'Give if you can, take if you need': Turkish mosques launch charity campaign
Shoe racks in a mosque have been turned into food shelves in a bid to help those in need during the coronavirus lockdown, Konya, Turkey, April 29, 2020. (AA Photo)


Two mosques in Turkey have converted their shoe racks to food shelves in a bid to help those in need due to the coronavirus lockdown.

The project with the theme "Give if you can, take if you need" was initiated in the central Konya province by the Mevlader Foundation, the Provincial Mufti’s Office and the Selcuklu District Mufti’s Office.

As part of the project, Adnan Menderes and Yildirim Beyazit mosques in the Selcuklu district have opened their doors to the needy.

"Even though our mosques are open for worship, they are closed for congregational prayers," Provincial Mufti Ahmet Poçanoğlu said.

He added they are working to convert other mosques in the city into charity bazaars.

Poçanoğlu also called on people to donate to help others during the holy month of Ramadan.

District Mufti Nusret Karabiber said that cash and food aid is also being dispatched. They visited 2,000 families to distribute food packages as well as TL 700,000 ($100,000).

Mevlader Foundation’s press secretary Maziyetullah Kulu Oğuz said they aim to extend a helping hand to people in need through the project.

"We want this benevolence to spread to the whole province," Oğuz said, adding that they want to increase the number of mosques offering this service with the support of philanthropists.

A similar project was also put in service at an Istanbul mosque earlier in the month by the imam of that facility. The mosque opened its doors to those in need of food and basic cleaning products.

The virus, which locked people at home, first appeared in China last December and has spread to at least 185 countries and regions.

Turkey is also affected by COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, and has registered 2,992 deaths. A total of 38,809 patients have also been discharged from hospitals after recovering from the virus.