

On May 17, the holy day of Laylat al-Qadr, the president made a televised appearance on a giant screen decorated with the word “Allah” in Arabic to congratulate the winners of a Quran recitation contest. Last week, a video showed President Recep Tayyip Erdogan doing a khatm - a reading of the Quran from beginning to end - as practicing Muslims do during Ramadan. Over the past month, the government has notably stepped up displays of piety, from unprecedentedly loud prayers from mosques to accusations and tough measures against individuals and groups it accuses of “ insulting religion.” Second, it came as the latest episode in rising tensions over religious symbols in Turkey before the country goes on lockdown for Eid al-Fitr, the holiday at the end of the holy month of Ramadan, on May 24-26.

The hacking is significant first for rekindling the resentment of the conservative government toward Izmir, the so-called “last bastion” of anti-government politicians and intellectuals. In a hasty statement, the local religious authorities announced that they have deactivated the centralized sound system in mosques.


Sabah trumpeted a “scandal in Izmir,” while Star labeled the hacking as “a heinous provocation.” In the next 24 hours, hackers broke into the systems of two more mosques, this time broadcasting the songs of Turkish protest singer Selda Bagcan. As videos of "Bella Ciao" blaring from minarets went viral on social media, pro-governmental newspapers seethed with outrage. Some might have found the incident amusing, but it is no joke in a country where political polarization is running deep between the conservative and the secular. Hackers had broken into the sound system of several mosques, which are closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, to broadcast the song, which expresses solidarity with workers and is often sung at protests in Turkey and beyond. IZMIR, Turkey - Residents in several districts in the Turkish city of Izmir could hardly believe their ears as " Bella Ciao," the Italian protest song that is akin to a leftist anthem in Turkey, soared from the minarets of mosques instead of the call for prayer on the afternoon of May 20.
