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Muslims enjoy opening of germanys biggest mosque

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 Instead, buoyed by a festive atmosphere, Muslims and Christians ate donor kebabs, drank tea and chatted together.

The opening of Germany’s biggest mosque on Sunday is intended to help break down barriers between Turks and Germans and ease sometimes strained community relations, politicians and Muslims said on Sunday.

About 8,000 people joined celebrations in the Marxloh suburb of the industrial north-western city of Duisburg to mark the opening of the Merkez mosque, with its 34-metre high minaret and room for 1,200 worshippers.

Germany’s biggest mosque opens in the Ruhr valley city of Duisburg in what leaders of Germany’s 3 million Muslims have described as a watershed moment, bringing mosques out of the backyards and alleys and into the middle of urban life.

In contrast to openings of mosques elsewhere in Germany, notably one in Berlin earlier this month which drew heavy protests from local residents, the ceremony went off with no demonstrations.

Instead, buoyed by a festive atmosphere, Muslims and Christians ate donor kebabs, drank tea and chatted together.

"We have nothing to hide so it is time to say goodbye to our mosques which were hidden in backyards," said Mehmet Ozay, head of the Ditib Turkish-Islamic Union in Marxloh, at the opening ceremony.

"I can assure you that this beautiful new mosque is quite safe, it is not a symbol of social division in Germany but a symbol of the benefits of human, religious, cultural and social interaction," he said.

"The fact that we’ve been allowed to build a mosque is a sign for us that the community is telling us ‘you’re accepted’," said Mustafa Kücük, a spokesman for the Merkez mosque.

Ditib initiated the project. The cost of building the mosque amounted to roughly 7.5 million euros, about half of which was funded by the EU and the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.

The ornate interior is decorated in gold, turquoise, red and white paint and golden chandeliers hang from the ceiling.

The mosque, designed by German architects Paul and Gottfried Böhm, will be a domed building with glass walls and two minarets. The minarets will be 180 feet tall, one-third the height of the towers of the Cologne Cathedral. The mosque will also be flanked by tall office buildings. DITIB has agreed not to broadcast the call to prayer over loudspeakers.

Germany is home to about 3.2 million Muslims, most of whom are Turks and integration has jumped up the political agenda in the last few years.

Germany took on cheap labour from Turkey after the end of World War Two to help rebuild its economy and many workers settled here. The industrial Ruhr area, where Duisburg is located, has a particularly strong Turkish community.

However, younger generations have started to form separate communities and many Turkish youngsters have poor German which limits their job prospects.

Many Muslims complain of Islamphobia and many Germans have spoken out against the building of new mosques.

Conservative Chancellor Angela Merkel has said minarets should not be any taller than church steeples.

Juergen Ruettgers, premier of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, said the mosque should serve to improve relations. "Not everyone who has a strong foundation of belief is a fundamentalist," said Ruettgers, a senior member of Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrats.

Agencies

MRN