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Islamic call to prayer shows Muslims ‘belong’ in Minneapolis

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Islamic call to prayer shows Muslims ‘belong’ in Minneapolis

Minneapolis, Minnesota – Pastor Jane Buckley-Farlee was not too long ago strolling by her Minneapolis church’s Cedar-Riverside neighbourhood when an surprising music broke out.

“I heard this music that sounded form of heavenly,” she informed Al Jazeera. At first, she didn’t know what it was – however after a couple of moments, she realised it was the adhan, or the Muslim name to prayer.

“It was echoing amongst all the buildings, but it surely was nonetheless somewhat arduous to listen to with all the visitors,” she recalled. “However it simply made me smile. I ended and listened and simply smiled. I will need to have appeared foolish, but it surely was simply so tender and delightful.”

Whereas public broadcasting of the adhan is widespread in Muslim-majority nations, Minneapolis not too long ago turned the primary main metropolis in the US to permit it year-round after metropolis council handed a decision in March. Now, the town’s 1000’s of Muslim residents, a lot of whom are Somali immigrants, can hear the identical acquainted calls within the streets of their new hometown – and never simply in the course of the holy month of Ramadan.

Jamal Osman, a member of metropolis council’s three-person Muslim caucus who proposed the decision, mentioned it was “an exquisite honour, the primary recognition of Ramadan by the town, and acknowledging that the decision to prayer will be broadcasted in Minneapolis”.

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Throughout the pandemic lockdown the mosque was given a particular allow to broadcast the prayer for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. That led to a latest decision authorising mosques to broadcast the adhan thrice a day [Jessie Wardarski/AP]

Whereas the Dar Al-Hijrah Mosque within the metropolis’s Cedar-Riverside neighbourhood, residence to many Somali and different East African residents, has been broadcasting the adhan throughout Ramadan since 2020, others at the moment are making ready to hitch it year-round. On the Abubakar as-Saddique Islamic Middle close to the town core, the adhan will start ringing out someday earlier than the top of September, mentioned government director Abdullahi Farah.

“We need to be respectful and hearken to suggestions earlier than we do it,” Farah informed Al Jazeera, noting that the centre plans to carry a group session occasion within the coming weeks.

As a result of the 5 every day calls to prayer are based mostly on the rise and fall of the solar, the earliest and newest calls will probably stay inner for a lot of the 12 months, Farah mentioned. The amount can be roughly the identical as church bells – audible however not disruptive to the neighbourhood.

“It’s an incredible alternative for us to succeed in our neighbours and the broader group, however before everything it’s a possibility for us as Muslims. It reminds us of again residence,” Imam Mowlid Ali informed Al Jazeera.

“It reminds us that we belong right here. It reminds us that we’re not hiding our religion. In a method, it will increase our confidence and in addition our sense of belonging to this group.”

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Constructing bridges

Among the many broader group, the common broadcasting of the adhan will permit residents of assorted faiths and backgrounds “to get to know this stunning music and what it means”, Ali mentioned.

“It’s a method of inviting individuals to come back to the mosque, as a result of there’s a passage within the Quran that claims ‘come to prayer, come to success,’” he added. “So it’s an invite to the neighbours and to the general public to essentially come to the mosque and get to know the Muslim group.”

Minneapolis
The Abubakar as-Saddique Islamic Middle in Minneapolis plans to carry conferences with neighbours earlier than publicly broadcasting the decision someday within the subsequent three months [Jessie Wardarski/AP]

AJ Awed, who helps develop insurance policies and programming methods for the Cedar-Riverside Group Council neighbourhood affiliation, mentioned the town’s latest decision marks the success of a marketing campaign pledge by Osman.

“Efforts like this are at all times helpful,” Awed informed Al Jazeera. “It helps construct bridges throughout understanding, and a way of residence when you’ve your individual cultural and non secular values being revered in such a fashion.”

The initiative has drawn solely optimistic suggestions from the group to date, he added.

“Our group is, at giant, very tolerant and really a lot accommodating,” Awed mentioned. “And [the call to prayer] actually isn’t that loud – it’s simply loud sufficient for the fast neighborhood.”

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Buckley-Farlee mentioned she discovered the adhan to be a soothing sound. “I feel it’s nice,” she mentioned. “I admire listening to it, as a result of it jogs my memory of how massive God is – that all of us have these totally different lenses for making an attempt to determine how this entire God factor works … Simply to be made conscious of that regularly is nice.

