IQNA

Tokyo Camii; Biggest Mosque in Japan

15:41 - August 09, 2022
News ID: 3480030
TEHRAN (IQNA) – Known as a quiet residential neighborhood, the upscale Yoyogi-Uehara district of Shibuya city, Tokyo, is home to a cultural marvel unlike any other: a grand blue mosque towering skyward.

Tokyo Camii; Biggest Mosque in Japan

   

The biggest mosque in Japan, it was built in splendid Ottoman style. It’s named Tokyo Camii, from Turkish camii “mosque,” and adjacent to it is a branch of the Yunus Emre Institute, as well as a shop offering halal food and Islamic gifts, including Turkish delights and baklavas.

The mosque, however, is not exactly of Turkish origin and was founded well over a decade after the fall of the Ottoman Empire. In fact, it was originally built in 1938 as an Islamic school for the Bashkir and Tatar refugees, who fled Russia following the October Revolution with Turkish citizenships.

In 1986, the school and the old wooden mosque, then called Yoyogi Mosque, were demolished due to severe deterioration. The land was donated to the Turkish government, which funded the reconstruction of the mosque and completed it in 2000. Designed by Hilmi Senalp, the newly-revived “Tokyo mosque” is considered one of the most beautiful mosques in East Asia, at the very least. 

Inside, a large chandelier and brilliant stained-glass windows welcome visitors to the domed hall, which can house up to 2,000 people at once.

The number of Muslims living in Japan, though small, has more than doubled in the past decade, from 110,000 in 2010 to 230,000 at the end of 2019 (including as many as 50,000 Japanese converts), according to Tanada Hirofumi of Waseda University.

The country boasts more than 110 mosques, including Tokyo Camii, Okachimachi Mosque, Otsuka Mosque, Nagoya Mosque, and Dar al Arqam Masjid.

 

Source: atlasobscura.com

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