Mubarak mosque in Chau Phong commune, An Giang province (Photo: Do Quyen/VOV4) |
Mubarak mosque resembles an ancient and mysterious Arabian and Persian mosque, featuring arched domes, tall minarets, and the crescent moon symbol. Its main gate has a distinctive design, shaped like two elephants meeting head on, their tusks interlocked.
The mosque’s dominant colors are blue and white from the exterior to the interior decorations. The grand hall is surrounded by long, wide corridors. The walls along these corridors are decorated with intricate motifs and Cham script excerpts from the Quran. Inside the grand hall, bright chandeliers hang from the ceiling.
The main hall of Mubarak mosque (Photo: Do Quyen/VOV4) |
An Giang province has 12 mosques and 16 minor prayer houses. Only Mubarak mosque is recognized as a National Historical and Cultural Relic. The mosque was designed by Indian architect Mohamet Amin and built in 1750. After several renovations, in 1922, it was rebuilt in a more solid form, with lime-plastered walls, wooden pillars, and tiled roofing. In 1965, it was reconstructed using reinforced concrete, a structure that remains today.
The chapel at Mubarak mosque (Photo: Do Quyen/ VOV4) |
Bookcase for the Quran (Photo: Do Quyen/VOV4) |
Every year Mubarak mosque hosts three major festivals: Maulid, commemorating the birth of the Prophet Muhammad, on the 12th day of the 3rd month of the Islamic calendar; Roya Haji, marking the pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia, on the 10th day of the 12th month of the Islamic calendar; and the Cham New Year celebration, on the 1st day of the 10th month of the Islamic calendar, following Ramadan, the month of fasting in the 9th Islamic month.
The burial area of the Cham Muslim community behind the mosque. (Photo: Do Quyen/VOV4) |
Mubarak mosque, one of the most outstanding religious architectural works of An Giang province, is a very popular tourist destination.
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