An Episcopalian priest has made
headlines in the UK and India by opening the doors of his Scottish church to
Muslims for prayer, reports Ucanews.
The Rev Isaac Poobalan allowed
Muslims to use St John’s church in Aberdeen for prayer after he saw worshippers
praying “on a bitterly cold day” outside a nearby mosque because it was too
small to accommodate them.
Up to 100 Muslims now pray in
the main chapel at St John’s every Friday – and the church hall is being
converted for the exclusive use of Muslims.
“The mosque is in fact in a
former diocesan office in the church grounds which was sold by the diocese to a
Muslim businessman. He opened it as a mosque but it only holds about 50
worshippers,” Poobalan told ucanews.com.
The opening of the church has
featured in The
Guardian, Daily
Mail and The
Sun in the UK and the Indian
Express and Times
of India.
Poobalan, 50, grew up in
Vellore, Tamil Nadu, and his father was a member of the chaplaincy team at
Christian Medical College Vellore Hospital.
“I saw people from all
religions praying in the hospital chapel,” he said. “It taught me that prayer
transcends religion. We all pray to essentially the same God.”
He said Secular India, an
“educational resource” devoted to the pledge in the Indian constitution that
all faiths are equal, also had a hand in teaching him “to look at every
religion with equal respect.”
Poobalan trained as a nurse
specializing in mental health and worked in Abu Dhabi before studying for the
Episcopalian priesthood in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Married to a doctor who trained
at CMC and with two children, he has been rector at St John’s for 11 years and
for some time has been involved in forging links with other religious
communities in Aberdeen.
“When I first arrived,” he
said, “there were very few people of other religions in Aberdeen, mostly
students. But many more have arrived over the years, working for the National
Health Service and the oil industry.”
He is also chaplain of Robert
Gordon University, Aberdeen, and chairman of the Friends of Vellore Scotland, a
charity that supports the work of CMC Vellore.
It is believed this is the
first time a church in the UK has been opened to Muslims for prayer, though it
is occasionally done in the United States.
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