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Boubakeur (R) and
Breze agreed to let bygones be bygones at Le Bourget conference. |
Additional Reporting By Hadi
Hahmid, IOL Correspondent
PARIS, March 27, 2005 (IslamOnline.net
& News Agencies) – With a call to reconsider the hijab ban and grant
Muslims official holidays on their religious feasts, French Muslim
leaders agreed Saturday, March 26, that it was high time they acted
in concert and forget about their differences ahead of the
re-election of the French Council for Muslim Faith (CFCM) in June.
Brought together by the 22nd
conference of the Union of French Islamic Organizations (UOIF),
Paris-le-Bourget, the leaders of the sizable Muslim minority moved
to let bygones be bygones and proved that they can speak with one
voice.
Mending fences, Dalil Boubakeur, the
rector of Paris Grand Mosque, Thami Breze, UOIF president, and
Abdullah Al-Safari, the head of the National Confederation, stood
shoulder to shoulder to deliver the message of unity.
It is the first time since 1993 that
the chairman of Paris Grand Mosque attends the Bourget conference.
Boubakeur has been known for his sting
criticism of the UOIF, accusing its leaders of taking a
“fundamentalist” line.
His critical remarks peaked when he
threatened last year to boycott the CFCM June election, fearing that
the UOIF would dominate the grouping.
New Leaf
But the “welfare of the generations to
come” was enough to convince Boubakeur of turning a new leaf.
In a speech that heavily quoted
Qur'anic verses on the importance of unity, Boubakeur said that the
CFCM should remain united irrespective of backgrounds and
ideologies.
He further underlined that Islam was
no obstacle to France's secularism “which guarantees for all to live
in peace.”
The French Muslim leader also warned
of rising Islamophobia in France, citing the racist swastika and
arson attacks on mosques.
“One shouldn't forget the key role
played by French Muslims in releasing the two French reporters
[Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot] last year in Iraq and
their call to set free French female journalist Florence Aubenas,”
held hostage in Iraq since January 5, Boubakeur stressed.
Safari relayed the same message of
unity, saying that French Muslims are resolved to act in concert in
the days ahead.
He, however, highlighted the daunting
challenges facing the CFCM, chiefly the qualification of imams and
the future plans of the Foundation for Islamic Works, which was
established earlier in the month by prominent Muslim leaders and
Interior Minister Dominique de Villepin.
The foundation is aimed at financing
the construction of mosques and development of other Islamic
activities in the European country.
Breze, for his part, used his speech
to counter media accusations to Muslims of being disunited and
isolated.
“French Muslims are striking the right
balance between their Islamic values and the values of the French
republic,” he said.
Hijab
The controversial issue of hijab was
also high on the agenda of the second day of the four-day
conference.
UOIF Secretary-General Fouad Alaoui
said the calm atmosphere now, following the hijab ban in March 2004,
allowed a new look at what he said was the compromised state of
religious freedom in France, reported Reuters.
“It is compromised because today, in
our country, they expel young girls from schools for making the
mistake of refusing to show their ears,” he told the gathering.
“I don't think we can teach a real
culture of respect for others if we demand that our minorities
amputate themselves of their differences,” he said.
France, whose 6 million Muslims make
up 8 percent of the population, banned “conspicuous religious signs”
in state schools last year.
After the law came into fruition at
the beginning of the new school year in September, some 48
hijab-donned students were kicked out of state schools.
Islamic Feasts
Alaoui further called for official
recognition of main Islamic feast days so Muslims did not feel “that
their religion does not have the same status as the majority
Catholic religion.”
He first spoke of two main holidays,
referring to Eid Al-Fitr and Eid Al-Adha feasts following the holy
fasting month of Ramadan and hajj.
The Muslim leader later added the
birthday of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).
Seven of France's 13 legal holidays
are Christian holidays.
The Stasi commission, formed last year
by French President Jacques Chirac to recommend on secularism and
religion in the European country, suggested adding Islamic holidays,
but the National Assembly ignored this and just passed the hijab ban
the panel also proposed.
“It would be perfectly normal to end the obligation to work or
attend school (on Islamic holy days),” Alaoui said.
Source:
IslamOnline