Mumtaz Ali Tajddin S. Ali is an popular Ismaili Scholar, He has written many articles on Ismaili Imam, Ismailism, and Masjid I Haram from Encyclopedia of Ismaili available on Ismaili Portal
The temple of Jerusalem is honoured in the Koran (17:1) as al-majid al-Aqsa (lit. the remote mosque). The sacredness of Jerusalem is emphasized on numerous places. Abraham migrated to the land of Canaanite around 1805 BC. The Koran states: "And We made them the greater losers. But We delivered him and (his nephew) Lot (and directed them) to the land which We have blessed for the nations" (21: 69-71). The Koran reports Moses telling his people: "O my people! Enter the holy land, which God has prescribed for you" (5: 21). It is further stated: "(It was Our power that made) the violent (unruly) wind flown (tamely) for Solomon. To his order, to the land which We had blessed..." (21: 81). Jerusalem is the resting place of the prophets including Abraham, Jacob, Isaac and according to the commentators, there are over hundred prophets buried in its soil. It was the first qibla of the Muslims. This practice continued until 16-17 months after hijra. To Muslims, Jerusalem houses one of the holiest mosques, the masjid al-Aqsa and represents a place of greatest religious significance. Masjid I Haram The Kaba stands in the center of a parallelogram whose dimensions are as follows: North-west side 545 feet, south-east side 553 feet, north-east side 360 feet and south-west side 364 feet. This are is known as al-Masjid al-Haram, or the Sacred Mosque, the famous mosque in Mecca. In the Koran this name occurs in revelations of the early Meccan period, as in 17:1. The area of the Sacred Mosque contains, besides the Kaba, the Maqam Ibrahim and the Zamzam buildings. The term Baitullah (House of God) is applied to the whole enclosure, although it more specially denotes the Kaba itself. Masjid-i Haram means the Sacred Mosque. It is the first house of the worship of God that was ever built on the earth (3:96). The tradition has it that it was built by Adam, then rebuilt by Abraham and his son Ismael on the same site as it had been damaged by the Deluge. After the completion of the Kaba, Abraham prayed to God: "Our Lord! Send amongs them an Apostle of their own, who shall rehearse Your signs to them and instruct them in Scripture and Wisdom, and sanctify them, for You are the Exalted in Might, the Wise" (2:129). The Sacred Mosque was the center of all administrative activities before Islam, as within it was situated the Dar al-Nadwa (the Council Hall), where important matters regarding the weal or woe of the people were settled. After the advent of Islam, the Sacred Mosque has been the pivot of the intellectual activities of Mecca, and the whole Muslim world looks upon it as its central point.
- Related Videos
- Related Articles
- Ask / Related Q&A




God Rebukes the Priests in Bible versus Quran
By: Prof.dr. Ibrahim Khalil | 02/12/2009In the Bible, God, the Lord of Hosts curses the Priests and will corrupt their seed. God will spread dung on their faces etc. In the Quran, there is neither Monasticism nor priesthood therein.
Canaan and Heaven – How God Gives
By: Denny Smith | 02/12/2009Canaan was God's promised land to the children of Israel. Heaven is God's promised land to Christians. Both were gifts but how does God give - conditionally or conditionally?
Christmas in the United States and Canada
By: Oli Osorhan | 01/12/2009Christmas in the United States today can be seen as focused around family, travel, shopping and decorations.
History of Christmas
By: Oli Osorhan | 01/12/2009Commercial activities during Christmas today are often decried as making the season too materialistic. This has caused comments that the religious aspect of Christmas is so overlooked and overshadowed that its celebration seems to be purely pagan.
Top 3 Awesome Gods
By: Kasan Groupe | 01/12/2009A list of the top three most awesome Gods/deities. I bet you can't just worship one!
A Caribbean Christmas
By: Oli Osorhan | 01/12/2009In the tropical islands of the Caribbean, the temperature is above 75 degrees from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31, which means that it is warm and pleasant during Christmas.
