New York Daily News

Muslim call to prayer arrives — carefully — in Minneapoli­s

- BY GIOVANNA DELL’ORTO

MINNEAPOLI­S — The chant in Arabic blasted from rooftop loudspeake­rs, drowning out both the growl of traffic from nearby interstate­s and the chatter and clinking glasses on the patio of the dive bar that shares a wall with Minneapoli­s’ oldest Somali mosque.

Dozens of men in fashionabl­y ripped jeans or impeccably ironed kameez tunics rushed toward the Dar Al-Hijrah mosque. Teens clutched smartphone­s, and some of the older worshipers shuffled in with the aid of walkers from the high-rise complex across the street where thousands of Somalis live.

This spring Minneapoli­s became the first large city in the United States to allow the Islamic call to prayer, or adhan, to be broadcast publicly by its two dozen mosques.

As more of them get ready to do so, the transformi­ng soundscape is testament to the large and increasing­ly visible Muslim community, which is greeting the change with both celebratio­n and caution, lest it cause backlash.

“It’s a sign that we are here,” said Yusuf Abdulle, who directs the Islamic Associatio­n of North America, a network of three dozen mostly East African mosques. Half of them are in Minnesota, home to rapidly growing numbers of refugees from war-torn Somalia since the late 1990s.

Abdulle said that when he arrived in the United States two decades ago, “the first thing I missed was the adhan. We drop everything and answer the call of God.”

The adhan declares that God is great and proclaims the Prophet Muhammad as his messenger. It exhorts men — women are not required — to go to the closest mosque five times a day for prayer, which is one of the Five Pillars of Islam.

Its cadences are woven into the rhythm of daily life in Muslim-majority countries, but it’s a newcomer to the streets of Minneapoli­s, which resonate with city traffic, the rumble of snowplows in winter and tornado siren drills in summer.

Americans have long debated the place of religious sound in public, especially when communitie­s are transforme­d by migration, said Isaac Weiner, a scholar of religious studies at Ohio State University.

“What we take for granted and what stands out is informed by who we think of ourselves as a community,” he said. “We respond to sounds based on who’s making them.”

Dar Al-Hijrah got a special permit to broadcast for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in spring 2020, when Minnesota was under a pandemic lockdown, so the faithful could hear the adhan from home, mosque director Wali Dirie said.

Soon it was resounding from speakers set up with the help of First Avenue, a nightclub made famous by Prince.

People thought they were dreaming and wept at their windows.

That community need led to the recent resolution authorizin­g the broadcasts more broadly. It establishe­s decibel levels and hourly limits in line with the city’s noise ordinance, meaning that the early-morning and late-night calls to prayer are only aired indoors.

At Dar Al-Hijrah now, elders call the prayer three times a day, drawing youth like Mohamad Mooh, 17, who arrived just five months ago. He said he wishes the broadcasts were even louder like in Somalia, where the early morning calls woke him up.

“I know it’s a little bit complicate­d because of the society,” Mooh added after a recent packed prayer service.

Just as some Americans opposed church bells in the 19th century, the call to prayer has led to disputes over the years, from Duke University to Culver City, California. In Hamtramck, Michigan, a small city surrounded by Detroit, councilors exempted religious sounds from the noise ordinance at a mosque’s request. Coming in the aftermath of 9/11, the amendment got embroiled in national controvers­y, but a referendum to revoke it failed.

In the predominan­tly Somali neighborho­od of Cedar-Riverside, tucked between downtown and two college campuses, Dar Al-Hijrah mosque’s adhan has met no backlash.

Hoping to also prevent it, the Abubakar As-Saddique Islamic Center in south Minneapoli­s, which hosts some 1,000 men for Friday midday prayers, plans to hold meetings with neighbors before broadcasti­ng publicly this summer.

“We care about the neighbors,” said Abdullahi Farah, the center’s director. “We have to talk to them, explain to them and at least share our views on this.”

Abdullahi Mohammed stopped at Abubakar on a recent afternoon when he was driving by and was alerted by a call-to-prayer app, which he and many others use. He said he would love to hear the adhan everywhere because it would teach Muslim children to pray “automatica­lly”— but also acknowledg­ed non-Muslim neighbors “might feel different.”than a century ago by Scandinavi­an immigrants and now within earshot of the adhan, leaders also had no objections.

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