Difference between revisions of "Mosque" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Badshahi Mosque July 1 2005 pic32 by Ali Imran.jpg|thumb|300px|The [[Badshahi Masjid]] in [[Lahore]], [[Pakistan]] with an [[iwan]] at center, three domes, and five visible [[minaret]]s]]
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A '''mosque''' is a [[places of worship|place of worship]] for followers of the [[Islam|Islamic]] faith. [[Muslims]] all over the world often refer to the mosque by its name in [[Arabic]], '''masjid''' (pl. ''masajid'') ([[Arabic language|Arabic]]: مسجد — [[International Phonetic Alphabet|pronounced]]: /{{IPA|mas.ˈɡʲid}}/ or /{{IPA|mas.ˈʤid}}/). The Arabic word ''masjid'' means ''temple'' or ''place of worship'' and comes from the Arabic root ''sajada'' (root "s-j-d," meaning to bow or kneel) which means ''he worshipped'' in reference to the prostrations performed during [[salah|Islamic prayers]].<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=mosque|title=Mosque|work=Online Etymology Dictionary|accessdate=2006-04-16|last=Harper|first=Douglas}}</ref> The word mosque in English is used to represent all types of buildings dedicated for Islamic worship, although there is a distinction in Arabic between the smaller, privately-owned mosque and the larger, "collective" mosque (''masjid jami'') ([[Arabic]]: جامع), which has more community and social amenities.<ref name="teach-islam">{{cite book|title=Teach Yourself Islam |last=Maqsood |first=Ruqaiyyah Waris |id=ISBN 0-07-141963-2 |date=[[2003-04-22]] |edition=2nd edition |publisher=McGraw-Hill |pages=57-8, 72-5, 112-120 |location=Chicago}}</ref>  
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[[File:Insideofmasjedolharam2.JPG|thumb|right|300px|The Masjid al-Haram in [[Mecca]] as it exists today]]
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A '''mosque''' is a place of worship for Muslims (followers of [[Islam|Islam]]). Muslims often refer to the mosque by its Arabic name, '''masjid''' (Arabic: مسجد). Mosques originated on the [[Arabian Peninsula]], but now exist on all the world's inhabited [[continent]]s. The primary purposes of a mosque are to serve as a place where Muslims can come together for [[prayer]], celebrate special events, learn about Islam, and meet fellow believers. Mosques are also known for their Islamic [[architecture]] and may include elaborate [[dome]]s, [[minaret]]s, and prayer halls.  
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==Etymology==
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The Arabic word ''masjid'' means ''place of worship'' and derives from the verb ''sajada'' (root "s-j-d," meaning "to bow" or "to kneel") in reference to the prostrations performed during Islamic prayers. Either the word ''masjid'' itself (or at least the verb from which it is derived) was borrowed from [[Aramaic language|Aramaic]]. The word "m-s-g-d" is attested in Aramaic as early as the fifth century B.C.E., and the same word is later found in Nabataean inscriptions with the meaning "place of worship"; apparently, this Aramaic word originally meant "stele" or "sacred pillar."<ref name="Masdjid1">R. Hillenbrand, "Masdjid." ''Encyclopaedia of Islam Online''. Edited by P. J. Bearman, ''et al''. Brill Academic Publishers.</ref>
  
Mosques have evolved significantly from the open-air spaces that were the [[Quba Mosque]] and [[Masjid al-Nabawi]] in the [[7th century|seventh century]]. Today, most mosques have elaborate domes, [[minaret]]s, and prayer halls.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ucalgary.ca/applied_history/tutor/islam/learning/architecture.html |accessdate=2006-04-12 |title=The Islamic World to 1600: The Arts, Learning, and Knowledge (Architecture) |publisher=The University of Calgary}}</ref> At one time mosques could only be found in the [[Middle East]], but now one can find mosques on all six inhabited continents where Muslim communities exist. The mosque is, and has always been, the center of the [[ummah|Muslim community]]. For Muslims, they are not only places to worship and pray; they are also places to learn about [[Islam]] and meet other Muslims.<ref name="teach-islam" /> On many occasions, [[place of worship|places of worship]] of other faiths such as [[synagogue]]s or [[church]]es were converted into mosques.
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The modern-day English word "mosque," just like its equivalents in many other European languages, derives from the word ''masjid'' via [[Spanish language|Spanish]] ''mezquita''.<ref name="Masdjid1"/> The pre-cursors of the word "mosque" appeared during the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries and "Moseak," "muskey," "moschy," and "mos'keh" were just some of the variations that came into use until it was decided that "mosquee," imitating Middle French, Italian, and Old Spanish, would become the standard. In the early eighteenth century, the modern spelling became the most popular in the English language.
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
Although grand entryways and tall towers, or [[minaret]]s, are associated closely with mosques, they originally lacked these elaborate features. The first three mosques were very simple open spaces on the [[Arabian Peninsula]], but since that time over one thousand years ago, mosques have evolved to adapt to cultures and environments on all parts of the globe.
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The first three mosques were very simple open spaces on the [[Arabian Peninsula]]. Over the next one thousand years, mosques evolved significantly acquiring their now-distinctive features (such as grand entryways and tall towers, or [[minaret]]s) and adapting to cultures around the world.
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{{readout||right|250px|According to the [[Qu'ran]], the first mosque was the [[Kaaba]] built by [[Abraham]] on [[Allah]]'s instruction}}
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According to Islamic beliefs, the first mosque in the world was the [[Kaaba]] (or Kaabah), which was built by [[Abraham]] upon an order from [[Allah]]. The word "masjid" is found throughout the [[Qur'an]], most frequently with the reference to the sanctuary of Kaaba in the city of [[Mecca]]. The Qur'an applies the term "masjid" to places of worship of different religions, including [[Judaism]] and [[Christianity]]; in the same general meaning of a place of worship, the word is used in the ''[[hadith]]'', collections of Muslim traditions about the deeds and saying of their [[prophet]] [[Muhammad]] and his companions.<ref name="Masdjid1"/> When Muhammad lived in Mecca, he viewed Kaaba as his first and principal mosque and performed prayers there together with his followers. Even during times when the pagan [[Arab]]s performed their rituals inside the Kaaba, Muhammad always held the Kaaba in very high esteem. The Meccan tribe of [[Quraish]], which was responsible for guarding Kaaba, attempted to exclude Muhammad's followers from the sanctuary, which became a subject of Muslim complaints recorded in the Qur'an.<ref name="Masdjid1"/> When Muhammad conquered Mecca in 630, he converted Kaaba to a mosque, which has since become known as the Masjid al-Haram, or “Sacred Mosque.” The Masjid al-Haram was significantly expanded and improved in the early centuries of Islam in order to accommodate the increasing number of Muslims who either lived in the area or made the annual [[Hajj]], or pilgrimage, to Mecca, before it acquired its present shape in 1577 in the reign of the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] [[sultan]] Selim II.<ref name="Haram">Weinsinck, A. J., P. J. Bearman, T. Bianquis, C. E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel and W. P. Heinrichs (eds.), "Masdjid al-Haram," ''Encyclopaedia of Islam Online''  Brill Academic Publishers. {{ISSN|1573-3912}}</ref>
  
===The first mosques===
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[[File:Masjedolnabi4.JPG|250px|thumb|right|The Masjid al-Nabawi in [[Medina]] as it exists today]]
[[Image:Masjid Al Haram in the night.jpg|The [[Masjid al-Haram]] in [[Mecca]] as it exists today|thumb|right|220px]]
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The first thing Muhammad did upon arriving with his followers near [[Medina]] (then named ''Yathrib'') after the emigration from Mecca in 622, was build the Quba Mosque in a village outside Medina.<ref>[http://www.hajinformation.com/main/h2022.htm Masjid Quba'] Ministry of Hajj - Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Retrieved February 14, 2019.</ref>
{{see also|Masjid al Haram|Quba Mosque|Masjid al-Nabawi}}
 
  
The first mosque in the world is sometimes considered to be the area around the [[Ka'bah]] in [[Mecca]], [[Saudi Arabia]], now known as the [[Masjid al-Haram]], or Sacred Mosque.<ref>{{cite book|title=Muslim Religious Architecture: Muslim Religious Architecture |last=Kuban |first=Dogan |month=August |year=1974 |publisher=Brill Academic Publishers |id=ISBN 9004038132 |chapter=The Mosque |pages=1}}</ref> Since as early as [[638]], the Masjid Al Haram has been expanded on several occasions to accommodate the increasing number of Muslims who either live in the area or make the annual [[Hajj]], or pilgrimage, to [[Mecca]].<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.hajinformation.com/main/j10.htm|title=Holy Mosque in Makkah|accessdate=2006-04-06|publisher= Ministry of Hajj - Kingdom of Saudi Arabia}}</ref> Others regard the first mosque in the world to be the [[Quba Mosque]], or Masjid al-Quba, in [[Medina]] (then named ''Yathrib'') since it was the first mosque built by the [[Prophet of Islam|Islamic prophet]] [[Muhammad]]. The first thing Muhammad did upon arriving with his followers outside Medina after the [[Hijra (Islam)|emigration from Mecca]] in [[622]] was build the Quba Mosque.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hajinformation.com/main/h2022.htm |publisher=Ministry of Hajj - Kingdom of Saudi Arabia|accessdate=2006-04-15 |title=Masjid Quba'}}</ref> Muslims believe he stayed at the Quba Mosque for three days before moving on to the rest of Medina.<ref name="first-state">{{cite book|title=The Prophet Mohammad and the First Muslim State|last=Ghali|first=Mohammad|accessdate=2006-04-07| url= http://www.islamic-council.org/lib/first-muslim-states/allch1/allCHAPTER1.html|chapter=The First Muslim State}}</ref>
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Just days after beginning work on the Quba' Mosque, Muhammad went on to establish another mosque in Medina, known today as the Masjid al-Nabawi, or “the Prophet's Mosque.The location of the mosque was declared as such after it hosted Muhammad's first [[jumuah|Friday prayer]]. Following its establishment, the Masjid al-Nabawi continued to introduce some of the practices now considered common in today's mosques. For example, the ''[[adhan]]'', or call to prayer, was developed in the form still used in mosques today. The Masjid al-Nabawi was built with a large courtyard, a motif common among mosques built since then. Muhammad would stand up at one end of the arcade to preach. Later on, he would develop a three-step [[pulpit]] as a platform from which he would give sermons. The pulpit, now known as a ''minbar'', is still a common feature of mosques.
  
[[Image:Masjid Nabawi. Medina, Saudi Arabia.jpg|220px|thumb|left|The [[Masjid al-Nabawi]] in [[Medina]] as it exists today]]
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[[Muhammad]] lived beside the mosque in Medina, which doubled as both a religious and political center for the early Muslim community. Negotiations were conducted, military actions planned, prisoners of war held, disputes settled, religious information disseminated, gifts received and distributed among his companions. His followers treated the wounded there and some people even lived in the mosque permanently in tents and huts. <ref name="Masdjid1"/>
Just days after beginning work on the Quba Mosque, Muhammad went on to establish another mosque in Medina, which is now known as the [[Masjid al-Nabawi]], or the Prophet's Mosque. The location of the mosque was declared as such after it hosted Muhammad's first [[jumuah|Friday prayer]]. Following its establishment, the Masjid al-Nabawi continued to introduce some of the practices that are now considered common in today's mosques. For example, the [[adhan]], or call to prayer, was developed in the form still used in mosques today. The Masjid al-Nabawi was built with a large courtyard, a motif common among mosques built since then. Muhammad would stand up at one end of the [[arcade (architecture)|arcade]] to preach. Later on, he would develop a three-step [[pulpit]] as a platform from which he would give sermons.<ref name="first-state" /> The pulpit, now known as a [[minbar]], is still a common feature of mosques.
 
  
Today, the [[Masjid al-Haram]] in [[Mecca]] and the [[Masjid al-Nabawi]] in [[Medina]] are considered the two holiest sites in Islam.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wsu.edu/~dee/OTTOMAN/ORIGIN.HTM|title=The Ottoman: Origins|accessdate=2006-04-15|publisher=Washington State University}}</ref> The Masjid al-Haram today has a large courtyard that surrounds the [[Ka'bah]] and walls that form the edge of the structure and a separation from the city of [[Mecca]].
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[[Image:Aya sofya.jpg|thumb|250px|right|[[Hagia Sophia]], an [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Eastern Orthodox]] church converted into a mosque on the day of the Fall of [[Constantinople]]; now a [[museum]]]]
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Conversion of non-Muslim houses of worship into mosques began during the life of Muhammad, who turned the pagan sanctuary of Kaaba into a mosque, and continued during subsequent Islamic conquests and under the Muslim rule. As a result, numerous [[church]]es, [[synagogue]]s, [[Zoroastrianism|Zoroastrian]] and [[Hinduism|Hindu]] [[Temple|temples]] became Muslim places of worship.
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According to [[Sharia|Islamic law]], non-Muslims should not continue to use their places of worship for their intended purposes if they are conquered by Muslims and if there exists no treaty of surrender that explicitly mentions the right of non-Muslims to continue to use their places of worship.<ref>Bat Ye'or, ''Islam and Dhimmitude: Where Civilizations Collide'' (Madison/Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press/Associated University Presses, 2002, ISBN 0838639437).</ref> According to early Muslim historians, towns that surrendered without resistance and made treaties with the Muslims received permission to retain their [[church]]es and [[synagogue]]s, while in towns taken by conquest, Jewish and Christian places of worship were seized by the Muslims.<ref name="Masdjid1"/><ref>One of the earliest examples of these kinds of conversions was in [[Damascus]], [[Syria]], where in 705 [[Umayyad]] [[caliph]] Abd al-Malik took the church of St. John from the Christians and had it rebuilt as a mosque, which is now known as Umayyad Mosque; overall, Abd al-Malik is said to have transformed ten churches in Damascus into mosques. The process of turning churches into mosques was especially intensive in the villages, with the gradual conversion of the people to Islam.</ref>
  
===Diffusion and evolution===
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Mosques were built outside the Arabian Peninsula as Muslims moved to other parts of the world. [[Egypt]] was occupied by Muslim [[Arab]]s as early as 640, and since then so many mosques have appeared throughout the country that its capital city, [[Cairo]], has acquired the nickname of “city of a thousand minarets.”<ref>Sinéad Archer, [https://www.geoexpro.com/articles/2012/10/cairo-city-of-a-thousand-minarets Cairo: City of a Thousand Minarets] Retrieved February 14, 2019.</ref> Egyptian mosques vary in amenities, as some have Islamic schools (''madrassas'') while others have hospitals or tombs.<ref>E. A. Wallis Budge, ''Budge's Egypt: A Classic 19th-Century Travel Guide'' (Courier Dover Publications, 2001, ISBN 0486417212), 123-128.</ref>  
[[Image:Chinese-style minaret of the Great Mosque.jpg|The [[minaret]] at the [[Great Mosque of Xi'an]], [[China]]|right|thumb|180px]]
 
