Ticker

6/recent/ticker-posts

Ad Code

Responsive Advertisement

Minneapolis City Council passes ordinance removing time-of-day limits on Islamic call to prayer broadcast

Sahan Journal’s Hibah Ansari reports Minneapolis’ City Council unanimously passed an ordinance to allow the Islamic call to prayer five times per day, and that Mayor Jacob Frey has said he will sign it. “Mosques were previously allowed to broadcast the adhan, or Islamic call to prayer, three to four times a day to comply with city noise ordinances,” Ansari reports. “A noise ordinance disallowed broadcasting it over a loudspeaker during the early morning and late night. Islamic prayer times depend on the position of the sun, so the exact times of each prayer varies from day to day.”

For the Spokesman-Recorder, H. Jiahong Pan rode along on Metro Transit with the agency’s new police chief, Ernest Morales III.

Mpls.St.Paul’s Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl reports Sean Sherman, of Owamni, has been named one of Time Magazine’s most influential people of 2023.

The Duluth News Tribune’s Peter Passi reports two teens were rescued after they were swept down the Lester River and “took a trip over a small waterfall before managing to scramble atop an island.”

MPR’s Chris Farrell reports on Digi-Key’s efforts to address housing and child care shortages in the Thief River Falls region.

WCCO staff report St. Paul’s Water Street will close Friday ahead of expected flooding.

KSTP’s Krystal Frasier reports Nicholas Firkus will be sentenced today after his conviction of first and second-degree murder in the death of his wife, Heidi Firkus, in St. Paul in 2010.

WTIP’s Kalli Hawkins reports the Angry Trout Cafe in Grand Marais was sold to two longtime employees.

Enregistrer un commentaire

0 Commentaires