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10 iconic mosques of Southeast Asia

10 iconic mosques of Southeast Asia

Asia News Network has compiled Southeast Asia's 10 iconic mosques.

They include the National Mosque and Tuanku Mizan Zainal Abidin Mosque (Malaysia); Masjid Sultan (Singapore); Ash-Shaliheen Mosque, Jame’ Asr Hassanil Bolkiah Mosque and Sultan Omar 'Ali Saifuddien Mosque (Brunei); Dian Al Mahri Mosque, Istiqlal Mosque and Lautze Mosque (Indonesia); and the Kamalulislam Mosque (Thailand). 
This series is a project by Star Media Group, Straits Times Singapore, Brunei Times, Jakarta Post and The Nation, members of the Asia News Network.
 
The Sai Kongdin @ Kamalulislam Mosque, Thailand 
The Kamalulislam Mosque in Bangkok’s eastern suburb was built along the Saen Saeb Canal in the 1820s. Also known as the Sai Kongdin Mosque, it serves the large community of Muslims living in the eastern suburb and also as a centre of Islamic education in Bangkok
 
Masjid Sultan, Singapore
Masjid Sultan was built in 1824 by Sultan Hussein Shah, the 19th-century ruler of Johor and Singapore. It is located in the historic Kampong Glam, the heart of Singapore's Muslim community. The original building was torn down a century later to make way for the current mosque which was completed in 1932. Masjid Sultan is considered the national mosque of Singapore. 
 
Brunei Darussalam’s top three iconic mosques
Brunei Darussalam’s three iconic mosques include the Ash-Shaliheen Mosque, the Jame’ Asr Hassanil Bolkiah Mosque and the Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddien (SOAS) Mosque. Of the three, the Ash-Shaliheen Mosque is one of the country’s most high-tech places of worship. Located near the Prime Minister’s office complex, the mosque has a retractable roof.
 
Dian Al Mahri Mosque, Indonesia
The Dian Al Mahri Mosque is also known as the Golden Dome Mosque. It has five domes coated with 24-carat gold, making it one of the most famous places of worship in Greater Jakarta. Located in Depok, the mosque was designed by architect Uke Setiawan and financed by businesswoman Dian Juriah Maimun Al Rasyid and her husband Maimun Al Rasyid. This mosque, said to resemble India’s Taj Mahal, is considered to be one of the most magnificent in Southeast Asia.
 
Istiqlal Mosque, Indonesia  
The Istiqlal Mosque is Southeast Asia’s biggest mosque. It is located opposite the Jakarta Cathedral. The two buildings were deliberately built close to each other to symbolise religious harmony.
The name “Istiqlal” is an Arabic word for independence. It can accommodate up to 120,000 people.
 
Lautze Mosque, Indonesia
Lautze Mosque is named after the street on which it is located. It sits in the middle of an area that is popularly known as Jakarta’s Chinatown. It can be mistaken for a temple, with its Chinese features, red walls and excerpts from the Quran written in Arabic hanging alongside Chinese scripts. The mosque was intentionally built in a predominantly Chinese community to educate Chinese-Indonesians about Indonesia's moderate Islam. 
 
Tuanku Mizan Zainal Abidin Mosque, Malaysia
Named after the 13th Malaysian ruler, the Tuanku Mizan Zainal Abidin Mosque is located in the country’s administrative capital, Putrajaya. Construction began in April 2004 and the mosque was completed in August 2009. Dubbed the “iron mosque”, it was built to cater up to 20,000 people. The mosque is built without a minaret.
 
Masjid Negara, Malaysia
Masjid Negara or the National Mosque, was built in 1965 after Malaysia achieved its independence. Located in Kuala Lumpur, it was built at a cost of RM10 mil, with RM3 mil raised from public donations. The mosque’s prayer hall can accommodate 15,000 people and a heroes mausoleum is built adjacent to it where prominent Malaysian leaders were buried. 
The programs are published on StarTV.com's Asean Channel. It can also be viewed directly from there: http://www.thestartv.com/programme/asean-mosques/
 
 
 
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