Monday, October 29, 2012

No Looking Mosques in Moscow Russian Federation


يشكو مسلمو العاصمة الروسية، موسكو، البالغ تعدادهم حوالي مليونين، قلة المساجد وعدم قدرتها على إستيعاب المصلين، وخصوصا في صلاة الجمعة.
حيث أكد "دمير جيزاتولون" مساعد رئيس مجلس "مفتي روسيا" أن المساجد لم تعد تتسع للمسلمين، في موسكو، التي لا يوجد فيها غير 4 مساجد صغيرة الحجم، مشددا على ضرورة حل هذه المعضلة، التي تستفحل في أيام الشتاء القارس وأضاف:" المسلمون باتوا يصلون خارج باحات المساجد، أيام العيد والجمعة والمناسبات الدينية الأخرى".
ويتطرق "جيزاتولون" الى موقف رئيس بلدية موسكو" سيرجي سوبيانين" حيال هذا الموضوع قائلا:" سوبيانين ينظر الى الأمر بتحفظ شديد، بدعوى أن القسم الاكبر من المسلمين، في موسكو هم مهاجرون وايدي عاملة، تقيم في العاصمة بصورة مؤقتة، قد يكون هذا صحيحا الى حد ما ولكنه واقع لا يلغي الحاجة الماسة الى إنشاء مساجد إضافية ".
فيما قال المواطن الاوزبكي "نسر إلياموف"، إن أقرب مسجد عن منزله يبعد حوالي ساعة ونصف الساعة، داعيا الى ضرورة انشاء مساجد صغيرة في مختلف أحياء المدينة.
وفي سياق متصل، قال المواطن الطاجيكي"عبدالرحمن عزيزوف":" نصلي غالبا امام مدخل المسجد بسبب الزحام، وفي أيام الشتاء، نواصل صلاتنا، رغم هطول المطر تارة والثلج تارة أخرى، على رؤوسنا" داعيا رئيس بلدية موسكو تنسيق الجهود مع مفتي موسكو لحل المشكلة.
وكان رئيس رئيس مجلس "مفتي روسيا" "رافيل غني الدين" أعلن، في وقت سابق، أنه طلب من رئيس بلدية موسكو تخصيص 10 قطع أراضي، في أنحاء مختلفة من العاصمة الروسية، لإنشاء مساجد جديدة عليها، مؤكدا أن توسيع أحد المساجد الأربعة في موسكو لن يحل مشكلة النقص في عددها".
وجدير بالذكر أن تعداد المسلمين في روسيا يبلغ حوالي 20 مليونا، منهم مليونان يعيشون في العاصمة الروسية موسكو.


اقرأ المقال الأصلي علي بوابة الوفد الاليكترونية الوفد - مساجد موسكو لم تعد تكفى مسلميها


Century-old mosque demolished in Moscow

 

 

Need or Nonsense: More mosques in City

 

 

THOUSANDS OF MUSLIMS BLOCKING STREETS FOR EID PRAYERS (MOSCOW 08/31/11)

 

 

 

Monday, July 23, 2012

New Grand Mosque Strasburg France

ادى نحو 2500 مسلم صلاة الجمعة الاولى من شهر رمضان في مسجد ستراسبورج الجديد، الذي فتح ابوابه اليوم الجمعة، بعد الانتهاء من اكمال نقوشه وزينته الداخلية. وقال سعيد اعلى، رئيس الجمعية التي قدمت مشروع بناء المسجد، لجمهور المصلين هذا المسجد هو مسجدكم. اننا جميعا مختلفون ومن الوان مختلفة لكننا هنا كلنا مسلمون وننتمي الى هذا البلد وهو فرنسا. من جانبه قال اوليفييه بيتز مساعد رئيس بلدية ستراسبورج الاشتراكي لشؤون الديانات ان هذا المسجد الفخم هو مفخرة لستراسبورج ويسمح للمسلمين بممارسة شعائر دينهم بما يستحقونه من كرامة. ويقع هذا المسجد على بعد اقل من كيلومترين من الكاتدرائية على ضفاف نهر ايل وتعلوه قبة نحاسية كبيرة بقطر 16 مترا تحيط بها نتوءات مزينة بالهلال. لكن لا توجد له مأذنة. وقاعة الصلاة الكبرى في هذا المسجد خالية من اي اعمدة تحجب الرؤية عن المصلين وذلك بفضل شبكة كابلات دعامية هندسية خاصة. اما الجدران فهي مزينة بقطع الفسيفساء المغربية اليدوية الصنع. وجاءت المئات من السيدات للصلاة في طابق الميزانين المخصص للنساء. والعام الماضي استقبل المسجد الكبير، الذي لم تكن زيناته ونقوشاته الداخلية قد اكتملت بعد، المصلين في شهر رمضان ليغلق بعد ذلك من جديد بانتظار انتهاء الاعمال. اقرأ المقال الأصلي علي بوابة الوفد الاليكترونية الوفد - افتتاح مسجد ستراسبورج بفرنسا http://www.alwafd.org/دنيا-ودين/افتتاح-مسجد-ستراسبورج-بفرنسا http://www.mosquee-strasbourg.com/ http://www.rohama.org/en http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strasbourg_Mosque

