In a July 10, 2020 decree, Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan reversed the 1934 law that converted the
Hagia Sophia from a mosque into a museum, thereby turning it back into a
mosque. He also placed the historic structure, which had been under the
authority of the Ministry of Tourism and Culture, under the authority
of the country's Ministry of Religious Affairs.[1]
While Erdoğan's move was praised by
Muslim Brotherhood (MB) clerics, senior officials at Egypt's Al-Azhar,
the most important religious institution in the country and the leading
institution in the Sunni Islamic world, were vehemently opposed. They
argued that turning a church into a mosque was forbidden and that the
building should remain either a museum or a church. One of the sheikhs
even stated that the move reflected the MB's enmity to human civilization.
The statements by the Al-Azhar
officials against Turkey's changing Hagia Sophia back into a mosque
reflect the unprecedented tension between Egypt and Turkey, that began
in July 2013 following the ousting of Mohamed Morsi from the Egyptian
presidency by Egyptian president Abd Al-Fattah Al-Sisi, who was defense
minister at the time. Erdoğan, who was at that time Turkey's prime
minister, still does not recognize the legitimacy of Al-Sisi's rule and,
along with Qatar, provides patronage to Al-Sisi's opponents in the MB.
The Egypt-Turkey tension has spiked recently following Turkey's
increasing military involvement in support of the Government of
National Accord (GNA) in Libya, headed by Fayez Al-Sarraj. This is
perceived by Egypt as an attempt by Erdoğan to establish Turkey as a
regional power while threatening to destabilize Egypt. Al-Sarraj's
forces, backed by Turkish military forces, have recently advanced to the
oil-rich region of eastern Libya, near the Egyptian border, and this
could lead to Egypt-Turkey military conflict on Libyan soil.
This report will present statements by Al-Azhar clerics opposing Turkey's turning Hagia Sophia back into a mosque:
Former
Al-Azhar Deputy Sheikh 'Abbas Shuman: It Is Forbidden To Turn A Church
Into A Mosque; The Houses Of Worship Of All Religions Must Be Respected
'Abbas Shuman, former deputy to the Sheikh
of Al-Azhar, told the Russian Sputnik news agency in Arabic on June 10,
2020: "Islam respects the houses of worship of the various religions,
and it is forbidden to turn a church into a mosque, just as it is
forbidden to turn a mosque into a church. This [turning a church into a
mosque] is a principle that Al-Azhar's ideology does not accept, [for]
all places of worship, of all religions, must be respected... Whatever
belongs to Islam is Muslim, whatever belongs to Christianity is
Christian, and whatever belongs to Judaism is Jewish. This move [of
turning a church into a mosque] is provocative, and contravenes the
directives of Islam as we know them and which were followed by our
righteous fathers of old. It is a known fact that they cared for the
holy places of other [religions], protected them and did not damage
them...
"Whatever its goal, this move [of turning
Hagia Sophia back into a mosque] is unacceptable, whether it was meant
to achieve political gains or was motivated by good intentions. It is
fundamentally mistaken, and neither political aims nor good intentions
justify making a mistake that is unacceptable in essence. It is not
possible to revoke, add or make [new] laws in Islam that do not exist
[in the shari'a]. Inventing goals in an artificial manner and claiming
that they benefit Islam is a distortion of Islam's tolerant
directives... Islam never turned churches into mosques by force. On the
contrary, it was Muslims and their mosques that were attacked, and those
responsible for this were in the wrong. The principle of turning a
church into a mosque is unacceptable, just like the opposite action of
turning a mosque into a church. There may be exceptions, for instance if
the residents of a Christian town have converted to Islam and turned
their church into a mosque in order to pray in it, which harms nobody,
or if a [formerly] Muslim town no longer has any Muslim residents and
all the people there are followers of a different religion, the mosques
there may be turned into places of worship for that religion."[2]
'Abbas Shuman (Source: Gate.ahram.org.eg, September 3, 2018)
Al-Azhar
University Professor Saad El-Din Helaly: Hagia Sophia Should Remain A
Museum; It Is The Nature Of The Muslim Brotherhood And Political Islam
To Take Others' Possessions
Saad El-Din Helaly, a professor of Islamic
jurisprudence at Al-Azhar University, said in a July 13, 2020 interview
on the Saudi-Egyptian MBC Misr TV that by renewing Friday prayers in
Hagia Sophia, the Turkish "Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated government" was
escalating its hostility "against human civilization." Adding that
Hagia Sophia should remain a museum and that it is the nature of the
Muslim Brotherhood and of political Islam to take things from other
people and religions, he called upon Muslims in Turkey to boycott the
July 24 Friday prayers at Hagia Sophia. He stated further that in 1945,
the world had agreed to "let bygones be bygones" and to solve conflicts
peacefully, and accused Erdoğan of wanting to turn the clock back to
before 1945.
To view this clip on MEMRI TV, click here or below:
Al-Azhar
University Professor Ahmad Karima: Hagia Sophia, Like The Sphinx And
The Pyramids, Belongs To The Heritage Of Humanity; It Should Remain A
Church
Ahmad
Karima, a professor of Islamic law at Al-Azhar University, said in a
July 13, 2020 interview on Egypt's Channel 1 that Hagia Sophia is part
of the heritage of humanity and should remain a church. He said that
Al-Azhar scholars had had the same reasoning for condemning the
Taliban's destruction of the ancient Buddha statues in Afghanistan. When
the companions of the Prophet Muhammad came to Egypt, he added, they
saw ancient Egyptian monuments such as the Sphinx and the pyramids, yet
did not destroy them or turn them into mosques because they belonged to
the heritage of all humanity – thus if Hagia Sophia was once a Christian
church, it should remain one now.
To view this clip on MEMRI TV, click here or below: