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Yearbook of Muslims in Europe Volume 5 Editor-in-Chief Jørgen S. Nielsen Editors Samim Akgönül Ahmet Alibašić Egdūnas Račius LEIDEN BOSTON 2013 © 2013 Koninklijke Brill NV ISBN 978-90-04-25456-5
Transcript

Yearbook of Muslims in EuropeVolume 5

Editor-in-ChiefJørgen S. Nielsen

EditorsSamim AkgönülAhmet AlibašićEgdūnas Račius

LEIDEN • BOSTON2013

© 2013 Koninklijke Brill NV ISBN 978-90-04-25456-5

CONTENTS

The Editors  ........................................................................................................ ixEditorial Advisers  ............................................................................................ xiForeword  ........................................................................................................... xiiiList of Technical Terms  ................................................................................. xix

European Islams and Muslim Europes: Some Thoughts about Studying Europe’s Contemporary Islam  ............................................. 1Konstantinos Tsitselikis

COUNTRY SURVEYS

Albania  ............................................................................................................... 21Olsi Jazexhi

Armenia  ............................................................................................................. 37Sevak Karamyan

Austria  ................................................................................................................ 47Thomas Schmidinger

Azerbaijan  ......................................................................................................... 65Bayram Balci and Altay Goyushov

Belarus  ................................................................................................................ 87Daša Słabčanka

Belgium  .............................................................................................................. 99Nadia Fadil

Bosnia and Herzegovina  ............................................................................... 123Aid Smajić

Bulgaria  .............................................................................................................. 143Aziz Nazmi Shakir

Croatia  ................................................................................................................ 163Dino Mujadžević

Cyprus ................................................................................................................. 173Ali Dayıoğlu and Mete Hatay

Czech Republic  ................................................................................................ 195Štěpán Macháček

Denmark  ............................................................................................................ 209Brian Arly Jacobsen

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vi contents

Estonia  ................................................................................................................ 229Ringo Ringvee

Finland  ............................................................................................................... 237Tuomas Martikainen

France  ................................................................................................................. 247Franck Frégosi

Georgia  ............................................................................................................... 263Satenik Mkrtchyan

Germany  ............................................................................................................ 281Mathias Rohe

Greece  ................................................................................................................. 307Konstantinos Tsitselikis

Hungary  ............................................................................................................. 319Norbert Pap and Éva Ladányi

Iceland  ................................................................................................................ 327Göran Larsson

Ireland  ................................................................................................................ 333Victoria Montgomery

Italy  ..................................................................................................................... 351Stella Coglievina

Kosovo  ................................................................................................................ 369Besa Ismaili

Latvia  .................................................................................................................. 383Valters Ščerbinskis

Liechtenstein  .................................................................................................... 391Thomas Schmidinger

Lithuania ............................................................................................................ 399Egdūnas Račius

Luxembourg  ...................................................................................................... 407Sylvain Besch

Macedonia  ......................................................................................................... 417Muharem Jahja

Malta  ................................................................................................................... 429Martin R. Zammit

Moldova  ............................................................................................................. 437Aurelia Felea

Montenegro  ...................................................................................................... 455Sabina Pacariz

Netherlands ....................................................................................................... 465Martijn de Koning

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contents vii

Norway  ............................................................................................................... 487Christine M. Jacobsen and Oddbjørn Leirvik

Poland  ................................................................................................................. 501Agata S. Nalborczyk and Stanisław Grodź

Portugal  .............................................................................................................. 517José Mapril and Nina Clara Tiesler

Romania  ............................................................................................................. 531Irina Vainovski-Mihai

Russia  .................................................................................................................. 547Elmira Akhmetova

Serbia  .................................................................................................................. 569Srđjan Barišić

Slovakia  .............................................................................................................. 585Jaroslav Drobný

Slovenia  .............................................................................................................. 593Christian Moe

Spain  ................................................................................................................... 603Jordi Moreras

Sweden  ............................................................................................................... 619Göran Larsson

Switzerland  ....................................................................................................... 633Stéphane Lathion and Andreas Tunger-Zanetti

Turkey  ................................................................................................................. 649Ahmet Yildiz

Ukraine  ............................................................................................................... 669Elmira Muratova

United Kingdom  .............................................................................................. 681Dilwar Hussain and Seán McLoughlin

© 2013 Koninklijke Brill NV ISBN 978-90-04-25456-5

© 2013 Koninklijke Brill NV ISBN 978-90-04-25456-5

ROMANIA

Irina Vainovski-Mihai1

1 Muslim Populations

The fijirst Muslim communities in Romania were formed (mainly in north-ern Dobrudja and along the lower Danube) in the fourteenth century when Ottoman rule was established in the region. Dobrudja remained part of the Ottoman Empire for fijive centuries. After the Russian- Romanian-Ottoman War (1877), Romania gained its independence and the Treaty of Berlin (1878) acknowledged Dobrudja as part of Romanian territory. As a result of the economic and political conditions in the early twentieth century, Turks and Tatars migrated massively from Dobrudja to Turkey. While the census of 1879 recorded Muslims as representing 56% of the population in the Dobrudjan county of Constantza, the census of 1909 indicates that the percentage had dropped to 10.8%.2 Since its establish-ment as an independent state, the Constitutions of Romania and special laws have guaranteed the rights of certain religious groups, in addition to Orthodox Christians who represent the majority of the population. The law on religious denominations adopted in 1923 lists the Muslim faith among the recognised ‘historical faiths’.3 The establishment of the Com-munist regime (1948) introduced many formal changes with regard to the recognition of religious denominations, but put them under strict state control. Between 1948 and 1989, the Communist state acted systematically to impose atheism and limit the impact of religious creeds on society.

