Gulf Times

Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia declared a mosque after Turkish court ruling

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Atop Turkish court yesterday struck down the 1934 cabinet decree that turned Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia into a museum, paving the way for its use again as a mosque after an 85-year hiatus.

An NGO in Istanbul, the Permanent Foundation­s Service to Historical Artifacts and Environmen­t Associatio­n, had filed a petition at the Council of State seeking annulment of the decision to convert Hagia Sophia into a museum after being a mosque for nearly 500 years.

The court heard the parties’ arguments at a July 2 hearing before issuing its ruling, according to Turkish news agency (Anadolu).

According to the court’s full ruling, Hagia Sophia was owned by a foundation establishe­d by Ottoman Sultan Mehmet the Conqueror and was presented to the community as a mosque.

The decision said that in its title deed, Hagia Sophia was defined as a “mosque” and this cannot be legally changed.

The society the mosque was bestowed to cannot be prevented from exercising its rights and benefits through the age-old immovable property the foundation left to it, said the ruling.

It concluded that it is not legally possible to use the building as anything other than a mosque, as it is defined as such in the deed.

Under the Byzantine Empire, Hagia Sophia had been used as a church for 916 years.

In 1453, after the Ottoman Empire conquered Istanbul, it was converted into a mosque by Sultan Mehmet II, also known as the Conqueror.

An unparallel­ed treasure of world architectu­re, Hagia Sophia underwent restoratio­n work during the Ottoman era, including the addition of minarets for the call to prayer by famed architect Mimar Sinan.

Under the Turkish Republic, in 1935 it became a museum.

In recent years Turkish leaders have called for its use as a mosque again and allowed Qur’an readings there on special occasions.

President Tayyip Erdogan declared Hagia Sophia open to Muslim prayer as a mosque yesterday after the court ruling.

Erdogan made his announceme­nt just an hour after the court ruling was revealed, brushing aside internatio­nal warnings not to change the status of the monument.

“The decision was taken to hand over the management of the Ayasofya Mosque...to the Religious Affairs Directorat­e and open it for worship,” the decision signed by Erdogan said.

 ??  ?? Muslims perform evening prayers in front of the Hagia Sophia, after a court decision that paves the way for it to be converted from a museum back into a mosque in Istanbul yesterday.
Muslims perform evening prayers in front of the Hagia Sophia, after a court decision that paves the way for it to be converted from a museum back into a mosque in Istanbul yesterday.

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