The East London Mosque (ELM) is situated in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets between Whitechapel and Aldgate East.[2] Combined with the adjoining London Muslim Centre and Maryam Centre, it is one of the largest mosques in Western Europe accommodating more than 7,000 worshippers for congregational prayers.[1] The mosque was one of the first in the UK to be allowed to use loudspeakers to broadcast the adhan.[3]
Building details
Construction of the three-storey East London Mosque began in 1982 on land left empty after bombing during World War II, and was completed in 1985. The architect was John Gill Associates.[4] The exterior is a distinctive brick pattern in two colours, with the front facing Whitechapel Road and the rear on Fieldgate Street. The mosque is capped with a golden dome of about 8.5m diameter. The minaret rises to about 28.5m above ground level, and the main entrance is finished with two smaller copies of the minaret. The mosque has two large halls, a gallery, classrooms, offices and a retail unit.
Construction for phase 1 of the mosque's expansion, called the London Muslim Centre, began in 2002 and was completed in 2004. Adjoining and connected to the mosque, it is a six-storey building with a prominent entrance featuring a sweeping mosaic pattern. The centre has two multipurpose halls, a seminar suite, a nursery, classrooms, a fitness centre, a small Islamic library, a radio station, retail units and offices. It was designed by Markland Klaschka Limited.[5]
In 2009 phase 2 commenced,[6] a nine-storey addition on the Fieldgate Street side to be known as the Maryam Centre, on a site originally used by the mosque's funeral services,[7] designed by the same architect.[8] The Maryam Centre opened to the public on 4 July 2013, adding a new main prayer hall, improved funeral services, a visitor centre, and over five floors of facilities for women including prayer spaces, education facilities, a fitness centre, and support services.
History
1910–1939: The London Mosque Fund
At the beginning of the 20th century, London was the capital of the extensive British Empire, which contained many millions of Muslims, but had no mosque for Muslim residents or visitors. On 9 November 1910, at a meeting of Muslims and non-Muslims at the Ritz Hotel, the London Mosque Fund was established with the aims of organising weekly Friday prayers and providing a permanent place of worship for Muslims in London.[9]
People associated with the London Mosque Fund over the years include:[10]
Syed Ameer Ali, the first Indian Privy Counsellor, was the Chairman of the Fund's executive committee until his death in 1928
From 1910 to 1940 various rooms had been hired for Jumu'ah prayers on Fridays. Finally, in 1940, three houses were purchased at 446–448 Commercial Road in the east end of London as a permanent place of prayer. On 2 August 1941 the combined houses were inaugurated as the 'East London Mosque and Islamic Culture Centre' at a ceremony attended by the Egyptian Ambassador, Colonel Sir Gordon Neal (representing the Secretary of State for India). The first prayer was led by the Ambassador for Saudi Arabia, Shaikh Hafiz Wahba.[13] The number of East Pakistanis in Britain, one of the largest Muslim ethnic groups in the country, rose from 2,000 in 1951 to 6,000 in 1961. The increase was due mainly to immigration from the small towns of Sylhet division,[15] in what became Bangladesh in 1971. During the 1970s, the Bangladeshi-origin population in Britain grew from 22,000 to 65,000.[16]
1975–1984: Preparing for a purpose-built mosque
In 1975 the local authority bought the properties in Commercial Road under a compulsory purchase order, in return providing a site with temporary buildings on Whitechapel Road next to the Fieldgate Street Great Synagogue. The local community set about raising funds to erect a purpose-built mosque on the site. King Fahd of Saudi Arabia donated £1.1 million of the £2 million fund,[17][18] and the governments of Kuwait and Britain also donated to the fund.[19] Seven years later, the building of the new mosque commenced, with foundations laid in 1982 and construction completed in 1985.
