Al-Azhar Mosque shines after years-long restoration
Nevine El-Aref, , Wednesday 7 Mar 2018
The 10th-century Mosque and University of Al-Azhar in Islamic Cairo re-opened this week after restoration


In the Al-Hussein quarter in Islamic Cairo, the historic Mosque and University of A-Azhar stands welcoming worshippers, students and visitors.

The edifice, re-opened by President Abdel-Fattah Al-Sisi and Saudi Crown Prince Mohamed bin Salman this week, has for the last three years been hiding under scaffolding, with workmen intent on polishing and strengthening its walls.

The restoration work was carried out under the patronage of King Salman bin Abdel-Aziz of Saudi Arabia with a grant from late king Abdullah, who ordered the initiative before his death with a view to restoring the historic Al-Azhar Mosque and a number of its faculties as well as establishing an integrated residential area for students.

The mosque, like other Islamic monuments located in heavily populated areas in Cairo, was suffering from environmental factors including air pollution, a high subsoil water level, a high level of humidity, leakage from the al-madiaa (a fountain used for ritual ablution), out-of-date sewerage systems and the adverse effects of the 1992 earthquake.

The restoration work was carried out using the latest scientific methods, and every effort was made to ensure that all the original architectural features were retained.

The aim of the restoration was mainly to strengthen the foundations of the mosque and to protect them from any further damage, Mohamed Abdel-Aziz, director of the Historic Cairo Development Project, which supervised the work, told Al-Ahram Weekly.

This was achieved using a micro-pile system, which, he said, involved the installation of columns beneath the Al-Azhar complex to reinforce its foundations. The walls were also reinforced, missing and decayed stones replaced, and masonry cleaned and desalinated.

The restoration also included cleaning and strengthening the building’s architectural designs, wooden ceilings, and mashrabiya (lattice woodwork) windows, as well as its arcades, paintings, engravings and fine metal ornaments.

The building’s mausoleums, five minarets and seven painted domes were restored and consolidated, and the work extended to the students’ residential area.

In the latter, the work involved the transformation and modernisation of the lighting systems, toilets, drainage, ventilation and sound systems, in accordance with the latest international standards and as used at the Grand Mosque in Mecca, while taking into account the historic nature of Al-Azhar.

“All the steps were carried out under the supervision of the Ministry of Antiquities to document the restoration,” Abdel-Aziz said, adding that the ministry had provided drawings and documents of the mosque’s restoration in 1998 and 2011 as references for the restoration team.

“The mosque now stands as proudly as it did in its heyday,” Abdel-Aziz confirmed.

The prestigious Mosque-University of Al-Azhar was built upon the orders of the Fatimid caliph Al-Muizz Li-Din Allah by architect Gawhar Al-Seqeli, who built the then Fatimid Empire’s new capital of Al-Qahera (the Triumphant), today the heart of Islamic Cairo.

This soon became a place of opulent palaces, mosques, madrassas (schools) and sabils (water fountains).

Al-Azhar was named after the Prophet Mohamed’s daughter Fatma Al-Zahraa. It was the first Fatimid monument to be built in Egypt and was a meeting place for Shia students, becoming the focal point of a famous university.

The architectural style of the mosque shows the influence of the various dynasties and their characteristic contributions over subsequent centuries.

Today, Al-Azhar, which covers an area of 12,000 square metres, is double its original size and shows various Islamic architectural styles, including in a succession of riwaqs (arcades), madrassas, mihrabs (pulpits) and minarets.

These were added to what was originally a courtyard surrounded by three arcades, of which the widest runs along the qibla (prayer niche) wall.

The mosque was renovated and expanded several times during the Fatimid era, but during the subsequent Ayyubid period it was neglected because it represented a Shia, and not a Sunni, regime.

The Sunni Ayyubids introduced the Sunni doctrine to the mosque and its teaching of Islamic jurisprudence, even as Al-Azhar continued to serve as a centre for Arabic language and education.

Mohamed Abdel-Latif, assistant to the minister of antiquities for Islamic antiquities, said that the Egyptian Mameluke regime, which ruled Egypt after the fall of the Ayyubids, had restored the mosque, especially during the reign of the Mameluke sultan Baybars.

A madrassa was built along the northwestern wall and a portion of the old wall removed to accommodate the new structure.

Another madrassa was also provided neighbouring the first, as well as a new ablutions fountain for the main mosque, and prayer halls were constructed for Al-Azhar’s schools and other annexes.

The Mameluke sultan Qansur Al-Ghouri later built the two-headed minaret that is the tallest of all Al-Azhar’s minarets and a superb example of Mameluke architecture.

After the fall of the Mamelukes with the Ottoman invasion in 1517, the Ottoman rulers of Egypt created several waqfs (religious endowments) to fund the construction and upkeep of the Al-Hanafiya riwaq, the Turkish riwaq, the Suleimaniya riwaq, the Al-Sham riwaq and the Amyan prayer hall at Al-Azhar.

The greatest extension of the mosque, said Abdel-Latif, began under the Mameluke emir Abdel-Rahman Katkhuda when a dome was constructed and the Bab Al-Muzayini (Barbers Gate), which now serves as the main entrance to the mosque, was built.

Renovations and repairs were also made under Mohamed Ali Pasha in the early 19th century and his successors. Under the khedive Abbas Helmi II in the late 19th century a new library was built, as well as the largest of the mosque’s riwaqs.

Al-Azhar today remains a deeply influential institution in Egyptian society and is highly revered in the Sunni Muslim world as a symbol of Islamic learning and culture.

* This story was first published in Al-Ahram Weekly

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