The Indonesian Ulema Council declared it ‘haram’ for Muslims to wear Santa hats, whilst acknowledging Christians’ right to celebrate Christmas.
The fatwa proposes that the government ‘prevent, monitor, and punish’ businesses who force Muslims to put on clothing which goes against their religion.
‘Christians will be facilitated on Christmas’
Incited by the fatwa, members of Islam Defenders Front (FPI) raided a shopping mall in Indonesia’s second largest city, Surabaya, to check whether businesses had asked employees to wear Christmas clothing such as Santa hats. The FPI members were escorted by Surabaya Police and East Java Police's Mobile Brigade.
The Surabaya police have been condemned for helping to impose the fatwa as well as showing support for the extremist group.
Christmas In Jhelum: Over 150 cops to guard 16 churches
Although the fatwa has prompted debate across the country about whether businesses can demand their employees to wear Santa hats, many Muslims feel they shouldn’t be judged for wearing the hats. More than 90 per cent of Indonesians describe themselves as Muslim, but the vast majority practice a moderate form of the faith.
Here's what people across Twitter had to say.
https://twitter.com/ItaNovitasari17/status/812032876309049344
Fatwa bans Muslims wearing Santa hats: Indonesia's killjoy imams... https://t.co/d2dlDcblRy
— Richard Allen (@AHA1R) December 23, 2016
https://twitter.com/shanep1/status/812139786496577536
Fatwa bans Muslims wearing Santa hats in #Indonesia https://t.co/rv6ckGEmaC
— VelhoGlobus (@Sumol67) December 23, 2016
https://twitter.com/markdery/status/812405196081004544
This article originally appeared on Metro
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