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Essential
Architecture- Israel
Al-Aqsa Mosque |
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architect
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location
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Temple Mount, Jerusalem |
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date
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7th-11th century |
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style
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Islamic |
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construction
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stone |
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type
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Mosque |
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Interior of Al Aqsa mosque showing mihrab |
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The Al-Aqsa Mosque (Arabic: Al-Masjid Al-Aqsa, commonly refers to the
southern part of the complex of religious buildings in Jerusalem known
as either Al-Haram al-Qudsi al-Sharif (the Noble Sanctuary) to Arabs and
Muslims, although in reality the whole area of the Noble Sanctuary is
considered Al-Aqsa Mosque and the entire precincts inviolable according
to Islamic law. It is known as Har ha-Bayit (the Temple Mount) to Jews
and some Christians. It is located in East Jerusalem, a disputed
territory governed as part of Israel since its annexation in 1967 but
claimed by the Palestinian Authority as part of a future State of
Palestine. The largest mosque in Jerusalem, its congregation building
can accommodate about 5,000 people worshipping inside it, while the
whole Al-Aqsa Mosque compound area may accomodate hundreds of thousands.
The government of Israel has granted a Muslim Council, Waqf, full
administration of the site. Since the beginning of Al-Aqsa Intifada in
2000, non-Muslims are barred from entering the site.
The congregation building of Al-Aqsa Mosque is sometimes referred to as
Jami al-Masjid al-Aqsa or al-Masjid al-Qibli. The term al-Masjid Al-Aqsa
proper is the general and oldest name for the precinct of al-Haram al-Qudsi
al-Sharif. The name al-Haram al-Qudsi al-Sharif was coined later by the
Mamluks.
Origin of name
The name "Al-Aqsa Mosque" translates to "the farthest mosque" ("the
remote mosque" according to some translations, such as that of Muhammad
Asad), and is associated with the Isra and Mi'raj, a journey made around
621 by the Islamic Prophet Muhammad (c. 570-632) on the winged steed
Buraq, which was brought to him by the Archangel Gabriel. This is often
referred to in English as Muhammad's "night journey". According to
Qur'anic verse, Muhammad took the journey in a single night from "the
sacred mosque" (in Mecca) to "the farthest mosque" (al-Masjid al-Aqsa).
From a rock there, Muhammad ascended to heaven, accompanied by Gabriel,
touring heaven and receiving the commandments, including the five daily
prayers, before returning to Earth and back to Mecca to communicate them
to the faithful.
The hadith narrator Imam Muslim reports that the Prophet's companion
Anas ibn Malik mentions that the Prophet said:
I came to the Buraq, I rode it until we arrived at Bayt al-Maqdis. I
tied it to where the Prophets tie, then I entered the masjid I prayed
two Rakaah, and then ascended to the heavens.
This story was to become the raison d'etre for Islam's two most
important shrines in Jerusalem, the Al Aqsa Mosque and Dome of the Rock,
and the driving force behind Muslim ambitions to rule the city to this
day.
In this regard, the leading muslim scholar Ibn Taymiyah reports:
al-Masjid al-Aqsa is a name that refers to the whole area of the masjid
that was built by Suleiman Peace Be Upon him. Some people today use the
term to refer to the prayer house built by Umar bin al-Khattab at the
front of this area... When Umar asked Kaab: Where to buid a prayer house
for the muslims. Kaab replied: behind the Rock. Umar said: No, but I
will build it in front of the Rock because we always pray at the front
of mosques. Therefore, Imams usually if they enter the masjid area, they
gather people and stand to lead the prayers in the house built by Umar.
The muslims scholar al Tabari reports in Tarikh al-Tabari:
Umar Ibn al-Khattab asked Kaab: Where should we pray? He said: towards
the Rock. Umar replied: Oh, Kaab! You are glorifying Judaism. But I will
make the Qibla of this masjid at its front just like the Prophet of
Allah made the Qibla of all our masajid at its front.
