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Islam in Naples (Islam has a very long
history in southern
Italy going back to the
Muslim conquest of Sicily in the
early 800's and subsequent brief expansion onto the Italian mainland.
Indeed, Islamic culture had a significant influence on our own Western
Renaissance. There is a
separate item in the Naples Encyclopedia on that topic that you may
read by clicking here. What
follows below, however, is about the modern, recent growth of Islam in
Italy and Naples.)It is fair to say that as recently as 1970 the number of Muslims in Italy was statistically insignificant, consisting mostly of students, diplomats and businessmen from Muslim countries, all or most of whom were part of a consistently small and constantly rotating group. They came and went; very few of them settled in Italy to stay. There were no visibly cohesive groups of Muslims; indeed, there were no mosques, no Islamic cultural centers or even organized centers where those of the Islamic faith might simply gather together to be with those of the same religion. That
situation has changed dramatically in the last few decades.
Numbers vary considerably depending on the source, but the most
conservative estimate claims that
there are now about 500,000 Muslims in Italy and about 400 mosques and
Islamic cultural
centers in the nation. The first mosque was opened in 1980 in Sicily,
and the largest one
was opened in Rome (photo) in 1995 (financed by the government of Saudi
Arabia). Islam is now the
second largest religion in Italy. This recent, intense burst of "Islam
building" in Italy is the
direct result of the recent waves of immigration into the country,
which started in earnest about 15 years
ago.Naples now has an active mosque (photo) located near Piazza Mercato. One source, a 2002 publication entitled L'Islam a Napoli, (book cover, photo) claims that there about 5,000 practicing Muslims in Naples. An interesting sidelight is the fact that there are at least a couple of hundred native-born Neapolitans who have converted from Roman Catholicism to Islam. This would include the author of the above-mentioned book, Hamza Massimiliano Boccolini, a graduate of the Center for Arabic and Islamic Studies of the Orientale University of Naples, one of the most prestigious institutions for Arabic studies in Italy. (Historically, Islam has aggressively sought converts but does not, to my knowledge, actively proselytize in Italy at this time.) Boccolini is also the person responsible for the Islamic cultural center, the Zayd ibn Thabit Association, founded in 1997. The association plays an important social role in the lives of Muslims in Naples. It welcomes newcomers, runs Italian classes, provides legal and medical help—and even provides many of the transient workers with sanitary and bathing facilities. In short, it helps Muslims in Naples start to feel more comfortable in a society in which many of them will wind up choosing to stay. The fact that the association is a visible and structured organziation also lends a sense of order to the presence of Muslims in the city, a fact that makes their Christian neighbors feel more comfortable as well. Thus, when a few hundred of the faithful assemble for Friday prayers, it's not a big deal. It's just some of your fellow citizens and neighbors, who happen to be of a different religion, taking time out to pray, and what's wrong with that? |