1 Irina Vainovski-Mihai is Associate Professor in Arabic Literature at Dimitrie Cantemir Christian University, Bucharest. She holds a degree in Arabic language and literature and a Ph.D. in Philology. She has published studies in Arab literature, comparative literature and intercultural stereotyping.

2 Schmidt-Rösler, Andrea, “Dobrudscha”, in Weithmann, Michael (ed.), Der ruhelose Balkan. Die Konfliktregionen Südosteuropas (Munich: Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag, 1993), pp. 94–106 (101), quoted in Bara, Maria, “Relaţii interetnice dintre creştinii ortodocşi şi musulmani în Dobrogea. Studiu de caz: Medgidia şi Cobadin (Muslim-Orthodox Christian interethnic relations in Dobrudja. A case study: Medgidia and Cobadin)”, Philologica Jassy-ensia, vol. 2, no. 1 (2006), pp. 93–104 (95).

3 Gillet, Oliver, Religie şi naţionalism (Religion and Nationalism) (Bucharest: Compania, 2001), p. 6.

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After 1959, education in the Tatar and Turkish languages was gradually eliminated and in 1967 the Muslim Theological Seminary was closed. Today, the majority of Muslim communities live in Dobrudja and are mainly made up of the historical ethnic groups. The census which took place in 2002 recorded 67,257 Muslims (0.3% of the total population of Romania), of whom 31,118 were ethnic Turks, 23,641 Tatars, and 3,310 Romanians.4 As regards levels of education, out of the total Muslim pop-ulation over the age of ten (i.e., 57,687 individuals), 2,637 were recorded by the census of 2002 as having a university degree.5 The data from the most recent census (October 2011) are still under review, but according to provisional interpretations, out of the total population (of 19,043 million) 28,226 persons declared themselves to be ethnic Turks and 20,464 to be Tatars.6 In light of the same data, 26,179 persons have Turkish as their mother tongue and 18,143 Tatar.7 The preliminary results of this last cen-sus include Muslims in the category of “other religions,” with a number of less than 85,000 adherents.8

The main Muslim ethnic groups, Turks and Tatars, follow Sunni Islam. In the census of 2002, a relatively small number of Turks and Tatars declared themselves to belong to religions other than Islam, to be athe-ists or to have no religion (980 Turks out of 32,098, and 294 Tatars out of 23,641).9 According to the same statistics, the total number of Mus-lim families was 16,807, out of which there were 12,584 families in which both spouses were Muslims.10 Although the total number of Muslims in Romania should have increased slightly due to immigration from Middle Eastern countries and conversion (mainly as a consequence of marriage),

4 National Institute of Statistics fijigures available at www.insse.ro/cms/fijiles/RPL2002INS/vol4/tabele/t5.pdf, accessed 4 February 2013.

5 National Institute of Statistics fijigures available at www.insse.ro/cms/fijiles/RPL2002INS/vol4/tabele/t13.pdf, accessed 4 February 2013.

6 Provisional census results available on the census webpage of the National Institute of Statistics at www.recensamantromania.ro/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/Comunicat_DATE_PROVIZORII_RPL_2011_.pdf, accessed 4 February 2013.

7 Provisional census results available on the census webpage of the National Insti-tute of Statistics at www.recensamantromania.ro/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/TS5.pdf, accessed 4 February 2013.

8 Provisional census results available on the census webpage of the National Insti-tute of Statistics at www.recensamantromania.ro/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/TS7.pdf, accessed 4 February 2013.

9 National Institute of Statistics fijigures available at www.insse.ro/cms/fijiles/RPL2002INS/vol4/tabele/t5.pdf, accessed 4 February 2013.

10 National Institute of Statistics fijigures available at www.insse.ro/cms/fijiles/RPL2002INS/vol4/tabele/t30.pdf, accessed 4 February 2013.