Regarding the name, other sources mention the following:
"Originally the term al-Masjid al-Aqsa was used to refer to the whole
area of al-Haram al-Qudsi al-Sharif with all what it holds from
establishments including the Dome of the Rock built by Abd al-Malik ibn
Marwan in 72 Hijri/691 A.D., which is considered among the most notable
Islamic structures. Today, the term al-Masjid al-Aqsa is also used to
refer to the large Mosque in the southern part of al-Haram al-Qudsi."[2]
... "The Dome of the Rock structure resides at the heart of al-Masjid
al-Aqsa, in the southeaster part of the Old City of Jerusalem, which is
wide rectangular area extending 480 meters from the north to the south,
and from the east to the west about 300 meters. This area constituites
what is almost fifth of the Old City."[3]
Islamic Background
According to the teachings of Islam, God in the the Qur'an used the word
Mosque when referring to the sites established by Abraham and his
children as houses of worship to God centuries before the revelation of
the Qur'an. The first of these spots is al-Masjid al-Haram in Mecca and
the second is al-Masjid al-Aqsa in Jerusalem. Before Mecca and Jerusalem
came under muslim control in 630 A.D. and 638 A.D., the site of al-Masjid
al-Haram had the Kaabah which was established by Abraham and Ishmael but
at the time of Muhammad was used by pagans. In Jerusalem the site of al-Masjid
al-Aqsa, which was under Roman control, was an abandoned and abused area
by the Romans but on which a house of worship established originally by
the prophet Jacob forty years after his grandfather Abraham established
the Kaabah and was used by succeeding prophets like David, Solomon, and
Zacharia.
The story of Abraham and Ishmael is mentioned in
Qur'an as follows:
22:26 For, when We assigned unto Abraham the site of this House, [We
said unto him:] “Do not ascribe divinity to aught beside Me!” and:
“Purify My House for those who will walk around it, and those who will
stand before it [in meditation], and those who will bow down and
prostrate themselves [in prayer].”
Waith bawwana liibraheema makana albayti an la tushrik bee shayan
watahhir baytiya lilttaifeena waalqaimeena waalrrukkaAAi alssujoodi
2:127 And remember Abraham and Isma'il raised the foundations of the
House (With this prayer): "Our Lord! Accept (this service) from us: For
Thou art the All-Hearing, the All-knowing.
Waith yarfaAAu ibraheemu alqawaAAida mina albayti waismaAAeelu rabbana
taqabbal minna innaka anta alssameeAAu alAAaleemu
Abu Dharr [ra] is quoted as saying, I asked the beloved Prophet Muhammad
[peace be upon him] which was the first mosque on earth? ‘The Sacred
Mosque (in Makkah),’ he said. And then which, I asked? ‘Masjid al Aqsa,’
he said. I further asked, what was the time span between the two? ‘Forty
years,’ the Prophet [peace be upon him] replied. (Imam Muslim)
Al-Aqsa mosque or the Holy Temple is mentioned explicitly in one verse
of the Koran and alluded several others. Some of the verses are shown
here in the order in which they appear in the Quran rather than the
order in which they were revealed to the Prophet Muhammad:
3:37 And thereupon her Sustainer accepted the girl-child with goodly
acceptance, and caused her to grow up in goodly growth, and placed her
in the care of Zachariah. Whenever Zachariah visited her in the
sanctuary [of the Mosque], he found her provided with food. He would
ask: "O Mary, whence came this unto thee?" She would answer: "It is from
God; behold, God grants sustenance unto whom He wills, beyond all
reckoning."
Fataqabbalaha rabbuha biqaboolin hasanin waanbataha nabatan hasanan
wakaffalaha zakariyya kullama dakhala AAalayha zakariyya almihraba
wajada AAindaha rizqan qala ya maryamu anna laki hatha qalat huwa min
AAindi Allahi inna Allaha yarzuqu man yashao bighayri hisabin
3:39 Thereupon, as he stood praying in the sanctuary [of the Mosque],
the angels called out unto him: "God sends thee the glad tiding of [the
birth of] John, who shall confirm the truth of a word from God, and
[shall be] outstanding among men, and utterly chaste, and a prophet from
among the righteous."
Fanadathu almalaikatu wahuwa qaimun yusallee fee almihrabi anna Allaha
yubashshiruka biyahya musaddiqan bikalimatin mina Allahi wasayyidan
wahasooran wanabiyyan mina alssaliheena
17:1 LIMITLESS in His glory is He who transported His servant by night
from the Inviolable House of Worship [at Mecca] to the Remote House of
Worship [,at Jerusalem] - the environs of which We had blessed -so that
We might show him some of Our symbols: for, verily, He alone is
all-hearing, all-seeing.