“And I do know that when it sounds within the neighbourhood, it actually touches the Muslims deeply,” Buckley-Farlee added. “They really feel like they’re residence once more and that they’re welcome and secure – all of these good issues.”

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Video: Rescue Efforts Continue After South Africa Building Collapse

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Video: Rescue Efforts Continue After South Africa Building Collapse

new video loaded: Rescue Efforts Continue After South Africa Building Collapse

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Rescue Efforts Continue After South Africa Building Collapse

The four-story building under construction collapsed on Monday, killing at least eight people and leaving dozens of others missing.

It’s a very controlled process whereby we remove one floor, we search the area, we put the dogs on, we do technical search. If we find nothing, we then remove the next floor. We’ve got lookouts to make sure that if we do uncover a victim, we’re able to go in there and remove them. This is an ongoing process. We will be getting more specialized equipment in this afternoon, and then we’re going to be going into the basement and into the lift shaft that’s still in place. You know, the part of it that’s still intact, and hopefully that’s where they’ll still be a lot of voids and where we can possibly still find victims.

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Triple murder suspect in Mexico surfer deaths allegedly confessed to girlfriend he killed '3 gringos': report

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Triple murder suspect in Mexico surfer deaths allegedly confessed to girlfriend he killed '3 gringos': report

One of the suspects believed to be connected to the murders of two Australian brothers and an American, who were on a surfing trip in Mexico, allegedly admitted to his girlfriend that he killed all three, according to her. 

During a court hearing on Wednesday, the BBC reported that Ari Gisel, the girlfriend of suspected killer Jesús Gerardo Garcia Cota, allegedly showed up at her house on April 28 and told her he did something to “three gringos.” Gringo is a slang term used to describe English-speaking foreigners. 

When she asked what he meant, Gisel stated that Garcia Cota said “I killed them.” 

In keeping with Mexican law, prosecutors identified him by his first name, Jesús Gerardo, alias “el Kekas,” a slang word that means “quesadillas,” or cheese tortillas. 

MOTHER OF AUSTRALIAN SURFERS KILLED IN MEXICO DELIVERS TOUCHING EULOGY AT SAN DIEGO BEACH

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Australian brothers Callum and Jake Robinson, top left, and US citizen Jack Carter Rhoad, right. (Reuters)

After admitting to the crime, Garcia Cota reportedly took Gisel outside to show her his vehicle, which reportedly had the tires on it that were allegedly stolen from the victims’ truck, Gisel explained in court. 

Mexican authorities believe the surfers were all killed because thieves wanted the tires from their truck. 

The three men, brothers Jake and Callum Robinson from Australia and American Jack Carter Rhoad, were on a camping and surfing trip along a stretch of coast south of the city of Ensenada when they went missing last weekend.

Chief state prosecutor María Elena Andrade Ramírez theorized the killers drove by and saw the foreigners’ pickup truck and tents and wanted to steal their tires. But “when [the foreigners] came up and caught them, surely, they resisted.”

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MEXICAN AUTHORITIES REVEAL BIZARRE REASON THEY BELIEVE AUSTRALIANS, AMERICAN WERE MURDERED ON SURFING VACATION

People protesting the surfers' murders

Locals march to protest the disappearance of foreign surfers in Ensenada, Mexico, Sunday, May 5, 2024.  (AP Photo/Karen Castaneda)

The thieves then allegedly went to what she called “a site that is extremely hard to get to” and allegedly dumped the bodies into a familiar well. A fourth body was also found inside the well.

Ramírez said investigators were not ruling out the possibility the same suspects also dumped the first, earlier body in the well as part of previous crimes.

All three bodies had a gunshot wound to the head, Reuters reported, citing a source from the attorney general’s office.

The mother of the Robinson brothers delivered a moving tribute to her sons Tuesday at a beach in San Diego.

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“Our hearts are broken, and the world has become a darker place for us,” Debra Robinson said, fighting back tears. “They were young men enjoying their passion of surfing together.”

FOURTH BODY FOUND IN SEARCH FOR US AND AUSTRALIAN SURFERS WHO MYSTERIOUSLY VANISHED IN MEXICO

Australia's Debra Robinson with her husband Martin, address the media on the beach in San Diego following the deaths in Mexico of their two sons during a surfing trip.

