Kerry tours giant mosque in Indonesia

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (R) tours the Istiqlal Mosque with Grand Imam K.H. Ali Mustafa Yaqub in Jakarta February 16, 2014. REUTERS/Evan Vucci/Pool

JAKARTA (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry spent part of his Sunday in his stocking feet at an Indonesian mosque, at one point beating a huge drum used to call Muslims to prayer. Kerry's visit to the modern Istiqlal Mosque in central Jakarta, said to be the largest mosque in Southeast Asia with a capacity of 130,000, was designed to demonstrate his respect for Islam as he visited the world's largest Muslim-majority nation. Kerry spent about 20 minutes touring the mosque, chatting briefly with women studying Islamic law and admiring the blue ceiling of its dome. Having removed his shoes in keeping with Islamic custom, Kerry at one point was shown a gigantic, skin-covered drum which rests sideways on the mosque's floor and stood several feet taller than his head. After witnessing a demonstration by the Grand Imam, identified by the State Department as K.H. Ali Mustafa Yaqub, Kerry then used a club to beat the drum, which is used to call Muslims to prayer. "It has been a special honor to visit this remarkable place of worship," Kerry said in a handwritten note to memorialize his visit. "We are all bound to one God and the Abrahamic faiths tie us…together in love for our fellow man and honor for the same God." (Reporting by Arshad Mohammed; Editing by Matt Driskill)