Subhana allathee asra biAAabdihi laylan mina almasjidi alharami ila
almasjidi alaqsa allathee barakna hawlahu linuriyahu min ayatina innahu
huwa alssameeAAu albaseeru
17:7 [And We said:] "If you persevere in doing good, you will but be
doing good to yourselves; and if you do evil, it will be [done] to
yourselves." And so, when the prediction of the second [period of your
iniquity] came true, [We raised new enemies against you, and allowed
them] to disgrace you utterly, and to enter the Mosque [Temple] as
[their forerunners] had entered it once before, and to destroy with
utter destruction all that they had conquered.
In ahsantum ahsantum lianfusikum wain asatum falaha faitha jaa waAAdu
alakhirati liyasoooo wujoohakum waliyadkhuloo almasjida kama dakhaloohu
awwala marratin waliyutabbiroo ma AAalaw tatbeeran
19:11 Thereupon he came out of the sanctuary unto his people and
signified to them [by gestures]: "Extol His limitless glory by day and
by night!"
Fakharaja AAala qawmihi mina almihrabi faawha ilayhim an sabbihoo
bukratan waAAashiyyan
38:21 AND YET, has the story of the litigants come within thy ken - [the
story of the two] who surmounted the walls of the sanctuary [in which
David prayed]?
Wahal ataka nabao alkhasmi ith tasawwaroo almihraba
Restoration of the Mosque site by Omar
Before Jerusalem came under the control of muslims in 638 A.D., it was
widely understood that al-Aqsa mosque is the same as David's sanctuary.
When Omar bin al-Khattab was given the key to the city by the Patriarch
of Jerusalem, Sophronius, he signed with him a treaty that is known as
the “Covenant of Omar” and he later asked the Patriarch of Jerusalem to
show him what Omar spelled out as “Masjid Dawood” (Mosque of David).
This was called David's sanctuary or prayer niche (mihrab Dawud), in the
Qur'an (38:21). David chose the site on which Solomon built his temple.
It was an abandoned place and abused by the Romans and the Church at the
time. The Patriarch took him to the door of the sanctuary which was
almost blocked due to the trash that was placed at the door. Omar looked
left and right and said: “Allah is Great, I swear by the one who hold my
soul in his hand that this is the Mosque of David which the prophet of
Allah described to us after his night journey.” The Caliph Omar started
cleaning up the place. He asked Kaab al-Ahbar, who was a Jewish Rabbi
that has converted to Islam and came with Omar from Medina, to guide him
to the place of the Rock. Omar used his cloths to remove the trash
covering the Rock, and other muslims did what Omar was doing. After
cleaning up the place, Omar went to the al-Mihrab (a chamber inside the
Mosque where the Imam usually stands) and started praying and reading
Surat Sad from Quran.
Construction of the Congregational Mosque
The term the farthest mosque is considered in Islamic tradition as the
general name for the precinct of al-Haram al-Sharif ("The Noble Sacred
Enclosure") in Jerusalem, as well as the specific name for the
congregational mosque located at its southern edge.
Umar (c. 581-644), the Muslim caliph who conquered Jerusalem in 637,
wanted a place of prayer that does not infringe on nearby Christian and
Jewish worship places. That place, to the south of the rock, was
developed into a mosque. Sometime between 687-691, Caliph Abd al-Malik
built a shrine over the sacred rock, and it was named Qubbat As-Sakhrah,
which means "The Dome of the Rock." Some years later, in 709-715,
Umayyad caliph al-Walid, son of Abd al-Malik, built, renovated, and
expanded the mosque south of the Dome, and at this time called the
mosque al-masjid al-aqsa, which means "the farthest mosque".
The contemporary congregational mosque of al-Aqsa is a result of
different stages of construction and renovations. It is usually agreed
upon that 'Abd al-Malik (685-705), the [[Umayyad Caliph who was the
patron of the Dome of the Rock, started the construction of al-Aqsa
Mosque at the end of the 7th century. A major building phase took place
during the time of the caliphate of his son, al-Walid (709-715). The
building suffered from several major earthquakes and was renovated and
reconstructed during the Abbasid period by Caliph al-Mahdi (775-785) and
possibly by Caliph al-Mansur (754-775).
