AGL40.16▲ 0.13 (0.00%)AIRLINK131.73▲ 2.42 (0.02%)BOP6.69▼ -0.11 (-0.02%)CNERGY4.47▼ -0.17 (-0.04%)DCL8.82▲ 0.19 (0.02%)DFML40.61▼ -0.34 (-0.01%)DGKC84.08▼ -1.66 (-0.02%)FCCL32.34▼ -0.66 (-0.02%)FFBL68.61▲ 2.08 (0.03%)FFL11.35▼ -0.11 (-0.01%)HUBC111.76▲ 1.18 (0.01%)HUMNL14.31▼ -0.32 (-0.02%)KEL5.22▼ -0.02 (0.00%)KOSM8.98▲ 0.87 (0.11%)MLCF39.43▼ -0.64 (-0.02%)NBP60.29▼ -0.22 (0.00%)OGDC194.94▼ -0.53 (0.00%)PAEL26.69▼ -0.41 (-0.02%)PIBTL7.48▼ -0.16 (-0.02%)PPL155.77▼ -0.05 (0.00%)PRL26.68▼ -0.69 (-0.03%)PTC18.3▼ -0.26 (-0.01%)SEARL83.02▼ -2.08 (-0.02%)TELE8.23▲ 0.33 (0.04%)TOMCL34.55▼ -0.33 (-0.01%)TPLP8.81▼ -0.41 (-0.04%)TREET16.7▼ -0.11 (-0.01%)TRG62.45▼ -0.41 (-0.01%)UNITY27.44▼ -0.31 (-0.01%)WTL1.28▼ -0.02 (-0.02%)

First Muslim prayers held in Hagia Sophia after 85 years Erdogan joins thousands including officials

Share
Tweet
WhatsApp
Share on Linkedin
[tta_listen_btn]

Observer Report

Istanbul

After more than eight decades as a museum, Turkey’s iconic Hagia Sophia reopened for Islamic worship for the first time with Friday prayers with the participation of thousands of people.
Thousands of people, including top officials, politicians and many who traveled from across Turkey, took part in the traditional Friday prayers both inside and outside the historic site in Istanbul, Turkey’s largest metropolis.
“Now this place [the Hagia Sophia] has returned to its original form, it became a mosque again,” said Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, wishing the historical monument will continue serving as a mosque forever to all believers.
“However, it is a place where people from all religions can come and visit as a cultural heritage of all humanity,” he added.
Hagia Sophia served as a church for 916 years until the conquest of Istanbul, and a mosque from 1453 to 1934, nearly half a millennium.
By mid-Friday morning, congregants were arriving in the area for the opening, holding prayer rugs in their hands, as verses from the Quran were read out over loudspeakers, Hurriyet Daily News.
Crowds formed at checkpoints surrounding the historic heart of Istanbul, where thousands of police maintained security. Upon entering the secured area, the worshippers, wearing face masks, sat spaced out on prayer mats in the city’s Sultanahmet Square.
However, the authorities stopped accepting new visitors around Hagia Sophia due to the increasing crowd. “All of our prayer areas around the Hagia Sophia Mosque are full. Our guest entries to these areas have been stopped due to the pandemic,” the Istanbul’s Governor’s office said in a statement.
A limited number of worshippers were allowed into the building to ensure adequate social distancing measures were in place.
Many joined the prayer from public spaces nearby and from the rooftops of nearby buildings. Security officials had earlier closed off streets leading into the mosque area in order to better manage the expected worshippers.
Paintings, depictions and mosaics were closed with a system of curtains during prayers. Before the Friday prayers, Erdogan recited from the Quran inside the reopened mosque, choosing from both the Surah Al-Fatihah and the Surah Al-Baqarah.
Leading the first Friday prayer performed in Hagia Sophia 86 years later, Ali Erbas, the head of Turkey’s top religious authority, read the khutbah [sermon] with a sword in his hand on the pulpit.
The ritual of reading the khutbah with a sword, which is a tradition dating back to the Ottoman era, has different meanings depending on the way the sword is handled and where it is used. “Hagia Sophia is the conquest’s symbol and the entrustment of its Conqueror who endowed it on condition that it remains a mosque until the last day,” Erbas said in the khutbah with reference to the Ottoman sultan Mehmed II, who conquered Istanbul.
Later, four muezzins from the mosque’s four minarets recited the adhan, or call to the prayer, and people started the Friday prayers. Hundreds of people, including Erdogan and his ministers, wearing white face masks as a precaution against Covid-19, knelt on blue carpets at the start of the Friday prayer at noon.
In the new era for Hagia Sophia, Diyanet will oversee religious services at the mosque, while the Culture and Tourism Ministry will supervise restoration and conservation work.

Related Posts

Get Alerts