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Muezzin Mustafa Kader recites the call to prayer at the Cologne Central Mosque in Cologne, on October 14, 2022. Image Credit: AP

COLOGNE, Germany: The Islamic call to prayer was sounded in public for the first time from one of Germany’s biggest mosques on Friday, but at limited volume, as part of a project agreed with authorities in Cologne, which has one of the country’s largest Muslim communities.

Authorities in Germany’s fourth-biggest city last year cleared the way for mosques to apply for permission for the muezzin to call for a maximum five minutes between noon and 3pm on Fridays, with a noise limit being set for each mosque according to its location.

The call to prayer wasn’t a first for Germany but did bring it to a particularly prominent mosque. The Central Mosque, a modern building with two tall minarets, is located on a busy road just west of downtown Cologne. Run by the Turkish-Islamic Union for Religious Affairs, or DITIB, it was inaugurated by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in 2018.

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Mustafa Kader preaches at Cologne Central Mosque. Image Credit: AP

Until now, the call to prayer was heard only inside the building. Early Friday afternoon, it was broadcast through two loudspeakers, though authorities stipulated that it should be limited to 60 decibels for nearby residents.

The call lasted less than five minutes and could be heard only immediately outside the mosque.

DITIB said an agreement for a two-year trial of the call was reached with the city on Wednesday.

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The faithful pray at the mosque in Cologne. Image Credit: AP

“This is an important step in the perception of Muslim religious communities as part of society,’’ Abdul Rahman Atasoy, a senior official with the group, said in a statement.

“That Muslims have arrived and been accepted with their representative mosques as a visible part and with the call to prayer as an audible part of society is the core message of this long process,’’ he said — one that, he added, has taken Muslims “out of unseen and unpleasant backyard mosques into the fold of society.’’

Mayor Henriette Reker said last year that Muslims, many of them German-born, are a firmly established part of society in Cologne, a city whose main landmark is its imposing Catholic cathedral.

“If we also hear the call of the muezzin in our city alongside church bells, that shows that diversity is appreciated and lived in Cologne,’’ she said.