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43 mosques, ma’atem demolished: Bahrain official tally shows
By: Mohamed Ali
PARIS, France: McClatchy Newspapers reported that
Bahraini government demolished or seriously damaged 43 Shiite Muslim
mosques or religious structures during its crackdown on
anti-government demonstrations, according to an official tally
compiled by the state-supported endowment that oversees Shiite sacred
buildings.
Twenty-eight mosques were completely leveled, of which 10 had been
historic structures, according to the list, which the Awaqf endowment
posted last week on its website. Another seven were seriously damaged,
of which two were historic, according to the list.
The endowment, which the government helps fund and which reports
directly to Bahrain's minister of justice and Islamic affairs, also
said that two Shiite cemeteries had been vandalized and that eight
"ma'atems" (husseiniyahs) had been damaged. One of those was historic,
the endowment said.
All of the religious structures had been properly registered with the
government, according to the list.
That assertion directly contradicts Bahraini government claims that
any religious buildings destroyed in the crackdown had been built
illegally in recent years.
"These are not mosques. These are illegal buildings," Bahrain's
minister of justice and Islamic affairs, Sheikh Khalid bin Ali bin
Abdulla al Khalifa, told McClatchy in a May 2 interview. "You cannot
build a place of worship on land taken by force or illegally."
There was no official explanation for why the endowment had posted the
list. One Bahraini familiar with the issue said it may have been in
response to a request for details of the destruction from Bahrain's
monarch, King Hamad bin Isa al Khalifa, after President Barack Obama
criticized Bahraini actions in a speech earlier this month.
Among the structures listed as damaged was the Sasa'a bin Sawhan
Mosque in the city of Askar, a mosque dating back to shortly after the
death of the Prophet Mohammad (s).
The Awaqf list did not specify the damage at the Sasa'a bin Sawhan
mosque, but a Bahrain resident, at McClatchy's request, visited the
mosque and reported that the windows were broken, posters of Bahrain's
royal family now plaster the front entrance, and the air conditioning
system had been vandalized.
McClatchy first reported on the systematic destruction of Shiite
mosques on May 8. The destroyed mosques included the 400-year-old Amir
Mohammed Barbaghi mosque in Aali and all 10 mosques in the village of
Nwaidrat, including the historic Mo'men mosque. The Awaqf list
confirmed the McClatchy report.
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better than wealth because it protects you while you have to
guard wealth. it decreases if you keep on spending it but the
more you make use of knowledge ,the more it increases . what you
get through wealth disappears as soon as wealth disappears but
what you achieve through knowledge will remain even after you."MORE
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