Mosques were built outside the Arabian Peninsula as Muslims moved to other parts of the world. [[Egypt]] became occupied by Muslim [[Arab]]s as early as [[640]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://inic.utexas.edu/menic/cairo/history/fustat/fustat.html |publisher=The University of Texas at Austin |title=Al-Fustat|accessdate=2006-04-16}}</ref> and since then so many mosques have appeared throughout the country that its capital city, [[Cairo]], has acquired the nickname of ''city of a thousand minarets''. Egyptian mosques vary in amenities, as some have Islamic schools (''[[madrassa]]s'') while others have hospitals or tombs.<ref>{{cite book|title=Budge's Egypt: A Classic 19th-Century Travel Guide |last=Budge |first=E.A. Wallis |publisher=Courier Dover Publications |date=[[2001-06-13]] |pages=123-128 |id=ISBN 0486417212}}</ref> Mosques in [[Sicily]] and [[Spain]] do not reflect the architecture of [[Visigoth]] predecessors, but instead reflect the architecture introduced by the Muslim [[Moors]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.muslimheritage.com/topics/default.cfm?ArticleID=278| title=Theoretical Issues of Islamic Architecture|accessdate=2006-04-07|publisher=Foundation for Science Technology and Civilisation}}</ref>  
 
  
The first [[China|Chinese]] mosque was established in the [[8th century|eighth century]] in [[Xi'an]]. The [[Great Mosque of Xi'an]], whose current building dates from the [[18th century|eighteenth century]], does not replicate many of the features often associated with traditional mosques. Instead, it follows traditional [[Chinese architecture]]. Mosques in western [[China]] incorporate more of the elements seen in mosques in other parts of the world. Western Chinese mosques were more likely to incorporate [[minaret]]s and domes while eastern Chinese mosques were more likely to look like [[pagoda]]s.<ref>{{cite news|url= http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/198504/muslims.in.china-the.mosques.htm|accessdate=2006-04-08|last=Cowen|first=Jill S.|date=July/August 1985|pages=30-35|publisher=Saudi Aramco World|title=Muslims in China: The Mosque}}</ref>
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Mosques in [[Sicily]] and [[Spain]] do not reflect the architecture of [[Visigoth]] predecessors, but instead reflect the architecture introduced by the Muslim Moors.<ref>Foundation for Science Technology and Civilisation,  [http://muslimheritage.com/article/theoretical-issues-islamic-architechture Theoretical Issues of Islamic Architecture] ''MuslimHeritage.com''. Retrieved February 14, 2019.</ref>
Mosques diffused into [[India]] during the reign of the [[Mughal empire]] in the [[16th century|sixteenth]] and [[17th century|seventeenth]] centuries. The Mughals brought their own form of architecture that included pointed, onion-shaped domes, as seen in [[Delhi]]'s [[Jama Masjid, Delhi|Jama Masjid]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://homepages.bw.edu/~wwwhis/mughal.html|accessdate=2006-04-15|title=Mughal Architecture|publisher=Baldwin-Wallace College|last=Gesink |first=Indira J. Falk}}</ref>
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[[Image:Chinese-style minaret of the Great Mosque.jpg|The [[minaret]] at the Great Mosque of Xi'an, [[China]]|right|thumb|200px]]
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The first [[China|Chinese]] mosque was established in the eighth century in Xi'an. The Great Mosque of Xi'an, whose current building dates from the eighteenth century, does not replicate many of the features often associated with traditional mosques. Instead, it follows traditional Chinese architecture. Mosques in western China incorporate more of the elements seen in mosques in other parts of the world. Western Chinese mosques were more likely to incorporate [[minaret]]s and domes, while eastern Chinese mosques were more likely to look like [[pagoda]]s.
  
[[Image:Mosques in Istanbul at dusk.jpg|Two [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]]-style mosques in [[Istanbul]], [[Turkey]]|thumb|left|200px]]
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[[Image:Ac-sultanahmed1.jpg|thumb|left|250px|The Sultan Ahmed Mosque/Blue Mosque in [[Istanbul]], [[Turkey]] with its tall, slender minarets is considered a classic example of [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] architecture]]
Mosques first arrived in the [[Ottoman Empire]] (mostly present-day [[Turkey]]) during the [[11th century|eleventh century]], when many of the [[Turkish people|Turks]] in the region began to convert to [[Islam]]. Several of the first mosques in the Ottoman Empire, such as the [[Hagia Sophia]] in present-day [[Istanbul]], were originally [[church]]es or [[cathedral]]s in the [[Byzantine Empire]]. The Ottomans created their own design of mosques, which included large central domes, multiple [[minaret]]s, and open [[facade|façades]]. The Ottoman style of mosques usually included elaborate columns, aisles, and high ceilings in the interior, while incorporating traditional elements, such as the [[mihrab]].<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.ccds.charlotte.nc.us/History/MidEast/04/Jpitts/Jpitts.htm|accessdate=2006-04-07|title=Mosques|publisher=Charlotte Country Day School}}</ref> Today, [[Turkey]] is still home to many mosques that display this Ottoman style of architecture.
 
  
[[Image:Wfm glasgow central mosque front.jpg|The [[Glasgow Central Mosque]] in [[Scotland]]|thumb|230px|right|thumb]]
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Mosques first arrived in the [[Ottoman Empire]] during the eleventh century, when many of the Turks in the region began to convert to Islam. Several of the first mosques in the Ottoman Empire, such as the [[Hagia Sophia]] in present-day [[Istanbul]], were originally [[church]]es or [[cathedral]]s in the [[Byzantine Empire]]. The Ottomans created their own design of mosques, which included large central domes, multiple [[minaret]]s, and open façades. The Ottoman style of mosques usually included elaborate columns, aisles, and high ceilings in the interior, while incorporating traditional elements, such as the ''[[mihrab]]''. Today, [[Turkey]] is still home to many mosques that display this Ottoman style of [[architecture]].  
Mosques gradually diffused to different parts of [[Europe]], but the most rapid growth in the number of mosques has occurred within the past century as more Muslims have migrated to the continent. Major European cities, such as [[Rome]], [[London]], and [[Munich]], are home to mosques that feature traditional domes and [[minaret]]s. These large mosques in urban centers are supposed to serve as community and social centers for a large group of Muslims that occupy the region. However, one can still find smaller mosques in more suburban and rural regions throughout Europe where Muslims populate.<ref name="saudi-arm">{{cite news|url= http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/198504/muslims.in.china-the.mosques.htm |accessdate=2006-04-17 |last=Lawton |first=John|date=January/February 1979|pages=9-14 |org=Saudi Aramco World |title=Muslims in Europe: The Mosque}}</ref> Mosques first appeared in the [[United States of America|United States]] in the early [[20th century|twentieth century]]. However, as more immigrants continue to arrive in the country, especially from [[South Asia]], the number of American mosques is increasing faster than ever before. While only two percent of the country's mosques appeared in the United States before [[1950]], eighty-seven percent of American mosques were founded after [[1970]] and fifty percent of American mosques founded after [[1980]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cair-net.org/mosquereport/Masjid_Study_Project_2000_Report.pdf|accessdate=2006-04-07|title=The Mosque in America:A National Portrait|publisher=Council on American-Islamic Relations|co-authors=Bagby, Ishan, Bryan T. Froehle, Paul M. Perl}}</ref>
 
  
===Mosques as focal points===
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Mosques diffused into [[India]] during the reign of the [[Mughal Empire]] in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The Mughals brought their own form of architecture that included pointed, onion-shaped domes, as seen in [[Delhi]]'s Jama Masjid.
{{see also|Karbala|Isfahan (city)}}
 
  
[[Image:Naghsh-e-jahan masjed-e-shah esfahan.jpg|[[Shah Mosque]] along [[Naghsh-i Jahan Square]] in [[Isfahan (city)|Isfahan]], [[Iran]]|thumb|250px|right]]
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Mosques gradually diffused to different parts of [[Europe]]. Major European cities, such as [[Rome]], [[London]], and [[Munich]], are home to mosques that feature traditional domes and [[minaret]]s. These large mosques in urban centers serve as community and social centers for Muslims. Mosques first appeared in the [[United States of America|United States]] in the early twentieth century, the first of which was built in the late 1920s in Cedar Rapids, [[Iowa]]. However, as more immigrants continued to arrive in the country, especially from [[South Asia]], the number of American mosques grew.
Many Muslim rulers after the death of the [[Islamic prophet]] [[Muhammad]], emulating him, established their domains by first building a mosque. In the same way [[Mecca]] and [[Medina]] are built around the [[Masjid al-Haram]] and the [[Masjid al-Nabawi]], [[Karbala]], in present-day [[Iraq]], was built around the [[Shi'a Islam|Shi'ite]] [[Imam Hussain Shrine]]. [[Isfahan (city)|Isfahan]], [[Iran]] is especially notable for its use of mosques to form the center of the city. In the [[8th century|eighth century]], a mosque was established within the city which three centuries later was described by theologian and philosopher [[Naser Khosrow]] as "a magnificent Friday Mosque built in the city center."<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.planum.net/topics/documents/planning_isfahan.pdf|author=Abouei, Reza|accessdate=2006-04-07|publisher=University of Sheffield School of Architecture|title=Urban Planning of Isfahan in the Seventeenth Century}}</ref> At the dawn of the [[17th century|seventeenth century]], [[Abbas I of Safavid|Shah Abbas I]] of the [[Safavid dynasty|Safavid Dynasty]] led an effort to establish Isfahan as one of the largest and most beautiful cities in the world. As part of his plan, he ordered the building of [[Shah Mosque]] and [[Sheikh Lotf Allah Mosque]] which border Isfahan's [[Naghsh-i Jahan Square]], which, as one of the largest city squares in the world, hosted sports and trade.<ref>{{cite book|title=Public and Private Spaces of the City |last=Madanipour |first=Ali |date=[[2003-05-09]] |id=ISBN 0415256291 |publisher=Routledge |pages=207}}</ref>
 
  
Mosques built more recently, especially in countries where Muslims are not the majority, tend to be away from the center of major cities. Nevertheless, even a mosque in a less densely populated area often influences Muslims to relocate their homes and businesses so they are close to the mosque. Thus, mosques form the focal points of Muslim communities, even if they do not form the center of the entire community as a whole. In the [[United States of America|United States]], the growth in the number of mosques and congregants in suburbs is much greater than that in densely urban areas.<ref>{{cite journal|journal=The Washington Quarterly|last=Abdo|first=Geneive|pages=7-17|volume=28|issue=4|year=2005|accessdate=2006-04-07|title= Islam in America: Separate but Unequal|month=September|url= http://www.imancentral.org/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=57 }}</ref>
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==Religious functions==
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===Prayers===
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[[Image:Mosque.Qibla.01.jpg|thumb|right|240px|Muslims performing [[salat]] (prayer)]]
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All adult Muslims are required to offer prayer, or ''[[salat]]'', at least five times each day. Although some smaller mosques with smaller congregations will offer only a few prayers, most mosques offer all five required prayers daily: before sunrise (''fajr''), at midday (''dhuhr''), in the afternoon (''asr''), after sunset (''maghrib''), and in the evening (''isha'a''). Muslims are not required to offer prayer inside a mosque, but according to ''[[hadith]]'', offering prayer in congregation at a mosque is considered more virtuous than offering prayer alone.
  
===Etymology of the word===
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In addition to holding the five obligatory daily prayers, mosques hold ''jumuah'' prayers, or Friday prayers, which replace the midday prayer as the second required prayer on Fridays. While the ordinary daily prayers can be performed at any location, it is required that all adult men attend Friday prayers at the mosque.<ref name="teach-islam">Ruqaiyyah Waris Maqsood, ''Teach Yourself Islam'' (Chicago: McGraw-Hill, 2003, ISBN 0071419632), 57-58, 72-75, 112-120.</ref>
Mosques were known to the English-speaking world well before the word to describe them was established. The [[Mezquita]] of [[Cordoba]] was one of the first mosques to attract Western attention; its name is simply one of many possible European transliterations for the Arabic ''masjid'', or place of worship. However, in the [[15th century|fifteenth]], [[16th century|sixteenth]], and [[17th century|seventeenth]] centuries, variations of the word began to be used. ''Moseak'', ''muskey'', ''moschy'', and ''mos'keh'' were just some of the variations that came into use until it was decided that ''mosquee'', imitating [[Middle French]], [[Italian language|Italian]], and [[Spanish language|Old Spanish]], would become the standard. In the early [[18th century|eighteenth century]], the modern spelling became the most popular and standard spelling of the word.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.spellingbee.com/cc06/week27/archive.shtml|title=Carolyn's Corner: Words Related to World Religions|publisher=Scripps National Spelling Bee|accessdate=2006-04-06}}</ref>
 
  
==Functions==
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A funeral prayer, or salat ul-janazah, is held for a deceased Muslim at the mosque, with all congregants present, including the [[imam]], participating. Unlike with the daily prayers, the funeral prayers are normally held outdoors in a courtyard or square close to the mosque.<ref>Sayyid Saabiq, [http://www.islamicstudies.info/subjects/fiqh/fiqh_us_sunnah/fus4_62.html Fiqh-us-Sunnah, Volume 4: Funeral Prayers (Salatul Janazah)] ''Fiqh-us-Sunnah''. Retrieved February 14, 2019.</ref> During solar [[eclipse]]s, mosques will host another special prayer called ''salat ul-kusuf''.<ref>[http://www.prayerinislam.com/guide-to-prayer/nafl-prayers/prayer-solar-lunar-eclipse-salat-al-khusuf/ Prayer of the Solar and Lunar Eclipse (Salat Al-Khusuf)] Prayer in Islam. Retrieved February 14, 2019.</ref>
The primary purpose of mosques is to serve as [[place of worship|places of worship]] for Muslims. However, mosques today often host classes and programs that educate Muslims about their faith or allow Muslims to socialize with each other.
 
  
===Prayers===
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There are two large holidays, or ''eids'', in the Islamic calendar: Eid ul-Fitr and Eid ul-Adha. On both of these days, there are special prayers held at mosques in the morning. The eid prayers are supposed to be offered in large groups, and so larger mosques will normally host eid prayers for their congregants as well as the congregants of smaller local mosques. Some mosques will even rent convention centers or other large public buildings to hold the large number of Muslims who attend the eid prayers. Mosques, especially those in countries where Muslims are the majority, will also host eid prayers outside in courtyards or town squares.
{{see also|Salat}}
 
  
[[Image:Mosque.Qibla.01.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Muslims performing [[salah]] (prayer)]]
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===Ramadan events===
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Islam's holiest month, [[Ramadan]], is observed through many events. As Muslims must fast during the day during Ramadan, mosques will host ''iftar'' (breakfast) dinners after sunset and the fourth required prayer of the day, ''maghrib''. [[Food]] is provided, at least in part, by members of the community, thereby creating nightly potluck dinners. Because of the community contribution necessary to serve ''iftar'' dinners, mosques with smaller congregations may not be able to host the ''iftar'' dinners daily. Some mosques will also hold ''suhoor'' meals before dawn to congregants attending the first required prayer of the day, ''fajr''. As with ''iftar'' dinners, congregants usually provide the food for ''suhoor'', although able mosques may provide food instead. Mosques will often invite poorer members of the Muslim community to share in beginning and breaking the fasts as providing [[charity]] during Ramadan in Islam is especially honorable.
  
