The head of Turkey’s Religious Affairs, or Diyanet, has once
again reacted to a recent Austrian code, which caused debate with items that
regulates Islam in the country, saying that the body has a plan-B to by-pass
the code by training a number of Turkish-origin imams in Turkey before they
return to the European country as religious officials.
On Feb. 25, the Austrian Parliament passed a law the updated
“Law on Islam,” which was prepared by the coalition of the Social Democratic
Party and the People’s Party, aims to regulate how Islam is managed inside the
country and includes provisions requiring imams to be able to speak German,
standardizing the Quran in the German language, and banning Islamic
organizations from receiving foreign funding.
The code also projects sending back religious service cadre
back to their countries in three years.
“We have a second preparation, a plan-B on the issue,”
Diyanet head Mehmet Görmez told Anadolu Agency in the Mediterranean province of
Antalya. “Sons of Turkish families who have immigrated to Europe, who have
become Europeans, are having religious training in Turkey. Inshallah they will
provide the best service when they return to their own countries.”
Along with Görmez, top Turkish officials, including
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, have criticized the Austrian Law on Islam.
Credit to ANTALYA
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