海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Putin says Moscow's new mosque is the largest in Europe

Private donors underwrote the 10-year effort to replace an old mosque with a bold structure that incorporates Russian architectural details. Moscow may have as many as 2 million Muslim residents.聽

By Robert Marquand , Staff writer

Russian President Vladimir Putin has held a high-profile ceremony in Moscow to mark the opening of what he described as Europe's largest聽mosque, a soaring and stunning piece of religious architecture.

The building replaces a mosque built in 1904 and will seat 10,000 adherents in a city that is estimated to have some 2 million Muslims, though no official data is published.聽

The structure is estimated to have cost $170 million, all of which was paid for by private donations. Its formal title is the Moscow Cathedral Mosque, employing religious terminology borrowed from the Russian Orthodox Church.

Mr. Putin used Wednesday's opening ceremony to praise peaceful Islam and castigate its extremist elements. His comments came as Russia steps up its military involvement in defending Syria's embattled dictatorship regime聽and as some Russian jihadists have volunteered to fight for the self-describe Islamic State.

The Catholic World Service news聽reports that聽Putin, standing with Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas and Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, told the crowd: 聽

Putin, who enjoys mixed reviews at best among ordinary Muslims in the sprawling Russian Federation, went on to warn against 鈥渆xploiting feelings.鈥 Reuters writes that Putin called for:

The mosque was completed after 10 years of local controversy in Moscow, echoing tensions in numerous cities around Europe where burgeoning Muslim populations face a paucity of places to pray and restrictions on mosque-building. Moscow has only three other working mosques.聽

The New York Times reports聽that Moscow census-takers stopped denoting ethnicity a decade ago but that estimates of 2 million Muslims in the Russian capital seem reasonable:

The architect of the Cathedral Mosque incorporated traditional Russian motifs in the design. The Times notes that, 鈥淭he dome 鈥 of the onion family, if not exactly an onion,鈥 is circled by quotations from the Koran and fits into the religious landscape of gilded Orthodox domes nearby.

The BBC reports that among the mosque's private funders were聽Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, who contributed $25,000, and Dagestan-born billionaire and politician Suleiman Kerimov, who gave $100 million.聽