All adult Muslims are required to offer prayer, or ''[[salat]]'', at least five times each day. Although some smaller mosques with smaller congregations will offer only a few prayers, most mosques offer all five required prayers daily: before sunrise (''[[fajr]]''), at midday (''[[dhuhr]]''), in the afternoon (''[[asr]]''), after sunset (''[[maghrib]]''), and in the evening (''[[isha'a]]''). Muslims are not required to offer prayer inside a mosque, but according to [[hadith]], offering prayer in congregation at a mosque is considered more virtuous than offering prayer alone.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/fundamentals/hadithsunnah/muwatta/008.mmt.html|title=Prayer in Congregation|publisher=University of Southern California|work=Compendium of Muslim Texts|accessdate=2006-04-06}}</ref>
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Following the fifth and final required prayer of the day, ''isha'', special, optional ''tarawih'' prayers are offered in larger [[Sunni]] mosques. [[Shi'a]] mosques, however, do not observe ''tarawih'' prayers. During each night of prayers, which can last for up to two hours each night, a member of the community who has memorized the entire [[Qur'an]] will recite a segment of the book.<ref name="teach-islam" /> During the last ten days of Ramadan, larger mosques will host all-night programs to observe Laylat al-Qadr, the night Muslims believe the Islamic prophet [[Muhammad]] first began to receive the Qur'an.<ref name="teach-islam" /> On that night, between sunset and sunrise, mosques will employ speakers to educate congregants in attendance about Islam. Mosques or the community usually provide meals periodically throughout the night.
  
In addition to holding the five obligatory daily prayers, mosques hold ''[[jumuah]]'' prayers, or Friday prayers, which replace the midday prayer as the second required prayer on Fridays. While the ordinary daily prayers can be performed at any location, it is required that all adult men attend Friday prayers at the mosque.<ref name="teach-islam" />
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During the last ten days of [[Ramadan]], larger mosques within the Muslim community will host ''i'tikaf'', a practice in which at least one Muslim man from the community must participate. Muslims performing ''i'tikaf'' are required to stay within the mosque for ten consecutive days, often in worship or learning about [[Islam]]. As a result, the rest of the Muslim community is responsible for providing the participants with food, drinks, and whatever else they need during their stay.<ref name="teach-islam" />
  
A funeral prayer, or [[Salatul janazah|salat ul-janazah]], is held for a deceased Muslim at the mosque, with all congregants present, including the [[imam]], participating. Unlike with the daily prayers, the funeral prayers are normally held outdoors in a courtyard or square close to the mosque.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/law/fiqhussunnah/fus4_62.html |title=Fiqh-us-Sunnah, Volume 4: Funeral Prayers (Salatul Janazah)|publisher=University of Southern California |work=Compendium of Muslim Texts |accessdate=2006-04-16}}</ref> During [[solar eclipse]]s, mosques will host another special prayer called salat ul-kusuf.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/fundamentals/hadithsunnah/bukhari/018.sbt.html |title=Eclipses |publisher=University of Southern California |work=Compendium of Muslim Texts |accessdate=2006-04-16}}</ref>
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===Charity===
 +
The third of the [[Five Pillars of Islam]] states that Muslims are required to give approximately one-fortieth of their wealth to charity as ''[[zakat]]''. Since mosques form the center of Muslim communities, they are where Muslims go to both give ''zakat'' and, if necessary, collect ''zakat''. Prior to the holiday of Eid ul-Fitr, mosques also collect a special ''zakat'' that is supposed to assist in helping poor Muslims attend the prayers and celebrations associated with the holiday.
  
There are two large holidays, or ''eids'', in the [[Islamic calendar]]: [[Eid ul-Fitr]] and [[Eid ul-Adha]]. On both of these days, there are special prayers held at mosques in the morning. The eid prayers are supposed to be offered in large groups, and so larger mosques will normally host eid prayers for their congregants as well as the congregants of smaller local mosques. Some mosques will even rent [[convention center]]s or other large public buildings to hold the large number of Muslims who attend the eid prayers. Mosques, especially those in countries where Muslims are the majority, will also host eid prayers outside in courtyards or [[town square]]s.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/fundamentals/pillars/prayer/Eid-Prayers_1.html |accessdate=2006-04-08 |title='Id Prayers (Salatul 'Idain) |publisher=University of Southern California |work=Compendium of Muslim Texts}}</ref>
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==Social functions==
 +
===Center of Muslim community===
 +
[[Image:Naghsh-e-jahan masjed-e-shah esfahan.jpg|thumb|240px|right|Imam Mosque, formerly Shah Mosque along Naghsh-i Jahan Square in Isfahan, [[Iran]]]]
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Many Muslim rulers after the death of the Islamic prophet [[Muhammad]], emulating him, established their domains by first building a mosque. In the same way [[Mecca]] and [[Medina]] are built around the Masjid al-Haram and the Masjid al-Nabawi, [[Karbala]], in present-day [[Iraq]], was built around the [[Shi'a Islam|Shi'ite]] Imam Hussain Shrine. Isfahan, [[Iran]] is especially notable for its use of mosques to form the center of the city. In the eighth century, a mosque was established within the city. At the dawn of the seventeenth century, Shah Abbas I of the [[Safavid Dynasty]] led an effort to establish Isfahan as one of the largest and most beautiful cities in the world. As part of his plan, he ordered the building of Shah Mosque and Sheikh Lotf Allah Mosque, which border Isfahan's Naghsh-i Jahan Square, becomming one of the largest city squares in the world.<ref>Ali Madanipour, ''Public and Private Spaces of the City'' (London: Routledge, 2007, ISBN 0415256291), 207.</ref>
  
===Ramadan events===
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Mosques built more recently, especially in countries where Muslims are not the majority, tend to be away from the center of major cities. Nevertheless, even a mosque in a less densely populated area often influences Muslims to relocate their homes and businesses so they are close to the mosque. Thus, mosques form the focal points of Muslim communities, even if they do not form the center of the entire community as a whole. In the [[United States]], the growth in the number of mosques and congregants in [[suburb]]s is much greater than that in dense urban areas.<ref>Geneive Abdo, [https://muse.jhu.edu/article/186470 “Islam in America: Separate but Unequal,”] ''The Washington Quarterly'' 28(4) (Sept. 2005): 7-17. Retrieved February 14, 2019.</ref>
[[Image:Loya7.jpg|thumb|right|200px|A mosque in [[Afghanistan]]]]
 
{{see also|Ramadan (religious observances)}}
 
  
Islam's holiest month, [[Ramadan (religious observances)|Ramadan]], is observed through many events. As Muslims must [[sawm|fast]] during the day during Ramadan, mosques will host ''[[iftar]]'' (break-fast) dinners after sunset and the fourth required prayer of the day, [[maghrib]]. Food is provided, at least in part, by members of the community, thereby creating nightly [[potluck]] dinners. Because of the community contribution necessary to serve iftar dinners, mosques with smaller congregations may not be able to host the ''iftar'' dinners daily. Some mosques will also hold ''[[suhoor]]'' meals before [[dawn]] to congregants attending the first required prayer of the day, [[fajr]]. As with iftar dinners, the food for suhoor is usually provided by congregants, although able mosques may provide food instead. Mosques will often invite poorer members of the Muslim community to share in beginning and breaking the fasts as providing [[charity]] during Ramadan in Islam is especially honorable.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/fundamentals/pillars/fasting/tajuddin/fast_51.htmll| accessdate=2006-04-17| title=Charity| publisher=University of Southern California |work=Compendium of Muslim Texts}}</ref>
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===Education===
 +
[[Image:Storks samarkand.jpg|thumb|right|240px|The Ulugh Beg Madrassa, which includes a mosque, in Samarkand, [[Uzbekistan]]]]
 +
Another primary function of a mosque is to house educational facilities. Some mosques, especially those in countries where state-funded [[Madrasah|Islamic schools]] are not present, will have full-time schools that teach both Islamic and general knowledge. Qur'an reading and Arabic are commonly taught at mosques that are located in countries where Arabic is not widely spoken. Classes for new Muslims about the basics of Islam are also common, especially in [[Europe]] and the [[United States]], where it is the fastest-growing religion.<ref>Brannon M. Wheeler, ''Teaching Islam'' (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002, ISBN 0195152255), v. "...[Islam] remains the fastest growing religion both in the United States and worldwide."</ref> [[Madrassa]]s are also available for Muslims to study ''<nowiki>'</nowiki>alim'' to become Islamic scholars or imams. However, madrassas are normally separate from neighborhood mosques.
  
Following the fifth and final required prayer of the day, [[isha]], special, optional [[tarawih]] prayers are offered in larger [[Sunni]] mosques. [[Shi'a]] mosques, however, do not observe [[tarawih]] prayers. During each night of prayers, which can last for up to two hours each night, a member of the community who has memorized the entire [[Qur’an]] will recite a segment of the book.<ref name="teach-islam" /> During the last ten days of Ramadan, larger mosques will host all-night programs to observe [[Laylat al-Qadr]], the night Muslims believe the [[Prophets of Islam|Islamic prophet]] [[Muhammad]] first began to receive the [[Qur'an]]. <ref name="teach-islam" /> On that night, between [[sunset]] and [[sunrise]], mosques will employ speakers to educate congregants in attendance about Islam. Meals are usually provided by mosques or the community periodically throughout the night.
+
==Contemporary political roles==
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The late twentieth century saw an increase in the number of mosques used for political purposes. As they are considered important to the Muslim community, mosques are often at the heart of social conflicts. While a small number of mosques have become the platforms of some extremist speakers to advocate [[terrorism]], the vast majority of Muslims denounces terrorism and promotes peace. Nevertheless, the growth of mosques in the west has alarmed some European residents who feel intimidated by the presence of Muslims in predominantly [[Christianity|Christian]] neighborhoods.<ref>John Harris, [http://politics.guardian.co.uk/farright/story/0,,1758974,00.html “Paranoia, poverty and wild rumours - a journey through BNP country,”] ''The Guardian'' (April 22, 2006). Retrieved February 14, 2019.</ref>
  
During the last ten days of [[Ramadan (calendar month)|Ramadan]], larger mosques within the Muslim community will host i'tikaf, a practice in which at least one Muslim man from the community must participate. Muslims performing i'tikaf are required to stay within the mosque for ten consecutive days, often in worship or learning about [[Islam]]. As a result, the rest of the Muslim community is responsible for providing the participants with food, drinks, and whatever else they need during their stay.<ref name="teach-islam" />
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Following the attacks of September 11, 2001, several American mosques were targeted by [[hate crime]]s ranging from simple [[vandalism]] to [[arson]].
  
===Charity===
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==Architecture==
{{see also|Zakat}}
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===Styles===
[[Image:Storks samarkand.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The Ulugh Beg Madrassa, which includes a mosque, in [[Samarkand]], [[Uzbekistan]]]]
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[[Image:Mosque of Cordoba Spain.jpg|thumb|right|240px|Interior of the [[Mezquita]], a hypostyle mosque with columns arranged in grid pattern, in Córdoba, Spain]]
The third of [[Five Pillars of Islam]] states that Muslims are required to give approximately one-fortieth of their wealth to charity as ''[[zakat]]''. Since mosques form the center of Muslim communities, they are where Muslims go to both give [[zakat]] and, if necessary, collect [[zakat]]. Prior to the holiday of [[Eid ul-Fitr]], mosques also collect a special zakat that is supposed to assist in helping poor Muslims attend the prayers and celebrations associated with the holiday.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://mediaguidetoislam.sfsu.edu/religion/03f_concepts.htm |publisher=San Francisco State University |accessdate=2006-04-15 |work=Media Guide to Islam |title=Primary Concepts : Eids}}</ref>
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''Arab-plan'' or ''hypostyle'' mosques are the earliest type of mosques, pioneered under the [[Umayyad Dynasty]]. These mosques are a square or rectangular in plan with an enclosed courtyard and a covered prayer hall. Historically, in the warm Mediterranean and Middle Eastern climates, the courtyard served to accommodate the large number of worshippers during Friday prayers. Most early hypostyle mosques have flat roofs on top of prayer halls, which resulted in the need to use numerous columns and supports.<ref name="Masdjid1"/> One of the most notable hypostyle mosques is the Mezquita in [[Córdoba]], [[Spain]], as the building is supported by over 850 columns.<ref name="mit-handout">Nasser Rabbat, [http://web.mit.edu/4.614/www/h02.html Religious Architecture and Islamic Cultures: 2-The Vocabulary of Islamic Religious Architecture,] Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved April 4, 2019.</ref> Frequently, hypostyle mosques have outer arcades so that visitors could enjoy some shade. Arab-plan mosques were constructed mostly under the Umayyad and [[Abbasid]] dynasties; subsequently, however, the simplicity of the Arab plan limited the opportunities for further development, and as a result, this architectural style gradually fell out of popularity.<ref name="Masdjid1"/>
  
===Education===
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The [[Ottoman Empire|Ottomans]] introduced ''central dome mosques'' in the fifteenth century and have a large dome centered over the prayer hall. In addition to having one large dome at the center, there are often times smaller domes that exist off-center over the prayer hall or throughout the rest of the mosque, where prayer is not performed.<ref name="mit-handout"/> This style was heavily influenced by the [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]] religious architecture with its use of large central domes.<ref name="Masdjid1"/>
Another primary function of a mosque is to house educational facilities. Some mosques, especially those in countries where state-funded [[Islamic schools]] are not present, will have full-time schools that teach both Islamic and general knowledge. These full-time schools normally have students in [[elementary school]] and [[middle school]], although there are also a few full-time schools available to [[high school]] students. Most mosques will also have part-time schools, either on the weekends or in the evenings. Whereas full-time schools are meant for children who depend on the mosque to provide an Islamic education as well as a general education, weekend and nightly schools are meant to provide only Islamic education for students of all ages, young and old. Some mosques, however, will also provide general educational help to Muslim students as a way of bringing young Muslims closer to the mosque. The subjects at the Islamic evening and weekend classes vary. [[Qur'an reading]] and [[Arabic]] are commonly found at mosques that are located in countries where [[Arabic]] is not widely spoken. Classes for new Muslims about the basics of Islam are also common, especially in [[Europe]] and the [[United States of America|United States]], where it is the fasting-growing religion.<ref>{{cite book|title=Teaching Islam |last=Wheeler |first=Brannon M. |publisher=Oxford University Press US |date=[[2002-08-01]] |id=ISBN 0195152255 |chapter=Preface |pages=v |quote=and [Islam] remains the fastest growing religion both in the United States and worldwide}}</ref> Mosques will also go into more depth about Islam by providing congregants with classes on [[fiqh|Islamic jurisprudence]]. [[Madrassa]]s are also available for Muslims to study ''[['alim]]'' to become [[Islamic scholar]]s or [[imam]]. However, as their primary purpose is not to serve as a place of worship or [[community center]], madrassas are normally separate from neighborhood mosques.
 
  
===Social events===
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''Iwan mosques'' are most notable for their domed chambers and ''iwans'', which are vaulted spaces open out on one end. In ''iwan'' mosques, one or more iwans face a central courtyard that serves as the prayer hall. The style represents a borrowing from pre-Islamic Iranian architecture and has been used almost exclusively for mosques in [[Iran]]. Many ''iwan'' mosques are converted [[Zoroastrianism|Zoroastrian]] [[fire]] [[temple]]s where the courtyard was used to house the sacred fire.<ref name="Masdjid1"/> The Shah Mosque in Isfahan, Iran is a classic example of an ''iwan'' mosque.
Mosques will host events and dinners either for the purpose of [[fundraising|raising money]] for mosque activities or simply to bring the community together. Young people are often attracted to mosques that have sports facilities such as [[basketball court]]s or fields for [[Football (soccer)|soccer]] or [[American football]]. Courtyards at mosques are often used for hosting social gatherings; [[bazaar]]s where community members can shop for Islamic merchandise are common among mosques. Mosques will also host [[wedding]]s, much like other places of worship.<ref name="teach-islam" />
 
  
==Features==
 
Modern mosques have a variety of amenities available to their congregants. As mosques are supposed to appeal to the community, they may also have additional facilities, from [[clinic|health clinics]] to [[library|libraries]] to [[gymnasium]]s, to serve the community. Nevertheless, the designs of mosques built more recently still borrow elements from older styles of mosques. As a result, there are several features that have become common among the body of mosques that exist today.
 
