Christ unites Jordan’s Muslims and Christians |
Madaba invites anarchists to learn lessons in co-existence
Half a century ago, a Muslim prayer leader (Imam) in a remote Jordanian village fell sick in Ramadan, thus failing to lead people break their fast (iftar). To avert any discrepancy, a priest in the neighboring church rang the bells to alert fellow Muslims to for the iftar.
However, inter-religious harmony is much older than the last few decades.
Over 100 years back, a Christian from Marar tribe donated land for a mosque in Madaba, the southern side of Jordanian capital, Amman. The state built the mosque in the country’s third most populous city and named it Masjid Al-Hussein Bin Talal. Today, the Ottoman-style mosque, standing on Christian-donated piece of land, remains the most popular for bigger Friday prayer congregations.
Jamal Juma Al-Safrati always felt indebted to Christian’s generosity towards Muslims for promoting the values of coexistence in Madaba, also called the city of mosaics dating back to the Byzantine times. Cleric by profession, Al-Safrati learnt that Ghalib Muhsin Muhammad Al-Otaibi, a Jordanian who resides in Ukraine, plans to build a mosque in Madaba. He convinced his rich compatriot to name the mosque after Prophet Issa bin Maryam (Peace be upon them). Al-Otaibi just loved the proposal.
Al-Safrati says, "I traveled across various Muslim nations and found mosques named after all the prophets’ of Allah except Jesus Christ."
During three decades in Syrian capital Damascus, Al-Safrati studied law and Arabic prior returning to his native Jordan.
Prayer leader in the Issa bin Maryam Mosque, Al-Safrati confirms that the idea crystallized in 2008 after a Danish cartoonist published caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon Him).
“The caricatures provoked bitter divisions between Muslims and Christians,” he explains. The Jesus Christ mosque emerged as a gesture towards Christians in Madaba.
Today the mosque, built with a donation of $85,000 or 58,000 EUR, is a popular landmark in a city where Christians make up merely 5% of the total population.
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