1985–2000: The new East London Mosque
It was one of the first mosques in the United Kingdom to broadcast the adhan (call to prayer) from the minaret using loudspeakers.[3] Some local non-Muslim residents protested it as noise pollution, leading to coverage by the Daily Mail and the Daily Star; in response, local Church of England clerics gave their support for the adhan in a letter to the East London Advertiser.[3] It had a capacity of 2,000, with prayer areas for men and women, and classroom space for supplementary education. However, by the 1990s the capacity was already insufficient for the growing congregation and for the range of projects based there. The land next to the mosque had been left vacant after bomb damage during World War II, and was used as a car park. Under the leadership of chairman Haji Akbor Ali, the mosque launched a campaign to buy the land; the purchase was completed in 1999.[20]
2001–2008: The London Muslim Centre
In 2001 Prince Charles launched the project to build the London Muslim Centre (LMC).[21] Construction began in 2002, and the new centre opened on 11 June 2004, with over 15,000 people attending the opening prayers.[22][23] The prayer capacity of the mosque and centre rose to about 5,000, with a greatly increased range of services. The building cost £10.4 million, funding was provided by the London Development Agency,[24]European Development Fund, London Borough of Tower Hamlets and Sure Start. Around £4 million was donated by members of the public.[23][25]
Following the 7 July 2005 London bombings, on 22 July, the mosque was evacuated due to a bomb hoax. The hoax was blamed on extremist Muslims after it condemned the 7/7 bombings and opposed extremist teaching.[30]
In October 2008 the East London Mosque and London Muslim Centre won Islam Channel's Super Model Mosque award presented at the Global Peace and Unity event at the Excel Centre.[32][33]
In December 2008 the East London Mosque planned to allow Noor Pro Media to hold a conference on 1 January 2009 which would include a videotaped lecture by Anwar al-Awlaki. Former Shadow Home SecretaryDominic Grieve expressed concern over al-Awlaki's involvement. A spokesman for the mosque said that "Mr Awlaki has not been proven guilty in a court of law. Everyone is entitled to their point of view", and that "We didn't organise this event, they are just using our facilities."[34][35] But the controversy brought the mosque management to review and tighten its booking procedures for private hire of facilities by third-party groups; subsequently, publicity materials were to be approved previous to booking mosque space for events. This was accompanied by a strong statement: "The mosque will not tolerate its facilities being used for extremist groups or speakers and is now vetting all speakers and publicity materials." Shortly after, at the end of January 2009 Awlaki published his views on Jihad and more information about him gradually emerged. The mosque then decided to ban all materials from Awlaki; people who had already hired the mosque's facilities for public events and were planning to use Awlaki's materials had to remove said materials from their program.
Later in 2009, Al-Awlaki expressed support of the Fort Hood murders; the mosque issued a statement condemning his extreme views and renewed that condemnation at the end of 2009 when possible connections to Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab emerged. It also prohibited the sale or distribution of Awlaki materials in the mosque and its centre.[36]
From 2009: The Maryam Centre and the neighbouring Synagogue
19 Jun 2009: construction began of the mosque's Phase 2 expansion, the 'Maryam Centre'.[6]
25 Aug 2010: subject of a BBC documentary, Middle EastEnders, that "chronicles the setbacks and triumphs of an institution which has shaped the identity of a corner of London", timed to anticipate the centenary of the mosque.[40]
4 Sep 2010: the mosque raised over £1.1 million in one night in Ramadan on Channel S,[41] breaking the record for ethnic television for the third year in a row, in an appeal for the building of their Phase 2 expansion.[42]
24 Jun 2011: first beehive installed on roof of London Muslim Centre.[43]
3 Sep 2011: the English Defence League (EDL) wanted to march past the mosque, but after widespread opposition[44] were prevented by a ban imposed by Home SecretaryTheresa May. The EDL instead held a static demonstration in Aldgate, and were stopped by police from entering Tower Hamlets, whilst a larger 'United East End' counter-demonstration was held by an alliance of groups and organisations.[45]
4 Jul 2013: the Maryam Centre opens to the public, increasing the capacity for prayers to over 7,000 people.[47]
28 Oct 2013: the president of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bakir Izetbegović visited the Mosque and Centre for an evening dinner reception. He delivered a key note speech to guests and dignitaries in attendance.[48]
30 Sep 2015: subject of BBC documentary Welcome to the Mosque by filmmaker Robb Leech.[52]
Management
The East London Mosque Trust is a registered charity[53] (previously registered as The London Mosque Fund)[54] and a private company (limited by guarantee, no share capital).[55] The mosque is managed by trustees who are elected biennially by its members at the Annual General Meeting.[56] The Director is Dilowar Hussain Khan, The Khatib and Head Imam of the mosque is Abdul Qayum, the CEO is Junaid Ahmed, and the Chairman is Abdul-Hayee Murshad.