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Conakry, Guinea Mosque

Conakry, Guinea Mosque



The Conakry Grand Mosque (French: Grande mosquée de Conakry / Mosquée Fayçal) is a mosque in Conakry, Guinea, located north of the Conakry Botanical Garden. It was built by Ahmed Sékou Touré, opening in 1982. It is the largest in West Africa.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conakry_Grand_Mosque

Sunday, April 22, 2012

COLOMBO Mosque to be Destroyed by Buddihists in Siri Lanca

أمرت الحكومة السريلانكية بإزالة مسجد فى وسط البلاد ، وذلك فى أعقاب قيام حشد من البوذيين بمحاولة لاقتحامه.
وأوضح تليفزيون (بى بى سى) البريطانى - الذى أورد النبأ اليوم - أن هذا الأمر يأتى بعد يومين من قيام رهبان بوذيين بقيادة حشد لمحاولة اقتحام المسجد الكائن فى منطقة (دامبولا) الواقعة وسط سريلانكا ، وأن الحكومة تقول إن المنطقة التى يوجد بها المسجد مقدسة بالنسبة للبوذيين الذين يشكلون أغلبية فى هذه البلاد.
ومن جانبه ، ذكر رئيس الوزراء السريلانكى دى إم جاياراتن أنه صدر أمر بنقل المسجد إلى جزء آخر من المنطقة.
وتفيد التقارير بأن هذا الحادث أثار غضبا شديدا بين كبار السياسيين المسلمين فى سريلانكا.
وأشار التليفزيون إلى أن الرهبان البوذيين فى وسط سريلانكا كانوا قد هددوا بأنهم سيهدمون هذا المسجد خلال الأسبوع القادم إذا لم تبادر السلطات بالقيام بهدمه.

COLOMBO The Sri Lankan government ordered a mosque relocated on Sunday after Buddhist monks said the 50-year-old structure had been built illegally in an area sacred to Buddhists and threatened to demolish it.
The monks in the island nation's central town of Dambulla protested against the mosque on Friday, stopping the Islamic prayers, and threatened violence if it was not removed.
They also have asked that a Hindu temple in the area be removed.
"Following a discussion with the relevant parties, the Prime Minister has ordered the disputed mosque moved to a suitable location as soon as possible," Sisira Wijesinghe, media secretary to Prime Minister D.M. Jayaratne, told Reuters.
He said several Muslim ministers took part in the discussion, a claim rejected by Muslim political leaders.
"It is a false statement and there was no discussion on this and we don't agree with the mosque relocation," A.H.M. Fowzie, a senior Muslim cabinet minister, told Reuters.
Muslims living in the area told Reuters that the mosque has existed since 1962 and regular prayers have been conducted for the past three decades.
Buddhist monks, however, said the government mistakenly had allowed the mosque to be expanded recently, despite a 1982 state regulation declaring the area sacred for Buddhism.
Constitutionally, Buddhism is the main religion in Sri Lanka, ahead of Hinduism, Islam, and Christianity, and the Buddhists make up around 70 percent of the population.
Analysts say successive governments have been under pressure to give in to the majority whenever there is an ethnic clash.
Sri Lanka saw a 25-year civil war between the government's military and Tamil Tiger rebels, who fought for a separate state for the Tamil minority, claiming their rights were discriminated against by successive Sinhala-majority governments.
اقرأ المقال الأصلي علي بوابة الوفد الاليكترونية الوفد - سريلانكا تزيل مسجداً بعد محاولة بوذيين اقتحامه

http://news.yahoo.com/sri-lanka-orders-mosque-move-buddhist-protest-191541764.html


Mosque in Anuradhapura destroyed by the members of Buddhist organization

The Mosque located near the tomb of King Duttakaimunu in Anuradhapura was destroyed by the members of genocide Buddhist organization.
Members of the Sinhala Ravaya National Organization, Security Council of Buddhism, Dhama Vijaya Council and some of the Buddhist monks have engaged in this illegal activity.
According to the sources, Inspector General of the Police and the other police officers fail to take action against this activity.
However since end of the war between LTTE in 2009 most of the religious places of the minority people have been destroyed by the majority, in the same time it was blame present government was fail to take action against this illegal activity.