 
[[Image:View from Mardin to the Mesopotamian plains.jpg|200px|The [[minaret]] of the Reyhane Mosque in [[Mardin]], [[Turkey]]|thumb|left]]
 
 
===Minarets===
 
===Minarets===
{{main|Minaret}}
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A common feature in mosques is the [[minaret]], the tall, slender tower that usually is situated at one of the corners of the mosque structure. The top of the minaret is always the highest point in mosques that have one, and often the highest point in the immediate area. The tallest minaret in the world is located at the Hassan II Mosque in [[Casablanca]], [[Morocco]].<ref>Brian Walters, ''Call to Prayer: My Travels in Spain, Portugal and Morocco'' (Virtualbookworm Publishing, 2004, ISBN 1589395921), 14: “Its 210-meter minaret is the tallest in the world.”</ref>
A common feature in mosques is the [[minaret]], the tall, slender tower that usually is situated at one of the corners of the mosque structure. The top of the minaret is always the highest point in mosques that have one, and often the highest point in the immediate area. The tallest minaret in the world is located at the [[Hassan II Mosque]] in [[Casablanca]], [[Morocco]].<ref>{{cite book|title=Call to Prayer: My Travels in Spain, Portugal and Morocco |last=Walters |first=Brian |date=[[2004-05-17]] |publisher=Virtualbookworm Publishing |id=ISBN 1589395921 |pages=14 |chapter=The Prophet's People |quote=Its 210-meter minaret is the tallest in the world}}</ref>
 
  
Most mosques, especially those in countries where Muslims are the majority, will have at least one [[minaret]]. Multiple minarets are present at some mosques not because they serve a purpose in practicing [[Islam]], but instead to make the mosque look beautiful. Mosques from the time of [[Muhammad]] in the early [[7th century|seventh century]] did not have minarets; one of the first minarets appeared in [[Umayyad Mosque]] in [[Damascus]], [[Syria]] at the beginning of the [[8th century|eighth century]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Architecture/4-614Religious-Architecture-and-Islamic-CulturesFall2002/LectureNotes/detail/umayyad.htm |accessdate=2006-04-16 |title=Umayyad Grandeur: First Imperial Expressions |publisher=Massachusetts Institute of Technology |work=OpenCourseWare}}</ref>
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The first mosque had no minarets, and nowadays the most conservative Islamic movements, like [[Wahhabism|Wahhabis]], avoid building minarets, seeing them as ostentatious and unnecessary. The first minaret was constructed in 665 in [[Basra]] during the reign of the Umayyad [[caliph]] [[Muawiyah I]]. Muawiyah encouraged the construction of minarets, as they were supposed to bring mosques on par with Christian [[church]]es with their bell towers. Consequently, mosque architects borrowed the shape of the bell tower for their minarets, which were used for essentially the same purpose&mdash;calling the faithful to prayer.<ref name="Manara">R. Hillenbrand, "Masara Manar," ''Encyclopaedia of Islam Online'', Edited by P. J. Bearman ''et al''. Brill Academic Publishers. {{ISSN|1573-3912}}</ref>
  
Before the five required daily prayers, a [[muezzin]] calls the worshippers to [[salat|prayer]] from the [[minaret]]. In many countries where Muslims are not the majority, mosques are prohibited from loudly broadcasting the call to prayer (''[[adhan]]''), although it is supposed to be said loudly to the surrounding community. The adhan is not required before every prayer. However, nearly every mosque assigns a muezzin for each prayer to say the [[adhan]] as it is a recommended practice or [[sunnah]] of the [[Prophets of Islam|Islamic prophet]] [[Muhammad]]. At mosques that do not have minarets, the adhan is called instead from inside the mosque or somewhere else on the ground.<ref name="teach-islam" /> The [[iqama]], which is similar to the [[adhan]] and said immediately before the start of prayer, is usually not said from the minaret even if a mosque has one.
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Before the five required daily prayers, a ''[[muezzin]]'' calls the worshipers to [[salat|prayer]] from the [[minaret]]. In many countries where Muslims are not the majority, mosques are prohibited from loudly broadcasting the call to prayer (''[[adhan]]''), although it is supposed to be said loudly to the surrounding community. The ''adhan'' is not required before every prayer. However, nearly every mosque assigns a ''muezzin'' for each prayer to say the ''adhan'' as it is a recommended practice or ''[[sunnah]]'' of the Islamic prophet [[Muhammad]]. At mosques that do not have minarets, the adhan is called instead from inside the mosque or somewhere else on the ground.<ref name="teach-islam" />  
 
 
[[Image:Khatem Al Anbiyaa Mosque Detail.jpg|250px|right|thumb|The domes of the Khatem Al Anbiyaa Mosque in [[Beirut]], [[Lebanon]]]]
 
  
 
===Domes===
 
===Domes===
Domes have long been a hallmark of mosques and [[Islamic architecture]] in general since the [[7th century|seventh century]]. The domes, which often are placed directly above the main prayer hall, may signify the vaults of [[jannah|heaven]] and the sky.<ref>{{cite book|title=Symmetries of Nature: A Handbook for Philosophy of Nature and Science |last=Mainzer |first=Klaus |date=[[1996-06-01]] |id=ISBN 3110129906 |pages=124 |chapter=Art and Architecture |quote=the dome arching over the believers like the spherical dome of the sky}}</ref> As time progressed, the sizes of mosque domes grew, from occupying only a small part of the roof near the [[mihrab]] to encompassing all of the roof above the prayer hall. Although domes normally took on the shape of a hemisphere, the [[Mughal Empire|Mughals]] in [[India]] popularized onion-shaped domes in [[South Asia]] and [[Persia]].<ref>{{cite book|title=Architecture of Mughal India |last=Asher |first=Catherine B. |date=[[1992-09-24]] |publisher=Cambridge University Press |pages=256 |id=ISBN 0521267285 |chapter=Aurangzeb and the Islamization of the Mughal style}}</ref> Some mosques will have multiple, often smaller, domes in addition to the main large dome that resides at the center.
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[[File:Putra Mosque dome (26187755783).jpg|250px|right|thumb|The domes of the Putra Mosque dome in [[Malaysia]]]]
 
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According to Pope (1965), two important contributions to architecture by the pre-Islamic Parthian and Sassanian Persians were [[dome]]s and [[arch]]es.<ref>Arthur Upham Pope, ''Persian Architecture; The Triumph of Form and Color'' (New York: George Braziller, Inc., 1965, ISBN 0807603082).</ref> Domes have long been a hallmark of mosques and Islamic architecture in general since the seventh century. Moreover, it was in this century that Islam was introduced to Persia. The domes, which often are placed directly above the main prayer hall, may signify the vaults of heaven and the sky.<ref>Klaus Mainzer, ''Symmetries of Nature: A Handbook for Philosophy of Nature and Science'' (Berlin and New York: Walter de Gruyter, 1996, ISBN 3110129906), 124: “...the dome arching over the believers like the spherical dome of the sky.”</ref> As time progressed, the sizes of mosque domes grew, from occupying only a small part of the roof near the ''[[mihrab]]'' to encompassing all of the roof above the prayer hall. Although domes normally took on the shape of a hemisphere, the [[Mughal Empire|Mughals]] in [[India]] popularized onion-shaped domes in [[South Asia]] and [[Persia]].<ref>Catherine B. Asher, ''Architecture of Mughal India'' (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN 0521267285), 256.</ref> Some mosques will have multiple, often smaller, domes in addition to the main large dome that resides at the center.
[[Image:People washing up to pray at badshahi mosque.JPG|left|thumb|200px|People washing before prayer at the [[Badshahi Masjid|Badshahi mosque]] in [[Lahore]], [[Pakistan]]]]
 
 
 
===Ablution facilities===
 
Because prayer must be preceded by ritual purification, mosques often have [[wudu|ablution]] fountains or other facilities for washing in their entryways or courtyards. However, worshippers at much smaller mosques often have to use restrooms to perform their ablutions. In traditional mosques, this function is often elaborated into a freestanding building in the center of a courtyard.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://web.mit.edu/4.614/www/handout02.html |accessdate=2006-04-09 |publisher=Massachusetts Institute of Technology |title=Religious Architecture and Islamic Cultures}}</ref> This desire for cleanliness extends to the prayer halls where shoes are not allowed to worn. Thus, foyers with shelves to put shoes and racks to hold coats are commonplace among mosques.<ref name="unitulsa">{{cite web|url=http://www.utulsa.edu/iss/Mosque/MosqueFAQ.html |accessdate=2006-04-09 |publisher=The University of Tulsa |title=Mosque FAQ}}</ref>
 
  
[[Image:Prayer-hall-turkey.jpg|right|180px|thumb|The prayer hall, or musalla, in a [[Turkey|Turkish]] mosque, with a [[minbar]]]]
 
 
===Prayer hall===
 
===Prayer hall===
The prayer hall, also known as the musalla, has no furniture; chairs and pews are absent from the prayer hall so as to allow as many worshippers as possible to line the room.<ref name="unitulsa" /> Unlike in most other places of worship, images of spiritual figures or other animals cannot be found as Muslims in prayer are supposed to only be focusing on [[Allah]]. Instead, mosques will have [[Arabic calligraphy]] and verses from the [[Qur'an]] on the walls to assist worshippers in focusing on the beauty of Islam and its holiest book, the Qur'an, as well as for decoration.<ref name="teach-islam" />
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[[Image:Badshahi Mosque July 1 2005 pic32 by Ali Imran.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The Badshahi Masjid in Lahore, [[Pakistan]] with an ''iwan'' at center, three domes, and five visible [[minaret]]s]]
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The prayer hall, also known as the ''musalla'', has no furniture; chairs and pews are absent from the prayer hall so as to allow as many worshipers as possible to line the room. Prayer halls contain no images of people, animals, and spiritual figures as Muslims in prayer are supposed to only be focusing on [[Allah]]. Instead, mosques will have Arabic verses from the [[Qur'an]] on their walls to assist worshippers in focusing on the beauty of Islam and its holiest book, the Qur'an, as well as for decoration.<ref name="teach-islam" />
  
Usually opposite the entrance to the prayer hall is the ''[[qibla]] wall'', which is the visually emphasized area inside the prayer hall. The ''qibla'' wall should, in a properly oriented mosque, be set perpendicular to a line leading to [[Mecca]], the location of the [[Ka'bah]].<ref>{{cite book|title=Writing Signs: Fatimid Public Text |date=[[1998-12-16]] |last=Bierman |first=Irene A. |publisher=University of California Press |pages=150 |id=ISBN 0520208021}}</ref> Congregants pray in rows parallel to the ''qibla'' wall and thus arrange themselves so they face [[Mecca]]. In the ''qibla'' wall, usually at its center, is the [[mihrab]], a niche or depression indicating the ''qibla'' wall. Usually the ''mihrab'' is not occupied by furniture either, unlike with the [[altars]] of [[Christianity|Christian]] [[church]]es. Sometimes, especially during [[Friday prayer]]s, a raised [[minbar]] or pulpit is located to the side of the ''mihrab'' for a [[khateeb]] or some other speaker to offer a sermon ([[khutbah]]). The [[mihrab]] serves as the location where the [[imam]] leads the five daily prayers on a regular basis.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~islamarc/WebPage1/htm_eng/index/keyword1_e.htm |accessdate=2006-04-09 |title=Terms 1: Mosque |publisher=University of Tokyo Institute of Oriental Culture}}</ref>
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Usually opposite the entrance to the prayer hall is the ''qibla wall'', which is the visually emphasized area inside the prayer hall. The ''qibla'' wall should, in a properly oriented mosque, be set perpendicular to a line leading to [[Mecca]], the location of the [[Ka'bah]].<ref>Irene A. Bierman, ''Writing Signs: Fatimid Public Text'' (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1998, ISBN 0520208021), 150.</ref> Congregants pray in rows parallel to the ''qibla'' wall and thus arrange themselves so they face Mecca. In the ''qibla'' wall, usually at its center, is the ''[[mihrab]]'', a niche or depression indicating the ''qibla'' wall. Usually the ''mihrab'' is not occupied by furniture either. Sometimes, especially during Friday prayers, a raised ''minbar'' (pulpit) is located to the side of the ''mihrab'' for a [[khatib]] or some other speaker to offer a sermon (''khutbah''). The ''mihrab'' serves as the location where the [[imam]] leads the five daily prayers on a regular basis.<ref>[http://www.ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~islamarc/WebPage1/htm_eng/index/keyword1_e.htm Terms 1: Mosque,] University of Tokyo Institute of Oriental Culture. Retrieved April 4, 2019.</ref>
  
==Types of mosques==
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===Ablution facilities===
Many forms of mosques have evolved in different regions of the [[Muslim world|Islamic world]]. Notable mosque types include the early [[Abbasid]] mosques, T-type mosques, and the central-dome mosques of [[Anatolia]]. The [[Petroleum|oil]]-wealth of the [[twentieth century]] drove a great deal of mosque construction using designs from leading non-Muslim modern architects and promoting the careers of important contemporary Muslim architects.  
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As ritual purification precedes all prayers, mosques often have ablution fountains or other facilities for washing in their entryways or courtyards. However, worshippers at much smaller mosques often have to use restrooms to perform their ablutions. In traditional mosques, this function is often elaborated into a freestanding building in the center of a courtyard.<ref name="mit-handout" /> This desire for cleanliness extends to the prayer halls where shoes are disallowed to be worn anywhere other than the cloakroom. Thus, foyers with shelves to put shoes and racks to hold coats are commonplace among mosques.
  
[[Image:Mosque of Cordoba Spain.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Interior of the [[Mezquita]], a hypostyle mosque with columns arranged in grid pattern, in [[Cordoba]], [[Spain]]]]
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===Contemporary features===
''Central dome mosques'' were introduced by the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottomans]] in the [[15th century|fifteenth century]] and have a large dome centered over the prayer hall. In addition to having one large dome at the center, there are often times smaller domes that exist off-center over the prayer hall or throughout the rest of the mosque, where prayer is not performed.<ref name="mit-vocab">{{cite web|url=http://ocw.mit.edu/OcwWeb/Architecture/4-614Religious-Architecture-and-Islamic-CulturesFall2002/LectureNotes/detail/vocab-islam.htm#islam6 |accessdate=2006-04-09 |title=Vocabulary of Islamic Architecture |publisher=Massachusetts Institute of Technology}}</ref>
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Modern mosques have a variety of amenities available to their congregants. As mosques are supposed to appeal to the community, they may also have additional facilities, from health clinics to libraries to gymnasiums, to serve the community.
  
