Quake-weary Algerians turn to religion to placate 'divine vengeance'

Their confidence shattered by an earthquake which last month took at least 2 200 lives, with hundreds still missing, the weary and demoralised people of Algeria are increasingly turning to Islam for spiritual comfort.

Each aftershock creates panic and, in a country where in the past few regularly attended prayer services at mosques, religious observance is becoming more common.

"Since the earthquake, every time there is a tremor, Samiha gets out her prayer mat and beseeches Allah," said one man, astonished by the change of behaviour in his daughter, who works in the information technology field.

These days Samiha (24) observes the five daily prayers so that "God will stop his anger" and has taken to wearing a headscarf, while continuing to wear Western-style clothes.

The earthquake of May 21 was measured at 6.8 on the Richter scale but Algerians have been dismayed and frightened by the intensity of some of the aftershocks, some of which have been registered at 5.8 on the scale.

Many people whose faith was, in the words of a local newspaper, "soft and wobbling" have suddenly found it lent extra vigour by emotion and terror.

"Powerless before the dimensions of the disaster and the limited explanations offered by science, people are rediscovering their faith after yielding to panic," the newspaper la Tribune noted.

In some mosques, imams, or religious leaders, have been quick to take up the theme of "divine vengeance", arguing that God is punishing people who "have strayed from their right path". Their arguments have won a hearing in some sections of the population.

"How do you want God to spare us when bars remain open?" said one man in his 40s, terrified by a sharp aftershock, pointing to an establishment serving alcohol.

Imams have used their sermons to single out women, attacking their lifestyles and their "provocative dress", which they say profanes God's will.

At the same time, religious activists are busy in the tent cities in which 100,000 of the homeless have been placed by the government.

Islamists in Afghan dress proclaim the tremors "divine punishment" because women have become "Westernised"; they believe women should wear loose-fitting clothes so as not to attract looks from men.

According to one sociologist, "Fear combined with these reproaches have contributed to a revival of faith in some people who are searching for an explanation or help in religion."

But not everyone is persuaded. "You would think we were back in the old days of the Islamic Salvation Front," said one regular customer in an Algiers bar, referring to the group that was set to win power in a 1992 general election cancelled by the military.

"The bearded ones (Islamists) seize every occasion to resurface. In fact, I see that the bars of Algiers have never been so full, and the atmosphere is more than warm. It's good for morale in these uncertain times," he joked.