Auburn Gallipoli Mosque

Auburn Gallipoli Mosque

Auburn Gallipoli Mosque
Basic information
Location Auburn (Sydney), New South Wales, Australia
Geographic coordinates 33°51′08″S 151°02′09″E / 33.852343°S 151.035964°E / -33.852343; 151.035964Coordinates: 33°51′08″S 151°02′09″E / 33.852343°S 151.035964°E / -33.852343; 151.035964
Affiliation Sunni Islam
Website www.gallipolimosque.org.au/
Architectural description
Architectural type Mosque
Architectural style Classical Ottoman[1]
Completed 28 November 1999[1]
Construction cost A$6 million[1]
Specifications
Dome(s) 1
Minaret(s) 2

Part of a series on
Islam in Australia



History

Early history
Afghan cameleers
Battle of Broken Hill
Contemporary society
Halal certification in Australia
Islamophobia in Australia

Mosques

List of mosques
Lakemba Mosque · Auburn Gallipoli Mosque
Central Adelaide Mosque  Marree Mosque

Organisations

Islamic organisations in Australia
AFIC · ANIC  LMA · IMAA · IISNA  ICQ 
ICV  MWA

Groups

Afghan  Albanian  Arab  Bangladeshi
Bosnian  Indian  Indonesian  Iranian
Iraqi  Lebanese  Malay  Pakistani 
Turkish

Events

National Mosque Open Day

People
Prominent Australian Muslims
Ibrahim Abu Mohamed
Criticism

Criticism of Islam

The Auburn Gallipoli Mosque is an Ottoman-style mosque in Auburn, a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. More than 500 worshippers attend every day and around 2000 worshippers attend the weekly special Friday prayer at the Auburn Gallipoli Mosque and is primarily used by Turkish Australians.[2]

Significance and history

The mosque's name invokes the legacy of the Gallipoli Campaign during World War I, which played a pivotal role in the history of both Australia and the Republic of Turkey. According to mosque officials, the name is meant to signify "the shared legacy of the Australian society and the main community behind the construction of the mosque, the Australian Turkish Muslim Community."[1]

The first mosque on the present mosque site was opened for worship on 3 November 1979. It was a house with internal walls removed to generate open space. The construction of the present mosque structure began in 1986. Its construction and external finishes were completed and officially opened on 28 November 1999, twenty years after the first opening.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "History of the Auburn Gallipoli Mosque". Auburn Gallipoli Mosque. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
  2. Tovey, Josephine (24 April 2010). "Turkish mosque joins honour roll of Australian heritage buildings". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 13 July 2011.

External links

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