Sri Lanka's government has ordered the removal of a mosque from an area it says is sacred to the country's majority Buddhists.

The order comes two days after Buddhist monks led a crowd trying to storm the mosque in the central town of Dambulla.

Prime Minister DM Jayaratne says the mosque has simply been ordered to relocate to another part of the area.

But the incident has angered senior Muslim politicians.

The BBC's Charles Haviland in Colombo says this statement by the prime minister appears to have been issued in a hurry, a day before the various parties to this religious dispute were due to meet.

Buddhist monks in central Sri Lanka had threatened to demolish the mosque next week if the authorities did not act first. A special meeting to discuss the issue appears to have been convened on Sunday, and this statement was produced.

The statement listed four prominent Muslims as present at Sunday's meeting agreeing to relocate the mosque - but according to a weekly Muslim paper, three of them say they were not there.

Cabinet minister AHM Fowzie told the BBC he had not been to such a gathering. He added that it would be acceptable to request such a relocation but not to order it.

Another politician of the governing party, Azath Sally, said that even if the mosque were illegal, people opposed to it should not "act like thugs".

"Do Tamils and Muslims not have a right to live in this country now?" he added.

Mr Jayaratne, who is also responsible for the affairs of the country's majority Buddhists, said he had ordered the mosque to be removed from a sacred area in Dambulla and that it could be relocated to "a suitable place in the neighbourhood".

He described it as a mosque which is in the process of being built and local Buddhists have reportedly said that a previously small structure is now being illegally expanded.

The chief of the mosque told the BBC Tamil service the building was legal and was simply being refurbished.

Our correspondent says that whereas Sri Lanka's Muslim community normally shies away from confrontations with the government, this incident has angered some senior Muslims and prompted them to speak out.
Posted in the Sri Lanka Forum

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

No Mosque southern city of Marseille, home to the largest Muslim community in France.


A mock-up of the Grand Mosque of Marseille. A French court Thursday cancelled a construction permit for a mega-mosque in the southern city of Marseille that had been touted as a potential symbol of Islam's growing place in France.      

The 22-million-euro ($31-million) project would have seen the Grand Mosque, boasting a minaret soaring 25-metres (82-feet) high and room for up to 7,000 worshippers, built in the city's northern Saint-Louis area.

