Muslims pray at the Berlin church to adapt to anti - coronary measures

A church in Berlin has welcomed Muslims who are unable to pray at the mosque because of the social distance rule, the Coronavirus's quarrel. Dar Assalam Mosque in the Neucoln district usually awaits hundreds of Muslims on Fridays. But it can actually only take up to 50 people at the same time, as rules allow for [...]
A church in Berlin has welcomed Muslims who are unable to pray at the mosque because of the social distance rule, the Coronavirus's quarrel.
Dar Assalam Mosque in the Neucoln district usually awaits hundreds of Muslims on Fridays. But currently, only up to 50 people can agree at the same time, as do regulations for preventing the distribution of the coronary to Germany.
During the month of Ramadan, the nearby Martha Lutheran church came to her aid by accepting Muslims to perform religious rituals, reports “Reuters”.
The “is something wonderful and brings pleasure in the month of Ramadan and at this time crisis”, Mohammed Taha Sabry, imam of the mosque, said. We have a community. Crisis unites people”.
The churches and mosques opened in Germany on May 4 after a period of several weeks closed as a result of being isolated from the Coronavirus. But after reopening, the rules are that the people they pray must keep at least 1.5m apart from each other.
The Islamic Council, a group representing about 400 mosques, had said in April that many of them risk bankruptcy because the closure has not made it through the donations made in the month of Ramadan.












