Uk, Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) and British Islamic Medical Association (BIMA) – GUIDANCE FOR MOSQUES/MADRASAS AND UMRAH PILGRIMS

https://mcb.org.uk/mcb-updates/coronavirus-guidance-for-mosques-and-madrassas/

Egypt’s Minister of Endowments: ‘Muslim Brotherhood spreads coronavirus’, sparking wave of mockery

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20200313-egypts-minister-of-endowments-muslim-brotherhood-spreads-coronavirus-sparking-wave-of-mockery/

Activists set several examples of similar accusations made against the Muslim Brotherhood, including blocking rain drains, increasing the prices of lemons and vegetables and causing the baby boom

The Egyptian Minister of Endowments has sparked widespread controversy after he claimed that the Muslim Brotherhood is seeking to spread the coronavirus among members of the army, the police, the judiciary and media figures.

The story began two days ago when the Minister of Endowments, Muhammad Mukhtar Juma, stated that “the Muslim Brotherhood’s affiliates have lost their mental balance, and reached unprecedented levels of criminality beyond all human perceptions, and became a global threat. We call on the whole world to recognize the Brotherhood’s disturbing truth, as some of its criminal elements call for spreading the coronavirus among innocent people.”

Juma said in a statement published on the official website of the ministry: “Some members of the stray organization called on their colleagues who have been infected with coronavirus to spread it among members of the army, police, judiciary, and media figures as well as to the rest of the innocent citizens, which reflects the Brotherhood’s extreme state of mental, psychological and human imbalance.”

The statement was warmly received in the House of Representatives, as Mahmoud Hussein, representative of Parliament’s Youth and Sports Committee, announced his support for Juma’s statement saying: “We all need to have a role in communicating these important and urgent messages delivered by the Minister of Endowment to the whole world. The international terrorist organization of the Muslim Brotherhood poses an imminent threat to international peace and security.”

Activists also pointed out that the ruling military regime in Egypt has always resorted, whenever it fails to contain a disaster, to accusing the Muslim Brotherhood of conspiring against the state, which prompted all segments of the Egyptian society to believe that Al-Sisi’s regime is using the Brotherhood as a pretext to cover its failures. They added that this pattern of behaviour confirms the seriousness of the virus’s spread in the country and the regime’s inability to handle the crisis.

Activists cited several examples of similar accusations made against the Muslim Brotherhood, including blocking rain drains, increasing the prices of lemons and vegetables, and causing the baby boom; in addition to having something to do with the fluctuation of Egyptian Pound’s price against the Dollar, the defeat of the national football team in the African Nations Championship, spreading hope, spreading pessimism, firing 3 million employees under the pretext of having ties with the Muslim Brotherhood, causing the national football team’s setback at the World Cup in Russia … and the last of which was spreading the coronavirus.”

The Islamic Medical Association of North America (IMANA), American Muslim Health Professionals (AMHP), Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) and Fiqh Council of North America (FCNA) strongly recommend the Muslim community to take precautions

JOINT COVID STATEMENT

(Also known as SARS-CoV-2 or COVID-19)

The Islamic Medical Association of North America (IMANA), American Muslim Health Professionals (AMHP), Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) and Fiqh Council of North America (FCNA) strongly recommend the Muslim community to take precautions, including but not limited to suspending daily congregational prayers, Sunday school, Jumuah prayers and other gatherings in your communities and mosques temporarily.
The above organizations are making these recommendations after careful shared discussions, review of relevant fiqh, and targeted advice from local, state and national public health authorities, local and national Muslim leaders, and Muslim public health experts who live in our communities.
Protecting human life is one of the fundamental objectives of Islamic Shari’ah. This concept takes precedence over all other objectives of Islamic faith as life represents the foundation of our existence. Therefore, at times, preservation of human life and human rights is far more significant than continuity of even essential practices of devotion.
The Prophet (SAW) gave us specific guidelines to navigate threats to the community such as epidemics. Quarantine, social isolation, travel bans and restriction of select movement, visitations, congregation and socialization are among the precautionary and preventive measures specified in authentic hadith. Fear for one’s safety is a genuine Islamic reason to forgo some of the fundamental Islamic actions and rituals. The Prophet (SAW) relinquished the oath of Islam from a member of Banu Thaqi’f tribe who suffered from Hansen’s disease (leprosy). Therefore, devotional acts such as daily and weekly congregational prayers, including those for funerals, Taraweeh and Eid can be temporarily halted to avoid life-threatening, widespread dangers such as pandemics.
According to FCNA, “ it is our moral duty as Muslims that we take all steps necessary to safeguard ourselves and others around us from this terrible disease. One’s personal desire to do obligatory prayers at the masjid or fulfill other religious duties comes secondary to ensuring the common health of the larger community. Masjids should be protected from bacterial or viral transmission s.”
The global coronavirus pandemic (also known as SARS-CoV-2 or COVID-19) is a serious threat to public health. It has the potential to spread rapidly and impact large populations. For vulnerable individuals (elderly, existing conditions like diabetes, heart disease, lung disease, immunocompromised state), this disease also has a potentially high mortality rate.
From both an Islamic and public health perspective, it is totally reasonable for the community to take aggressive measures temporarily to reduce transmission of the virus, including temporarily:

