Sweden mosque condemns desecration of Quran in latest anti-Muslim attack

Images released by the Stockholm Central Mosque of the attack show the damaged Holy book of the Muslims chained up and hanging from an iron railing outside the mosque.

“The Quran is sacred in Islam; it is the word of God. Burning the Quran, therefore, becomes enormously hurtful for us Muslims,” says Imam and director of the Stockholm Central Mosque.
AA

“The Quran is sacred in Islam; it is the word of God. Burning the Quran, therefore, becomes enormously hurtful for us Muslims,” says Imam and director of the Stockholm Central Mosque.

A Stockholm mosque has condemned the latest attack on its facility after a damaged copy of the Quran was left chained up and hanging outside the mosque’s entrance.

Images released by the Stockholm Central Mosque of the attack last Friday show the damaged Holy book of the Muslims chained up and hanging from an iron railing outside the mosque.

The mosque said it frequently experiences such threats.

Tying a destroyed Quran and hanging it to the garden bars next to the mosque door is humiliating for Muslims, the mosque wrote on Facebook.

“Our mosque and our congregation receive threats very widely. Racists always make a new attempt to smear those who are not like themselves,” it said.

READ MORE: Police in Sweden arrest dozens after protests against anti-Muslim group

Rising anti-Muslim hate 

A statement said the mosque decided to share photographs and information “to attract the attention of both our congregation and the public, and to prevent hate crime from being normalised,” it said.

But the attack is not isolated as the mosque has been subjected to anti-Muslim attacks in the past, including when anti-Islamic graffiti and writings were painted on its door.

The Quran has been under attack in Sweden for some time.

Swedish and Danish national Rasmus Paludan, who leads the far-right Danish anti-immigration party regularly organises Quran-burning tours across the two Scandinavian countries despite protests that triggered riots.

Imam and director of the Stockholm Central Mosque, Mahmoud Khalfi, told Anadolu Agency that he “personally witnessed the Quran burning here in Stockholm” last December, “and I remember how hurtful it was.”

“The Quran is sacred in Islam; it is the word of God. Burning the Quran, therefore, becomes enormously hurtful for us Muslims,” he said.

READ MORE: Indian police arrest 'members of right-wing group' for desecrating mosques

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