Eurovision partying upsets nearby mosque worshippers

Eurovision partying upsets nearby mosque worshippers

by Joseph Anthony
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The minaret of the Hassan Bek Mosque is seen as people visit the Eurovision Village, an area dedicated to fans of the 2019 Eurovision Song Contest, in Tel Aviv

The Eurovision Song Contest has found few fans in a famous mosque in the Israeli host city, where worshippers have complained that the gaudy festivities are disrupting their observances of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

A โ€œEurovision Villageโ€ pavilion set up on the Tel Aviv beachfront to host parties is located directly opposite the century-old Hassan Bek mosque, named after an Ottoman governor and frequented by Israeli Arabs from nearby Jaffa.


The 41-country songfest has been a focus of pro-Palestinian boycott calls, and some Muslims fasting daily as part of Ramadan resent the carousing of scantily clad Eurovision enthusiasts.

โ€œIt (pavilion) is in the wrong place because it is close to the mosque,โ€ said worshiper Saโ€™d Abu Zakariya.

โ€œWhen we pray inside there is no feeling of solemnity because of the sound โ€ฆ We stand here and we can hear the noisy songs.โ€

Mohammad al-Akra, a Palestinian labourer from the occupied West Bank who prays at Hassan Bek, said โ€œthe Jewsโ€ were throwing parties โ€œwhere people drink alcohol and everythingโ€.

โ€œBecause of the noise we close the windows and doors,โ€ said Abed al-Kareem Mohammad, another worshiper.

A spokeswoman for Tel Aviv city hall said the municipality โ€œrespects the Islamic religion, community and institutionsโ€ and noted that โ€œthere are also synagogues in the area affected by the heavy pressure of the crowdsโ€.

The Eurovision Song Contest kicked off on Tuesday and ends on Saturday.

In the West Bank city of Bethlehem, a small group of Palestinian protesters came out against the contest.

โ€œIsrael is using Eurovision to distract attention from the crime of the Nakba,โ€ one demonstratorโ€™s placard read, using the Arabic term for the โ€œCatastropheโ€ when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled or were displaced in violence that led to war between the new Jewish state and its Arab neighbours in 1948.

May 15 is traditionally the day Palestinians mark the โ€œNakbaโ€.

REUTERS

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