A further reconstruction was executed during the Fatimid period, in the
11th century. During the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem the mosque was
considered as Templum Salomonis (Royal Palace of Solomon) and it served
as the palace of the Kings of Jerusalem and later as the dwelling place
of the Knights Templars. At the same time the Dome of the Rock was
regarded as the Templum Domini (The Temple of the Lord). Moreover,
several major restorations are known to have taken place during the 14th
and 20th century.
The building became known as Masjid al-Aqsa, (Al-Aqsa Mosque), although
in reality the whole area of the Noble Sanctuary is considered Al-Aqsa
Mosque, the entire precincts inviolable according to Islamic law. Every
Friday prayer, the Al-Aqsa Mosque building overflows, with thousands of
worshippers who must make their prayers outside in the courtyards of the
vast open expanse of the Noble Sanctuary.
Damage from earthquakes in 1927 and 1936 necessitated an almost complete
rebuilding of the mosque, in the process of which ancient sections of
the original mosque were brought to light.
It has been modified several times to protect it from earthquakes, which
sometimes occur in the area, and to adapt to the changing needs of the
local population. The form of the present structure has remained
essentially the same since it was reconstructed by the Khalif Al-Dhahir
in 1033 AD. It is said that he did not alter it from the previous
architecture except to narrow it on each side.
Analysis of wooden beams and panels removed from the building during
renovations in the 1930s shows they are made from Cedar of Lebanon and
Cyprus. Radiocarbon dating indicates a large range of ages, some as old
as 9th century BC, showing that some of the wood had previously been
used in older buildings.
Mark Twain during his travels in Jerusalem wrote that parts of the Al
Aqsa Mosque used stones excavated from the Mount and which were a part
of the Jewish Temple :
"Every where about the Mosque of Omar are portions of pillars, curiously
wrought altars, and fragments of elegantly carved marble--precious
remains of Solomon's Temple. These have been dug from all depths in the
soil and rubbish of Mount Moriah, and the Moslems have always shown a
disposition to preserve them with the utmost care.... to enter the
Mosque of Omar and see the costly marbles that once adorned the inner
Temple was annulled. The designs wrought upon these fragments are all
quaint and peculiar, and so the charm of novelty is added to the deep
interest they naturally inspire. One meets with these venerable scraps
at every turn, especially in the neighboring Mosque el Aksa, into whose
inner walls a very large number of them are carefully built for
preservation. These pieces of stone, stained and dusty with age, dimly
hint at a grandeur we have all been taught to regard as the princeliest
ever seen on earth; and they call up pictures of a pageant that is
familiar to all imaginations--camels laden with spices and
treasure--beautiful slaves, presents for Solomon's harem--a long
cavalcade of richly caparisoned beasts and warriors--and Sheba's Queen
in the van of this vision of "Oriental magnificence.".
Modern significance
Since part of the mosque's extended surrounding wall is the Western Wall
venerated by Jews, this relatively small spot in Jerusalem is a source
of friction. There have been times when Muslims worshipping at the
mosque threw rocks downward at the Jews below at the Western Wall. A
group of Jews known as the Temple Mount Faithful have expressed a desire
to rebuild the ancient Jewish Temple in that area.
In the morning of August 21, 1969, a fire at Masjid al-Aqsa, gutted the
southeastern wing of the mosque. The fire destroyed a priceless
one-thousand-year-old wood and ivory pulpit (minbar) that had been sent
from Aleppo by Saladin. The "twin" of this minbar (Saladin had them both
made at the same time) is still extant in the mosque at the Cave of the
Patriarchs in Hebron.
Michael Dennis Rohan, a tourist from Australia, was arrested for the
arson attack on August 23, 1969. Rohan was a Protestant follower of an
evangelical sect known as the Church of God. By his own admission, Rohan
hoped to hasten the coming of the Messiah by burning down the al-Aqsa
Mosque. Rohan told the court that he acted as "the Lord's emissary" on
divine instructions, in accordance with the Book of Zechariah, and that
he had tried to destroy the al-Aqsa Mosque in order to rebuild the
Jewish Temple on the Temple Mount. He was hospitalized in a mental
institution, found to be insane and was later deported from Israel.
