France will no longer accept new imams “ detached “, that is to say sent by other countries, from January 1, said French Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin on Friday in a letter to the countries concerned by the subject. After April 1, 2024, seconded imams still present in the territory will not be able to remain there “under this status”, he adds in this letter.
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At the beginning of 2020, Emmanuel Macron announced his desire to end the reception of some 300 imams sent by various countries (Algeria, Turkey, Morocco, etc.), and to increase at the same time the number of imams trained in France. “ We are working on the end of seconded imams in 2024 », Said the Minister of the Interior at the time, Christophe Castaner.
Recalling this “ prior notice » of three years, to give mosques and states time to organize themselves, Gerald Darmanin insists Friday on the calendar: the decision “ will effectively apply from January 1, 2024 “. This means in concrete terms that from this date France “ will no longer accept new seconded imams “.
As for those who are already there, they will have to change their status: from April 1, a “ specific framework » will be put in place to allow associations managing places of worship to recruit imams themselves, whom they will directly employ. The goal is not to prevent foreign imams from preaching in France, but to ensure that none are paid by a foreign state, of which they would be a civil servant or public agent.
On the other hand, the arrival of “ Ramadan imams “, these some 300 chanters and reciters who go to France during the blessed month for Muslims, is “ not questioned », According to this missive.
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Training in France
At the same time, emphasis is placed on the need for a “ increasing share » imams officiating in the territory are, “ at least partially, trained in France “. This requires developing training and the State wants to be “ attentive » to what an offer « respectful of the laws and principles of the Republic » French is growing rapidly.
Beyond religious training, it is also about supporting imams’ access to university training, such as those launched in 2023 by the French Institute of Islamology for example. Determined to fight against the Islamist separatism », President Emmanuel Macron announced in February 2020 a series of measures against “ foreign influences » on Islam in France, ranging from seconded imams to the financing of mosques.
To better organize Muslim worship, a French Islam Forum (Forif) had also been launched in February 2022, with field actors supposed to better represent the country’s second religion. But this body is struggling to establish itself in the fragmented landscape of Islam in France.
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(With AFP)