''Hypostyle mosques'' have prayer halls that are lined with a forest of [[column]]s and [[support]]s. One of the most notable hypostyle mosques is the [[Mezquita]] in [[Cordoba]], [[Spain]] as the building is supported by over 850 columns.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.glendale.edu/~rkibler/mezquitamihrab.html |accessdate=2006-04-15 |title=Mihrab within the Mezquita in Córdoba, Spain |publisher=Glendale Community College}}</ref> The [[Abbasid]]s and [[Umayyad]]s were the pioneers of the hypostyle mosque.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://archnet.org/library/sites/one-site.tcl?site_id=31 |accessdate=2006-04-09 |title=Great Mosque of Córdoba |publisher=Massachusetts Institute of Technology |work=ArchNet}}</ref>
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==Rules and etiquette==
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Mosques, in accordance with Islamic practices, institute a number of rules intended to keep Muslims focused on worshipping [[Allah]]. While there are several rules, such as those regarding allowing shoes in the prayer hall, that are universal, there are many other rules that are dealt with and enforced in a variety of ways from mosque to mosque.
  
''Inverted "T" mosques'' get their name from the shape the [[iwan]]s, and the courtyard they surround, make. A central [[courtyard]] in the inverted "T" mosque is flanked by three iwans on three different sides. One iwan, usually the largest and most central, faces [[Mecca]] and thus serves as the prayer hall.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.metu.edu.tr/home/wwwissch/ozgurey/bursa/hudavendigar.htm |accessdate=2006-04-16 |title=Mevlana Celaleddin-i Rumi |publisher=Middle East Technical University |last=Peker |first=Ali Uzay}}</ref>  
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===Prayer leader===
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Appointment of a prayer leader is considered desirable, but not always obligatory.<ref name="mawardi112">Al-Mawardi, ''The Ordnances of Government'' (Al-Ahkam al-Sultaniyya w’al-Wilayat al-Diniyya), (Reading, Berkshire, UK: Garnet Publishing, 2000, ISBN 1859641407), 112-115.</ref> The permanent prayer leader ([[imam]]) must be a free honest man, who has learned the [[Qur'an]] by heart and is authoritative in religious matters.<ref name="mawardi112" /> In mosques constructed and maintained by the government, the prayer leader is appointed by the ruler;<ref name="mawardi112" /> in private mosques, however, the appointment is done by the members of the congregation through majority voting. According to the Hanafi school of Islamic jurisprudence, the man who built the mosque has a stronger claim to the title of imam, but this view is not shared by the other schools.<ref name="mawardi112" />
  
''Iwan mosques'' are most notable for their [[iwan]]s, which are vaulted spaces that open out on one end. In iwan mosques, one or more iwans face a central courtyard that serves as the prayer hall. The style has been used almost exclusively for mosques in [[Iran]]. Today, iwan mosques are not built.<ref name="mit-vocab" /> The [[Shah Mosque]] in [[Isfahan (city)|Isfahan]], [[Iran]] is a classic example of an iwan mosque.
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Leadership at [[prayer]] falls into three categories, depending on the type of prayer: five daily prayers, Friday prayer, or optional prayers.<ref name="mawardi112"/> According to the Hanafi and Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence, appointment of a prayer leader for Friday service is mandatory because otherwise the prayer is invalid. The Shafi'i and Hanbali schools, however, argue that the appointment is not necessary and the prayer is valid as long as it is performed in a congregation. A slave may lead a Friday prayer, but Muslim authorities disagree over whether the job can be done by a minor.<ref name="mawardi112" /> An imam appointed to lead Friday prayers may not also lead at the five daily prayers; however, Muslim scholars disagree as to whether the leader appointed for five daily services may lead the Friday service as well.<ref name="mawardi112" />
  
==Rules and etiquette==
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All Muslim authorities hold the consensus opinion that women may not lead prayer.<ref name="mawardi112" /> Recently, the rule was relaxed in some places in China, where women have been allowed to lead prayer in front of all-female congregations.<ref>Louisa Lim, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3656180.stm “Chinese Muslims forge isolated path,”] BBC News (Sept. 15, 2004). Retrieved April 4, 2019.</ref> There have been a few women, most notably [[Amina Wadud]], who have defied the ruling and have opted to lead mixed-gender prayers and Friday prayers.<ref> [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4361931.stm “Woman leads US Muslims to prayer,”] BBC News (March 15, 2005). Retrieved April 4, 2019.</ref>
Mosques, in accordance with [[Islam]]ic practices, institute a number of rules that are intended to keep Muslims focused on worshipping [[Allah]]. While there are several rules, such as those regarding allowing shoes in the prayer hall, that are universal, there are many other rules that are dealt with and enforced in a variety of ways from mosque to mosque.
 
  
 
===Cleanliness===
 
===Cleanliness===
[[Image:Mosqueboysshoes.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Entering the prayer hall, shoes are removed]]
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[[Image:Mosqueboysshoes.jpg|thumb|right|250px|People must remove their shoes when entering the prayer hall]]
{{see also|Taharah}}
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All mosques have rules regarding cleanliness, as it is an essential part of the worshipper's experience. Muslims before prayer are required to cleanse themselves in an ablution process known as ''wudu''. However, even to those who enter the prayer hall of a mosque without the intention of praying, there are still rules that apply. Shoes must not be worn inside the carpeted prayer hall. Some mosques will also extend that rule to include other parts of the facility even if those other locations are not devoted to prayer. Congregants and visitors to mosques are supposed to be clean themselves.  
All mosques have rules regarding cleanliness as it is an essential part of the worshipper's experience. Muslims before prayer are required to cleanse themselves in a process known as ''[[wudu]]''. However, even to those who enter the prayer hall of a mosque without the intention of praying, there are still rules that apply. Shoes are not allowed to be worn inside the carpeted prayer hall. Some mosques will also extend that rule to include other parts of the facility even if those other locations are not devoted to prayer. Congregants and visitors to mosques are supposed to be clean themselves. It is undesirable to come to the mosque after eating something smelly or without being properly bathed.<ref name="ahmadiyya">{{cite web|url=http://www.alislam.org/library/mosque.html |accessdate=2006-04-15 |title=Etiquettes in the Mosque |publisher=Ahmadiyya Muslim Community}}</ref>
 
  
 
===Dress===
 
===Dress===
[[Islam]] requires that its adherents wear [[Islam and clothing|clothes]] that portray [[modesty]]. As a result, although many mosques will not enforce violations, both men and women when attending a mosque must adhere to these guidelines. Men are supposed to come to the mosque wearing loose and clean clothes that don't reveal the shape of the body. Likewise, it is recommended that Muslim women wear loose clothing and shirts and pants that cover to the wrists and ankles. Many mosques will require that non-Muslim female visitors also wear a scarf to cover the head in the style of the Islamic [[hijab]]. [[Middle East|Middle eastern]] clothing often associated with Islam is not necessary, although many Muslims, regardless of their ethnic background, will wear them to events and prayers at mosques.<ref name="teach-islam" />
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Islam requires that its adherents wear clothes that portray modesty. As a result, although many mosques will not enforce these rules, both men and women when attending a mosque are expected to adhere to these guidelines. Men are supposed to come to the mosque wearing loose and clean clothes that do not reveal the shape of the body. Likewise, it is recommended that Muslim women wear loose clothing, shirts, and pants that cover to the wrists and ankles. Many mosques will require that non-Muslim female visitors also wear a scarf to cover the head in the style of the Islamic ''[[hijab]]''. [[Middle East|Middle Eastern]] clothing often associated with Islam is not necessary, although many Muslims, regardless of their ethnic background, will wear them to special occasions and prayers at mosques.<ref name="teach-islam" />
  
 
===Concentration===
 
===Concentration===
As mosques are [[place of worship|places of worship]], those within the mosque are required to remain respectful to those in [[salat|prayer]]. Loud talking within the mosque, as well as discussion of topics deemed disrespectful, is forbidden in areas where people are praying. In addition, it is disrespectful to walk in front of or touch Muslims in prayer as it may break the worshipper's concentration.<ref name="ahmadiyya" /> The walls within the mosque have few items, expect for possibly [[Arabic calligraphy]], so Muslims in prayer are not distracted. Muslims are also discouraged from wearing clothing with distracting [[image]]s and [[symbol]]s so as not to divert the attention of those standing behind them during prayer.
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As mosques are places of worship, those within the mosque are required to remain respectful to those in [[salat|prayer]]. Loud talking within the mosque, as well as discussion of topics deemed disrespectful, is forbidden in areas where people are praying. In addition, it is disrespectful to walk in front of or otherwise disturb Muslims in prayer. The walls within the mosque have few items, except for possibly Arabic calligraphy, so Muslims in prayer are not distracted. Muslims are also discouraged from wearing clothing with distracting images and symbols so as not to divert the attention of those standing behind them during prayer.
  
 
===Gender separation===
 
===Gender separation===
{{see also|Women as imams}}
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[[Sharia|Islamic law]] requires men and women to be separated in the prayer hall. [[Muhammad]] preferred women to pray at home rather than at a mosque, and according to the ''[[hadith]]'', Muhammad said: "The best mosques for women are the inner parts of their houses." The second [[caliph]] [[Umar]] went so far as to prohibit women from attending mosques and required them to pray at home.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20060326033802/http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/humanrelations/womeninislam/womeninsociety.html “Women in Society,”] Muslim Students Association Compendium of Muslim Texts, University of Southern California. Retrieved April 4, 2019.</ref> Sometimes a special part of the mosque was railed off for women; for example, the governor of Mecca in 870 had ropes tied between the columns to make a separate place for women.<ref name="Masdjid1"/> Many mosques today will put the women behind a barrier or partition or in another room. Mosques in South and Southeast Asia put men and women in separate rooms, as the divisions were built into them centuries ago. In nearly two-thirds of [[United States of America|American]] mosques, women pray behind partitions or in separate areas, not in the main prayer hall; some mosques do not admit women at all. Almost a quarter of the mosques do not offer programs for women, and one-third does not allow women on governing boards. The large crowds present at the Masjid al-Haram in [[Mecca]], especially during the annual [[hajj|pilgrimage]], often result in unintended mixing between genders. Some Islamic jurists would prefer to exclude women from prayer halls altogether.<ref name="Masdjid1"/>  
 
 
Mosques around the world deal with gender separation in various ways.
 
 
 
[[Image:Frauengebetsraum.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Women's section at a mosque in [[Munich]], [[Germany]]]]
 
One notable restriction common among nearly every mosque is that against women leading prayer. Although some [[hadith]] state that women are allowed to lead prayer in front of all-female congregations, mosques almost always have more men than women present during prayer. Recently, in [[Islam in China|China]], women have been allowed to lead prayer in front of all-female congregations.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3656180.stm|title=Chinese Muslims forge isolated path|date=[[2004-09-15]]|accessdate=2006-04-07|publisher=BBC News|last=Lim|first=Louisa}}</ref> When it comes to leading prayer in front of mixed-gender congregations, Islam clearly states that only men are allowed to lead prayer. However, there have been a few women, most notably [[Amina Wadud]], who have defied the ruling and have opted to lead mixed-gender prayers and Friday prayers.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4361931.stm |accessdate=2006-04-09 |date=[[2005-03-15]] |title=Woman leads US Muslims to prayer |publisher=BBC News}}</ref>
 
 
 
[[Shari'a|Islamic law]] has no rule asserting that men and women must be separated by a [[partition]] in the prayer hall. Ideally, the men are to occupy the lines in front of the women.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/humanrelations/womeninislam/womeninsociety.html |accessdate=2006-04-15 |title=Women in Society |work=Compendium of Muslim Texts |publisher=University of Southern California |work=Compendium of Muslim Texts |last=Doi |first=Abdur Rahman I.}}</ref> Nevertheless, many mosques today will put the women behind a barrier or partition or in another room altogether so they are unable to see the [[imam]]. The basis of the gender separation within the prayer hall is to help congregants concentrate on worshipping [[Allah]]. Mosques in [[South Asia|South]] and [[Southeast Asia]] put men and women in separate rooms, as the divisions were built into them centuries ago. [[United States of America|American]] and [[Europe]]an mosques do not normally have these divisions built in as they are more often buildings converted from other purposes. The large crowds present at the [[Masjid al-Haram]] in [[Mecca]], especially during the annual [[hajj|pilgrimage]], often result in unintended mixing between genders.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.columbiajournalist.org/rw1_dinges/2005/article.asp?subj=national&course=rw1_dinges&id=624 |accessdate=2006-04-09 |date=[[2006-01-26]] |title=Muslim Women Seek More Equitable Role in Mosques |last=Rezk |first=Rawya |publisher=The Columbia Journalist}}</ref> Nevertheless, there are still mosque officials who attempt to enforce the division in some areas.
 
 
 
The same restrictions present in the prayer hall also extend to social events. Men and women at dinners and religious events will often be separated to comply with the Islamic principles that reduce intermingling of the sexes.
 
 
 
=== Non-Muslims in mosques ===
 
[[Image:Hassan II Mosque.jpg|thumb|220px|right|The [[Hassan II Mosque]] in [[Casablanca]] is the only mosque open to non-Muslims in [[Morocco]]]]
 
Many who advocate preventing non-Muslims from entering mosques cite a verse from Islam's holiest book, the [[Qur'an]], in which [[Paganism|pagans]] are banished from the Sacred Mosque, the [[Masjid al-Haram]] in [[Mecca]]:
 
 
 
:''O ye who believe! Truly the Pagans are unclean; so let them not, after this year of theirs, approach the Sacred Mosque. And if ye fear poverty, soon will Allah enrich you, if He wills, out of His bounty, for Allah is All-knowing, All-wise.'' (9:28, Yusuf Ali)<ref>Interpretation of the Meanings of The Noble Qur'an. Trans. Abdullah Yusuf Ali. Riyadh, Saudi Arabia: n.p., n.d.</ref>
 
  
That prohibition has since been extended to include all non-Muslims; today the [[Masjid al-Haram]] and all of [[Mecca]] are open only to Muslims. Likewise, the [[Masjid al-Nabawi]] and the city of [[Medina]], [[Saudi Arabia]] that surrounds it are also off-limits to those who do not practice [[Islam]].<ref>{{cite book|title=Dictionary of Beliefs & Religions|last=Goring |first=Rosemary |publisher=Wordsworth Editions |date=[[1997-05-01]] |id=ISBN 1853263540}}</ref> But when it comes to whether non-Muslims should be banned at other mosques, the ruling varies. It has most commonly been taken that non-Muslims may only enter mosques if granted permission to do so by Muslims and if they have a legitimate reason. All entrants regardless of religious affiliation are expected to respect the rules and [[decorum]] for mosques.<ref name="teach-islam" />
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Women are subjected to other restrictions in mosques. Some ''hadith'' indicate that women must not be perfumed while others say that women must leave the mosque before the men.<ref name="Masdjid1"/>
  
Despite the provisions allowing non-Muslims to enter mosques, there is still a difference in opinion, even in countries where Muslims are the majority, over whether non-Muslims should be permitted to enter. The [[Hassan II Mosque]] in [[Casablanca]], for instance, remains the only mosque in [[Morocco]] open to non-Muslims.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sit.edu/studyabroad/africa/morocco_highlights.html|title=Morocco: Culture and Society|publisher=School for International Training|accessdate=2006-04-16}}</ref> However, mosques in [[Turkey]] are open to everyone.
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===Non-Muslims in mosques===
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[[Image:Hassan II Mosque.jpg|thumb|250px|right|The Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca is one of two mosques in [[Morocco]] open to non-Muslims]]
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Under most interpretations of [[Sharia|Islamic law]], non-Muslims may be allowed into mosques, as long as they do not sleep or eat there; the dissenting opinion is presented by the followers of the Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence, who argue that non-Muslims may not be allowed into mosques under any circumstances.<ref>Al-Mawardi, 184.</ref>  
  