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probably the overall fijigures kept with the general trend of population decrease. The available updated estimates as of 2012 vary: 70,000 accord-ing to the Muftiate in Romania, with 85% living in the south-eastern county of Constantza11 and approximately 67,300 according to the State Secretariat for Religious Afffairs (Secretariatul de Stat pentru Culte).12 After the fall of the Communist regime in 1989, new Muslim groups appeared in major cities such as Bucharest, Iasi, Cluj and Timisoara. These groups are made up of Middle Eastern businessmen, former students who studied in Romania before the fall of the Communist regime in 1989, and refu-gees. They are mostly Palestinians, Kurds (from northern Iraq and south-eastern Turkey), Iraqis, Syrians, Lebanese and Jordanians. These new communities have not joined the old Muslim communities in Romania, and the two groups live almost parallel lives,13 so discussion does not run around the question of who is a Muslim, but rather what kind of Muslim someone is and to which extent.14 After Romania’s accession to the EU (in 2007), the number of migrants from the Middle East and North Africa increased. According to the statistical bulletin of the General Inspectorate for Immigration (Inspectoratul General pentru Imigrări), in the fijirst quar-ter of 2012, there were 1,457 requests for asylum mainly from citizens of such countries as Algeria, Morocco, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria.15

2 Islam and the State

Romania is a secular republic with no state religion, though Orthodox Christians constitute the majority (according to the 2011 census, 16,367 million out of the total population of 19,043 million).16 The Islamic faith, as one of the 18 religious denominations recognised by law (Law 489/2006), is

11 Figures from the Muftiate in Romania, available at www.muftiyat.ro/comunitatea, accessed 4 February 2013.

12 Figures from the State Secretariat for Religious Afffairs available at www.culte.gov.ro/cultul-musulman, accessed 4 February 2013.

13 Grigore, George, “Muslims in Romania”, ISIM Newsletter, 3 July 1999, p. 34.14 Kozák, Gyula, “Romániai muzulmán intézmények diskurzusa az identitásról és inte-

grációról (The discourse of Muslim institutions from Romania on identity and integra-tion)”, Korunk, no. 5 (May 2009), pp. 54–61 (54).

15 Statistics available on the webpage of the General Inspectorate for Immigration at http://ori.mai.gov.ro/api/media/userfijiles/analiza%20statistica%20sem%20I.pdf, accessed 4 February 2013.

16 Provisional census results available on the census webpage of the National Institute of Statistics at www.recensamantromania.ro/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/TS7.pdf, accessed 4 February 2013.

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considered a public-utility legal entity.17 Costs are covered primarily from the Muslim communities’ own income. Through their offfijicially recogn-ised national leadership and representative body (the Muftiate), Muslims can receive material support from the state for maintenance of mosques, monuments and other communal buildings. According to the law, the Muftiate is the only religious institution that represents the followers of the Islamic faith in Romania and has the right to organise pilgrimages to Mecca and Medina. Any other individual or legal entity that wishes to organise pilgrimages must have the Muftiate’s approval.18 The Synodal Council (Romanian: Consiliu Sinodal, Turkish: Şura-i Islam), headed by the Mufti, takes decisions regarding the functioning and organisation of the Muslim community. According to the same Law of 2008, the Synodal Coun-cil is made up of the Mufti, four members nominated by the Democratic Union of the Turkish-Muslim Tatars in Romania (Uniunea Democrată a Tătarilor Turco-Musulmani din România, UDTTMR), four members nomi-nated by the Turkish Democratic Union of Romania (Uniunea Democrată Turcă din România, UDTR), the principal of the Kemal Atatürk High School (Colegiul Naţional Kemal Atatürk) and 15 clerics.19 The UDTTMR and the UDTR are two of the eighteen political parties and cultural asso-ciations representing ethnic minorities in the Romanian Parliament. The Mufti must be a Romanian citizen, born in Romania and with no other previous citizenship, and a graduate of an Islamic theological institute in Romania (or abroad, provided his qualifijication is recognised by the Roma-nian state). Because the position of the head of a religious denomination is regarded as equivalent to a high-ranking public position, after being elected by the Synodal Council, the Mufti is confijirmed by a decree of the President of the Republic.

17 “Hotărâre de guvern privind statutul cultului musulman (Goverment Decision regard-ing the Recognition of the Muslim Denomination)” on the website of the State Secretariat for Religious Afffairs www.culte.wbd.ro/library/fijiles/biserici/statutul_cultului_musulman.doc, accessed 4 February 2013.

18 Cf. Chapter III, Art. 3.e and Art. 4(1) of the “Government Decision regarding the Rec-ognition of the Muslim Denomination”, offfijicially published on 25 June 2008.

19 List of the present members available on the Muftiate’s website at www.muftiyat.ro/muftiatul/organizare, accessed 4 February 2013.

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3 Main Muslim Organisations

The traditional (Sunni) Muslim denomination engages in public activities mainly through the Muftiate (Str. Bogdan Voda nr. 75, Constantza, tel./fax: ++40 241611390, http://www.muftiyat.ro) together with the UDTTMR (Str. B. P. Haşdeu, nr. 53, Constantza, tel./fax: ++40 241616643; ++40 241520186, www.tatar.ro) and the UDTR (Constantza Str. Crişana nr. 44, tel./fax: ++40 241550903, www.udtr.ro). Although the Muftiate has a longer history in the region of Dobrudja, it has functioned as the only institution repre-senting Muslims in Romania since 1943. The present Mufti, Murat Yusuf (b. 1977 in Medgidia, Constantza), was fijirst elected to this position in 2005 and was re-elected in June 2010.20 He studied in Romania and Turkey, holds an MA in Comparative Religion and is currently a PhD candidate in the Faculty of Orthodox Christian Theology (University of Constantza).21 In recent years, the Muftiate extended its international relations, includ-ing with the Saudi-based Muslim World League.22