The Al-Aqsa Intifada is named after the mosque (due to Ariel Sharon's
controversial visit to the Temple Mount in September 2000), as are the
Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades.
Israeli authorities have foiled the terrorist organization Makhteret's
plans to blow up the al-Aqsa Mosque, Makhteret is a branch of the
right-wing Jewish organization Kach.
Some Muslims have accused Israel of weakening the walls of the mosque
during archaeological excavations that began in 1967 and continue today.
In response to concerns about the structure's stability, renovations are
being carried out by the Islamic Waqf Foundation. Jews and Israel claim
that the Waqf are performing irresponsible excavations weakening the
structures stability and destroying Temple Relics and other historical
artifacts. [6] (Hebrew)
The Muslim Waqf is in charge of the Al Aqsa mosque, along with most of
the important Muslim shrines in Israel.
The mosque consists today of a seven bay hypostyle hall with several
additional small halls to the west and east of the southern section of
the building. Unlike most hypostyle-style mosques the building does not
have a clearly delineated courtyard unless one considers the whole Haram
as its court. It is capped with a silver dome, made of lead sheets,
which together with the golden dome of the Dome of the Rock, formulate
the icon of the Haram in Jerusalem.
First qibla
The historical significance of Al-Aqsa Mosque is further emphasised by
the fact that Muslims used to turn towards Al-Haram al-Sharif when they
prayed.
As it was the place at which Muhammad performed the first commanded
prayer after Isra and Mi'raj, it became the qibla (direction) that
Muslims faced during prayer and continued to be so for sixteen or
seventeen months, 6:60:13. After a revelation recorded in the Koran the
qibla was then turned towards Mecca:
We have seen you turning your face about the sky (searching for the
right direction). We now assign a qibla that is pleasing to you.
Henceforth, you shall turn your face towards the Sacred Mosque. Wherever
you may be, all of you shall turn your faces towards it. Those who
received the previous scripture, know that this is the truth from their
Lord. God is never unaware of anything they do. Even if you show the
followers of the scripture every kind of miracle, they will not follow
your qibla. Nor shall you follow their qibla. They do not even follow
each others qibla. If you acquiesce to their wishes, after the knowledge
that has come to you, you will belong with the transgressors. (Koran
2:144;145)
For this reason Al-Haram al-Sharif, including the Al-Aqsa Mosque, is
known to Muslims as the "First of the Two Qiblas".
The altering of the qibla was precisely the reason Caliph Umar, despite
identifying the Rock upon his arrival at the Temple Mount in 638 neither
prayed facing it nor built any structure upon it. This was because the
significance of that particular spot on the Temple Mount was over in
Islamic jurisprudence after the change of qibla event in Islamic
ideology. However, because of the holiness of Temple Mount itself Caliph
Umar did make a small mosque in the southern corner of its platform
which initially was called ‘mosque of Umer’ and today is known as ‘Masjid
Al-Aqsa’, taking caution to avoid the Rock to come between the mosque
and the direction of Kaaba so that Muslims would face only Mecca when
they prayed [5]
In another illustration of how significance of the “first qibla” was
diminished in Islam, the following hadith states:
Narrated 'Abdullah bin 'Umar: People say, "Whenever you sit for
answering the call of nature, you should not face the qibla or Bait-ul-Maqdis
(Jerusalem)." I told them. "Once I went up the roof of our house and I
saw Allah's Apostle answering the call of nature while sitting on two
bricks facing Bait-ul-Maqdis (See Holy Temple, Hebrew: ??? ?????, Bet
HaMikdash)...1:4:147
The importance of Al-Aqsa in Islam
Masjid-al-Aqsa is one of the holiest site in Islam because it belongs to
the history of Islam since Abraham until now. It is where, according to
Muslims, Abraham (the patriarch of the Abrahamic faiths) established his
covenant with God and spread the teaching of monotheism. Muslims respect
all the Prophets revered by Judaism and Christianity and their venerated
places are also central to the ethos of Islam. Solomon was a prophet and
revered by Muslims.