==Saudi influence in foreign mosques==
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The Qur'an addresses the subject of non-Muslims, and particularly [[polytheism|polytheists]], in mosques in two verses in its ninth chapter, Sura At-Tawba. The seventeenth verse of the chapter prohibits those who ''join gods with Allah''&mdash;polytheists—from entering mosques:
{{see also|Wahhabism}} [[Image:Kazan kremlin at night.JPG|thumb|right|250px|[[Qolsharif mosque|Qolşärif mosque]] in [[Kazan]], [[Russia]] — the largest mosque in Europe]]
 
  
Although the [[Saudi Arabia|Saudi]] movement to promote its form of Islam around the world can be traced back to the [[1960s]], it was not until later in the [[20th century|twentieth century]] that the government of [[Saudi Arabia]] began to become a large influence in foreign mosques.<ref name="money-trails">{{cite news|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A13266-2004Aug18 |title=U.S. Eyes Money Trails of Saudi-Backed Charities |date=[[2004-08-19]] |accessdate=2006-04-17 |last=Ottoway |first=David B. |page=A1 |publisher=The Washington Post}}</ref> Beginning in the [[1980s]], shortly after the [[Iranian Revolution]], the [[Saudi Arabia]]n government began to finance the construction of mosques in countries around the world. An estimated [[United States dollar|US$]]45 billion has been spent by the Saudi Arabian government financing mosques and Islamic schools in foreign countries. ''[[Ain al-Yaqeen]]'', a Saudi newspaper, reported in [[2002]] that Saudi funds may have contributed to building as many as 1,500 mosques and 2,000 other Islamic centers in countries were Muslims are not the majority.<ref name="saudi-con">{{cite news|url= http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/031215/15terror.htm |title=The Saudi Connection |date=[[2003-12-15]] |accessdate=2006-04-17 |last=Kaplan |first=David E. |publisher=U.S. News and World Report}}</ref> [[Saudi Arabia]] practices a form of Islam known as [[Wahhabism]] that promotes a strict adherence to Islamic law or [[Shari'a]]. As a result, many countries were funding from [[Saudi Arabia]] is going to Islamic centers believe [[Saudi Arabia]] is exporting extreme [[Islamic fundamentalism|fundamentalist]] views. Since the [[September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks]], countries have also paid more attention to Saudi funding as they fear part of the funding may be going to [[terrorist groups]] through foreign mosques.<ref name="saudi-con" />
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:''It is not for such as join gods with Allah, to visit or maintain the mosques of Allah while they witness against their own souls to infidelity. The works of such bear no fruit: In Fire shall they dwell.'' (Yusuf Ali Qu'ran-usc|9|17)
  
The effects of this Saudi influence are not easily calculable, but a [[2000]] American survey suggests that approximately seventy percent of Muslim leaders in the United States favor a [[Islamic fundamentalism|fundamentalist]] approach to Islam and that twenty-one percent of Muslim leaders in the United States favor and practice [[Wahhabism]].<ref name="money-trails" /> The same study also indicated that presence of isolation and separation of women within mosques had begun during the [[1980s]], around the time [[Saudi Arabia]] began to finance foreign mosques, and increased during the [[1990s]]. Whereas in [[1994]] only about fifty percent of American mosques separated men and women, by [[2000]] approximately sixty-six percent of American mosques had adopted a separation along gender lines. American mosques have also begun to enforce more modest clothing, even for non-Muslims.<ref name="money-trails" />
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The twenty-eighth verse of the same chapter is more specific as it only considers polytheists in the Sacred Mosque, the Masjid al-Haram in [[Mecca]]:
  
Today, an estimated sixteen mosques in the United States have been built with funds from the Saudi Arabian government. The King Faud Mosque in [[Culver City, California]] represents the largest Islamic center built by the kingdom as it was financed by [[United States dollar|US$]]8 million in donations from the former Saudi king [[Faud of Saudi Arabia|Fahd bin Abdul Aziz al-Saud]] whose name is attached to mosque as well as his half-brother, former [[crown prince]], and current [[List of kings of Saudi Arabia|king]], [[Abdullah of Saudi Arabia|Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al-Saud]].<ref name="money-trails" /> In [[Europe]], one of the largest mosques financed by the Saudi government is the Islamic Cultural Center of Italy, located in [[Rome]], a city normally associated with the [[Roman Catholic Church]]. Originally conceived during the [[1970s]] and completed during the early [[1980s]], over half of the original [[United States dollar|US$]]20 million needed to pay for the mosque came from [[Saudi Arabia]] and governments from other countries where Muslims are the majority.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/197805/a.mosque.for.rome.htm |title=A Mosque for Rome |last=Scarfiotti |first=Gian Luigi |date=September/October 1978 |accessdate=2006-04-17}}</ref> More recently, former Saudi king [[Fahd of Saudi Arabia|Fahd bin Abdul Aziz]] has contributed over [[United States dollar|US$]]50 million to the mosque.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kingfahdbinabdulaziz.com/main/m4506.htm |accessdate=2006-04-17 |publisher=King Fahd bin Abdul Aziz |title=Islamic Center in Rome, Italy}}</ref>
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:''O ye who believe! Truly the Pagans are unclean; so let them not, after this year of theirs, approach the Sacred Mosque. And if ye fear poverty, soon will Allah enrich you, if He wills, out of His bounty, for Allah is All-knowing, All-wise.'' (Yusuf Ali Quran-usc|9|28)
  
[[Saudi]] citizens have also contributed significantly to mosques in the [[Islamic world]], especially in countries where they see Muslims as poor and oppressed. Following the fall of the [[Soviet Union]], in [[1992]], mosques in impoverished [[Afghanistan]] saw many contributions from Saudi citizens. Likewise, al Haramain, a Saudi charity, spends [[United States dollar|US$]]40 million to [[United States dollar|US$]]60 million annually on mosques, copies of the [[Qur'an]], and other Islamic needs in fifty countries, including many poor countries, around the world.<ref name="money-trails" />
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According to Ahmad ibn Hanbal, these verses were followed to the letter at the times of Muhammad, when Jews and Christians, considered [[monotheism|monotheists]], were still allowed to the Masjid al-Haram. However, the Umayyad caliph Umar II later forbade non-Muslims from entering mosques, and his ruling remained in practice in Saudi Arabia.<ref name="Masdjid1"/> Today, the decision on whether non-Muslims should be allowed to enter mosques varies. With few exceptions, mosques in the [[Arabian Peninsula]] as well as [[Morocco]] do not allow entry to non-Muslims. However, there are many other places, in the west as well as the Islamic world, where non-Muslims are welcome to enter mosques. Most mosques in the United States, for example, report receiving non-Muslim visitors every month.<ref name="mosquesinamerica">Ihsan Bagby, Paul M. Perl and Bryan T. Froehle, [http://icnl.com/files/Masjid_Study_Project_2000_Report.pdf “The Mosque in America: A National Portrait,”] Council on American-Islamic Relations, 2001. Retrieved April 4, 2019.</ref> Many Mosques throughout the United States welcome non-Muslims as a sign of openness to the rest of the community as well as to encourage conversions to Islam.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/4511780.stm “Laptop link-up: A day at the mosque,”] BBC News (Dec. 5, 2005). Retrieved April 4, 2019.</ref>
  
==See also==
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In modern-day [[Saudi Arabia]], the Masjid al-Haram and all of Mecca are open only to Muslims. Likewise, the Masjid al-Nabawi and the city of [[Medina]] that surrounds it are also off-limits to those who do not practice Islam.<ref>Rosemary Goring, ''Dictionary of Beliefs & Religions'' (Wordsworth Editions,1997, ISBN 1853263540).</ref> For mosques in other areas, it has most commonly been taken that non-Muslims may only enter mosques if granted permission to do so by Muslims and if they have a legitimate reason. All entrants regardless of religious affiliation are expected to respect the rules and decorum for mosques.<ref name="teach-islam" />
*[[Islamic architecture]]
 
*[[Islamic art]]
 
*[[Salah]]
 
*[[Timeline of Islamic history]]
 
  
===Notable mosques===
+
==Notes==
[[Image:Faisal.JPG|thumb|right|275px|[[Faisal Mosque|Shah Faisal Mosque]] in [[Islamabad]], [[Pakistan]]]]
+
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;">
{{main|List of mosques}}
+
<references />
* [[Masjid al-Haram]]; [[Mecca]], [[Saudi Arabia]] - holiest site in Islam<ref name="holysites1">{{cite news|last=Miller |first=Pamela |title=Journey of a lifetime |publisher=Star Tribune |date=[[2006-01-07]] |page=12E}}</ref>
+
</div>
* [[Masjid al-Nabawi]]; [[Medina]], [[Saudi Arabia]] - second-holiest site in Islam<ref name="holysites2">{{cite news|last=Abu-Nasr |first=Donna |title=Many Saudis criticize attack |publisher=Ventura County Star |date=[[2004-12-09]] |page=16}}</ref>
 
* [[Al-Aqsa Mosque]]; [[Jerusalem]], [[Israel]] - third-holiest site in Islam<ref name="holysites3">{{cite news|publisher=Associated Press |title=Arafat to be buried in soil from Islam's third holiest site |date=[[2004-11-11]]}}</ref>
 
* [[Imam Ali Mosque]]; [[Najaf]], [[Iraq]] - holy site in [[Shi'a Islam]]
 
* [[Faisal Mosque]]; [[Islamabad]], [[Pakistan]] - largest mosque in the world, in area<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.embassyofpakistan.org/gov2.php |accessdate=2006-04-10 |title=Press Release: First in Pakistan |publisher=Embassy of Pakistan, Washington, D.C.}}</ref>
 
* [[Badshahi Masjid]]; [[Lahore]], [[Pakistan]] - large [[Mughul]] empire mosque
 
* [[Mezquita]]; [[Cordoba]], [[Spain]] - [[10th century|tenth century]] [[Moors|Moorish]] place of worship, now a [[Roman Catholic Church|Roman Catholic]] cathedral
 
* [[Hagia Sophia]]; [[Istanbul]], [[Turkey]] - former [[cathedral]]; mosque from [[1453]] to [[1935]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/buildingbig/wonder/structure/hagia_sophia.html |accessdate=2006-04-10 |title=Building Big: Databank: Hagia Sophia |publisher=PBS}}</ref>
 
* [[Sultan Ahmed Mosque]] (Blue Mosque); [[Istanbul]], [[Turkey]] - built across from the [[Hagia Sophia]]
 
* [[Shah Mosque]]; [[Isfahan]], [[Iran]] - [[Iran]]ian mosque commissioned by [[Abbas I of Safavid|Shah Abbas I]]
 
* [[Jama Masjid, Delhi|Jama Masjid]]; [[Delhi]], [[India]] - one of the largest mosques in [[India]]<ref>{{cite book|last=Lach |first=Donald F., and Edwin J. Van Kley |title=Asia in the Making of Europe: |publisher=University of Chicago Press| pages=721 |date=[[1998-12-01]] |quote=The Jami Masjid, the largest mosque in India |id=ISBN 0226467678 |chapter=The Empire of Aurangzib}}</ref>
 
  
==Notes and references==
+
==References==
{{islam}}
+
*Al-Mawardi. ''The Ordnances of Government''. Garnet Publishing, 2000. ISBN 978-1859641408
{{sisterlinks|Mosque}}
+
*Asher, Catherine B. ''Architecture of Mughal India''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992. ISBN 978-0521267281
<div style="font-size: 90%"><references /></div>
+
*Bierman, Irene A. ''Writing Signs: Fatimid Public Text'' (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1998. ISBN 978-0520208025
 +
*Budge, E. A. Wallis. ''Budge's Egypt: A Classic 19th-Century Travel Guide''. Courier Dover Publications, 2001. ISBN 0486417212
 +
*Goring, Rosemary. ''Dictionary of Beliefs & Religions''. Wordsworth Editions, 1997. ISBN 978-1853263545
 +
*Madanipour,  Ali. ''Public and Private Spaces of the City''. Routledge, 2003. ISBN 978-0415256292
 +
*Mainzer, Klaus. ''Symmetries of Nature: A Handbook for Philosophy of Nature and Science''. Walter de Gruyter, 1996. ISBN 978-3110129908
 +
*Maqsood, Ruqaiyyah Waris. ''Teach Yourself Islam''. Chicago: McGraw-Hill, 2003. ISBN 0071419632
 +
*Pope, Arthur Upham. ''Persian Architecture; The Triumph of Form and Color''. New York: George Braziller, Inc., 1965. ISBN 0807603082
 +
*Walters, Brian. ''Call to Prayer: My Travels in Spain, Portugal and Morocco''. Virtualbookworm Publishing, 2004. ISBN 978-1589395923
 +
*Wheeler, Brannon M. ''Teaching Islam''. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0195152258
 +
*Ye'or, Bat. ''Islam and Dhimmitude: Where Civilizations Collide''. Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0838639436
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.theottomans.org/english/art_culture/index.asp Ottoman: Art and the Culture] - provides information on Ottoman mosques and architecture
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All links retrieved November 10, 2022.
*[http://flickr.com/groups/mosques/ Flickr: Mosques and Minarets] - a compendium of over two thousand photos of mosques around the world
 
*[http://www.islamicarchitecture.org/architecture/themosque.htm The Mosque Review (Masjid)] - provides an overview of the features and floor plans of mosques
 
  
[[Category:Arabic language]]
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*[http://www.theottomans.org/english/art_culture/index.asp Ottoman: Art and the Culture] &ndash; Provides information on Ottoman mosques and architecture
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[[Category:Mosques|*]]
 
[[Category:Religious buildings]]
 
  
[[ar:مسجد]]
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[[Category: Philosophy and religion]]
[[bg:Джамия]]
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[[Category: Religion]]
[[ca:Mesquita]]
 
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[[os:Мæзджыт]]
 
[[pl:Meczet]]
 
[[pt:Mesquita (templo islâmico)]]
 
[[ru:Мечеть]]
 
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Latest revision as of 16:59, 10 November 2022

The Masjid al-Haram in Mecca as it exists today

A mosque is a place of worship for Muslims (followers of Islam). Muslims often refer to the mosque by its Arabic name, masjid (Arabic: مسجد). Mosques originated on the Arabian Peninsula, but now exist on all the world's inhabited continents. The primary purposes of a mosque are to serve as a place where Muslims can come together for prayer, celebrate special events, learn about Islam, and meet fellow believers. Mosques are also known for their Islamic architecture and may include elaborate domes, minarets, and prayer halls.

Etymology

The Arabic word masjid means place of worship and derives from the verb sajada (root "s-j-d," meaning "to bow" or "to kneel") in reference to the prostrations performed during Islamic prayers. Either the word masjid itself (or at least the verb from which it is derived) was borrowed from Aramaic. The word "m-s-g-d" is attested in Aramaic as early as the fifth century B.C.E., and the same word is later found in Nabataean inscriptions with the meaning "place of worship"; apparently, this Aramaic word originally meant "stele" or "sacred pillar."[1]

The modern-day English word "mosque," just like its equivalents in many other European languages, derives from the word masjid via Spanish mezquita.[1] The pre-cursors of the word "mosque" appeared during the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries and "Moseak," "muskey," "moschy," and "mos'keh" were just some of the variations that came into use until it was decided that "mosquee," imitating Middle French, Italian, and Old Spanish, would become the standard. In the early eighteenth century, the modern spelling became the most popular in the English language.

