CAIRO
(AP) -- Inside a large mosque in the Nile Delta, an Egyptian cleric
looked over his congregation as he climbed the pulpit clutching a piece
of paper and began to speak - delivering a 13-minute discourse on the
virtues of personal hygiene.
For the first
time in his career, the young imam found himself
forced to read a Friday sermon printed from the official website of the Religious Endowments
Ministry.
Minutes after he ended the unusually short sermon, uproar spread through the congregation.
Some
men in the crowd began shouting "No to written sermons!" while others
tried to hush them - a commotion filmed on cellphones and posted online.
Similar scenes occurred across the country and in the capital, where
one angry worshipper reportedly snatched the paper from the hands of the
cleric.
The clamor was in response to a controversial bid by the government to establish control over Egypt's religious discourse.
They don't want overly enthusiastic sermons promoting radicalism. And so they manage to outrage folks, promoting radicalism.
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