Les Palestiniens vent debout contre la loi israélienne voulant interdire l’appel à la prière notamment à Jérusalem

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  • Jerusalemites recite call to prayer from their rooftops – Middle East Monitor
    November 18, 2016 at 12:01 pm
    https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20161118-jerusalemites-recite-call-to-prayer-from-their-rooftops
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7io4UkwpR80

    In response to the Israeli government’s plan to prohibit the call to prayer in the city, Jerusalemites climbed onto the roofs of their houses and recited the call to prayer all together.

    In video footage which is circulating on social media, residents can clearly be heard reciting the call to prayer in protest of the law to ban it in Jerusalem.

    Churches in Nazareth showed solidarity by broadcasting the call to the night prayer in response to attempts to prohibit the call of prayer being broadcasted from Al-Aqsa Mosque.

    • Mosque in Israeli city fined for using loudspeakers to broadcast call to prayer
      Nov. 21, 2016 5:01 P.M. (Updated: Nov. 21, 2016 5:01 P.M.)
      http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=774069

      BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — A mosque in the city of al-Ludd (Lod), located just south of Tel Aviv, was fined a penalty of $200 by the Israeli municipality for using loudspeakers to make the call to prayer on Monday, according to Israeli newspaper Haaretz’s Hebrew site.

      Haaretz reported that the fine was imposed in accordance with an existing Israeli “pollution and nuisances law,” which restricts the volume at which mosques can use loudspeakers to call out the adhan — the Muslim call to prayer that is broadcast five times a day — during nighttime.

      The mosque’s imam, Muhammad al-Far, said it was the first time Israeli authorities had imposed such a penalty on al-Ludd’s mosque, and called it “a very dangerous step.”

      “There is no doubt that the Israeli municipality is taking advantage of the current situation,” al-Far said, referring to a recent bill — backed by backed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — making its way through Israel’s parliament which would ban the use of loudspeakers for the Muslim call to prayer in Israel.