Diyanet, which oversees religious activity in Turkey, on Wednesday voiced distaste over the Berlin mosque where men and women pray side-by-side, saying it was incompatible with the principles of Islam.
Diyanet's criticism sparked strong words from Germany, with foreign ministry spokesman Martin Schaefer firmly rejecting the Turkish agency's comments "which are targeted at limiting people's right to practise their religion and freedom of opinion".
"How, where, when and in which manner people worship is not a matter for the state," said the spokesman.
Interior ministry spokesman Tobias Plate added that comments that "endanger domestic peace in Germany is something that cannot be accepted."
Also Read
"We will be sure to express that bilaterally in every channel of dialogue that the interior ministry is responsible for," he added.
Berlin's new mosque, located in a rented room on the third floor of the Protestant Johanniskirche (St John's Church) building, welcomes all Muslims - Sunni or Shia, Alawite or Sufi, and comes complete with female imams.
Relations plunged further after Turkey imprisoned Deniz Yucel, a German-Turkish journalist with Germany's Die Welt daily, on terror charges earlier this year.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content