Source: The Washington Post

In this Friday, Dec. 28, 2012 file photo, Muslims arrive to attend the Friday prayer at Al-Azhar mosque in Cairo, Egypt. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra, File)
In Islam, attending Friday sermons is mandatory and is the most important prayer of the week.
For observant Muslims in Egypt, the sermons delivered by clerics in their respective neighborhoods offer a time to connect spiritually and, for many, remain their main source of religious teaching.
For imams, it’s a chance to focus their sermons on issues affecting their particular community, sometimes mixed with political messages.
Now Egyptian authorities are trying to change all that. Officials announced Tuesday that Muslim clerics will be required to read out identical sermons pre-written by various government agencies, an initiative that is part of President Abdel Fatah al-Sissi’s effort to combat extremism. The move has upset Muslim preachers throughout Egypt.
An unnamed undersecretary, quoted by Reuters, said that the sermons would now be written by ministry officials and senior clerics from Al-Azhar, the main center for Islamic learning in Egypt, as well as members of parliament who serve on Egypt’s House Committee on Religious Affairs.
“The objective [of the decision] is not at all political,” the Minister of Religious Endowments Mohamed Mokhtar Gomaa, said, according to reports inside Egypt. He said the decision is in an attempt to reduce the length of the sermons as well as to depoliticize them.
It might be difficult to enforce the new practice. But some Egyptians worry that if the government controls what is being discussed at places of worship, it will also be able to define religious education for large segment of Egypt.
Categories: Egypt, Islam, Middle East, The Muslim Times