A French court has annulled the construction permit for a mega-mosque in the southern city of Marseille, home to the largest Muslim community in France.
The court ruling represents a major setback for proponents of the mosque, which has long been touted as the biggest and most potent symbol of Islam's growing place in France -- and Europe.
The move comes as a French newspaper published the contents of a leaked intelligence report about the rise of Islam in Marseille. The document states that "even if the number of individuals who have been radicalized to the point of supporting the Jihadists is relatively low, Islamic fundamentalism has progressed to the point where it has won over the majority of the Muslim population" who live in the city and who now number over 250,000.
The Administrative Tribunal of Marseille ruled on October 27 that the mega-mosque project would have to be cancelled because of failures to meet urban-planning requirements. The court raised particular concerns over the project's failure to finalize a deal for a 450-space parking lot and to reassure planners that the mosque would fit in with the urban environment.
The tribunal noted "a lack of graphical material permitting the evaluation of the project's integration with neighbouring buildings, its visual impact and the treatment of access points and land."
The 22-million-euro ($31-million) project would have seen the Grand Mosque -- boasting a minaret soaring 25 meters (82 feet) high, and room for up to 7,000 worshippers in a vast prayer hall -- built on the north side of the city's old port in
the city's northern Saint-Louis area, an ethnically mixed neighborhood that suffers from poverty and high unemployment.
Several decades in the planning, the project was granted a construction permit in November 2009. At the time, city officials said the new mosque would help the Muslim community better integrate into the mainstream and foster a more moderate form of Islam.
The first cornerstone of the 8,300 square meter (92,000 square feet) project was laid in May 2010. The elaborate stone-laying ceremony was attended by Muslim religious leaders and local politicians, as well as more than a dozen diplomats from Muslim countries.
Full-scale construction of the Grand Mosque -- which was also to have included a Koranic school and a library, as well as a restaurant and tea room -- was scheduled to begin in February 2012.
But the project has faced stiff opposition from local residents and businesses. Opponents of the Grand Mosque have argued that it would be out of harmony with the neighborhood's economic and social fabric.
Local residents also pointed to potential parking problems surrounding the building. Authorities have estimated that the number of people attending Friday prayers at the mosque could reach 1,500, a figure that could rise to up to 14,000 on Muslim holidays.
The court decision comes as the French newspaper La Marseillaise on October 24 published extracts of a leaked intelligence report about the state of Islam in Marseille, France's second-largest city, where the Muslim population has reached 25% of the total population.
The confidential seven-page document, drafted by domestic intelligence in the French administrative department of Bouches-du-Rhône in March 2011, focuses on the phenomenon of Muslim street prayers in Marseille, but also provides a more general assessment of Islam in the city.
The document also addresses a specific mosque on Gaillard Street in the 3rd district of Marseille that is associated with Muslim immigrants from the Comoros Islands, an archipelago island nation in the Indian Ocean that gained independence from France in 1975.
"Far from being Comorian, this mosque promotes Islam marked by tribalism. It is clear that this mosque is a direct obstacle to the proper integration of Comorians in the Marseilles area, a kind of voluntary marginalization," the document states.
The Koranic school associated with this mosque is also criticised: "Far from awaking spirituality and minds, it locks them even further into a cultural loop and thus increases their communitarian inwardness."
The report describes the Muslim population of Marseille as a "marginalized population, poorly informed, uncultured and with a limited understanding even of their own religion, finding themselves in the hands of self-proclaimed imams, barely more competent than their flocks but sufficiently charismatic to obtain their blind obedience."
The document also calls for fewer mosques in Marseille. It states: "The abundance of prayer rooms in Marseille is largely a reflection of divisions of all kinds: obediential as well as nationalistic, ethnic and even business strategies that set Muslims in Marseille against each other."
The proposed solution is to "refocus the places of worship" which would "permit a professionalization of the imams, achieve economies of scale and force the Islamic federations and sects to reach a consensus. It would marginalize extra-national interests and also facilitate relations and observations with our institutional partners. Not more mosques but better mosques."
Nevertheless, the report warns against the construction of a grand mosque: "This building would dominate an entire part of the city which is not very elevated. It would be visible from most of the surrounding main roads and would perform the call to prayer by using a massive beam of light that would be seen across Marseille. The mosque is generally considered aggressive to the point where a local referendum on the matter would give results at least equivalent and perhaps more emphatic than the voting organized in the Swiss confederation last year [the Swiss vote to ban minarets]."
The report says that building new mosques is only a solution if their architecture is "discreet" in order to "limit their visual impact on the urban landscape."
The document concludes by stating that Muslims in France appear to want the state to intervene in religious matters: "It is interesting to note that the majority of Muslims find it natural for the state to organize religious practice, even by force if necessary, and that many of them even declare that they do not understand the neutrality of France in this matter."

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Great Mahmudiye Mosque Constanţa Romania




A landmark of the Turkish role in the region, the Great Mahmudiye Mosque (known also as Carol I Mosque) of Constanţa was built between 1910-1912, during the reign of King Carol I, as a copy of Konieh Mosque (Anatolia - Turkey), unique in the whole Dobrudja area. The faithful name it "Kral camisi" or "Geamia Regelui" (King's Mosque).

The mosque is the first building in Romania made of reinforced concrete, by engineer Gogu Constantinescu and architect Victor Ştefănescu. It is designed in Egyptian-Byzantine style, with some Romanian architectural features, making it one of the most distinctive mosques in the area. It features a 50 meter high minaret, built in Moorish style, which offers a stunning view of the old downtown and harbor. Five times a day, the muezzin climbs 140 steps to the top of the minaret to call the faithful to prayer.
The mosque is the seat of the Mufti, the spiritual leader of the 55,000 Muslims (Turks and Tatars by origin) who live along the coast of the Dobrudja region. The centerpiece of the interior is a large Persian carpet, over 200 years old, a gift from Sultan Abdul Hamid. Handmade woven at the Hereche Handicraft Center in Turkey, it is one of the largest carpets in Europe (9x16m), weighing 500 kg. The Carol I Mosque in Constanţa is the center of Islam in Romania.

http://surprising-romania.blogspot.com/2009/08/great-mahmudiye-mosque.html