Judaism belief in the Temple of Solomon (Haykal Sulaiman) as the Noble
Sanctuary is coherent with the Islam believe in Masjid al-Aqsa because
the literal meaning of masjid does not mean a building or any specific
place. The word Masjid derived from the root word "Saa" "Jaa" "Daa" in
arabic which means (to prostrate) (act of worship). In this case not
only the Mosque of Umar is considered as Masjid al-Aqsa but the entire
precinct too. Muslims belief that the Temple of Solomon meant by the
Jews was a Masjid and not a temple because Islam believe that all
prophet conveyed the same messege and prostrated to God during prayers.
It was the site where Muhammad ascended to heaven during Isra and Mi'raj.
(The main place, however, where Muhammad received most revelations,
including the first, was in the cave of Hira where he meditated
frequently during the first forty years of his life.)
The Mosque of Umar reminds all about the atrocity and devestation
suffered by the inhabitant of Jerusalem during the Roman occupation. It
also signifies freedom of religion achieved by Jews, Christians and
Muslims a long time before.
It was the first qibla, the second house of God after Kaabah in Mecca,
and the third holiest site in Islam.
Second house of prayer established on Earth
Imam Muslim quotes Abu Dharr as saying:
"I asked the beloved Prophet Muhammad which was the first "mosque" [i.e.
house of prayer] on Earth?"
"The Sacred House of Prayer (Masjid al-Haram), i.e. Kaaba)", he said.
"And then which", I asked?
"The Furthest House of Prayer (Masjid al Aqsa, i.e. Holy Temple)", he
said.
I further asked, "what was the time span between the two?"
"Forty years", the Prophet replied.
Third sacred mosque by its virtue
The Sahih Bukhari quotes Abu al-Dardaa as saying: "the Prophet of Allah
Muhammad said a prayer in the Sacred Mosque (in Mecca) is worth 100,000
prayers; a prayer in my mosque (in Medina) is worth 1,000 prayers; and a
prayer in al-Masjid al-Aqsa is worth 500 prayers more than in an any
other mosque.
Abu Huraira [ra] is quoted as saying that Allah’s Messenger [peace be
upon him] said, ‘set out deliberately on a journey only to three
mosques: this mosque of mine (in Medina), the Sacred Mosque (in Makkah)
and the Masjid al Aqsa (in Jerusalem) (Bukhari & Muslim)
As part of another tradition, on the authority of Maimunah bint Sa’d, it
is reported that, upon being asked about a person who is unable to
travel to the Al-Aqsa Mosque he replied: "The Messenger of Allah (Muhammed)
said, ‘He should make a gift of oil to be burnt therein, for he who
gives a gift to the Al-Aqsa Mosque will be like one who has prayed
Salaah (five daily ritual prayers of Islam) therein.’ [6]
Location of the “farthest mosque”
The "farthest mosque" in verse 17:1 of the Qur'an is traditionally
interpreted by Muslims as referring to the site at the Noble Sanctuary
in Jerusalem on which the mosque of that name now stands. According to
this tradition, the term used for mosque, "masjid", literally means
"place of prostration", and includes monotheistic places of worship such
as Solomon's Temple, which in verse 17:7 (in the same sura) is described
as a "masjid". Many Western historians regard this as the originally
intended interpretation, for instance Heribert Busse [7] and Neal
Robinson [8]
However some disagree arguing that at the time this verse of the Qur'an
was recited (traditionally at around the year 621), many Muslims
understood the phrase "furthest mosque" as a poetic phrase for either a
mosque established as an exclusively Muslim place of worship - in
existence during Muhammad’s lifetime - (such as Medina [7], Jirana [9],
or Kufa [8]), or a mosque in Heaven, or as a metaphor.
