Architecture is a political act. What, where and how we build is affected by politics but this is beyond the pale. This story has become the center of debate in architecture firms across the globe. We are not talking Tiger nor are we hyperventilating over Dubai, it is the banning of minarets. Recent online discussions on architectural sites like Archinect show the dismay (and support) at this decision and it is hard to disagree with the fact this even got on the agenda is eye-opening. Many of the moderate Swiss suggested that the ban was for 'architectural conformity' but the SVP political party said they represent a "political-religious claim to power, which challenges fundamental rights."
Some context - The minority Muslim population in Switzerland are mainly refugees from the Yugoslav wars, so they are European. Not that this makes a huge difference but Europe has had its' issues with countries going after religious minorities.
If the west wants to show that it is a culture of openness and peace - this clearly sends a wrong message. Think I'm over-reacting? Below are two images, one from the campaign to ban minarets and the other a photo I took a few years ago. One suggests minarets are missiles, the other to kick the black sheep off the Swiss flag. So much for being a 'neutral' country.
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Source: huffingtonpost.com/
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