Al-Aqsa Mosque is the main mosque in Jerusalem. The mosque is situated inside a 35-hectare complex called Al-Haram Ash-Sharif (The Holy Place of Nobleness) or Temple Mount, which is the third holiest site in Islam after Mecca and Medina. The Al-Aqsa Mosque complex is situated in the Old City of Jerusalem which has been assigned a World Heritage site by the United Nations social organization, UNESCO.
Coming up next are significant realities from the
- The primary Qibla of Muslims
Al Aqsa MosqueAl-Aqsa is perhaps the holiest site in Islam. While Muslims presently ask towards the Kaaba in Saudi Arabia, this has not generally been the standard. Prior to going to the Kaaba as the Qibla, the course to be looked during supplications, Muslims used to implore toward the Holy Place in Jerusalem, where Al-Aqsa presently stands. The Prophet Muhammad was then arranged to accept the Kaaba as a world renowned hub through the Isra Miraj occasion.
- The mosque referenced in the Qur'an other than the Kaaba
Al-Aqsa Mosque is the lone mosque other than the Kaaba, which is referenced in the Qur'an.
- The quiet observer to the introduction of the show-stopper
Abu Hamid Al-Ghazali, a notable Persian scholar, legal adviser and savant is said to have lived in Al-Aqsa for quite a while. He is alluded to by certain antiquarians as perhaps the most persuasive Muslims in history since the Prophet Muhammad. There, he composed his book Ihyaa Ulum Al-Din (Revival of the Knowledge of Religion), which is generally viewed as probably the best work in Islamic writing and among the most broadly read books in the Muslim world.