World Wide
Jun 01, 2026
India's Muslims Denied Public Spaces for Eid Prayers
In India, Muslims are facing restrictions on offering Eid prayers in public spaces, with authoritie…
The Growing Fear Among Muslims
In Meerut, India, a group of Muslim men are huddled inside a small mosque, discussing the arrangements for Eid al-Adha prayers. The conversation is not about sacrificial animals or charity, but about the pressing issue of where and how they will offer their prayers on Thursday.
Restrictions on Public Prayers
For more than a decade, right-wing Hindu groups have been protesting against Muslims offering public prayers on Fridays and festivals, citing traffic and security concerns. These groups, and even politicians from Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), have disrupted namaz on roads, in parks, or on vacant plots of land.
The Impact on Muslim Communities
The restrictions on Eid prayers are creating an atmosphere in which even routine religious gatherings are increasingly treated as security concerns. Mosque committees are quietly recalibrating Eid arrangements, reducing the size of congregations, and asking worshippers to arrive in smaller groups or disperse quickly after prayers.
The Psychological Impact
For many Muslims, the psychological impact of such restrictions and targeting extends beyond the prayer ground. There is a fear of humiliation, and parents tell young people to avoid standing outside mosques because they don't want trouble.
Selective Enforcement of Rules
While the government frames the restrictive measures around Muslim festivals as necessary for traffic management and public order, it has also facilitated large Hindu religious processions and celebrations with traffic diversions, police protection, and public infrastructural support. Critics say the contrast with the crackdown on namaz deepens perception among Muslims of a selective enforcement of rules.
#India
#Muslims
#Eid al-Adha
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