  1. Canceling congregational prayers
  2. Canceling “Sunday school” or halaqas
  3. Limiting meetings or utilizing web conferencing
  4. Canceling conferences and social gatherings 

Social distancing is one of the key concepts to reduce the spread of this potentially deadly disease, and hence, we advise individuals to observe the following measures to contain the spread of the virus:

  • Those who are sick and have any symptoms of illness must avoid going to crowded public places. 
  • Frequent hand-washing with soap and water for at least 20 seconds.
  • Use hand sanitizers.
  •  Cover your nose and mouth with a single-use tissue (throw out after using and wash hands immediately afterwards) or use your flexed elbow when coughing and sneezing.
  • Mosques should take extra precautions, like the availability of sanitizers, frequent scrubbing, and disinfecting areas of worship.
  • Avoid close contact with anyone with cold or flu-like symptoms.
  • Do not shake hands, embrace, or kiss others, especially those who are sick and if you are sick.

The organizations referenced here who have developed this statement do not take lightly the seriousness of these recommendations. It is only in the most extreme circumstances that we would demand these measures be taken. We agree that the current situation with the novel coronavirus is one of those circumstances.
IMANA, AMHP, ISNA and FCNA will meet regularly to consult key medical, public health, and fiqh experts to support our communities. We are working together to compile the most pertinent and essential information. Please visit http://www.imana.org/covid-19 for additional resources, our latest recommendations, and full statement from Fiqh Council of North America. You can email covid@amhp.us for questions and concerns.
Last but not least, we are reminded of trials and tribulations from Allah (SWT) and must continuously pray to Him for safety and protection from all illness, for guidance to follow His way, and for success in this life and the next. During these stressful times, all believers should find comfort in this verse: “ Say: Nothing will happen to us except what Allah has decreed for us! And He is our Protector; let the believers put their trust in Him! ”

Sincerely,Islamic Medical Association of North America (IMANA)American Muslim Health Professionals (AMHP) Islamic Society of North America (ISNA)Fiqh Council of North America (FCNA)

What churches, mosques and temples are doing to fight the spread of coronavirus

Link: https://edition.cnn.com/2020/03/14/world/churches-mosques-temples-coronavirus-spread/index.html

AL JAZEERA – Omar Suleiman: Don’t forget the Uighur amid the coronavirus crisis

https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/don-forget-uighur-coronavirus-crisis-200214134600562.html

by Omar Suleiman

When a people are subjected to the most unimaginable forms of cruelty at the hands of a brutal regime and prominent world powers are unwilling to take any meaningful steps to stop that cruelty, where and what do they then turn to? When a tragedy strikes the government that abused them, could they be excused for believing it to be divine intervention?

The largest mass atrocity occurring in the world today, unfortunately, speaks to this sad reality. 

The Uighurs and other mostly-Muslim Turkic minorities in China are being subjected to the most brutal forms of oppression and the Chinese government’s so-called “re-education camps” are holding over a million of them out of sight. 


To counter any criticism of its treatment of the Uighurs, China has employed a language of “de-radicalisation” that has been normalised throughout the world by repressive governments to mask their own policies of death and destruction. 

While other groups that suffer under inhumane policies either at the hands of their own governments or others often find themselves championed by a competing force and score some gains while being used as a political football, the Uighurs do not seem to qualify even for that.  