Gay rights campaigners accused the mosque of hosting homophobic speakers,[63][64] although the mosque had earlier condemned homophobia.[65][66] In 2014 Oxfam cancelled an event at the mosque after it learned the headline speaker, Ibrahim Hewitt, had written a book in 1994 for GCSE students, What does Islam say, calling homosexuality a "great sin" and saying gay people should be "severely punished" under Islamic law.[67][68]
In July 2017 the mosque and others complained to Pride London about placards displayed in their march by the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain (CEMB), claiming they were Islamophobic.[69] Gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell defended the CEMB and criticised the mosque's record on homophobia, writing "In the last two years, I and my colleagues at the Peter Tatchell Foundation have 11 times contacted the mosque and LMC, requesting them to have a dialogue with the LGBT community: to build bridges and solidarity between LGBTs and Muslims to combat the prejudice, discrimination and violence that both communities suffer. All our requests have been rebuffed."[70][71][72][73] In reply, the mosque stated it had met with LGBT groups, and also with Tatchell himself in 2012.[74]
— Annual Review 2013–14, East London Mosque Trust[84]
The Friday sermon is delivered in Arabic, Bengali and English.
Services provided to the community include: nursery, primary and secondary schools; supplementary education; library; fitness centres; wedding and conference hire; support for deaf children and adults; ICT Training and English classes; advice and counselling; and exhibitions and open days.[84]
The mosque previously ran Muslim Community Radio (MCR), in partnership with the Islamic Forum of Europe, which started to broadcast in 1998 through an RSL, then through Spectrum. In the month of Ramadan from 2001 to 2013 MCR broadcast 24 hours a day across parts of east London. In 2005 it moved into a new studio in the London Muslim Centre. It was run by volunteers, and provided programmes in English, Bengali and Arabic.[85]
^ abcEade, John (1996). "Nationalism, Community, and the Islamization of Space in London". In Metcalf, Barbara Daly (ed.). Making Muslim Space in North America and Europe. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN0520204042. Retrieved 16 May 2022. The mosque committee was determined from the outset, moreover, to remind local people of the building's religious function as loudly as possible. As one of the few mosques in Britain permitted to broadcast calls to prayer (azan), the mosque soon found itself at the center of a public debate about "noise pollution" when local non-Muslim residents began to protest.
^"A Century of Service". Emel Media Ltd. January 2011. Archived from the original on 27 April 2014. Retrieved 24 April 2014.
^Humayun Ansari, ed. (30 June 2011). The Making of the East London Mosque, 1910-1951: Minutes of the London Mosque Fund and East London Mosque Trust Ltd (Camden Fifth Series). Cambridge University Press. ASIN1107014921.
^Khizar Humayun Ansari, "Ali, Abdullah Yusuf (1872–1953)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Oct 2012; online edn, Jan 2013 accessed 6 February 2020
^"London Muslim Centre". East London Mosque. 12 February 2017. Archived from the original on 6 February 2020. Retrieved 6 February 2020.
^Kibria, Nazli (1996). Muslims in Motion: Islam and National Identity in the Bangladeshi Diaspora. Rutgers University Press. pp. 79–80. ISBN978-0-8135-5055-8.
^Kibria, Nazli (1996). Muslims in Motion: Islam and National Identity in the Bangladeshi Diaspora. Rutgers University Press. pp. 84–85. ISBN978-0-8135-5055-8.
^Eade, John (1996). "Nationalism, Community, and the Islamization of Space in London". In Metcalf, Barbara Daly (ed.). Making Muslim Space in North America and Europe. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN0520204042. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
^Kibria, Nazli (1996). Muslims in Motion: Islam and National Identity in the Bangladeshi Diaspora. Rutgers University Press. p. 103. ISBN0813550556.
HaSeulLagu oleh LoonaDirilis15 Desember 2016GenrePopDurasi6:35LabelBlockberry CreativeCJ E&MVideo musikLet Me In di YouTubeVideo musikThe Carol di YouTube HaSeul (atau LOOΠΔ & HaSeul) adalah singel ketiga dari proyek pra-debut girl grup Korea Selatan Loona. Singel ini dirilis pada 15 Desember 2016 oleh Blockberry Creative dan didistribusikan oleh CJ E&M.[1] Ini memperkenalkan anggota HaSeul dan berisi dua lagu, solo berjudul Let Me In, dan sebuah lagu kolaborasi Natal be...
