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Islamic Centre (Maldives)

Coordinates: 04°10′41″N 73°30′45″E / 4.17806°N 73.51250°E / 4.17806; 73.51250
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Islamic Centre
Masjid al-Sultan Muhammad Thakurufaanu al-Auzam
Dhivehi: މަސްޖިދުއް ސުލްޠާން މުޙައްމަދު ތަކުރުފާނު އަލްއަޢުޡަމް
The mosque prayer hall in 2018
Religion
AffiliationSunni Islam
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusMosque
StatusActive
Location
LocationMalé, Kaafu Atoll
CountryMaldives
Islamic Centre (Maldives) is located in Maldives
Islamic Centre (Maldives)
Location of the mosque in the Maldives
AdministrationMinistry of Islamic Affairs
Geographic coordinates04°10′41″N 73°30′45″E / 4.17806°N 73.51250°E / 4.17806; 73.51250
Architecture
TypeMosque architecture
StyleModernist (Malaysia)
Completed1984
Specifications
Capacity5,000 worshippers
Minaret(s)One
Minaret height43 m (142 ft)

The Islamic Centre, officially named the Masjid al-Sultan Muhammad Thakurufaanu al-Auzam (Dhivehi: މަސްޖިދުއް ސުލްޠާން މުޙައްމަދު ތަކުރުފާނު އަލްއަޢުޡަމް; Arabic: مسجد السلطان محمد تكرفان الأعظم), is a Sunni Islam mosque, located in Malé, on the Kaafu Atoll, in the Maldives. The mosque was opened by President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom in November 1984.[1]

History

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The Islamic Centre was built with the assistance of Islamic countries who provided financial support during the 1980s, including Saudi Arabia, Brunei, Pakistan, Malaysia, United Arab Emirates, Egypt, and Kuwait. The mosque was opened on 11 November 1984. A plate in the grand entrance of the Centre is engraved in Dhivehi, Arabic and English with the names of all leaders of the Islamic countries who provided support. The plate also records that the Islamic Centre was opened on AH 10 Safar 1405, or 11 November 1984 CE.[citation needed]

The building is an impressive structure, with a large golden dome and a minaret that stands 43 m (142 ft) tall. The building was based on the Modernist design of a mosque that was built in Malaysia and still present there, and it was constructed using traditional Islamic architectural elements.[2]

The Grand Friday Mosque, located in the Islamic Centre, is named after one of the most celebrated Maldivian heroes, Sultan Muhammad Thakurufaanu al-Auzam of the Maldives. The mosque has capacity for approximately 5,000 worshippers.[1][3]

The centre also serves as a conference hall for official meetings and ceremonies, an Islamic library, and a number of offices,[1] and houses the Ministry of Islamic Affairs since 11 November 2008, that replaced the Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs, established by Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, a former president of the Maldives.[1]

The Islamic Centre acts as a major tourist attraction in Malé, in part due to its location near the main jetty of Malé and the mosque's architecture. The mosque's golden dome is evident on the skyline of Malé and is highly visible. The mosque's interior walls are decorated with woodcarvings and Arabic calligraphy. The Centre's Grand Friday Mosque, Masjid al-Sultan Muhammad Thakurufaanu al-Auzam, was the largest mosque in the Maldives,[1] until the opening of the King Salman Mosque in 2022, that accommodates 10,000 worshippers.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Islamic Centre Maldives". Ministry of Islamic Affairs.
  2. ^ "Maldives Islamic Centre". My Maldives: Attractions.
  3. ^ "Al A'Azam Islamic Center and Mosque". Islamic Architectural Heritage. IRCICA. 2019. Retrieved 7 December 2024.
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