Last month, US President Donald Trump signed a new trade deal with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, bringing the two-year trade war between the two superpowers to an end and making his administration less willing than usual to even mention the gross human rights violations committed by the Asian giant.

While most Muslim minorities oppressed by non-Muslim nations have at times, though decreasingly, received support, charity or at least some lip service from Muslim majority countries, the Uighurs did not get any of that either. 

Days after a group of 22 nations signed a letter addressed to the president of the UN Human Rights Council and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights calling on China to close down its internment camps in Xinjiang, a group of 37 countries, many with overwhelmingly Muslim populations, submitted a similar letter in defence of China’s policies. In the second letter, the signatories expressed their opposition to “politicising human rights” and reiterated China’s defence of what it calls “vocation education and training centers”. 

The greatest explanation for this behaviour, aside from the general decline in all forms of Muslim solidarity, is China’s economic chokehold on the Muslim world. Most Muslim governments who depend politically on the United States for protection, depend on China for their economic survival. Given that Beijing is known for not taking criticism of its human rights record laying down, censoring China over its treatment of Uighurs simply comes at too high an economic cost for most Muslim nations. 

As a result of all this, the world largely remains mute on the plight of Uighurs, with their suffering only being mentioned in occasional news reports by a few media organisations.

In December, as the world continued to turn a blind eye to the plight of the Uighur community, a coronavirus outbreak began in the central Chinese city of Wuhan. In a few months, the deadly virus infected tens of thousands of people in mainland China, killing more than 1,000 people. 

As the epidemic grabbed headlines across the world, and the international community made the outbreak its utmost priority, a debate sparked among Muslims and especially Uighurs: could the outbreak be God’s punishment for China and the world’s horrific treatment of Uighur Muslims? 

Before I write another sentence, I need to emphasise that this article is not an attempt at whataboutery. I am not trying to minimise the deaths of more than 1,000 people or the threat the virus poses to the world.  I’m simply attempting to explain why a growing number of Muslims, and especially Uighurs, are asking whether the outbreak is divine intervention. 

While many have been exposed to this debate solely through social media, I actually had a chance to speak to Uighurs themselves about it. They told me how their family members and loved ones disappeared into China’s internment camps. They told me how they felt utterly abandoned by world powers, especially the Muslim ones. And they admitted to me that when the epidemic started, they felt deep down that it may be divine aid for them. They said they couldn’t help but feel that way even though they know making such a determination is theologically flawed. 

In Islam, God determines what, who, and how he punishes in a way that is only known by him, and to opine on divine intent is to claim access to God’s unique knowledge, which no one can. We also hold that what may be a punishment to some, could be a reward to others.

Some told me that they feel sorry for the Muslims, and innocent people of other religions, suffering in Wuhan, but hope that China would economically and politically collapse for its crimes. And every single Uighur I’ve spoken to have agreed that apathy to tragedy, which they have suffered the most as a result of, is not only un-Islamic but merciless. 

But as we emphasise the un-Islamic nature of such claims and feelings, we should not ignore the injustices that sparked these sentiments in the first place.  

Why are the Uighurs wasting away in internment camps not receiving the same level of support people infected with the coronavirus do? Why does the suffering of the Uighurs receive only a fraction of the media coverage the victims of the epidemic are receiving? Is it only because the virus has the potential to spread across the world and infect others, or is there a more sinister reason why the world does not seem to care about the Uighurs?

So much of what common Chinese people are now experiencing as a result of the outbreak is similar to what the Uighurs have long been experiencing at the hands of the Chinese government.  

Before anyone was quarantined for coronavirus, the Uighurs were quarantined by the Chinese government – first in their homes and neighbourhoods, then in literal concentration camps. 

Before Chinese people were forced to cover their faces with masks due to the virus, hijabs and niqabs were being pulled off the heads and faces of Uighur women. 

Before the coronavirus spread throughout China, putting the freedom, health and wellbeing of millions of innocent people at risk, millions of innocent Uighurs were already being imprisoned, tortured and killed because they had the “virus” of Islam.

And long before the Chinese government was suspected of covering up the number of deaths and confirmed infections to carefully control the narrative about coronavirus, it was covering up its systematic abuse of the Uighur people.

Nevertheless, the same international community that swiftly came together to work to bring an end to the devastation caused by the virus and ease the suffering of its victims, did almost nothing to stop the suffering of the Uighurs.  

