Sun, 17 May 2026
Jammu And Kashmir News Updated May 17, 2026 · 21:56

Mirwaiz Calls for Mosques as Centers of Social Reform and Unity

Kashmir's chief Islamic cleric Mirwaiz Umar Farooq has called for mosques, khanqahs, and imambaras to be used as centres of social reform and unity. He emphasized that these institutions historically served as vibrant centres of learning, guidance, and social transformation beyond just prayer. Addressing moral decline, domestic discord, and weakening community bonds, he urged religious centres to guide the younger generation and strengthen moral values. Mirwaiz stressed the need to preserve Kashmir's traditions of coexistence, tolerance, and spirituality through renewed commitment.

Mosques, khanqahs, imambaras should be used as centres of social reform, says Mirwaiz Umar Farooq

Srinagar, May 17

Kashmir's chief Islamic cleric Mirwaiz Umar Farooq on Sunday called for mosques, khanqahs, and imambaras to be used as centres of social reform and unity.

Addressing a religious function here, he said that places of worship must guide society towards moral revival, collective responsibility and protection of identity, culture, and values.

Mirwaiz Umar said that mosques, khanqahs and imambaras are not only places for offering prayers, but historically have served as vibrant centres of reform, learning, guidance and social transformation. He said throughout Islamic history, these institutions played a pivotal role in shaping moral consciousness, strengthening communal harmony and addressing the social and ethical challenges confronting society.

He said that in the present times, when society faces growing political, moral, social, and cultural challenges, there is an urgent need to revive the true role of these centres of worship.

The Mirwaiz said that issues such as moral decline, domestic discord, increasing materialism, and the weakening of family and community bonds require collective introspection and sustained social engagement.

"Our mosques, khanqahs and imambaras must become centres for initiating positive change and reform within society. They should guide the younger generation, spread awareness, strengthen moral values and help address the problems affecting our people," he said.

He added that Kashmir's religious and spiritual institutions have historically nurtured values of coexistence, tolerance, spirituality, and social responsibility, and these traditions must be preserved and strengthened.

"We have to strive to safeguard our religious identity, our culture, our language, our moral values, and our spiritual heritage. These institutions have always acted as centres of guidance and reform and must continue to play that role with renewed commitment," he said.

Referring to the life and teachings of the Holy Prophet, the Mirwaiz said that the life and teachings of the Prophet are not merely to be commemorated through gatherings and speeches, but must be reflected in individual conduct and collective social behaviour. He said the Prophet established a society based on justice, compassion, honesty, accountability and service to humanity, and Muslims must strive to embody these principles in contemporary life.

— IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
I appreciate the emphasis on coexistence and tolerance. Kashmir has a rich tradition of pluralism and it's good to see a religious leader promoting unity and social responsibility. However, I hope this isn't just rhetoric—we need concrete action plans for youth engagement and community service from these institutions.
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Vikram M
Finally someone talking sense! Our religious places have become too focused on rituals and have forgotten their social role. Mirwaiz is pointing out that Islam's core message is about justice, compassion and service. If these institutions can truly become centers of moral guidance, it could help address many issues like domestic discord and weakening family bonds. Let's see if the follow-through matches the vision.
S
Sarah B
As someone who respects all faiths, I find this initiative promising. The idea of using religious spaces for social reform—addressing moral decline, materialism, and community bonds—is exactly what any society needs. Kashmir's unique blend of Islamic traditions and its history of coexistence makes it an ideal place for such revival. Hope other religious leaders also take note.
R
Rohit P
Good sentiment but I'm skeptical. Talk of 'protecting identity, culture and values' can sometimes be used to exclude others. If the focus is truly on universal values like compassion, honesty and service to humanity as mentioned, then these institutions should be open to all, not just one community. Let's hope this reform doesn't become divisive.
J
James A
Interesting perspective from a long-respected religious leader in Kashmir. The historical role of mosques and imambaras as centres of learning is often overlooked—they were libraries, schools and community gathering spots.

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