200 mosques in Makkah have wrong Qibla direction 

By Salman Al-Salmi

MAKKAH - The building of multistory residential towers adjacent to the Grand 
Mosque has led to the discovery that the direction of the Qibla in some 200 old 
mosques in the proximity of the Holy Mosque is wrongly positioned.

Qibla is the Arabic word for the direction a Muslim should face when offering 
prayers. Most mosques contain a niche in a wall that indicates the Qibla which 
faces in the direction of the Holy Ka'aba. 

These high residential towers around the Grand Mosque have enabled some 
worshippers to discover slight discrepancies in the direction of the Qibla of 
an estimated 200 mosques, especially the ones in Al-Mansour and Al-Tandbawi 
districts and Al-Sitteen. 

The direction of the Qibla in some of these mosques is set to the western wing 
of the Holy Mosque while others are inclined toward Al-Misfala District.. It is 
believed some of these mosques were built 50 years ago. 

Muslims consider the direction of the Qibla very important because of the fact 
that all Muslims pray facing the Holy Ka'aba. It is traditionally considered to 
be a symbol of the unity of all Muslims worldwide. Thus, the Qibla, anywhere on 
Earth, is the direction of the Ka'aba. 

Anwar Damaj, Muhammed Assiri and Ibrahim Hawsawi who pray in one of the mosques 
at Al-Mansour District said worshippers had discovered the wrong position of 
the Qibla in these mosques after people visiting the high rise towers noticed 
it.

Residents in these districts have called upon the authorities concerned at the 
Ministry of Islamic Affairs to correct the direction of the Qibla in these 
mosques or adjust the direction of the carpets on which the worshippers pray 
facing the Ka'aba. 

They suggested that laser beams be installed on the minarets of the Holy Haram 
in order to show the direction of the Qibla. 

Muhammed Ibrahim, a muezzin in one of the mosques in Al-Mansoura District, said 
most of the mosques in the district were built a long time ago and the 
direction of the Qibla was randomly estimated. 

Hassan Bukhari, a muezzin in another mosque in the same district, said many 
worshippers were perplexed by the location of the Qibla. This made them have 
doubts about the prayers they have already offered. 

Talal Nouh, a former mosques supervisor in Makkah, said the old mosques in the 
city were not directly set towards the eye of the Ka'aba though they face it, 
pointing out that this stems from the lack of accurate instruments for 
determining the real direction of the Ka'aba. 

Dr. Saad Mousa Al-Mousa, a member of the teaching staff of the Faculty of 
Shariah at Umm Al-Qura University in Makkah, said the Endowment Administration 
is responsible for determining the location of the Qibla since they have 
experts trained specifically for the purpose. - Okaz/SG

http://saudigazette .com.sa/index. cfm?method= home.regcon& contentID= 
2009040534175  


      
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