Owing to ebbing Covid-19 cases and sustained public demand for reopening Kashmir’s grand mosque, the Jamia Masjid, officials from the divisional administration in Kashmir visited the mosque on Monday and assured its management of allowing Friday prayers soon.
Owing to ebbing Covid-19 cases and sustained public demand for reopening Kashmir’s grand mosque, the Jamia Masjid, officials from the divisional administration in Kashmir visited the mosque on Monday and assured its management of allowing Friday prayers soon.
For the past 30 weeks, Friday prayers have not been allowed at the mosque by the authorities, primarily citing Covid protocols.
Divisional commissioner of Kashmir Pandurang K Pole and inspector general of police Vijay Kumar took stock of the state of the mosque at old city Srinagar and also met its management, Anjuman Auqaf Jamia Masjid.
Pole was not available for comments despite calls and messages. A senior police officer confirmed that the mosque is being reopened. “As there has been public demand, the officials assured us that they will allow the Friday prayers to resume,” said Haji Altaf, general secretary of the Auqaf.
Jamia Masjid is one of the biggest mosques in Kashmir and has been central to many important developments throughout the history of the Valley. Hurriyat leader and chief priest of the mosque, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, used to deliver the weekly sermons in the mosque but he has been under house arrest since August 5, 2019, when the special status of the region was revoked.
In December, the mayor of the Srinagar municipal corporation, Junaid Azim Mattu, had written to the lieutenant governor terming “unacceptable to administratively normalise the locking-up of the Jamia Masjid as a preemptive measure in perpetuity” even though he had urged the mosque administration to disallow any politicisation. On Monday, Mattu welcomed the development of the reopening of the mosque.
“The reopening of the Jamia Masjid is a welcome step in the right direction. I had written to the LG seeking the reopening of the historic mosque. Hope to be able to pray at the Jamia soon,” he said.
On Friday, the Anjuman Auqaf in a statement had termed the behavior of the authorities as extremely regrettable and reprehensible after no prayers were allowed for the 30th straight week and also owing to the last 10 days of the holy occasion of Mehraj-Ul-Alam.
“The continuous closure of the central Jama Masjid and keeping the Anjuman head Mirwaiz Umar Farooq under house arrest for more than two and a half years is illegal and immoral,” it had said.
The mosque has remained closed for extended periods of time since August 2019, owing to the restrictions imposed after the region was bifurcated into two union territories, followed by the Covid-19 pandemic.
Last year, the mosque was closed on April 28 owing to the surge in Covid-19 cases during the second wave and imposition of Section 144 of CrPC. The mosque had closed for five months after the pandemic started in March 2020.
Before that, the mosque had remained closed for months in 2019 as well when restrictions were imposed following the abrogation of J&K’s special status on August 5.