Prayers on chairs ban sparks outrage in Bangladesh
Critics saying it will exclude the elderly and infirm from prayers
REUTERS:
A ban on using chairs in mosques has provoked outrage in Muslim-majority Bangladesh, with critics saying it will exclude the elderly and infirm from prayers.
The Islamic Foundation, an autonomous government agency, issued the fatwa over the weekend, saying devotees must instead use prayer mats.
But the move has attracted criticism both from within the government and Muslim clerics.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina told a weekly cabinet meeting on Monday she was "stunned", according to media reports, while pro-opposition Islamic groups reacted with fury.
Read: New space technology prayer mat unveiled
"We strongly protest this faulty and fictitious fatwa," said a statement issued by a group of Islamic leaders and clerics.
"Chairs have been used for prayers in mosques for years," said Abdul Latif Nejami, one of the signatories.
Muslims in the conservative nation traditionally kneel on the floor to pray.
But in recent years most of the country's half a million mosques have allowed elderly and infirm worshippers to sit on chairs.
"They issued the edict by consulting with the traditions of Prophet Mohammed and his companions and practices over the centuries," the head of the Islamic Foundation Shamim Afzal told AFP.
Afzal said chairs spoiled the beauty of the mosques, and that there had been a similar move to ban them in India.
"There are no instances of the Prophet (pbuh) praying while sitting on a chair," he said.
A ban on using chairs in mosques has provoked outrage in Muslim-majority Bangladesh, with critics saying it will exclude the elderly and infirm from prayers.
The Islamic Foundation, an autonomous government agency, issued the fatwa over the weekend, saying devotees must instead use prayer mats.
But the move has attracted criticism both from within the government and Muslim clerics.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina told a weekly cabinet meeting on Monday she was "stunned", according to media reports, while pro-opposition Islamic groups reacted with fury.
Read: New space technology prayer mat unveiled
"We strongly protest this faulty and fictitious fatwa," said a statement issued by a group of Islamic leaders and clerics.
"Chairs have been used for prayers in mosques for years," said Abdul Latif Nejami, one of the signatories.
Muslims in the conservative nation traditionally kneel on the floor to pray.
But in recent years most of the country's half a million mosques have allowed elderly and infirm worshippers to sit on chairs.
"They issued the edict by consulting with the traditions of Prophet Mohammed and his companions and practices over the centuries," the head of the Islamic Foundation Shamim Afzal told AFP.
Afzal said chairs spoiled the beauty of the mosques, and that there had been a similar move to ban them in India.
"There are no instances of the Prophet (pbuh) praying while sitting on a chair," he said.