Newly established associations and foundations23 dominated by immi-grants from various ethnic backgrounds are also actively engaged in pub-lic activities, charities, translating and publishing religious literature, and teaching Arabic. The main such organisations are:

–  Crescent Islamic Cultural Centre Foundation (Fundaţia Centrul Cultural Islamic Semiluna, Bucharest, sector 6, Str. Munţii Gurghiului, nr. 50–52, www.musulman.ro/);

–  Taiba Foundation (Fundaţia Taiba), which in 2011 changed its name to Foundation “Islam Today” Cultural Center (Fundaţia Centrul Cultural “Islamul azi”, Bucharest, sector 2, Şos. Colentina, nr. 373; Constantza, Str. Maior Şofran, nr. 11, http://www.islamulazi.ro);

–  Association of Muslims of Romania (Asociaţia Musulmanilor din România, at the same address as the Foundation “Islam Today” Cultural Center in Constantza);

20 www.muftiyat.ro/muftiatul/organizare/muftiu (The Muftiate of Romania), accessed 4 February 2013.

21 http://teologie.univ-ovidius.ro// (Faculty of Theology, University of Constantza), accessed 4 February 2013.

22 State Secretariat for Religious Afffairs, www.culte.gov.ro/cultul-musulman, accessed 4 February 2013.

23 See the National Registry of Foundations, the Ministry of Justice, available at www.just.ro/LinkClick.aspx?fijileticket=mwqfL9%2fN2NU%3d&tabid=91, accessed 4 February 2013.

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–  Muslim Sisters Association (Asociaţia Surori Musulmane) (at the same address as the Foundation “Islam Today” Cultural Center in Bucharest and Constantza, http://femeiamusulmana.blogspot.com/);

–  Tuna Foundation (Fundaţia Tuna, Bucharest, Bd. Regina Maria, nr. 34, http://www.tuna.ro and www.tunaforum.ro/);

–  Islamic and Cultural League in Romania (Liga Islamică şi Culturală din România), with a branch in Bucharest (Bucharest, sector 2, Str. Fabrica de Gheaţă, nr.14, http://www.islam.ro) and another one in Cluj-Napoca (Cluj-Napoca, str. Pastorului, nr. 17, www.islamcluj.ro/);

–  Association of Romanian Converts to Islam (Asociaţia Românilor Convertiţi la Islam, 617036 Rediu—Bira, Jud. Neamţ, www.arci.ro/).

The most active of them appear to be the Islamic and Cultural League and the Foundation “Islam Today” Cultural Centre, formerly Taiba Foun-dation. According to the spokesperson of the latter, the name has been changed to make it more meaningful for non-Muslims and to allow for more activities and departments.24 Both organisations have several websites—two dedicated to children, The Little Muslim (Micul musulman, www.miculmusulman.com) and Islam for Children (Islamul pentru copii, http://islamulpentrucopii.wordpress.com/)—as well as blogs and Inter-net discussion groups in Romanian, handbooks on Islam in Romanian, stands in book fairs, charitable activities, and Internet broadcasting (see Section 13 below).25 Most of the other organisations are offfshoots of the Foundation “Islam Today” Cultural Centre, apart from the Tuna Founda-tion, which is linked to the Gülen Movement. Under the Law of Denomi-nations (489/2006) and particularly the Government Decision regarding the Recognition of the Muslim Denomination (offfijicially published on 25 June 2008), all Islamic NGOs, associations and foundations need to be endorsed by the Mufti. However, in 2010, the mufti expressed his opinion that many of these associations are harmful to traditional Hanafiji Islam in Romania because of their alleged persistent propaganda and conservative views, which come from Arab schools of Islam, and also that they have taken advantage of legal ambiguities and the need for religious education

24 “Another name”, Radio Islam, available at www.radioislam.ro/en/news-archive/277-radio-islam-another-name-.html, accessed 4 February 2013.

25 See a report of activities for 1998–2010 at www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sfu_EFtH5Zs, accessed 4 February 2013.

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after the collapse of Communism.26 The Taiba Foundation rejected this opinion and accused the Mufti and the Synodal Council of libel.

4 Mosques and Prayer Houses

In Romania, there are 77 purpose-built mosques. Ten of them are histori-cal monuments and still in use. The oldest, Esmahan Sultan Mosque in Mangalia, was built in 1590. The Big Mosque Carol I in Constantza, com-missioned by King Carol I of Romania (ruled: 1866–1914) and erected in 1910, was the fijirst reinforced concrete building in Romania.27 The Hun-chiar mosque of Constantza, built in 1869 and included as a category A monument on the list of the national cultural patrimony,28 is the issue of bitter declarations and legal battles between the Mufti, the mayor of the city, the prefect of Constantza County, and a private enterprise. On account that both aesthetically and structurally the mosque is put in dan-ger, the Mufti has asked for cancelation of the construction authorisation and for the demolishing of the neighbouring building just 1.2 meters from the place of worship.29 The issue was also followed abroad. On a visit to Constantza in November 2011, the Turkish Minister of Culture, Ertuğrul Günay, expressed his concern for the safety of the mosque30 and in Decem-ber Neue Zürcher Zeitung offfered a detailed account of the problem.31

26 “Daca musulmanii ar respecta ceea ce scrie in Coran ar exista unitate (There would be unity if Muslims respected what is written in the Qur’an)”, interview with the mufti, Ziua de Constanta, 25 November 2010, available at www.ziuaconstanta.ro/rubrici/interviu/%22daca-musulmanii-ar-respecta-ceea-ce-scrie-in-coran-ar-exista-unitate%22.html, accessed 4 February 2013.

