christianity.
Referendum
Though it has only two members on the 51-member city council, the nationalistic National Democratic Party swiftly called for a referendum.
"I see a link with the Swiss situation," said Mayor Klaus Lorig, 59, a representative of Angela Merkel’s ruling Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party.
"Many people saw it on TV and they ask me, ‘Why are we not allowed to decide on our city?’ and I try to argue this is a city for everybody."
Swiss voters had backed a proposal by the right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP) for a blanket ban on minaret building in the Alpine country.
The SVP described the minarets as a symbol of Shari`ah and forced the referendum after collecting 100,000 signatures within 18 months from eligible voters.
A group called Pro-NRW (short for the German state North Rhine-Westphalia) is reportedly cooperating with right-wing political parties in many European countries for a Europe-wide minaret referendum.
Mayor Lorig has appealed to the Muslim community to withdraw the minaret proposal.
The mosque committee, however, said there were no legal grounds to reject its plan and warned that it was prepared to go to court.
"This is our democratic right, to have our places of worship just like there are churches," Adnan Atakli, the head of the Turkish-Muslim community, told the Times.
"Churches have a tower. I live here, we have a mosque and a mosque should have a minaret."
Source
Steel town divided over mosque minaret amid fears of Islamic quest for power (Times Online)
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