The coronavirus epidemic is undoubtedly a horrible tragedy that has caused more than 1,000 deaths in China, and it may cause even more devastation elsewhere in the future. It is no small deal, and our hearts should go out to the families of those left behind as well as people still living with the fear that they or their loved ones may soon catch the virus. We should do everything we can to contain the virus and encourage our leaders to take action to end this crisis as soon as possible. 

But we should also understand the feelings of the Uighurs who are now forced to watch the outpouring of  support, in part, towards the government that abused them. They are simply trying to come to terms with a reality in which their tragedy is ignored but the tragedy of their oppressors remains in the headlines. 

While it is wrong to definitively speak of God’s will in any matter, let alone a devastating disease outbreak indiscriminately affecting millions of people, we can certainly try to understand why Uighurs cannot help but feel that way. 

Also, as we worry about the spread of the virus, we should spare a minute to think how this new tragedy may affect the Uighurs themselves. After all, if the coronavirus was to spread through the closed, cramped camps holding scores of Uighurs, we almost certainly would never learn the full extent of their devastation.  

ITA VERSION – https://www.dailymuslim.it/il-coronavirus-e-gli-uiguri/

Turkey: Diyanet allows Muslims to perform Friday prayers at home

Turkey’s Religious Affairs Directorate said on March 13 that instead of attending weekly collective mosque prayers on Fridays, Muslims in the high risk group can pray at home amid coronavirus concerns.

Underscoring that Friday prayers were a must for every obliged person, the statement said that various justifications could excuse a person from the congregation, including danger to life, property or health.

Instead of attending weekly collective mosque prayers on Fridays, Muslims in the high risk group can pray at home, Turkey’s highest religious body said on March 13 amid heightened concerns that such events could speed up the spread of the novel coronavirus.

The supreme council of religious affairs announced that Muslim members of high-risk groups living in countries with a COVID-19
outbreak could perform their noon prayers at home instead of attending Friday prayers at a mosque, as is normally mandated

Canadian Council of Imams (CCI) and Muslim Medical Association of Canada (MMAC) Joint Statement on COVID-19 Coronavirus

Bismillah Al-Rahman Al-Raheem

In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.

Representatives from the Canadian Council of Imams (CCI), the Muslim Medical Association of Canada (MMAC) and other key community leaders held an emergency meeting today to discuss the unprecedented COVID-19 (Coronavirus) pandemic and the implications for the health of all Canadians, and in particular the Muslim community.

The two organizations have agreed to the following:

2. A 1 page, double-sided information fact sheet regarding COVID-19 has been prepared and will be shared by both organizations, their members and community
partners electronically and/or in print to reach as many members of the Canadian Muslim community as possible.

3. Formation of a task force comprising of Imams from the Canadian Council of Imams (CCI), healthcare professionals from the Muslim Medical Association of Canada (MMAC)
and other key stakeholders to help provide guidance going forward.

We ask you to implement these recommendations as soon as possible and look forward to providing updates in the near future. As Muslims, we must do our part to reduce the spread of this virus. Insha’Allah we will all get through this together if we stand united as one Ummah.

How are Muslim authorities fighting against coronavirus?

https://alkhaleejtoday.co/saudi-arabia/57204/How-are-Muslim-authorities-fighting-against-coronavirus.html

how-are-muslim-authorities-fighting-against-coronavirus.pdf

Aden – Yasmine El Tohamy – The rapid spread of the novel coronavirus in countries where Muslims constitute a majority – as well as those where they are a minority – presents a major challenge to Islamic religious authorities across the world.

Large gatherings of worshippers are a reality of religious practices, which in the case of Islam are the five mandatory daily prayers, as well as the Friday congregational service.

With international organisations and regional governments under immense strain to contain the virus, how have Imams harnessed their powers of influence to raise awareness among their congregants and inculcate simple habits which could save lives?

Pragmatism during a pandemic

Last Wednesday, Saudi Arabia took the unprecedented step of banning the holy pilgrimage of Umrah for both residents and citizens, leaving the Muslim world reeling in a state of shock, with the doomsday-esque images showing Islam’s holiest city nearly devoid of worshippers. 

During the following Friday sermon, Imams of the Grand Mosque in Mecca and the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina stressed the paramount importance of adhering to the ”precautionary measures” taken by the Saudi government to prevent the outbreak. 

