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Jamia Mosque (Hong Kong)

The Jamia Mosque is a Friday mosque in Mid-Levels, Hong Kong, China. Completed in 1890, it is the oldest mosque in Hong Kong. The neighbouring streets Mosque Street and Mosque Junction are named after the mosque. Mufti Abdul Zaman is the main Imam and he leads prayers and taraweeh during Ramadan.

History

The mosque was built in 1890 on a piece of land leased by the British Hong Kong government for 999 years. The treaty for the land was granted on 23 December 1850.

Initially, the mosque was named Mohammedan Mosque. Extension of the building took place in 1915 which made the mosque into a larger building. After World War II, the mosque was renamed Jamia Mosque. It is also known as Lascar Temple.

There has been a plan to construct an Islamic Cultural Center by its side in the future.

Architecture

The mosque has a rectangular shape with an arched main entrance and Arabic-style arched windows on all sides.

A three-storey residential building next to the mosque provides rent-free accommodation to followers. It was probably built in the early 20th century. In May 2010, the mosque was classified as a Grade I building by the Government of Hong Kong, inscribed as "outstanding merits of which every effort should be made to preserve if possible." The nearby three-storey residential building has been classified as a Grade II building.

Transportation

The mosque is accessible within walking distance South West from Central station of the MTR, via the Central–Mid-Levels escalator.

Gallery

See also

References

External links