27 See a detailed presentation on the site of the Muftiate at www.muftiyat.ro/monumente/119-kral and post #2 on the website of the Association of Romanian Converts to Islam at http://forum.arci.ro/thread-1227.html, accessed 4 February 2013.

28 Ranking available on the site of the Ministry of Culture at www.cultura.abt.ro/Files/GenericFiles/LMI-2010.pdf, accessed 4 February 2013.

29 “Mazăre, cu spatele la patrimoniul naţional. Acuzaţii grave în cazul geamiei Hunchiar” (Mazăre turns his back to the national patrimony. Serious accusations in the case of Hun-chiar mosque), on-line interview with the mufti, 15 November 2011, Ziua de Constanta, www.ziuaconstanta.ro/rubrici/interviu-online/interviu-online-cu-muftiul-cultului-musulman-din-romania-iusuf-muurat-tema-este-mazare-cu-spatele-la-patrimoniul-national-acuzatii-grave-in-cazul-geamiei-hunchiar-12916.html, accessed 4 February 2013.

30 “Turcia cere salvarea Geamiei Hunchiar” (Turkey asks for the rescue of Hunchiar mosque), RL Romania libera.ro, 15 November 2011, available at www.romanialibera.ro/actualitate/dobrogea/turcia-cere-salvarea-geamiei-hunchiar-244641.html, accessed 4 Feb-ruary 2013.

31 “Moschee in Bedrängnis. Streit um einen Neubau in Constanta” (Mosque in distress. Contention for a new building in Constantza), NZZOnline, 3 December 2011, available at www

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On 11 February 2012, the court gave its fijinal decision for the cancelation of the construction authorisation.32 The consequent works of demolition did not start yet. The oldest mosque in Bucharest was initially built in 1900. In 1956 the Communist regime disassembled and rebuilt it in another loca-tion a year later.33 In Bucharest, in addition to the main mosque, it is esti-mated that there are fijifteen other mosques funded by foreign residents,34 but these are in fact prayer halls adjacent to the buildings of associations and foundations established in the capital city and principal towns.35 In 2011, Aledin Ahmet, the representative of the UDTTMR in the Parliament, submitted an interpellation on behalf of the Muftiate addressed to the State Secretary for the Relation with the Parliament. The fijive line text signalled the fact that certain foundations had created in Romania, mainly in Bucharest, illegal “units of Islamic faith” and asked for clarifijications. A month later, the State Secretariat for Religious Afffairs sent its answer, which asserted that it did not receive any information or complaint regard-ing the creation of Islamic faith units by Muslim foundations and added that, according to the Law of Denominations any person has the right to practise his religion collectively and the State Secretariat cannot decide against the creation of units for the practice of religion as long as they do not violate public security and order or fundamental human rights.36

5 Children’s Education

The Law of Education adopted in 1995 introduced religion as a compulsory subject in public schools. Pupils can express their wish to take courses in

.nzz.ch/nachrichten/politik/schweiz/moschee_in_bedraengnis_1.13497933.html, accessed 4 February 2013.

32 “Autorizatiile de constructie a hotelului de langa Geamia Hunchiar raman anulate” (The construction authorisations for the hotel near Hunchiar Mosque remain cancelled), 14 February 2012, Observator de Constanta, http://observator.ro/131996/autorizatiile-constructie-hotelului-langa-geamia-hunchiar-raman-anulate-131996.html, accessed 4 Feb-ruary 2013.

33 For a presentation of the mosque see post #1 on the website of the Association of Romanian Converts to Islam at http://forum.arci.ro/thread-1227.html, 4 February 2013.

34 Islam in the European Union: What’s at Stake in the Future? (Brussels: European Par-liament, Directorate-General for Internal Policies of the Union, 2007), p. 155, available at www.euromedalex.org/sites/default/fijiles/Islam_in_Europe.pdf, accessed 4 February 2013.

35 For a presentation of the Ar-Rahman Mosque (created in the building of the Cres-cent Islamic Cultural Centre) see post #3 on the website of the Association of Romanian Converts to Islam at http://forum.arci.ro/thread-1227.html., accessed 4 February 2013.

36 Both documents are available on the site of the Chamber of Deputies at www.cdep.ro/pls/parlam/interpelari.detalii?idi=27672&idl=1, accessed 4 February 2013.

