Every evening between 50 and 60 Muslims, many of them homeless,
stream into the centuries-old stone passages of the Santa Anna
church, where volunteers offer a hearty meal of home-cooked
food.
"We are all the same... If you are Catholic or of another
religion and I am Muslim, that's fine," said Hafid Oubrahim, a
27-year old Moroccan of Berber descent who attends the dinners.
"We are all like brothers and we must help each other too."
During the month of Ramadan, observant Muslims do not eat
between sunrise and sundown, breaking their fast only after
nightfall with a meal known as Iftar.
Faouzia Chati, president of the Catalan Association of Moroccan
Women, used to organise Iftar gatherings in the city, but limits
on indoor dining forced her to seek an alternative space with
good ventilation and room for distancing.
She found a receptive ear in Father Peio Sanchez, Santa Anna's
rector, who sees the meeting of different faiths as emblematic
of civic coexistence.
"People are very happy that Muslims can do Iftar in a Catholic
church, because religions serve to unite us, not to separate
us," said Chati.
Sanchez looked on as a man intoned the Muslim evening call to
prayer beneath the orange trees of the church's central
courtyard, illuminated by the flames of gas heaters.
"Even with different cultures, different languages, different
religions, we are more capable of sitting down and talking than
some politicians," said the rector.
(Writing by Nathan Allen in Madrid; Editing by Andrei Khalip and
Gareth Jones)
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