Stasiun Ebetsu江別駅Bangunan stasiun pada September 2012LokasiEbetsu, HokkaidoJepangOperator JR HokkaidoJalur■ Jalur Utama HakodateLetak307.3 km dari HakodateJumlah peron1 peron samping + 1 peron pulauJumlah jalur4Informasi lainStatusMemiliki stafKode stasiunA09SejarahDibuka13 November 1882 (1882-11-13)PenumpangFY20143.964 per hari Sunting kotak info • L • BBantuan penggunaan templat ini Stasiun Ebetsu (江別駅code: ja is deprecated , Ebetsu-eki) adalah sebuah stasiu...
Charles MozinPortrait présué de Charles Mozin, localisation inconnue, document non sourcé..BiographieNaissance 12 mars 1806Ancien 12e arrondissement de ParisDécès 7 novembre 1862 (à 56 ans)Trouville-sur-MerSépulture Cimetière de MontmartreNom de naissance Charles Louis MozinNationalité françaiseActivité Peintre, dessinateur et lithographePériode d'activité 1795Parentèle Charles Malherbe (petit-fils)Autres informationsMaître Xavier LeprinceGenre artistique MarineŒuvre...
Artikel utama: Daftar telenovela Televisa Berikut adalah daftar telenovela yang diproduksi Televisa dari tahun 1980 hingga 1989. 1980 Abel Santacruz wmenulis beberapa telenovela anak-anak Carrusel, Mi segunda madre, Guadalupe dan Chispita. # Tahun Judul Pengarang Direktur Ref. 375 1980 Al final del arco iris María Zarattini Alfredo Saldaña 376 Al rojo vivo María Zarattini Alfredo Saldaña [1] 377 Ambición Inés Rodena Rafael Banquells [2] 378 Aprendiendo a amar Caridad Bra...
Russian state-controlled international television network Russia Today redirects here. Not to be confused with Rossiya Segodnya or Russian Federation Today. ANO TV-Novosti redirects here. Not to be confused with RIA Novosti. RTTV redirects here. Not to be confused with RTVI. Television channel RTTypeState media,[1]news channel,propaganda[2]CountryRussiaBroadcast areaWorldwideHeadquartersMoscowProgrammingLanguage(s)News channel: English, French, Arabic & Spanish Documentary...
Department of France For other uses, see Creuse (disambiguation). Department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, FranceCreuse (Occitan): Cruesa or CrosaDepartmentPrefecture building of the Creuse department, in Guéret FlagCoat of armsLocation of Creuse in FranceCoordinates: 46°07′20″N 1°54′46″E / 46.12222°N 1.91278°E / 46.12222; 1.91278CountryFranceRegionNouvelle-AquitainePrefectureGuéretSubprefecturesAubussonGovernment • President of the Departmental Coun...
French track cyclist Marion ClignetPersonal informationFull nameMarion ClignetBorn (1964-02-21) 21 February 1964 (age 60)Hyde Park, Chicago, United StatesTeam informationDisciplineTrack, roadRoleRiderRider typePursuit, time-trialist Medal record Representing France Women's Road bicycle racing World Championships 1991 Stuttgart Team time trial Women's Track cycling Olympic Games 1996 Atlanta Individual pursuit 2000 Sydney Individual pursuit World Championships 1994 Palermo...
Artikel ini bukan mengenai bahasa Italik. Bahasa Italia lingua italiana, italiano Pengucapan[itaˈlj:ano]Dituturkan di Italia Swiss (Ticino dan Kanton Graubünden Selatan) San Marino VatikanDaerah di Istria Slovenia (Slovenia) dan Wilayah Istria (Kroasia)WilayahItalia, Ticino dan Graubünden Selatan, Pesisir Slovenia, Istria BaratEtnisItaliaPenutur70 juta penutur bahasa ibu125 juta penutur bahasa kedua Rincian data penutur Jumlah penutur beserta (jika ada) metod...
Youssef Benali Benali pada 2017Personal informationLahir 28 Mei 1987 (umur 36)Kebangsaan Tunisia/QatarTinggi 193 m (633 ft 2 in)Posisi permainan PivotInformasi klubKlub saat ini FC BarcelonaJumlah 41Tim nasionalTahun Tim Penampilan (Gol) Qatar 63 (195) Rekam medali Kejuaraan Dunia 2015 Qatar Kejuaraan Asia 2018 Korea Selatan Youssef Benali (lahir 28 Mei 1987) adalah seorang pemain bola tangan Qatar kelahiran Tunisia. Ia bermain untuk FC Barcelona dan tim nasional Qatar. ...
