The street-prayer ban has highlighted France's problems assimilating its 5-million-strong Muslim community, which lacks prayer space, and follows a long-running controversy, fanned by far-right leader Marine Le Pen, over Muslims forced to lay their prayer mats on the streets in big cities.
Interior Minister Claude Gueant directed Muslims in Paris to temporary spaces made available pending the building of a huge new prayer space and warned that force would be used if necessary as police end their tolerance of street prayers.
Seven months before a presidential election, the ban has struck some in France as an attempt to rally far-right sympathizers to President Nicolas Sarkozy's center-right camp.
At the barracks, Cheik Mohammed Salah Hamza oversaw prayers for Muslims who had migrated from around the city. Worshippers streamed in, spreading their woven prayer mats over the floor of the hangar-like building and out into the courtyard.
"It's the beginning of a solution," Hamza told Reuters before the start of the service. "The faithful are very pleased to be here. The space, which holds 2,000, is full."
Many worshippers were also upbeat. "This will be better than rue Mryha," said one man, referring to a Paris street renowned for hosting street prayers. "Apparently, it shocked people."
Le Pen has described the growing phenomenon of praying on the streets and sidewalks as an "invasion."
"It's Marine Le Pen who started all this," a woman who gave her name as Assya said on her way into the former barracks on the outskirts of Paris. "Now the government has banned street prayers and sent us here so they can gather votes from the (far-right) National Front (party) - that's all."
"No system can control us"
In France, where a strict separation of church and state has been in force for a century, public displays of religious activity are frowned upon.
Yet efforts by Sarkozy's conservative government to restrict religious displays, such as a ban on full-face veils, have drawn criticism as empty measures that unfairly single out Muslims.
France counts the largest Muslim minority of any European country. But only a portion -- about 10 percent, or the same proportion as among Catholics -- are practicing, according to Muslim associations.
As a rule, radical Muslim voices in France are rare, but Friday's prayers in northern Paris drew a small but angry protest from a radical minority more often seen in online posts.
An hour before the first prayer young men with beards, green headbands and banners gathered on rue Myrha to discourage worshippers from moving to the new site.
"No system in the universe can control us aside from Allah," shouted one young man. "There is more dignity in praying in the grass than in their false mosque," said another.
As the prayers began, dozens of young men belonging to a group called Forsane Alizza disrupted the service with shouts of "Allahu akbar" - "God is greatest" - and jostled with security.
COMMENTS (12)
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Good for france.Hope other non muslim countries follow.
@Malik Great humour dude.
@Frank
Where are you? missing those pearls of wisdom that you throw around on such issues.
STONE WALLS DO NOT A PRISON MAKE NOR IRON BARS A CAGE. THIS LIFE A REAL MUSLIM SOUL WOULD TAKE FOR A HERMITAGE
Do minarettes make a mosque? or mosque a minarette?
Good for France -- no group has a right to interfere with other people using public roads.
The reason we people migrate to France is because the roads are so clean and traffic is less that we can pray right on the roads.
Now these intolerant bigots fully of Islamophobia are not allowing peaceful prayers on the road ! Where will this end?
Tomorrow they will say, don't send remittances to madrassahs in Pakistan ! These French are getting intolerant !!!!!
Totally agree with Xoya...in Saudi there are no prayer spaces for minorities. Even a progressive country like UAE, there are no proper Temples or Churches which are prominent or visible to others. All of us Muslims should respect the law of the land.
It doesn't matter if they have restricted the church activity for 9 decades. They have no rights to suppress the Muslims. Muslims are specials and they must be provided by special rights in every country.
What is the need to pray in groups and block traffice ? Why don't people pray at their home ?
is it necessary to pray on the road ? can't you pray in your house ? i believe allah will listen to your prayer even you are in space !!
“No system in the universe can control us aside from Allah,” shouted one young man. “There is more dignity in praying in the grass than in their false mosque,” said another.
Hmm then Pray at home & not cause others any problems.God is Everywhere. in Pakistan too i just dont know why the take the Streets Block roads & cause others inconveinance
Well People ur in another country respect their laws . In Pakistan we dont gove Minorities their Freedom to come on streets for anthing . so vica versa. what goes around comes around.
banning of veil was bcoz of security reasons so please media should not make something else about it