THE
MOSQUE
OF
PROPHET Sallalla ho allihi
wassalam
The Prophet's Mosque in Madinah is the second
most revered place of worship for
Muslims around the world. Millions of Muslims
visit the Mosque each year, to
worship, to visit the Prophet's grave,
and to see the city that gave birth to Islam. This
pilgrimage is not mandatory as is the one
to Makkah, but nevertheless popular. It is
important to remember, however, that a
visit to the Prophet's grave is not in any way
to worship or revere him, but to commemorate
his role as God's messenger, and to
remind Muslims of his mortality and humanity.
The Prophet's Mosque was the first institution
to be built following Prophet
Muhammad's migration in 622 AD from Makkah,
where he was born, to the town of
Yathrib, which became known as 'Al-Madinah
an-Nabi", or 'City of the Prophet', and
is today simply Madinah. Surrounded as
it was by the shops and stalls of all kinds
of merchants, the new mosque soon became
the political and economic as well as
the spiritual nucleus of the city, and
played both a practical and a symbolic role in
unifying the citizens, ultimately providing
a solid foundation from which the Prophet
and his companions could set forth and
establish the Islamic state.
According to history, the manner in which
the Prophet decided on its location, was to
let his camel loose, and choose the site
where it finally stopped to rest. The entire
Muslim community, both the residents of
Yathrib and those who had migrated from
Makkah with the Prophet, participated in
the construction of this first mosque, which
was simply an open courtyard about 805
square meters in area surrounded by a
wall made from bricks and tree trunks.
On the eastern side apartments were built to
house the Prophet and his family. By 629
the Prophet had enlarged the area of the
mosque to 2,475 square meters.
Under the first four Caliphs, Madinah and
the Mosque where the Prophet was buried
continued to be the seat of government,
reinforcing the synthesis of religion and
governance in the Islamic state. The first
two Caliphs, Abu Bakr and Omar, were
buried next to the Prophet in the place
that had originally been the Prophet's home,
and which today is covered by the famous
green dome of the mosque.
Throughout Islamic history, successive Islamic
regimes have spared no cost or
effort in dignifying and honoring the Prophet's
Mosque in Madinah. In 638, the Caliph
Omar Bin Al-Khattab increased the area
by 1,100 square meters, and in 650 the
Caliph Othman Bin Affan increased it by
496 square meters. The Caliph Al-Walid
Bin Abdul Malik in 706 ordered an extension
of 2,379 square meters, and 73 years
later Caliph AL-Mahdi AL-Abbasi increased
it by 2450 square meters.
For over seven centuries no additional improvements
were made until Sultan Qaid
Bey added another 120 square meters in
1483. Another three centuries passed,
and in 1849 Sultan Abdul Majid initiated
another extension of 1,293 square meters.
Soon after the establishment of the modern
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 1932, King
Abdul Aziz Al-Saud issued a royal decree
ordering the expansion of the Prophet's
Mosque, a plan implemented by his son King
Saud in 1950. This first Saudi
expansion was the largest the mosque had
ever seen, and not only doubled it in
size, but also brought about changes in
the city of Madinah itself. The number of
pilgrims continued to increase rapidly,
from an average of 100,000 annually in 1955
to one million in 1970 and more than two
million in 1980. In 1973 King Faisal Bin
Abdul Aziz ordered the construction of
awnings on the west side of the mosque as a
temporary solution to protect visitors
from the elements, and in 1981 Custodian of
the Two Holy Mosques King Fahd Bin Abdul
Aziz began research into plans for
further extensions that would ultimately
result in a five-fold increase in the size of the
mosque. The mosque today is one hundred
times the size it was when the Prophet
first established it, and can accommodate
at any one time, more than half a million
worshipers. Indicative of the facilities
now available is an underground parking
garage designed to hold nearly 5,000 cars.