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Longgang Mosque


History


In 1953, the United Nations General Assembly passed a resolution condemning the Taipei government for its actions and guerilla warfare inside Burma. Finally, an agreement was reached between Taipei, Rangoon, and Bangkok for evacuation of all Kuomintang Irregular forces under command of General Li Mi to Taiwan. Civil Air Transport transported 5,583 Kuomintang soldiers and 1,040 dependents to Taiwan. The majority of these guerrilla forces were Muslim and had no place to worship in their new Taiwan home and so they started to raise funds to construct a mosque in 1964.

The original building of Longgang Mosque was built in 1967 by a group of 30 Muslims. Built over an area of 1,289 square meters, at first the mosque was very small. But after joining the Chinese Muslim Association, they were able to raise money in the early 1980s, including funds from Saudi Arabia, to build a larger mosque.

To make a bigger mosque, they purchased a plot of land at Longdong Road (Chinese: 龍東路) in Zhongli. At this US$312,000 initial development stage, only the main prayer hall and basement area of the mosque were built. The mosque building occupies an area of 1,300 square meters and the mosque's main worship area can hold 150 worshippers.

At the US$400,000 second development stage, the mosque's minarets, a kitchen, dormitory and shower room were added to the main building.

Over time, due to the poor materials used to construct the building because of lack of funds, the mosque quickly deteriorated. After some discussion, a plan to reconstruct the mosque was finally put in place. With financial assistance from inside and outside Taiwan, the first reconstruction project for the mosque began in March 1988 and was completed in January 1989. And in 1995, the second reconstruction was completed again resulting in the mosque in use today.

Urban and Architectural


The Longgang mosque is a green structure which has one prayer hall that can accommodate more than 150 people simultaneously. The other features of the mosque includes the imam office, staff office, reception room, children chanting room.

Description


The Longgang Mosque  is a mosque in Zhongli DistrictTaoyuan CityTaiwan. It is the fifth mosque to be built in Taiwan. As of September 2008, the Imam was Abdullah Liu 

Details

Location

No. 216號, Longdong Rd, Zhongli District, Taoyuan City, Taiwan 320

Worshippers

500

Owners

Chinese Muslim Association

Year of Build

1967

Area

1300 m2

Drawings

Map

History

In 1953, the United Nations General Assembly passed a resolution condemning the Taipei government for its actions and guerilla warfare inside Burma. Finally, an agreement was reached between Taipei, Rangoon, and Bangkok for evacuation of all Kuomintang Irregular forces under command of General Li Mi to Taiwan. Civil Air Transport transported 5,583 Kuomintang soldiers and 1,040 dependents to Taiwan. The majority of these guerrilla forces were Muslim and had no place to worship in their new Taiwan home and so they started to raise funds to construct a mosque in 1964.

The original building of Longgang Mosque was built in 1967 by a group of 30 Muslims. Built over an area of 1,289 square meters, at first the mosque was very small. But after joining the Chinese Muslim Association, they were able to raise money in the early 1980s, including funds from Saudi Arabia, to build a larger mosque.

To make a bigger mosque, they purchased a plot of land at Longdong Road (Chinese: 龍東路) in Zhongli. At this US$312,000 initial development stage, only the main prayer hall and basement area of the mosque were built. The mosque building occupies an area of 1,300 square meters and the mosque's main worship area can hold 150 worshippers.

At the US$400,000 second development stage, the mosque's minarets, a kitchen, dormitory and shower room were added to the main building.

Over time, due to the poor materials used to construct the building because of lack of funds, the mosque quickly deteriorated. After some discussion, a plan to reconstruct the mosque was finally put in place. With financial assistance from inside and outside Taiwan, the first reconstruction project for the mosque began in March 1988 and was completed in January 1989. And in 1995, the second reconstruction was completed again resulting in the mosque in use today.

Urban and Architectural

The Longgang mosque is a green structure which has one prayer hall that can accommodate more than 150 people simultaneously. The other features of the mosque includes the imam office, staff office, reception room, children chanting room.

Description

The Longgang Mosque  is a mosque in Zhongli DistrictTaoyuan CityTaiwan. It is the fifth mosque to be built in Taiwan. As of September 2008, the Imam was Abdullah Liu