In this image taken from video, Australia’s Debra Robinson with her husband Martin, address the media on the beach in San Diego, Tuesday, May 7, 2024 following the deaths in Mexico of their two sons during a surfing trip. The sons, Callum and Jake, and U.S. friend Jack Carter Rhoad, were allegedly killed by car thieves in Baja California, across the border from San Diego, somewhere around April 28 or 29. (Channel 9/POOL via AP)

During her speech, Robinson noted that her son Jake loved surfing so much that, as a doctor, he liked to work in hospitals near the beach.

“Jake’s passion was surfing, and it was no coincidence that many of his hospitals that he worked in were close to surfing beaches,” she said. “Live bigger, shine brighter, and love harder in their memory,” she said.

Garcia Cota will be prosecuted for the crime of “disappearance committed by private individuals,” and homicide charges are expected to be filed later, the BBC reported. 

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The prosecution added that it is continuing to gather evidence in an effort to charge two other suspects, who remain in custody for alleged possession of methamphetamine.

Fox News Digital’s Bradford Betz and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Europe matters to consumers, and so does your vote

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Europe matters to consumers, and so does your vote

The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not represent in any way the editorial position of Euronews.

What happens in Brussels does have an impact on our daily lives, more than we are aware of, more than we credit them for. Treating it like a second-rate election would not do it right, Els Bruggeman writes.

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The European Union and its citizens, it remains a strained relationship. One full of mixed perceptions and mistrust, yet with high expectations. 

Sounds like the recipe for some serious marriage counselling or the script of the better Hollywood rom-com? No, it’s just a European reality. 

From love to hate, hate to love. It’s reminiscent of the Facebook relationship status, “It’s complicated”.

Taking stock of the last five years, a large-scale Euroconsumers survey shows little consumer satisfaction with the EU’s overall track record. 

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While people appreciate how Europe handled the COVID-19 pandemic, the EU’s approach to inflation and the cost of living crisis merely gets a staggering 12% approval rate. 

This goes with an equally low level of trust in our EU institutions to address citizens’ major concerns for the future.

A recipe for disaster, one would think? Here’s where it becomes interesting. When presented with some concrete consumer measures, perception takes a remarkably sharp turn. 

Having a right to get products repaired? Very important. Better protection against energy providers? Great. Protecting minors on social media? We love it.

Unknown equals unloved

Yet very few citizens are aware they have the European Union to thank for this. Even less feel properly informed about it. 

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Okay, 7 out of 10 know it is the EU that is putting a limit to their cars’ CO2 emissions, but when it comes to better cybersecurity and product safety, not so much.

Even longer-lasting and well-established consumer wins, like the right to send back a product when shopping online, no more roaming charges, or compensation in case of flight delays, don’t seem to ring an EU bell with half of Europe’s citizens. 

That is baffling, knowing that most consumer-empowering rules originate from solid European legislation.

Consumers were certainly not lying when they indicated in the survey they knew very little about the European Union. 

Of course it doesn’t help they feel little informed by their national media. And it for sure doesn’t help some national policymakers tend to blame Europe when something goes bad but claim it when it goes well.

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That’s not what people want and expect from their leaders. On the contrary, 69% want them to act as Europeans first, and half want more Europe, not less. 

That’s the funny thing: despite consumers’ scepticism and mistrust, they also express high hopes and big expectations.

Access to affordable medicines, sustainable and affordable food or fighting financial scams? Yes, please.

With 75% and more deeming this very important, citizens are giving the EU a clear mandate to deliver this for them. Together with a clear mandate comes a clear message: Europe, we count on you to rise to the challenge.

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Your vote matters

On 9 June, it is up to European citizens to rise to the challenge and cast their vote.

Europe matters. What happens there does have an impact on our daily lives, more than we are aware of, more than we credit them for. If we want Europe to lead for consumers, it is up to consumers to show the right direction.

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Treating it like a second-rate election would not do it right. That’s why it is striking that at the time of the Euroconsumers’ survey, nearly half felt poorly or not informed at all about the different political election programs, and one out of three would just vote for the same party they vote for nationally.

With one month to go to the European election, it’s not too late yet. 

To use the language of Taylor Swift, one of the most influential women of today, whether we’ll end up with a “Lover” or rather a “Tortured Poets Department” is up to our new European leaders and to the European people. 

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Els Bruggeman is Head of Advocacy and Enforcement at Euroconsumers. At Euronews, we believe all views matter.

Contact us at view@euronews.com to send pitches or submissions and be part of the conversation.

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