Beautiful Bamboo Mosque in Rural Malaysia

In 1936, the then ruler of Perak, Sultan Iskandar Shah had built a small, two storied mosque in a rural area of the Kampong (meaning: village) Kuala Dal, Perak, Malaysia. The mosque known as Ihsaniah Iskandariah (meaning Goodness of Iskandar) Mosque was built as fulfilment of a vow taken by the Sultan to build a mosque when one of his sons recovered from serious illness.

The mosque with timber frame was unique in the region as its walls were made of woven hand cut bamboo strips and it had no minaret. Construction of the mosque was undertaken by Chinese craftsmen assisted by local workers.

The mosque fell in disuse when a new mosque was built in the village in 1976 and thereafter it gradually decayed. Few years back it was granted heritage status and in 2009 the National Heritage Department of Malaysian Government undertook its restoration. The building has now been restored to its full glory, however  now it is not used as a mosque but is used for Quranic teachings and meetings of the Mosque Committee of the village.

The mosque in 1938;
The mosque in 1976;

The mosque in 2007 (Before restoration);

Image from Panoramio is by ibnuhaq
Mosque after restoration.

Image from Panoramio is by tonyng.my

Image from Panoramio is by smnrs
Image from Flickr is by Graham Harcombe

View approximate location in Google Earth / Google Maps

Main source of information: heritage.gov.my / heritage-malaysia2u.blogspot.com

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please feel free to write your comments but remember that the same are moderated. So please do not post SPAM comments i.e. your business links here including surrogate links.

Comments containing SPAM are liable for rejection.