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A variety of religions will be whooping it up this weekend at something unique in terms of inaugural festivities: religiously oriented balls.

The African American Church Inaugural Ball will have several bishops in attendance. A Masonic ball is scheduled just off Dupont Circle. A Sikh ball will be filled with men in turbans and women in flowing silk tunics and loose trousers.

A Jewish ball will feature klezmer music, and a Muslim event will be black tie. Some will allow dancing; others will not.

One that will not is the Muslim Inauguration Gala at 7 p.m. Monday at the Thurgood Marshall Center, 1816 12th St. NW. About 500 people have signed up, paying $100 each for tickets.

Rep. Keith Ellison, Minnesota Democrat, will attend. Several local imams, including Johari Abdul-Malik of Dar al-Hijrah Islamic Center in Falls Church and Yusef Saleem of Masjid Muhammad in the District, also will be there.

Organizers declined to talk on the record, although they did say there will be no dancing. Islam forbids mixed-sex dancing in public.

Musical groups such as the Nappy Roots and L'Tynna and Company will perform. The Congressional Muslim Staffers Association is an honorary host.

At an Indian restaurant just a few blocks from the White House, a first-ever Sikh Inaugural Ball will be held Tuesday night for a crowd of 300 turbaned and sari-clad guests. A "dhol" (drum) player will perform, as will Adel Ahmed, a Bangladeshi singer.

Full Sikh regalia or formal Punjabi (northwest Indian) attire is required at the event. So far, 150 tickets, costing $150 and $250, have been sold for the event at the Indian Experience at 17th and L streets in Northwest. Celebrants will do a Punjabi folk dance called the "bhangra," Indian food will be served and organizers are hoping that the newly inaugurated president, Barack Obama, will drop by. Mr. Obama is said to favor Indian cuisine.

However, the Secret Service might have a problem with an item some guests may have on their bodies. It's the "kirpan," a knifelike religious item that devout Sikhs wear at all times as a reminder of their task to protect the weak and promote justice.

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