A number of factors are enumerated why they find it unlikely that this
verse referred to a location in Jerusalem. [9][10]
There were already two places that Muslim tradition of that time period
called "the farthest mosque"; one was the mosque in Medina [10] and the
other was the mosque in the town of Jirana, which Muhammed is said to
have visited in 630 [11]
Even over a century later, Islamic scholars continued to locate the
"farthest mosque" with a site inside Arabia, such as al-Waqidi who in
his 9th-century book Kitab al-Tarikh wa al-Maghazi (Book of History and
Campaigns) preserved the tradition locating it in Jirana
No mosque existed in Jerusalem during Muhammad's lifetime. It was 6
years after Muhammad’s death that the Muslims conquered Jerusalem. Only
then were the foundations of the mosque laid by the Second Khalif Umar
ibn al-Khattab while he was in Jerusalem. The actual Mosque was
completed by Abd al-Malik ibn Marwan and his son Al-Walid I, 68 years
after Muhammad’s death.
A passage from the biography of Umar ibn al-Khattab states:
The Patriarch of Jerusalem handed over the keys of the city of Jerusalem
to Umar. The Muslims were now the masters of Jerusalem… As Umar entered
the city he was greeted by the citizens with great enthusiasm. Umar said
that he wanted to be led to some place where he could offer thanksgiving
prayer to God. He was led to a church but refused to pray there on the
ground that that would set a precedent for the Muslims of the following
generations to forcibly convert churches into mosques... Umar stayed in
Jerusalem for a few days…he founded a mosque at an elevated place in the
city. This mosque came to be known as Umar's Mosque.
The above passage informs us that there was no mosque in Jerusalem to
pray in when Umar entered the city. He laid the foundation of the first
ever mosque in Jerusalem.
The Koranic inscriptions that make up a 240-meter mosaic frieze inside
the Dome of the Rock do not include Sura 17:1 and the story of the Night
Journey, suggesting that as late as 692 the idea of Jerusalem as the
lift-off for the Night Journey had not yet been established. This is a
strange omission since Muslims claim that the Dome of the Rock was
erected in commemoration of this alleged event. The inscriptions that do
mention the Night Journey are later additions made by Abdul Hamid II in
1876, nearly eleven centuries later.
Muhammad ibn al-Hanafiya (638-700), a close relative of Muhammad, is
quoted denigrating the notion that the prophet ever set foot on the Rock
in Jerusalem: "these damned Syrians," by which he means the Umayyads,
"pretend that God put His foot on the Rock in Jerusalem, though [only]
one person ever put his foot on the Rock, namely Abraham."[11]
Thus he asserts Muhammad never acended to heaven from the Rock in
Jerusalem and that another location was indeed meant by the "farthest
mosque".
When Muslims finally did conquer and occupy Jerusalem, they are not
known to have identified the Temple Mount with "the farthest mosque"
until 715. According to A.L. Tibawi, a Palestinian historian, in 715 the
Umayyads built a new mosque on the Temple Mount; they named this Mosque
al-masjid al-aqsa, or "farthest mosque" in order to "give reality to the
figurative name used in the Koran."
In October 2003 an Egyptian government-owned weekly questioned the
sanctity of Jerusalem to Muslims, pointing out that the Prophet Muhammad
never made the miraculous "night journey " to the city. According to Al-Qahira,
which is published by the Egyptian Ministry of Culture, the two mosques
on the Temple Mount were built only to divert the pilgrimage from Mecca
in the context of political rivalry between Muslim leaders:
When Abed al-Malik ibn Marwan became caliph and his rival Ibn al-Zubayr
held control of Hejaz, he feared that the people would be inclined
towards him [Ibn al-Zubayr] when they made pilgrimage [to Mecca],
because the only way they could enter Mecca and Medina was with Ibn al-
Zubayr's permission and under his control... Therefore, Abd al-Malik
prevented people from making pilgrimage until [Ibn al-Zubayr was
defeated and] the war ended. He began to build a large mosque in
Jerusalem... It is from this point in time that some transmitters of
traditions started to promote the religious significance of this mosque
and turn it into the 'third to the two holy mosques' [of Mecca and
Medina].