History

The first three mosques were very simple open spaces on the Arabian Peninsula. Over the next one thousand years, mosques evolved significantly acquiring their now-distinctive features (such as grand entryways and tall towers, or minarets) and adapting to cultures around the world.

Did you know?
According to the Qu'ran, the first mosque was the Kaaba built by Abraham on Allah's instruction

According to Islamic beliefs, the first mosque in the world was the Kaaba (or Kaabah), which was built by Abraham upon an order from Allah. The word "masjid" is found throughout the Qur'an, most frequently with the reference to the sanctuary of Kaaba in the city of Mecca. The Qur'an applies the term "masjid" to places of worship of different religions, including Judaism and Christianity; in the same general meaning of a place of worship, the word is used in the hadith, collections of Muslim traditions about the deeds and saying of their prophet Muhammad and his companions.[1] When Muhammad lived in Mecca, he viewed Kaaba as his first and principal mosque and performed prayers there together with his followers. Even during times when the pagan Arabs performed their rituals inside the Kaaba, Muhammad always held the Kaaba in very high esteem. The Meccan tribe of Quraish, which was responsible for guarding Kaaba, attempted to exclude Muhammad's followers from the sanctuary, which became a subject of Muslim complaints recorded in the Qur'an.[1] When Muhammad conquered Mecca in 630, he converted Kaaba to a mosque, which has since become known as the Masjid al-Haram, or “Sacred Mosque.” The Masjid al-Haram was significantly expanded and improved in the early centuries of Islam in order to accommodate the increasing number of Muslims who either lived in the area or made the annual Hajj, or pilgrimage, to Mecca, before it acquired its present shape in 1577 in the reign of the Ottoman sultan Selim II.[2]

The Masjid al-Nabawi in Medina as it exists today

The first thing Muhammad did upon arriving with his followers near Medina (then named Yathrib) after the emigration from Mecca in 622, was build the Quba Mosque in a village outside Medina.[3]

Just days after beginning work on the Quba' Mosque, Muhammad went on to establish another mosque in Medina, known today as the Masjid al-Nabawi, or “the Prophet's Mosque.” The location of the mosque was declared as such after it hosted Muhammad's first Friday prayer. Following its establishment, the Masjid al-Nabawi continued to introduce some of the practices now considered common in today's mosques. For example, the adhan, or call to prayer, was developed in the form still used in mosques today. The Masjid al-Nabawi was built with a large courtyard, a motif common among mosques built since then. Muhammad would stand up at one end of the arcade to preach. Later on, he would develop a three-step pulpit as a platform from which he would give sermons. The pulpit, now known as a minbar, is still a common feature of mosques.

Muhammad lived beside the mosque in Medina, which doubled as both a religious and political center for the early Muslim community. Negotiations were conducted, military actions planned, prisoners of war held, disputes settled, religious information disseminated, gifts received and distributed among his companions. His followers treated the wounded there and some people even lived in the mosque permanently in tents and huts. [1]

Hagia Sophia, an Eastern Orthodox church converted into a mosque on the day of the Fall of Constantinople; now a museum

Conversion of non-Muslim houses of worship into mosques began during the life of Muhammad, who turned the pagan sanctuary of Kaaba into a mosque, and continued during subsequent Islamic conquests and under the Muslim rule. As a result, numerous churches, synagogues, Zoroastrian and Hindu temples became Muslim places of worship. According to Islamic law, non-Muslims should not continue to use their places of worship for their intended purposes if they are conquered by Muslims and if there exists no treaty of surrender that explicitly mentions the right of non-Muslims to continue to use their places of worship.[4] According to early Muslim historians, towns that surrendered without resistance and made treaties with the Muslims received permission to retain their churches and synagogues, while in towns taken by conquest, Jewish and Christian places of worship were seized by the Muslims.[1][5]

Mosques were built outside the Arabian Peninsula as Muslims moved to other parts of the world. Egypt was occupied by Muslim Arabs as early as 640, and since then so many mosques have appeared throughout the country that its capital city, Cairo, has acquired the nickname of “city of a thousand minarets.”[6] Egyptian mosques vary in amenities, as some have Islamic schools (madrassas) while others have hospitals or tombs.[7]

Mosques in Sicily and Spain do not reflect the architecture of Visigoth predecessors, but instead reflect the architecture introduced by the Muslim Moors.[8]

The minaret at the Great Mosque of Xi'an, China

The first Chinese mosque was established in the eighth century in Xi'an. The Great Mosque of Xi'an, whose current building dates from the eighteenth century, does not replicate many of the features often associated with traditional mosques. Instead, it follows traditional Chinese architecture. Mosques in western China incorporate more of the elements seen in mosques in other parts of the world. Western Chinese mosques were more likely to incorporate minarets and domes, while eastern Chinese mosques were more likely to look like pagodas.

The Sultan Ahmed Mosque/Blue Mosque in Istanbul, Turkey with its tall, slender minarets is considered a classic example of Ottoman architecture

Mosques first arrived in the Ottoman Empire during the eleventh century, when many of the Turks in the region began to convert to Islam. Several of the first mosques in the Ottoman Empire, such as the Hagia Sophia in present-day Istanbul, were originally churches or cathedrals in the Byzantine Empire. The Ottomans created their own design of mosques, which included large central domes, multiple minarets, and open façades. The Ottoman style of mosques usually included elaborate columns, aisles, and high ceilings in the interior, while incorporating traditional elements, such as the mihrab. Today, Turkey is still home to many mosques that display this Ottoman style of architecture.

Mosques diffused into India during the reign of the Mughal Empire in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The Mughals brought their own form of architecture that included pointed, onion-shaped domes, as seen in Delhi's Jama Masjid.

Mosques gradually diffused to different parts of Europe. Major European cities, such as Rome, London, and Munich, are home to mosques that feature traditional domes and minarets. These large mosques in urban centers serve as community and social centers for Muslims. Mosques first appeared in the United States in the early twentieth century, the first of which was built in the late 1920s in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. However, as more immigrants continued to arrive in the country, especially from South Asia, the number of American mosques grew.

Religious functions

Prayers

Muslims performing salat (prayer)

All adult Muslims are required to offer prayer, or salat, at least five times each day. Although some smaller mosques with smaller congregations will offer only a few prayers, most mosques offer all five required prayers daily: before sunrise (fajr), at midday (dhuhr), in the afternoon (asr), after sunset (maghrib), and in the evening (isha'a). Muslims are not required to offer prayer inside a mosque, but according to hadith, offering prayer in congregation at a mosque is considered more virtuous than offering prayer alone.

In addition to holding the five obligatory daily prayers, mosques hold jumuah prayers, or Friday prayers, which replace the midday prayer as the second required prayer on Fridays. While the ordinary daily prayers can be performed at any location, it is required that all adult men attend Friday prayers at the mosque.[9]

A funeral prayer, or salat ul-janazah, is held for a deceased Muslim at the mosque, with all congregants present, including the imam, participating. Unlike with the daily prayers, the funeral prayers are normally held outdoors in a courtyard or square close to the mosque.[10] During solar eclipses, mosques will host another special prayer called salat ul-kusuf.[11]

There are two large holidays, or eids, in the Islamic calendar: Eid ul-Fitr and Eid ul-Adha. On both of these days, there are special prayers held at mosques in the morning. The eid prayers are supposed to be offered in large groups, and so larger mosques will normally host eid prayers for their congregants as well as the congregants of smaller local mosques. Some mosques will even rent convention centers or other large public buildings to hold the large number of Muslims who attend the eid prayers. Mosques, especially those in countries where Muslims are the majority, will also host eid prayers outside in courtyards or town squares.

Ramadan events

Islam's holiest month, Ramadan, is observed through many events. As Muslims must fast during the day during Ramadan, mosques will host iftar (breakfast) dinners after sunset and the fourth required prayer of the day, maghrib. Food is provided, at least in part, by members of the community, thereby creating nightly potluck dinners. Because of the community contribution necessary to serve iftar dinners, mosques with smaller congregations may not be able to host the iftar dinners daily. Some mosques will also hold suhoor meals before dawn to congregants attending the first required prayer of the day, fajr. As with iftar dinners, congregants usually provide the food for suhoor, although able mosques may provide food instead. Mosques will often invite poorer members of the Muslim community to share in beginning and breaking the fasts as providing charity during Ramadan in Islam is especially honorable.

Following the fifth and final required prayer of the day, isha, special, optional tarawih prayers are offered in larger Sunni mosques. Shi'a mosques, however, do not observe tarawih prayers. During each night of prayers, which can last for up to two hours each night, a member of the community who has memorized the entire Qur'an will recite a segment of the book.[9] During the last ten days of Ramadan, larger mosques will host all-night programs to observe Laylat al-Qadr, the night Muslims believe the Islamic prophet Muhammad first began to receive the Qur'an.[9] On that night, between sunset and sunrise, mosques will employ speakers to educate congregants in attendance about Islam. Mosques or the community usually provide meals periodically throughout the night.

During the last ten days of Ramadan, larger mosques within the Muslim community will host i'tikaf, a practice in which at least one Muslim man from the community must participate. Muslims performing i'tikaf are required to stay within the mosque for ten consecutive days, often in worship or learning about Islam. As a result, the rest of the Muslim community is responsible for providing the participants with food, drinks, and whatever else they need during their stay.[9]

Charity

The third of the Five Pillars of Islam states that Muslims are required to give approximately one-fortieth of their wealth to charity as zakat. Since mosques form the center of Muslim communities, they are where Muslims go to both give zakat and, if necessary, collect zakat. Prior to the holiday of Eid ul-Fitr, mosques also collect a special zakat that is supposed to assist in helping poor Muslims attend the prayers and celebrations associated with the holiday.

Social functions

Center of Muslim community

Imam Mosque, formerly Shah Mosque along Naghsh-i Jahan Square in Isfahan, Iran

Many Muslim rulers after the death of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, emulating him, established their domains by first building a mosque. In the same way Mecca and Medina are built around the Masjid al-Haram and the Masjid al-Nabawi, Karbala, in present-day Iraq, was built around the Shi'ite Imam Hussain Shrine. Isfahan, Iran is especially notable for its use of mosques to form the center of the city. In the eighth century, a mosque was established within the city. At the dawn of the seventeenth century, Shah Abbas I of the Safavid Dynasty led an effort to establish Isfahan as one of the largest and most beautiful cities in the world. As part of his plan, he ordered the building of Shah Mosque and Sheikh Lotf Allah Mosque, which border Isfahan's Naghsh-i Jahan Square, becomming one of the largest city squares in the world.[12]

Mosques built more recently, especially in countries where Muslims are not the majority, tend to be away from the center of major cities. Nevertheless, even a mosque in a less densely populated area often influences Muslims to relocate their homes and businesses so they are close to the mosque. Thus, mosques form the focal points of Muslim communities, even if they do not form the center of the entire community as a whole. In the United States, the growth in the number of mosques and congregants in suburbs is much greater than that in dense urban areas.[13]

Education

The Ulugh Beg Madrassa, which includes a mosque, in Samarkand, Uzbekistan

Another primary function of a mosque is to house educational facilities. Some mosques, especially those in countries where state-funded Islamic schools are not present, will have full-time schools that teach both Islamic and general knowledge. Qur'an reading and Arabic are commonly taught at mosques that are located in countries where Arabic is not widely spoken. Classes for new Muslims about the basics of Islam are also common, especially in Europe and the United States, where it is the fastest-growing religion.[14] Madrassas are also available for Muslims to study 'alim to become Islamic scholars or imams. However, madrassas are normally separate from neighborhood mosques.

Contemporary political roles

The late twentieth century saw an increase in the number of mosques used for political purposes. As they are considered important to the Muslim community, mosques are often at the heart of social conflicts. While a small number of mosques have become the platforms of some extremist speakers to advocate terrorism, the vast majority of Muslims denounces terrorism and promotes peace. Nevertheless, the growth of mosques in the west has alarmed some European residents who feel intimidated by the presence of Muslims in predominantly Christian neighborhoods.[15]

Following the attacks of September 11, 2001, several American mosques were targeted by hate crimes ranging from simple vandalism to arson.

Architecture

Styles

Interior of the Mezquita, a hypostyle mosque with columns arranged in grid pattern, in Córdoba, Spain

Arab-plan or hypostyle mosques are the earliest type of mosques, pioneered under the Umayyad Dynasty. These mosques are a square or rectangular in plan with an enclosed courtyard and a covered prayer hall. Historically, in the warm Mediterranean and Middle Eastern climates, the courtyard served to accommodate the large number of worshippers during Friday prayers. Most early hypostyle mosques have flat roofs on top of prayer halls, which resulted in the need to use numerous columns and supports.[1] One of the most notable hypostyle mosques is the Mezquita in Córdoba, Spain, as the building is supported by over 850 columns.[16] Frequently, hypostyle mosques have outer arcades so that visitors could enjoy some shade. Arab-plan mosques were constructed mostly under the Umayyad and Abbasid dynasties; subsequently, however, the simplicity of the Arab plan limited the opportunities for further development, and as a result, this architectural style gradually fell out of popularity.[1]

The Ottomans introduced central dome mosques in the fifteenth century and have a large dome centered over the prayer hall. In addition to having one large dome at the center, there are often times smaller domes that exist off-center over the prayer hall or throughout the rest of the mosque, where prayer is not performed.[16] This style was heavily influenced by the Byzantine religious architecture with its use of large central domes.[1]

Iwan mosques are most notable for their domed chambers and iwans, which are vaulted spaces open out on one end. In iwan mosques, one or more iwans face a central courtyard that serves as the prayer hall. The style represents a borrowing from pre-Islamic Iranian architecture and has been used almost exclusively for mosques in Iran. Many iwan mosques are converted Zoroastrian fire temples where the courtyard was used to house the sacred fire.[1] The Shah Mosque in Isfahan, Iran is a classic example of an iwan mosque.

Minarets

A common feature in mosques is the minaret, the tall, slender tower that usually is situated at one of the corners of the mosque structure. The top of the minaret is always the highest point in mosques that have one, and often the highest point in the immediate area. The tallest minaret in the world is located at the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca, Morocco.[17]

The first mosque had no minarets, and nowadays the most conservative Islamic movements, like Wahhabis, avoid building minarets, seeing them as ostentatious and unnecessary. The first minaret was constructed in 665 in Basra during the reign of the Umayyad caliph Muawiyah I. Muawiyah encouraged the construction of minarets, as they were supposed to bring mosques on par with Christian churches with their bell towers. Consequently, mosque architects borrowed the shape of the bell tower for their minarets, which were used for essentially the same purpose—calling the faithful to prayer.[18]

Before the five required daily prayers, a muezzin calls the worshipers to prayer from the minaret. In many countries where Muslims are not the majority, mosques are prohibited from loudly broadcasting the call to prayer (adhan), although it is supposed to be said loudly to the surrounding community. The adhan is not required before every prayer. However, nearly every mosque assigns a muezzin for each prayer to say the adhan as it is a recommended practice or sunnah of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. At mosques that do not have minarets, the adhan is called instead from inside the mosque or somewhere else on the ground.[9]

Domes

The domes of the Putra Mosque dome in Malaysia

According to Pope (1965), two important contributions to architecture by the pre-Islamic Parthian and Sassanian Persians were domes and arches.[19] Domes have long been a hallmark of mosques and Islamic architecture in general since the seventh century. Moreover, it was in this century that Islam was introduced to Persia. The domes, which often are placed directly above the main prayer hall, may signify the vaults of heaven and the sky.[20] As time progressed, the sizes of mosque domes grew, from occupying only a small part of the roof near the mihrab to encompassing all of the roof above the prayer hall. Although domes normally took on the shape of a hemisphere, the Mughals in India popularized onion-shaped domes in South Asia and Persia.[21] Some mosques will have multiple, often smaller, domes in addition to the main large dome that resides at the center.

