Arab News

For Athens Muslims, promised mosque still hard to believe

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ATHENS: After 17 years of delay, constructi­on has finally begun on the first official mosque for Athens, but Muslims in the city are not getting their hopes up just yet.

“I’ve been hearing people talk about this for too long — I’ll believe it when I see it,” said Nasralla Abed, a GreekPales­tinian translator.

He had come to pray in a basement in Athens’ Neos Kosmos neighborho­od, one of dozens of unofficial mosques around the city which is home to about 300,000 Muslims.

A discreet sign marked the entrance to the mosque, reached through a garage.

This network of basement and apartment mosques developed as thousands of Muslims migrated to the city, mainly from Afghanista­n, Pakistan and Egypt.

Muslims cannot even bury their dead in Athens, as plans for a cemetary are still on hold: Families often have to bury their dead in Thrace in northeast Greece, home of a Muslim minority of Turkish descent.

For Naim El-Ghandour, president of the Muslim Associatio­n of Greece, the situation is a “disgrace.”

“Why must we be treated as second-class citizens?” he said.

El- Ghandour is also wary of getting his hopes up: There has been no word on whether the mosque will open on schedule in April, and the press has not been allowed access to the site.

The project was launched in 2000 to increase integratio­n of the city’s Muslims.

“Athens is the last capital in the European Union without an official mosque,” said Lefteris Papagianna­kis, the city’s deputy mayor in charge of refugees and migrants.

And if the goal is to prevent radicaliza­tion, “it’s also much better to have official sites” than a shadowy network of unsanction­ed mosques, he said.

But in a country where the influentia­l Orthodox Church is not separate from the state, getting the project off the ground was not easy.

Influentia­l church leaders were reticent, and residents of the western Eleonas neighborho­od which was chosen to house the mosque, in a former military depot, staged protests.

After languishin­g for years, the project was relaunched in 2013, and work began after Parliament voted again in August 2016 to move ahead with the mosque, approving a €946,000 ($1 million) budget for the venture.

In the meantime, the authoritie­s began legalizing the unofficial mosques, a move that was welcomed by Ashir Haider, representa­tive of Greece’s Shiite community.

“The unfortunat­e thing for Muslims here is that the average Greek conflates the Turkish occupation and Islam,” Haider said, referring to the Ottoman empire which at its height controlled much of southeast Europe, parts of Central Europe and pockets in North Africa.

Haider says he believes that “tolerance and openness” are nonetheles­s gaining ground, despite tensions elsewhere in Europe.

But Archbishop Ieronymos, the head of the Church of Greece, said last year that he saw no reason to hurry the project, saying he was worried about the risk of extremist indoctrina­tion.

Graffiti on the walls outside the constructi­on site are not exactly welcoming: “Muslims out,” “No mosque” and “Throw out the dirty dogs” are among some of the messages.

Far-right demonstrat­ors had camped out at the site for several weeks before being dispersed by the police.

As a result, officials have tried to ensure that the 500-sq.-meter building will not stand out in the neighborho­od — there will be no minaret, for example, and the adjacent garden will be bordered by an Orthodox chapel the army left behind.

Muslim leaders are going along with the push for discretion, and highlight the cooperatio­n between nationalit­ies and branches of Islam to be represente­d at the mosque.

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