
Within the mid-19th century, the Kampong Kapor area was a dynamic commerce centre for Indian dealers and for those who worked at the ancient racecourse at Farrer Stop. Kampong Kapor hence got to be a natural enclave for South Indian Muslim shippers and Bawanese syces and horse coaches. To serve the devout needs of the community, Masjid Al-Abrar (Al-Abrar Mosque) – a wooden structure with a tiled roof made of brick and chunam – was built in 1859 at the same location of the display Abdul Gaffoor Mosque. In 1881, the Dunlop Road Mosque Blessing was set up, with Ismail Mansor and Shaik Abdul Gaffoor designated as trustees of the mosque.
Masjid Abdul Gaffoor was gazetted as a national monument on 13 July 1979. The mosque is rich in architectural features. The prayer hall is raised above the ground and surrounded with verandas at the entrance and sides. The verandas are enclosed by a balustrade with circular and lancet-shaped openings and framed by repetitive cinquefoil arches double-framed with heavy mouldings. The bays are marked out with pilasters with ornate capitals. The wide openings give the interior an airiness that contrasts with the heavy columns in the centre of the prayer hall. On either side of the main entrance are two graduated cinquefoil arched openings. The larger ones are nearest the entrance, while the smaller ones are further away. The main entrance to the prayer hall is pedimented with an elaborate sundial in which the 25 rays of the sunburst are done in calligraphy. The sundial is flanked on either side by a series of pilasters and columns in miniature. The pediment above the sundial is shaped like an onion dome. The two square minarets on the left and right are complete with miniature columns and arches. There are panels with calligraphic inscriptions in several places in the mosque, including over the entrance. The interior of the cupola at the centre of the prayer hall is supported by four large cluster columns that form semicircular arches. Square and round calligraphic inscriptions decorate the interior of the cupola. The cluster columns that hold up the cupola have elaborate mouldings and capitals. From the exterior, the cupola emerges from the roof deck as a hexagonal-shaped tower that is divided into three levels and marked out with Doric pilasters.
On the first level of the tower are eight cinquefoil windows with coloured glass panes that let light through to the interior. These windows are ornamented with recessed mihrab-shaped moulding and cinquefoil arches. The second level has pilasters and capitals and is topped by a balustrade with bottleneck balusters. There are minarets at the corners of the hexagon. These minarets are crowned with onion-shaped domes with a crescent moon and a star at the pinnacle. The very centre of the hexagon is crowned with a large onion dome topped with a smaller onion dome. On the pinnacle is a star and crescent moon.
The corners of the front veranda have simpler and less elaborate cupolas. The four corners of the building are anchored by large Corinthian columns in a cluster with elaborate capitals in a leaf design. The interior and exterior of the mosque have several types of columns and pilasters. They are both structural and ornamental and range from Doric to Corinthian. Columns can be paired with pilasters and pilasters are inset into columns. The mihrab is plain. There is a narrow rectangular panel with a quotation from the Qur’an above it. Next to the mihrab is the minbar, a three-step timber staircase from which the imam leads prayers. Above the prayer hall is a flat roof deck surrounded by a parapet wall with bottle-shaped balusters. It is topped with a line of 22 small six-level minarets crowned with onion domes, each with a crescent moon. The miniature minarets rise from the pilasters that frame the cinquefoil arched openings below.
There is also a type of single-leafed window that is recessed and framed by an elaborate cinquefoil arch. It is flanked with pilasters and pedimented and has the same star-and-crescent pattern of the larger arched openings. The ablution area in this mosque was originally a pool. This was later drained, and a modern wash area put in. It is located outside at the southwest end of the mosque.
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