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Slapping incident: Hong Kong’s chief imam tells religious teachers ‘we can’t punish students for learning the Koran’

  • Community responds to case of boy who needed surgery after religious teacher allegedly slapped him
  • Chief imam convenes meeting with all religious teachers to emphasise proper conduct of Islamic lessons

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Chief imam Mufti Muhammad Arshad (left) at Kowloon Mosque in Tsim Sha Tsui. Photo: Jonathan Wong

Seated cross-legged on the white-tiled floor of their classroom, about 30 children aged eight to 15 rocked gently from side to side, reciting verses in Arabic from the Koran, Islam’s holy book, at a religious school in Hong Kong.

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A mix of girls and boys, they are all from ethnic minority communities and dressed in traditional Islamic clothes.

The children are attending a religious class at the Kowloon Mosque and Islamic Centre on Nathan Road, Tsim Sha Tsui.

“They sing the words to remember them better. The swaying helps them keep the rhythm,” said chief imam Mufti Muhammad Arshad, leader of Hong Kong’s Muslim community of 300,000.

The Koran is taught at Kowloon Mosque in Tsim Sha Tsui. Photo: Jonathan Wong
The Koran is taught at Kowloon Mosque in Tsim Sha Tsui. Photo: Jonathan Wong

An Islamic religious school, or madrasa, was in the spotlight after an incident on August 5 when a 13-year-old student was allegedly slapped during a Koran reading class.

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