The mosque is named Ibn-Rushd-Goethe-Mosque, combining the names of medieval Andalusian philosopher Ibn Rushd and German writer Johann Wolfgang Goethe. It is located on a busy shopping street in the immigrant neighborhood of Moabit, which is dotted with Indian and Vietnamese restaurants and Middle Eastern cafes. Visitors looking for a minaret or trying to follow the call of the muezzin will search in vain. For now, the mosque occupies a big room on the third floor of an old red brick Lutheran church. "To get started, we've rented this room for one year," Ates said. More than 4m Muslims live in Germany, the majority from Turkey but also from the Balkans, the Middle East and Northern Africa. Germany has also taken in more than a million refugees since 2015, most of them Muslims from war-torn countries such as Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan.Germany: "Where burqas are banned: Germany's first 'liberal mosque' to open in Berlin" https://t.co/bA5lG33X4g
— Reinhard Firlinger (@RFirlinger) June 16, 2017
'Liberal' mosque where burqas are banned opens in Germany https://t.co/KiJlnnE9p0 pic.twitter.com/hV40I2Zmcn— Aüd™ (@CodeAud) June 17, 2017Turks, Kurds and Arabs alike have donated money, businesspeople have called to offer help with creating signage and advertisements and several Middle Eastern restaurants were delivering free food for the iftar, the breaking of the Ramadan fast on Friday night, she said. Ates' sister brought 30 prayer rugs from Istanbul a few weeks ago, and an Indonesian interior architect has offered her services to refurbish the 90-square-meter room. For the future, she and the seven colleagues who supported her project from the beginning, dream of building a real mosque with several prayer rooms for believers of all the different Islamic sects as well as an academy devoted to the education of liberal imams, male and female.