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a particular religion, those under 18 being spoken for by their parents or guardians. Pupils are exempted from attending religious education classes if they declare themselves to be non-religious. According to the new Law of Education (Law of National Education 2011/Ch. I, Art. 18.3), only per-sons authorised by the Ministry of Education and the heads of the legally recognised religions can teach religion in public schools. How many this applies to in practice is not recorded.

Islam is also taught in mosques and by religious and cultural associa-tions on an extra-curricular and private basis. There are a number of pri-vate schools functioning under the auspices of such associations. Two that are worth mentioning are the Jerusalem School (Madrasat al-Quds www.jerusalemschool.ro/), under the patronage of the Islamic and Cultural League; the Crescent School and Kindergarten (Şcoala şi Grădiniţa Semi-luna, www.ourhappykids.ro), under the patronage of the Crescent Islamic Cultural Centre.

In 1996, a Turkish high school (Colegiul Naţional Kemal Atatürk) was opened in Medgidia, a city with a sizable Turkish and Tatar population, which is now functioning with the joint support of the Romanian and Turkish governments (for example, the pupils in the boarding school are fijinancially sustained by Turkey; the courses of Turkish language and Islam are taught by visiting teachers from Turkey).37 The school comprises sev-eral sections, including Theology. A similar institution existed before the Communist period and was closed in 1967.

6 Higher and Professional Education

Academic courses on Islam and the Middle East are offfered at several universities and consist of a general overview within courses on Arabic language, history of Arab culture and civilisation and history of Arab lit-erature. All holders of academic degrees in Islamic theology have studied abroad, as no such higher education qualifijications are offfered in Romania. Diplomas issued abroad are subject to the recognition by the Romanian Ministry of Education after endorsement by the Mufti. In 2007, disputes

37 Gülşen Ismail, “De vorbă cu noul director adjunct, despre Colegiul Naţional ‘Kemal Atatürk’ din Medgidia” (Speaking with the new vice-principal of the Kemal Atatürk High School in Medgidia), Interetnica, 28 October 2011, available at http://interetnica.ro/de-vorba-cu-noul-director-adjunct-despre-colegiul-national-%E2%80%9Ckemal-ataturk%E2%80%9D-din-medgidia, accessed 4 February 2013.

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emerged after the Mufti refused to endorse diplomas obtained from Islamic theological institutions in Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Syria and Sudan. The Mufti offfijicially requested the Ministry of Education not to recognise diplomas obtained by seven Tatars on the ground that they had studied a radical form of Islam,38 and recognition of their diplomas was denied.

7 Burial and Cemeteries

The Muftiate owns 108 cemeteries. In some cities, e.g. Bucharest, there is an acute need for a cemetery, while in others, e.g. Constantza, there is need for additional provision. The creation of a Muslim cemetery in Bucharest was put on the Municipality’s agenda some ten years ago. At present, Muslims who die there are usually taken to Constantza (250 km away) for burial. The matter seemed to have been settled after the Mayor of Bucharest promised in 2008 to allot the Muslim community land for this purpose on the outskirts of the city, but until now the situation has been subject to delay. The implementation of the offfijicial decision taken in this regard by the Municipality Council in 2009 was stalled due to legal issues until 2010, when the Council decided on the relocation of the cem-etery. In 2011 the local administration earmarked a two-year budget for carrying out a feasibility study and for arranging the site. In March 2012, the Muslim Synodal Council voted for a document meant to legally regu-late the organisation and the functioning of the Muslim cemeteries.39 The initiative came after some lavish family vaults were erected in the Muslim cemetery of Constantza.40

38 “Plangere catre Sura-i Islam (Complaint to the Sura-i Islam)”, Clubul român-arab de presă şi cultură (Romanian-Arab Club for Press and Culture), 19 April 2007, available at www.ana-news.ro/index.php/limba-romana-i-156/stiri-i-171/440-plangere-catre-sura-i-islam, accessed 4 February 2013.

39 “Regulament de organizare şi funcţionare a cimitirelor musulmane din România” (Regulations for the organisation and functioning of the Muslim cemeteries in Romania), available on the Muftiate’s website at www.muftiyat.ro/anunturi/169-regulament-de-organizare-i-funcionare-a-cimitirelor-musulmane-din-romania, accessed 4 February 2013.

40 “Lux dincolo de moarte. Cavouri musulmane cu geam antiglont, in Cimitirul Musul-man din Constanta” (Luxury after death. Muslim vaults with bulletproof windows in the Muslim Cemetery of Constanta), Stirile ProTv.ro, 23 December 2011, available at http://stirileprotv.ro/stiri/actualitate/lux-dincolo-de-moarte-desi-religia-le-cere-modestie-cavouri-musulmane-cu-geam-antiglont.html, accessed 4 February 2013.

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8 ‘Chaplaincy’ in State Institutions

There are no imams in the armed forces. The Muftiate can assign an imam to visit a prison inmate at the inmate’s request and at the Mufti-ate’s expense. The same applies to patients in hospitals. Most prisons and state hospitals have Orthodox Christian chapels. In hospitals in the towns of Dobrudja, where there is a signifijicant number of Muslims, quotations from the Qur’an are often displayed on the walls of the wards.