Prayer hall

The Badshahi Masjid in Lahore, Pakistan with an iwan at center, three domes, and five visible minarets

The prayer hall, also known as the musalla, has no furniture; chairs and pews are absent from the prayer hall so as to allow as many worshipers as possible to line the room. Prayer halls contain no images of people, animals, and spiritual figures as Muslims in prayer are supposed to only be focusing on Allah. Instead, mosques will have Arabic verses from the Qur'an on their walls to assist worshippers in focusing on the beauty of Islam and its holiest book, the Qur'an, as well as for decoration.[9]

Usually opposite the entrance to the prayer hall is the qibla wall, which is the visually emphasized area inside the prayer hall. The qibla wall should, in a properly oriented mosque, be set perpendicular to a line leading to Mecca, the location of the Ka'bah.[22] Congregants pray in rows parallel to the qibla wall and thus arrange themselves so they face Mecca. In the qibla wall, usually at its center, is the mihrab, a niche or depression indicating the qibla wall. Usually the mihrab is not occupied by furniture either. Sometimes, especially during Friday prayers, a raised minbar (pulpit) is located to the side of the mihrab for a khatib or some other speaker to offer a sermon (khutbah). The mihrab serves as the location where the imam leads the five daily prayers on a regular basis.[23]

Ablution facilities

As ritual purification precedes all prayers, mosques often have ablution fountains or other facilities for washing in their entryways or courtyards. However, worshippers at much smaller mosques often have to use restrooms to perform their ablutions. In traditional mosques, this function is often elaborated into a freestanding building in the center of a courtyard.[16] This desire for cleanliness extends to the prayer halls where shoes are disallowed to be worn anywhere other than the cloakroom. Thus, foyers with shelves to put shoes and racks to hold coats are commonplace among mosques.

Contemporary features

Modern mosques have a variety of amenities available to their congregants. As mosques are supposed to appeal to the community, they may also have additional facilities, from health clinics to libraries to gymnasiums, to serve the community.

Rules and etiquette

Mosques, in accordance with Islamic practices, institute a number of rules intended to keep Muslims focused on worshipping Allah. While there are several rules, such as those regarding allowing shoes in the prayer hall, that are universal, there are many other rules that are dealt with and enforced in a variety of ways from mosque to mosque.

Prayer leader

Appointment of a prayer leader is considered desirable, but not always obligatory.[24] The permanent prayer leader (imam) must be a free honest man, who has learned the Qur'an by heart and is authoritative in religious matters.[24] In mosques constructed and maintained by the government, the prayer leader is appointed by the ruler;[24] in private mosques, however, the appointment is done by the members of the congregation through majority voting. According to the Hanafi school of Islamic jurisprudence, the man who built the mosque has a stronger claim to the title of imam, but this view is not shared by the other schools.[24]

Leadership at prayer falls into three categories, depending on the type of prayer: five daily prayers, Friday prayer, or optional prayers.[24] According to the Hanafi and Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence, appointment of a prayer leader for Friday service is mandatory because otherwise the prayer is invalid. The Shafi'i and Hanbali schools, however, argue that the appointment is not necessary and the prayer is valid as long as it is performed in a congregation. A slave may lead a Friday prayer, but Muslim authorities disagree over whether the job can be done by a minor.[24] An imam appointed to lead Friday prayers may not also lead at the five daily prayers; however, Muslim scholars disagree as to whether the leader appointed for five daily services may lead the Friday service as well.[24]

All Muslim authorities hold the consensus opinion that women may not lead prayer.[24] Recently, the rule was relaxed in some places in China, where women have been allowed to lead prayer in front of all-female congregations.[25] There have been a few women, most notably Amina Wadud, who have defied the ruling and have opted to lead mixed-gender prayers and Friday prayers.[26]

Cleanliness

People must remove their shoes when entering the prayer hall

All mosques have rules regarding cleanliness, as it is an essential part of the worshipper's experience. Muslims before prayer are required to cleanse themselves in an ablution process known as wudu. However, even to those who enter the prayer hall of a mosque without the intention of praying, there are still rules that apply. Shoes must not be worn inside the carpeted prayer hall. Some mosques will also extend that rule to include other parts of the facility even if those other locations are not devoted to prayer. Congregants and visitors to mosques are supposed to be clean themselves.

Dress

Islam requires that its adherents wear clothes that portray modesty. As a result, although many mosques will not enforce these rules, both men and women when attending a mosque are expected to adhere to these guidelines. Men are supposed to come to the mosque wearing loose and clean clothes that do not reveal the shape of the body. Likewise, it is recommended that Muslim women wear loose clothing, shirts, and pants that cover to the wrists and ankles. Many mosques will require that non-Muslim female visitors also wear a scarf to cover the head in the style of the Islamic hijab. Middle Eastern clothing often associated with Islam is not necessary, although many Muslims, regardless of their ethnic background, will wear them to special occasions and prayers at mosques.[9]

Concentration

As mosques are places of worship, those within the mosque are required to remain respectful to those in prayer. Loud talking within the mosque, as well as discussion of topics deemed disrespectful, is forbidden in areas where people are praying. In addition, it is disrespectful to walk in front of or otherwise disturb Muslims in prayer. The walls within the mosque have few items, except for possibly Arabic calligraphy, so Muslims in prayer are not distracted. Muslims are also discouraged from wearing clothing with distracting images and symbols so as not to divert the attention of those standing behind them during prayer.

Gender separation

Islamic law requires men and women to be separated in the prayer hall. Muhammad preferred women to pray at home rather than at a mosque, and according to the hadith, Muhammad said: "The best mosques for women are the inner parts of their houses." The second caliph Umar went so far as to prohibit women from attending mosques and required them to pray at home.[27] Sometimes a special part of the mosque was railed off for women; for example, the governor of Mecca in 870 had ropes tied between the columns to make a separate place for women.[1] Many mosques today will put the women behind a barrier or partition or in another room. Mosques in South and Southeast Asia put men and women in separate rooms, as the divisions were built into them centuries ago. In nearly two-thirds of American mosques, women pray behind partitions or in separate areas, not in the main prayer hall; some mosques do not admit women at all. Almost a quarter of the mosques do not offer programs for women, and one-third does not allow women on governing boards. The large crowds present at the Masjid al-Haram in Mecca, especially during the annual pilgrimage, often result in unintended mixing between genders. Some Islamic jurists would prefer to exclude women from prayer halls altogether.[1]

Women are subjected to other restrictions in mosques. Some hadith indicate that women must not be perfumed while others say that women must leave the mosque before the men.[1]

Non-Muslims in mosques

The Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca is one of two mosques in Morocco open to non-Muslims

Under most interpretations of Islamic law, non-Muslims may be allowed into mosques, as long as they do not sleep or eat there; the dissenting opinion is presented by the followers of the Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence, who argue that non-Muslims may not be allowed into mosques under any circumstances.[28]

The Qur'an addresses the subject of non-Muslims, and particularly polytheists, in mosques in two verses in its ninth chapter, Sura At-Tawba. The seventeenth verse of the chapter prohibits those who join gods with Allah—polytheists—from entering mosques:

It is not for such as join gods with Allah, to visit or maintain the mosques of Allah while they witness against their own souls to infidelity. The works of such bear no fruit: In Fire shall they dwell. (Yusuf Ali Qu'ran-usc|9|17)

The twenty-eighth verse of the same chapter is more specific as it only considers polytheists in the Sacred Mosque, the Masjid al-Haram in Mecca:

O ye who believe! Truly the Pagans are unclean; so let them not, after this year of theirs, approach the Sacred Mosque. And if ye fear poverty, soon will Allah enrich you, if He wills, out of His bounty, for Allah is All-knowing, All-wise. (Yusuf Ali Quran-usc|9|28)

According to Ahmad ibn Hanbal, these verses were followed to the letter at the times of Muhammad, when Jews and Christians, considered monotheists, were still allowed to the Masjid al-Haram. However, the Umayyad caliph Umar II later forbade non-Muslims from entering mosques, and his ruling remained in practice in Saudi Arabia.[1] Today, the decision on whether non-Muslims should be allowed to enter mosques varies. With few exceptions, mosques in the Arabian Peninsula as well as Morocco do not allow entry to non-Muslims. However, there are many other places, in the west as well as the Islamic world, where non-Muslims are welcome to enter mosques. Most mosques in the United States, for example, report receiving non-Muslim visitors every month.[29] Many Mosques throughout the United States welcome non-Muslims as a sign of openness to the rest of the community as well as to encourage conversions to Islam.[30]

In modern-day Saudi Arabia, the Masjid al-Haram and all of Mecca are open only to Muslims. Likewise, the Masjid al-Nabawi and the city of Medina that surrounds it are also off-limits to those who do not practice Islam.[31] For mosques in other areas, it has most commonly been taken that non-Muslims may only enter mosques if granted permission to do so by Muslims and if they have a legitimate reason. All entrants regardless of religious affiliation are expected to respect the rules and decorum for mosques.[9]

Notes

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 R. Hillenbrand, "Masdjid." Encyclopaedia of Islam Online. Edited by P. J. Bearman, et al. Brill Academic Publishers.
  2. Weinsinck, A. J., P. J. Bearman, T. Bianquis, C. E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel and W. P. Heinrichs (eds.), "Masdjid al-Haram," Encyclopaedia of Islam Online Brill Academic Publishers. ISSN 1573-3912
  3. Masjid Quba' Ministry of Hajj - Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  4. Bat Ye'or, Islam and Dhimmitude: Where Civilizations Collide (Madison/Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press/Associated University Presses, 2002, ISBN 0838639437).
  5. One of the earliest examples of these kinds of conversions was in Damascus, Syria, where in 705 Umayyad caliph Abd al-Malik took the church of St. John from the Christians and had it rebuilt as a mosque, which is now known as Umayyad Mosque; overall, Abd al-Malik is said to have transformed ten churches in Damascus into mosques. The process of turning churches into mosques was especially intensive in the villages, with the gradual conversion of the people to Islam.
  6. Sinéad Archer, Cairo: City of a Thousand Minarets Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  7. E. A. Wallis Budge, Budge's Egypt: A Classic 19th-Century Travel Guide (Courier Dover Publications, 2001, ISBN 0486417212), 123-128.
  8. Foundation for Science Technology and Civilisation, Theoretical Issues of Islamic Architecture MuslimHeritage.com. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.7 Ruqaiyyah Waris Maqsood, Teach Yourself Islam (Chicago: McGraw-Hill, 2003, ISBN 0071419632), 57-58, 72-75, 112-120.
  10. Sayyid Saabiq, Fiqh-us-Sunnah, Volume 4: Funeral Prayers (Salatul Janazah) Fiqh-us-Sunnah. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  11. Prayer of the Solar and Lunar Eclipse (Salat Al-Khusuf) Prayer in Islam. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  12. Ali Madanipour, Public and Private Spaces of the City (London: Routledge, 2007, ISBN 0415256291), 207.
  13. Geneive Abdo, “Islam in America: Separate but Unequal,” The Washington Quarterly 28(4) (Sept. 2005): 7-17. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  14. Brannon M. Wheeler, Teaching Islam (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002, ISBN 0195152255), v. "...[Islam] remains the fastest growing religion both in the United States and worldwide."
  15. John Harris, “Paranoia, poverty and wild rumours - a journey through BNP country,” The Guardian (April 22, 2006). Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 Nasser Rabbat, Religious Architecture and Islamic Cultures: 2-The Vocabulary of Islamic Religious Architecture, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  17. Brian Walters, Call to Prayer: My Travels in Spain, Portugal and Morocco (Virtualbookworm Publishing, 2004, ISBN 1589395921), 14: “Its 210-meter minaret is the tallest in the world.”
  18. R. Hillenbrand, "Masara Manar," Encyclopaedia of Islam Online, Edited by P. J. Bearman et al. Brill Academic Publishers. ISSN 1573-3912
  19. Arthur Upham Pope, Persian Architecture; The Triumph of Form and Color (New York: George Braziller, Inc., 1965, ISBN 0807603082).
  20. Klaus Mainzer, Symmetries of Nature: A Handbook for Philosophy of Nature and Science (Berlin and New York: Walter de Gruyter, 1996, ISBN 3110129906), 124: “...the dome arching over the believers like the spherical dome of the sky.”
  21. Catherine B. Asher, Architecture of Mughal India (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN 0521267285), 256.
  22. Irene A. Bierman, Writing Signs: Fatimid Public Text (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1998, ISBN 0520208021), 150.
  23. Terms 1: Mosque, University of Tokyo Institute of Oriental Culture. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  24. 24.0 24.1 24.2 24.3 24.4 24.5 24.6 24.7 Al-Mawardi, The Ordnances of Government (Al-Ahkam al-Sultaniyya w’al-Wilayat al-Diniyya), (Reading, Berkshire, UK: Garnet Publishing, 2000, ISBN 1859641407), 112-115.
  25. Louisa Lim, “Chinese Muslims forge isolated path,” BBC News (Sept. 15, 2004). Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  26. “Woman leads US Muslims to prayer,” BBC News (March 15, 2005). Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  27. “Women in Society,” Muslim Students Association Compendium of Muslim Texts, University of Southern California. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  28. Al-Mawardi, 184.
  29. Ihsan Bagby, Paul M. Perl and Bryan T. Froehle, “The Mosque in America: A National Portrait,” Council on American-Islamic Relations, 2001. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  30. “Laptop link-up: A day at the mosque,” BBC News (Dec. 5, 2005). Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  31. Rosemary Goring, Dictionary of Beliefs & Religions (Wordsworth Editions,1997, ISBN 1853263540).

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Al-Mawardi. The Ordnances of Government. Garnet Publishing, 2000. ISBN 978-1859641408
  • Asher, Catherine B. Architecture of Mughal India. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992. ISBN 978-0521267281
  • Bierman, Irene A. Writing Signs: Fatimid Public Text (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1998. ISBN 978-0520208025
  • Budge, E. A. Wallis. Budge's Egypt: A Classic 19th-Century Travel Guide. Courier Dover Publications, 2001. ISBN 0486417212
  • Goring, Rosemary. Dictionary of Beliefs & Religions. Wordsworth Editions, 1997. ISBN 978-1853263545
  • Madanipour, Ali. Public and Private Spaces of the City. Routledge, 2003. ISBN 978-0415256292
  • Mainzer, Klaus. Symmetries of Nature: A Handbook for Philosophy of Nature and Science. Walter de Gruyter, 1996. ISBN 978-3110129908
  • Maqsood, Ruqaiyyah Waris. Teach Yourself Islam. Chicago: McGraw-Hill, 2003. ISBN 0071419632
  • Pope, Arthur Upham. Persian Architecture; The Triumph of Form and Color. New York: George Braziller, Inc., 1965. ISBN 0807603082
  • Walters, Brian. Call to Prayer: My Travels in Spain, Portugal and Morocco. Virtualbookworm Publishing, 2004. ISBN 978-1589395923
  • Wheeler, Brannon M. Teaching Islam. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0195152258
  • Ye'or, Bat. Islam and Dhimmitude: Where Civilizations Collide. Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0838639436

External links

All links retrieved November 10, 2022.

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