Authorities which lie beyond the spiritual heartland of the Muslim world are now reinforcing the concrete advice of governments and public health bodies. 

The Muslim Council of Britain, an umbrella body with over 500 mosques, educational and charitable associations affiliated to it, has shared comprehensive advice ahead of expected government plans to introduce emergency legislation. 

The organisation advises its affiliated bodies to ”proactively plan” for the ”likely suspension” of congregational prayers. 

In the meantime, it has suggested introducing more gradual contingency plans, such as mosques abandoning optional Sunnah and Nawafil prayers as well as hosting external events and fundraising for charity.

In a poster on the MCB’s website, those who show even minor symptoms are advised to pray at home, with volunteers encouraged to send food to the elderly and most vulnerable in the community.  

The instructional Khutbah

On Friday, around 10,000 worshippers performed the congregational prayer at the Al-Aqsa mosque compound in Israeli-annexed East Jerusalem.

Heeding the advice of officials, the majority gathered in the courtyard of the third holiest site in Islam to avoid crowding inside the mosques, where they listened to a 13-minute sermon focused on raising awareness of how to stop the spread of the contagious disease. 

Coronavirus has become central theme of Friday sermons, even in countries which have still seen relatively few cases. 

In South Africa, which now has a total of 13 cases, Imam Rashied Omar, an Islamic studies scholar at the University of Notre Dame, addressed Muslim staff attending a January Friday prayer service at a hospital in Cape Town. 

In a transcript of the lecture, Omar invoked directives from the Quran and teachings of the Muslim Prophet Muhammad, which promotes personal and environmental hygiene in the form of a religious obligation know as fiqh al-taharah

With public information campaigns launched by governments built around the simple act of frequent hand washing, Imam Omar drew parallels with performing Wudu, the Muslim practice of ritually washing limbs prior to commencing the five daily prayers. 

Even in Uganda, where there are no recorded cases, the country’s Inter-Religious Council held a meeting with the Ministry of Health on Thursday, to discuss ways of mitigating the spread of the disease. 

Spiritual leaders in the landlocked African currently, where over 10 per cent of the population are Muslim, drafted a range of guidelines, which include allocating time to medical professionals during Khutbahs to educate ”congregants on how they can stay safe”. 

Curbing congregations

In comparison, some Muslim countries are taking completely different measures, going so far as to ban congregational prayers altogether. 

Authorities in Muslim-majority Malaysia, where there are currently 149 cases of Covid-19, are tracking thousands of people after at least 12 infections were linked to a three-day gathering of Islamic missionaries at a mosque in the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur. 

In a bid to stop the virus, the country’s Minister of Health reissued guidelines for holding Friday prayers at mosques, including shortening sermons and for ablution rites to be carried out at home. 

The religious event in the Malaysian capital, which drew in some 10,000 participants, also included scores of visitors from neighbouring Singapore, prompting the Southeast Asian island country to take the much more dramatic measure of closing all mosques in the country for a five day period of ”deep-cleaning”, Reuters reported.

In countries home to substantial Shia populations, Friday prayer services have been either suspended altogether until further notice, such as in Lebanon and Kuwait, or in major cities, such as hard-hit Iran and Iraq.

Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani, whose Friday sermons from the Shia holy city of Karbala provide guidance for millions, last week urged worshippers to abide by a ban on mass prayers, according to AP

Avoiding affection

Iraq’s Sunni authorities have also taken action to fight the spread of the infectious disease in the country, which has 80 recorded cases, Arabi21 reported, advising adherents to avoid visiting mosques, as well as suspending their norms of physical contact, which including cheek kissing and hugging as greetings. 

In neighbouring Jordan, religious and government leaders have explored more creative avenues to change deeply-ingrained habits.

An instructional video, which shows the Hashemite Kingdom’s Minister of Health accompanied by the Minister of Religious Endowments, has been produced, where the two advise the country’s faithful to abandon their traditional greetings.

Agencies contributed to this report.

Kamal Afzali is a journalist at The New Arab

HUFFPOST.COM – Coronavirus Forces Mosques To Reassess Weekly Prayers And Ramadan Plans

coronavirus-forces-mosques-to-reassess-weekly-prayers-and-ramadan-plans-huffpo.pdf