The article written by Egyptian columnist Ahmed Arafeh rejects the
established Islamic doctrine that Muhammad's celebrated night journey
took him from Mecca to Jerusalem. He argues that the journey mentioned
in the Koran's Surat al-Isra does not refer to a miraculous journey from
Mecca to Jerusalem, but to the prophet's emigration from Mecca to
Medina.[14]
There is an opinion among some Muslim scholars that "the farthest
mosque" in Qur'an actually points to the Temple of Solomon and not
Masjid Al-Aqsa, which was built by Omer Bin Khattab (c. 581-644), the
Muslim caliph who conquered Jerusalem in 637. However this had been
destroyed many centuries earlier. [15]
Even if Jerusalem was indeed intended, it was nevertheless a
“miraculous” occurrence, raising doubts whether Muhammed had ever
physically set foot in Jerusalem at all. This could be supported by the
hadith which states:
The Prophet said, "When the Quraish disbelieved me (concerning my night
journey), I stood up in Al-Hijr (the unroofed portion of the Ka'ba) and
Allah displayed Bait-ul-Maqdis (Jerusalem) before me, and I started to
inform them (Quraish) about its signs while looking at it." 6:60:233
Not only was it proving problematic for Muhammad himself to convince the
masses of his journey, but had he indeed visited Jerusalem he should
have been able to rely on his memory to describe Jerusalem, not on Allah
"displaying it before him".
It is widely believed amongst Muslims that the Night Journey was a
physical journey of Muhammad, but some Islamic scholars consider it as a
dream. They point to a verse in Qur'an: ...and We did not make the
vision which We showed you but a trial for men... 17:60 and a hadith
regarding the Night Journey in Sahih Bukhari: ...Allah's Apostle said,
"O Moses! By Allah, I feel shy of returning too many times to my Lord."
On that Gabriel said, "Descend in Allah's Name." The Prophet then woke
while he was in the Sacred Mosque (at Mecca). 9:93:608. They argue that
it was a mode of revelation for the Prophet in symbolic form for the
guidance of the Muslim nation. This event also foretold Muslims that God
would now raise Muslims up as a superpower and Jerusalem would soon fall
into their hands, which happened indeed within less than three decades
of this event.[16][17]
"Third holiest site"
Regarding "The Three Virtuous Mosques in Islam", the authentic Islamic
creed regarding the 'holiness' of any place is mentioned by the Prophet
Muhammad himself in many hadiths. Al-Bukhari reported in his authentic
Collection of hadiths (i.e. Sahih al-Bukhari) that the Prophet (peace be
upon him) said, "The rihaal must not be fixed (i.e. to go any where) [rihaal
means 'luggage and provision a traveler usually takes with him in a long
journey] except to three mosques: al-Masjid al-Haram (in Makkah), the
Messenger’s mosque (in Madinah) and al-Aqsa mosque (in Jerusalem). "
(No.1189)
In this hadith, the Prophet prohibits Muslims from traveling to any
mosque to visit (as a holy site) and to get reward for it except to the
three mentioned mosques. No mosque carries special virtues other than
the three mosques, that is probably due to their origin and who built
them. We know that all of these mosques were built by God’s Messengers
(Ibrahim, Ya’qub and Muhammad). Once Abu Dharr asked the Prophet, "O
Allah's Apostle! Which mosque was built first?" He replied, "Al-masjid-ul-Haram."
I asked, "Which (was built) next?" He replied, "Al-masjid-ul-Aqsa." I
asked, "What was the period in between them?" He replied, "Forty
(years)." He then added, "Wherever the time for the prayer comes upon
you, perform the prayer, for all the earth is a place of worshipping for
you." (Sahih al-Bukhari, no. 3194) All other masjids that were built
after the Prophet’s mosque in Madinah are therefore the same in virtue
and they don’t carry any special status in Islam unless the Prophet
(peace be upon him) had said so, regardless who built the mosque or what
exist in inside it.
Throughout the history, humans built structures and claim that they are
holy with out giving any evidence of their ‘holiness’. In Islam, the
‘holy’ place is the place that Allah and His Messenger made holy, not
what people claim to be so.
While the Al-Aqsa mosque is considered the third site by its virtue in
mainstream Islam as discussed above, some sects consider one of the
following to be the "third holiest" site:
Imam Ali Mosque, Iraq
Imam Husayn Shrine, Iraq
Al Askari Mosque, Iraq
Rawze-e-Sharif, Afghanistan
Al Juwana Mosque, Saudi Arabia
Hala Sultan Tekke, Cyprus
Takht-i-Suleiman, Iran
Dargah Sharief, India
Kairouan, Tunisia
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