9 Religious Festivals

The annual ‘Id al-Fitr (in Turkish: Şeker Bayram) and ‘Id al-Adha (in Turkish: Kurban Bayram) celebrations take place in the main cities (with popular music concerts, etc.) and in villages with a signifijicant Muslim population. They are open to the public. In Ramadan, iftar dinners offfered by Turkish and Arab restaurants are open to the public. Non-Muslims participate in events organised in public places (including sharing food), while in the regions without a historical tradition of Muslim-Christian coexistence (as in Dobrudja), they attend iftar meals in restaurants only if accompanied by a Muslim, being wary of behaving inappropriately. Large-scale iftars are also organised in cities with a quite small Muslim popula-tion. The US Ambassador to Romania, Mark H. Gitenstein, organises an annual iftar dinner. Representatives of every religion in Romania were invited to the 2012 event meant as recognition of the common Abrahamic heritage.41 In 2012, Murat Yusuf reciprocated the invitation and Ambas-sador Gitenstein visited the Muftiate in Constanţa and participated in a traditional dinner.

An estimated 150–200 Muslims perform the annual hajj, but there is no offfijicial data available. The pilgrims are supported fijinancially by the Muftiate, as well as by the foundations Crescent Islamic Cultural Centre and “Islam Today” Cultural Centre. Most of them travel by bus to Bulgaria and Turkey, where they join other groups of pilgrims.

41 “U.S. Ambassador Mark H. Gitenstein’s Remarks on the Occasion of an Iftar Dinner at His Residence,” 24 July 2012, on the site of the US Embassy in Romania, http://romania.usembassy.gov/policy/remarks/amb-07242012.html, accessed 4 February 2013.

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10 Halal Products and Islamic Services

In the main cities, there are several halal food shops with both Muslim and non-Muslim customers, as well as numerous ethnic restaurants (which offfer halal food and do not serve alcohol). The meat for the shops and restaurants is supplied by halal slaughter houses functioning in Romania and certifijied by the Muftiate. Generally, halal food is not available either in public institutions or in the supermarkets. As the Orthodox Christian tradition has several annual fasting periods and two weekly fasting days (Wednesdays and Fridays), during which abstention includes animal and dairy products, Muslims may choose among the food labelled as “de post” (“for fasting”). Usually, Muslims do not buy meat from general stores and supermarkets but from the Arab and Turkish stores (see Section 11 below).

Small Arab and Turkish food stores, most of them carrying the name of “măcelărie halal” (halal butchery), have been flourishing all around Romania. They cater both to Muslims in search of halal products and to non-Muslims looking for spices, special flavours and ingredients. In the cities with a sizeable Muslim population, fast food restaurants and pizze-rias started to accommodate their menus by including, for example, “Mus-lim Pizza” (which had as an ingredient traditional Turkish dried beef and mutton sausage). Some, but rather few, international companies present in Romania obtained halal certifijicates for their merchandise.42 Islamic banking and fijinance is present in Romania through the Bank of Lon-don and Middle East and the European Islamic Investment Bank, which have the right to provide services without the establishment of local branches.43 The Foundation for Islamic Services in Romania (Fundaţia de Servicii Islamice din România, Bucharest, sector 2, Şoseaua Fundeni, nr. 9, www.fsir.ro), with branches in seven towns, offfers shelter and meals for those in need. Islamic clothes and head scarves (as well as other items) can be bought from ZamZam, an on-line shop in the Romanian language opened in February 2011 (http://islamic.host.org/shop/). There are numer-ous businesses run by Muslims, both Romanian and foreign citizens, but they are not strictly related to Islam.

42 “The Production of Non-Dairy Whipping Creams Was Halal Certifijied”, Eurocas Romania, www.eurocas.ro/en#, accessed 4 February 2013.

43 See the List of foreign banks exercising the freedom to provide services within the territory of Romania on cross-border basis on the website of the National Bank of Romania at ttp://www.bnro.ro/fijiles/d/RegistreBNR/XLS/AlteIC_En.xls, accessed 4 February 2013.

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11 Dress Codes

There are no rules restricting Muslim dress in public or for pupils in schools, but it is mostly in villages with a large Muslim population that women wear head scarves. In recent years, many new converts adopted Islamic dress codes and the head scarf.44 No women have been observed wearing niqab. As there are no regulations restricting the head scarf in the photos attached to offfijicial documents, signals of the increasing num-ber of requests coming from women in Dobrudja to wear the hijab when photographed for their identity cards are evident in media coverage of the issue.45

12 Publications and Media

The main printed media are the monthly Hakses (The Authentic Voice, published by UDTR (Constantza 8700, Bd-ul Tomis nr. 99, bl. SO, ap. 3, tel./fax: ++40 241550903; on-line issues: www.udtr.ro/hakses/index.htm) and the periodicals published by the UDTTMR: Karadeniz (The Black Sea), Kadinlar Dunyasi (The World of Women) and Cas (The Youngster) all the three with the same address (Constantza 8700, Str. Stefan cel Mare nr. 66, tel./fax: ++40 241616643). Back issues are also available on-line at: www.tatar.ro/publicatii.php?arhiva.

