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Restoration works are in full swing to prepare Mogadishu mosques for Ramadan.
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MOGADISHU — Deserted
mosques across the Somalia capital Mogadishu,
which have been either closed for turned into
garbage dumps by warlord militias, are being
cleaned and dressed up to welcome worshippers
in the holy fasting month of Ramadan.
"No one has prayed
inside his mosque for years after gangsters
had used it as a garbage dump and a place to
burry their innocent victims of their
crimes," Hassan Mohamed told
IslamOnline.net while watching the restoration
of the Arbaa Rokn mosque in southern
Mogadishu.
"By the will of God we
will get this mosque ready before the start of
Ramadan," said a confident Mohamed.
The mosque had been
deserted for years because of continued
fighting between the warlords since the
outbreak of the civil war.
"However, the mosque's
high minaret has always spoken of its
history."
Mohamed plans to hand over
the mosque after its revamp to trusted
scholars to teach people the tenets of Islam.
In addition to the
renovation, the mosque is preparing a busy
schedule for worshippers during Ramadan
including Qur'anic classes and iftar banquets
for the poor.
Arbaa Rokn is one the
country's oldest mosques, dating back to the
second half of the 19th century.
Full Swing
Nearby, people are having
their hands full with work to complete the
restoration of the Sheikh Ahmed mosque in
northern Mogadishu before the holy month.
"Residents hope to be
able to perform prayers at this grand mosque
during Ramadan," Sheikh Ahmed Mino, who
supervises the work, told IOL.
The mosque had been closed
for the past 16 years.
Restoration works are also
continuing around the clock at the Islamic
Solidarity mosque.
The mosque, the largest in
the Horn of Africa region, was opened last
August for the first time since the outbreak
of the civil war.
It was established in 1987
by the Saudi King Faisal bin Abdel-Aziz
Foundation and accommodates around 10,000
worshippers.
Dilapidated governmental
buildings are also the focus of the
restoration efforts.
"Chaos and destruction
have plagued everything in Somali, either
worship places or government buildings,"
said preacher Sheikh Abdul-Aziz Mohamed.
"Now, the Somalis are
rebuilding their country."
Home to about 10 million
largely impoverished people, Somalia has
lacked almost all the trappings of a
functional state, such as national systems of
education, healthcare and justice, for the
past 16 years.
Warlords had controlled the
capital of the Horn of Africa country since
the 1991 overthrow of president Mohamed Siad
Barre.
But the Somalis started
enjoying rare moments of peace and security
since the Islamic Courts rose to power by
capturing Mogadishu and other key areas in
June from the US-backed warlords.