This is a list of some of the ways regions are defined in the United States. Many regions are defined in law or regulations by the federal government; others by shared culture and history, and others by economic factors. Interstate regions Census Bureau–designated regions and divisions U.S. Census Bureau regions and divisions Since 1950, the United States Census Bureau defines four statistical regions, with nine divisions.[1][2] The Census Bureau region definition is widely...
Regency in Papua, IndonesiaJayawijaya Regency Kabupaten JayawijayaRegency SealMotto(s): Yogotak Hubuluk Mutuk Hanorogo(Tomorrow Must Be Better Than Today)Location in Highland PapuaJayawijaya RegencyLocation in Indonesian PapuaShow map of Western New GuineaJayawijaya RegencyLocation in IndonesiaShow map of IndonesiaCoordinates: 4°05′00″S 139°05′00″E / 4.0833°S 139.0833°E / -4.0833; 139.0833Country IndonesiaRegionPapuaProvinceHighland PapuaCapitalWa...
Unincorporated community in the state of Oregon, United States Horton general store Horton is an unincorporated community in Lane County, Oregon, United States.[1] It is about three miles northeast of Blachly, in the Lake Creek valley of the Central Oregon Coast Range . History In 1903, three brothers—E. J. Horton, Sam M. Horton, and J. C. Horton—settled in the area and started a sawmill they named Horton Mill.[2] When the post office was established in 1913 it was named ...
Le Suore di San Giovanni di Dio (in inglese Sisters of St. John of God) sono un istituto religioso femminile di diritto pontificio: le suore di questa congregazione pospongono al loro nome la sigla S.J.G.[1] Indice 1 Storia 2 Attività e diffusione 3 Note 4 Bibliografia 5 Collegamenti esterni Storia Giovanni di Dio, santo titolare della congregazione La congregazione fu fondata da Thomas Furlong, vescovo di Ferns, insieme con Visitation Collins: nel 1863 la Collins era entrata tra le ...
Football stadium in South Korea Gwangju World Cup StadiumGuus Hiddink StadiumLocationSeo-gu, Gwangju, South KoreaCapacity40,245ConstructionOpenedSeptember 2001ArchitectSpace Group of KoreaTenantsGwangju Sangmu (2003–2010)Gwangju FC (2011–2020) The Gwangju World Cup Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium in the South Korean city of Gwangju. It is managed by the Sports Support Division of the Culture & Sports Policy Office of the Gwangju Metropolitan city.[1] Initially the stadium w...
Disambiguazione – Se stai cercando altri significati, vedi Settala (disambigua). Settalacomune Settala – Veduta LocalizzazioneStato Italia Regione Lombardia Città metropolitana Milano AmministrazioneSindacoMassimo Gianfranco Giordano (Settala Bene Comune) dal 10-06-2024 TerritorioCoordinate45°27′21″N 9°23′31″E45°27′21″N, 9°23′31″E (Settala) Altitudine108 m s.l.m. Superficie17,42 km² Abitanti7 401[1] (31-01-2024)...
Pour les articles homonymes, voir OWS. Occupy Wall Street Un orateur s'adresse à la foule dans le parc Zuccotti, le 17 septembre 2011. Informations Date 17 septembre 2011 - 15 novembre 2011 Localisation New York Caractéristiques Types de manifestations AnticonsommationCyberactivismeDésobéissance civileManifestation non-violentePiquet de grève Coordonnées 40° 42′ 33″ nord, 74° 00′ 40″ ouest modifier Occupy Wall Street (OWS) ou Occupy New York (en ...
Adjusting pitches of guitar strings This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Guitar tunings – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message) The range of a guitar with standard tuning Standard tuning (listen) Guitar tunings are the assignment of pi...
Questa voce sull'argomento società calcistiche lettoni è solo un abbozzo. Contribuisci a migliorarla secondo le convenzioni di Wikipedia. Daugava DaugavpilsCalcio Segni distintiviUniformi di gara Casa Trasferta Colori sociali Blu, bianco Dati societariCittàDaugavpils Nazione Lettonia ConfederazioneUEFA Federazione LFF Fondazione1944 Presidente Igors Mališkovs Allenatore Gennadi Orbu StadioCeltnieks(4.100 posti) Sito webwww.fcdaugava.lv PalmarèsTitoli nazionali1 Campionato lett...