The website http://www.tatar.ro, although it focuses on information about the Tatar community, also offfers extended articles on Muslims in Romania in general. Zaman Romania (www.zaman.ro) is the on-line local edition of the Zaman newspaper. Published in Romanian and Turkish, it has a special section for news from Dobrudja.

In March 2009, UDTR, UDTTMR and the Muftiate opened a broadcast-ing station, Radio T, in Constantza with programmes in Romanian, Turk-ish and Tatar, which adds to the already long-running similar programmes aired by the local station of the state-owned Romanian Broadcasting Society (Societatea Română de Radiodifuziune, SRR). DDTV (a television

44 Daniela Stoica, “New Romanian Muslimas: Converted women sharing knowledge in online and offfline communities”, in Katarzyna Górak-Sosnowska (ed), Muslims in Poland and Eastern Europe: Widening the European Discourse on Islam (Warsaw: University of Warsaw, Faculty of Oriental Studies, 2011), pp. 274–277.

45 T.G. Horia, “Cu vălul islamic pe cartea de identitate” (With the Islamic Veil on the Identity Card), evz.ro, 19 February 2012, available at www.evz.ro/detalii/stiri/cu-valul-islamic-pe-cartea-de-identitate-967063.html, accessed 4 February 2013.

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channel broadcasting from Bucharest nationally, although with a small audience) hosted a weekly programme, Islamul azi (Islam Today) pre-sented in Romanian by the Foundation “Islam Today” Cultural Centre. The programme was cancelled after DDTV started broadcasting movies only. Webcasting is used increasingly: video clips (in Romanian or with Romanian subtitles) on dailymotion (www.dailymotion.com/AsociatiaSuroriMusulmane), YouTube (www.youtube.com/islamulazi, www.youtube.com/muhlisun) and Ikhwan Tube (www.ikhwantube.org/), and audio streaming on websites such as Radio Islam (www.radioislam.ro/radio.html). The web portal Islam Romania (http://islamromania.ro/), admin-istered by the Islamic and Cultural League and the Foundation “Islam Today” Cultural Centre, presents information from diverse sources in the Romanian language and offfers downloadable books in Romanian.

13 Family Law

The Romanian legal system is secular. According to the Civil Code, mar-riages are only recognised if they are performed and registered by a state (secular) authority. Marriages in mosques (as in the places of worship of other religions) have a rather ceremonial function. In litigation, a non-denominational premarital contract may be taken into account. The Civil Code prohibits polygamy but marriages are recognised if they were legal in the jurisdictions where they were contracted. There are circumstances (almost exclusively among Arab expatriates) when marriages contracted in countries with legal systems diffferent from the Romanian are offfijicially recorded as such in the Romanian civil status register. Painful litigation (mainly over custody of children) emerges in cases of separation when the spouses bring to court the laws of their respective countries. Gener-ally, such cases are not resolved because they end with two separate court decisions pronounced under diffferent legal systems.

14 Interreligious Relations

Muslim festivals and special events are regularly attended by non-Muslim representatives of local authorities.

Government agencies, such as the Department for Interethnic Rela-tions (Departamentul pentru Relaţii Interetnice, www.dri.gov.ro/) and non-governmental institutions, such as the Intercultural Institute Timisoara

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(Institutul Intercultural Timişoara, www.intercultural.ro/rom/index.html) are promoting dialogue through symposia, publications and websites, such as Intercultural Calendar (Calendar Intercultural, www.calendarintercultural.ro/index.php), comprising both ethnic and religious festivals. Probably as a result of the long tradition of coexistence with Muslims, those who are long-established in Romania are regarded as familiar, while outsiders (i.e., Muslims from other countries, including the Balkan coun-tries), are regarded with suspicion (even if contact is indirect, through media coverage, etc.).

15 Public Opinion and Debate

Media coverage concerning Muslims in Romania at the national level focuses almost exclusively on signifijicant events (cultural exhibitions, eth-nic festivals and public performances) (see also Section 17). The regional media (in Dobrudja) covers in detail the life of the community, as it addresses a broad audience and presents both religious and ethnic points of view. Internal debates within the community and tensions between the version of Islam professed by the historical Muslim community and that professed by new-comers are irrelevant to the non-Muslim popula-tion and not understood by them. Media focus on Islam tends mostly to be related to international events, and presentations and debates about international Islam-related subjects are usually presented by non-Muslim commentators, Middle East experts and ad-hoc analysts.

16 Major Cultural Events

Nawruz, the annual spring holiday, is observed with public festivities organised by the Turkish and Tatar minorities, as well as Kurdish immi-grants. There are several other festivals and contests with a mainly ethnic dimension, such as Küreş (traditional Tatar wrestling) and Hîdîrlez (a Tur-kic spring festival). While the Parliament rejected a proposal to institute Nawruz and Hîdîrlez as legal holidays, on 5 May 2011 the Day of the Tatar Language was celebrated for the fijirst time, after the Parliament voted in favour of establishing it as an offfijicial annual feast.


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