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Recent Case: The Turkish Decision on Hagia Sophia
Author(s) -
Cem Tecimer
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of islamic law
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2475-7985
pISSN - 2475-7977
DOI - 10.53484/jil.v2.tecimer
Subject(s) - worship , prayer , law , context (archaeology) , turkish , presidency , islam , political science , government (linguistics) , history , theology , philosophy , politics , archaeology , linguistics
On July 2, 2020, a division of Turkey’s highest administrative appellate court annulled[reference_link 1] a 1934 presidential decision[reference_link 2] by Kemal Ataturk, founding president of Turkey, converting Hagia Sophia (tr. Aya Sofya) into a museum.  Days later, on July 10, 2020, Recep Tayyip Erdogan issued a decision[reference_link 3] based on the court ruling, restoring its status as a mosque open to worship and transferring its maintenance to the country’s Presidency of Religious Affairs. Following a Turkish administrative court ruling that revoked an earlier administrative decision (1934) converting the mosque into a museum, President Erdogan of Turkey was expected[reference_link 4] to restore Hagia Sophia’s status as a mosque.  Upon his decision to restore the site’s status as a mosque open to worship, Erdogan personally inspected[reference_link 5] the site and the preparations to have it ready for the Friday prayer on July 24, 2020. The government quickly named[reference_link 6] 3 imāms, one a professor of religious studies, for Hagia Sophia. On July 24, 2020, Erdogan, accompanied by top government officials and politicians, participated[reference_link 7] in the first Friday prayer at the site after a 86-year hiatus where he recited passages from the Qur’ān. 350,000 people are estimated[reference_link 8] to have been in attendance). For further context, see the Case Roundup on the Islamic Law Blog.[reference_link 9]

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