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Updated:Tue. Mar. 21, 2006

 

Cradle of Civilization

The Mosques of Iraq

By Aisha El-Awady
Freelance Writer

16/08/2003 

In Islam, mosques are not just places of worship and prayer; rather, they take on a comprehensive role in Muslims’ lives. Historically, mosques were places of education, where both religious and worldly sciences were taught. Students used to set off to Iraq from countries such as Syria, India and Persia to study the sciences of pharmacology, engineering, astronomy, etc. at the mosques of Baghdad. In addition to their role in education, mosques gradually took on other functions such as the lodging of students, who came from outside the city, and assisting students financially. Mosques were thus called madrasas.


In the aftermath of the US-UK war on Iraq, mosques have been playing a new role in the lives of Iraqis.


The establishment of such Islamic schools (madrasas) in Iraq mainly took place during the Abbasid realm. One of the most famous of these madrasas is the Mustansiriyya Madrasa which was built between 1228 and 1233 A.D. It was the first college to be constructed for the four canonical schools of Sunni law and was named after the caliph Al-Mustansir. Known for its famous astronomical clock, which gave the hourly positioning of the sun and moon, it was the most prominent university in the Islamic world.

Iraq has many well-known mosques – both old and new – such as the Sheikh Marouf Mosque, the Khafafin Mosque and the Mosque of Prophet Youniss – thought to be the burial place of the prophet Youniss (Johan). One of the mosques in Baghdad best known for its elaborate, glazed tile work, beautiful calligraphy and splendid arabesques is Al-Kadhimain Mosque. Built in the 16th century, Al-Kadhimain mosque stands in Al-Kadhimain district in the west of Baghdad. More recently built mosques include the Martyrs Mosque, the 14th of Ramadan Mosque and Um Al-Ma`arik Mosque.

The Great Mosque of Samarra

Around 74 years after the establishment of Baghdad (which was established during the Abbasid Caliphate), the Caliph Al-Mu`tasim Billah established a new capital 125km north of Baghdad; it was called Samarra. It was the capital of Iraq from 836 to 892 A.D.

The most glorious days of Samarra were during the reign of Caliph Al-Mutawakkil (A.D. 847-861) when the Arabs excelled in science, literature and art. The Balkwara Palace, the Ma`shouq palace and Abu-Dalaf Mosque prove the glory of Sammara in those days. Perhaps the most remarkable structure that was built by the Abbasids there is the Great Mosque, along with its distinguished minaret known as Al-Malwiya, or the spiral.

Al-Mutawakkil built the Great Mosque in 852 A.D. to accommodate the large number of Muslims who came to pray. With an area of 38,000 square meters and a capability of accommodating eighty thousand people, it became the largest mosque in the world. It was built using bricks and clay. Its walls surround a rectangular area measuring 240 x 158 meters. The walls have a height of 10 meters and a thickness of 2.65 meters. The mosque has 23 doors: five in the north corner, eight in each of the east and west corners, and two doors in the niche wall.

The mosque has a spiral, 52-meter high minaret that stands 27 meters away from the northern wall of the mosque. The spiral structure has a quadrangular base with each side measuring 32 meters in length. The spiral ramp turns anti-clockwise making five rotations that end in a small circular room.

The Leaning Minaret of the Nurid Mosque

Nurridin Zangi, the Turkish ruler of Mosul, built the Great Nurid Mosque in 1172 A.D. The outstanding feature of this mosque is its 59-meter high minaret, which stands at the north-west corner of the mosque. It leans 8 feet off the perpendicular, much like the tower of Pisa in Italy, which leans 13 feet off the perpendicular. This is how it earned its Arabic name Al-Hadba (the humped).

The exact cause of the tilt is not known; however, many assumptions have been made in this regard. Some place the blame on the northwesterly winds; others believe that the cause of the tilt is the gypsum used to keep the bricks in place. Another theory implies that when the baked bricks that encased the minaret were exposed to the sun, they expanded, crushing those that were shaded and causing the cylindrical minaret to lean southward.

It is feared that the leaning minaret, that has brought fame to the city of Mosul, may soon collapse if measures to save it are not taken.

The Italian company Fondedile attempted to restore the minaret in 1981 by planting steel braces inside it; the steel braces extended into the ground below the minaret. Yet, as a result of the bombing of Mosul during the Iran-Iraq war, underground pipes burst causing sewage to seep in the soil beneath the minaret, something that weakened it and led to a further leaning of 16 inches.

New Role for the Mosques of Iraq

In the aftermath of the US-UK war on Iraq, and in the light of the widespread looting that Iraq witnessed following the fall of Baghdad, mosques have been playing a new role in the lives of Iraqis, a role that demonstrates the positive impact mosques can have on Muslims. Imams of different Iraqi mosques have asked looters to return stolen items and have urged the Iraqi youth to volunteer to clean and patrol streets and to help return stolen items.

The success of this new, positive role of the mosques can be seen all over Iraq; for example, the Haq Mosque’s hawza group saved 300,000 volumes from the National Library of Iraq by transferring them to their mosque in Revolution City. At Al-Husayniyah District, boxes of medicine and hospital supplies and equipment were returned to Majd Al-Arab Primary School.

Sources:

Aisha El-Awady has a bachelor’s degree in medicine from Cairo University and is currently preparing her MA and working as instructor of Parasitology in the Faculty of Medicine. She may be contacted at: aawady@islam-online.net.


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