Eating Heartily but Consciously During Christmas Season
By: Oli Osorhan | 01/12/2009During the Christmas season, summer and its body-conscious state of mind are distant memories. Hearty indulgence in the many foods shared at Christmas therefore doesn't produce the same feelings of guilt.
Christian Faith: A Journey to Life’s Real Purpose
By: Elle Wood | 01/12/2009Drug addiction, woman trafficking, child abuse, abortion, and all time high crime rates - what more could this rotting society offer? It seems as if everyday is just another opportunity for these rowdy criminals to spread foibles and idiosyncrasies without recognizing the after effects they do to society, more so to the Christian faith.
Varas Karim Kassim
By: Ibrahim | 11/11/2009 | ReligionPeriod (1878-1958) Karim Kassim was the younger brother of Varas Bandali Kassim (1875-1956). He was born in 1878 in Karachi, where he acquired his formal education from Sind Madresa-tul-Islam School upto fourth class. He held a strong command in English, Gujrati and Sindhi languages. Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan was his classmate.
What is SEO Bot? How do i use Bot Monitor Code
By: Ibrahim | 30/09/2009 | InternetSeo is an short word which is commonly use in every alternate marketing website, but only few are the real optimizers and experts, SEO Bots is not claim as an optimizer, our expertise we share as a free service provider, and let everyone to follow the instruction check there own website stats and ranks and implement themselves.
Sir Karim Ibrahim
By: Ibrahim | 27/09/2009 | ReligionKarim Ibrahim's father Ibrahim Pabani came from Mandavi, Kutchh. He was an eminent owner of the ships, sailing in Arabian and Zanzibar coasts. He had three sons - Ladha, Datoo and Karim. Ibrahim Pabani died in 1857.
Missionary Karam Hussain
By: Ibrahim | 27/09/2009 | ReligionThe Shamsi Ismailis in Punjab, the followers of Pir Shams (d. 1356), mostly practiced the Ismaili faith in solitude in the garb of the Hindus, and became known as the gupti (secretive). These gupti Ismailis mostly resided in 73 different villages in Punjab. Most of them revealed themselves from the Hindu culture, and emerged in public and assumed the Islamic names soon after the orders of Imam Sultan Muhammad Shah in 1910.
Wazir Jivabhai Bhanji
By: Ibrahim | 24/09/2009 | ReligionJivabhai Bhanji traced his lineage from a certain Bhagat Virabhai Devasi, who lived in the beginning of 15th century in Kathiawar. Paraptani is said to be his only son, and his son was Parpiya. Karim was the younger son of Parpiya, and the son of the former was Bhima, who also lived for some time in Mundra, Kutchh with his son Hamid. The next generation followed by Hamid was
Juma Jan Muhammad
By: Ibrahim | 23/09/2009 | ReligionJuma Jan Muhammad was born possibly in 1850 in Bombay, where he got his early education. He was a leading leather merchant in Bombay and a commission agent. He was also an owner of a tannery at Dharavi. He extended his business as far as Europe and Burma.
Jaffer Rahimtulla
By: Ibrahim | 21/08/2009 | ReligionJaffer Rahimtulla was the younger brother of Sir Ibrahim Rahimtullah (1862-1942). He was born in 1870 and after the death of his father, his brother Ibrahim Rahimtullah gave him adequate education. After his matriculation in 1888, he joined the university and passed B.A. (Hon.) in Philosophy and Logic.
Missionary Jaffer Ali Muhammad Sufi
By: Ibrahim | 20/08/2009 | HistoryJaffer Ali Muhammad Somji, surnamed Sufi was born at Karachi in 1908, where he took his formal education, both religious and secular. He started his career as a religious teacher as well as a supervisor of Wazir Rahim Boarding School. He also became a regular missionary in Karachi, and then moved to East Africa.