Fight virus not Muslims, plead Indian Muslim leaders

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Indian Muslim organizations and leaders on Tuesday took strong exception to the attempts being made by certain sections to squarely blame the Tablighi Jamaat and its members for accentuating the coronavirus or COVID-19 pandemic crises in the country.

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Feeding the poor and needy is an act that draws us closer to Allah. We earn His forgiveness, mercies and blessings through this act of charity.

“Anyone who looks after and works for a widow and a poor person is like a warrior fighting for Allah?s cause, or like a person who fasts during the day and prays all night. (Bukhari)

They said that demonizing the Tablighi Jamaat — an apolitical organization spreading elementary Islamic knowledge among Muslims – is a clear ploy to divert attention from the government’s systemic failures and the migrant workers’ crisis.

Earlier the government sealed the six-storey headquarters of the group, located in the heart of the Indian capital New Delhi. Officials said that they have launched a manhunt all over the country to locate the people, who had attended a congregation from March 13-15 at its headquarters in Nizamudin locality, now being flagged a coronavirus hotspot.

The capital’s administration said that at least 24 people who had attended the gathering have tested positive.

The jamaat, however, said that they had followed every government direction and discontinued its programs soon after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced public curfew on March 22. It said that people had got stuck in the mosque because of sudden lockdown announced by the government.

“We have a headquarter here for over the past 100 years, where worshippers/visitors come from across the world. When PM Modi announced public curfew on March 22, the ongoing programs were discontinued immediately. But due to sudden cancellation of rail and transport services, a large group of people got stuck at the premises,” the group said in a statement.

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It added that since the one-day civil curfew was followed by a 21-day lockdown only the next day, there was no mode of transport available for the people to return to their homes.

They had no option, but to stay back at the headquarters, known as Markaz or Banglawali Mosque. The Ameer of Jamaat Maulana Saad had even written a letter to the magistrate to arrange transportation for the eviction of people and even offered the building to be used as a quarantine facility. (aa.com)

 

“While it is irresponsible on the part of the Jamaat to allow such a large gathering, knowing that COVID-19 had already entered the country, I also see this as a failure on the part of the authorities,” Zafarul Islam Khan, the chairman of the Delhi Minority Commission, told Anadolu Agency.

He said it smacks vindictive to blame the Muslim group when Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh Yogi Adityanath supervised a function at the city of Ayodhya.

“Targeting the Tablighi Jamaat and ignoring the bigger and more irresponsible gatherings amounts to playing dirty politics and communal polarization,” said Jamaat-e-Islami Hind President Syed Sadatullah Hussaini. He said the country must unitedly fight the pandemic (aa.com)

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